Women's History is Every Month: The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote - YouTube; 5 Things to Know About Maya Ange

0 views
Skip to first unread message

panaritisp

unread,
Apr 18, 2018, 11:13:38 PM4/18/18
to Six on History
If you like what you find on the "Six on History" blog, please share w/your contacts. 

       Here is the link to join: https://groups.google.com/d/forum/six-on-history


Women's History is Every Month: The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote - YouTube; 5 Things to Know About Maya Angelou's Complicated, Meaningful Life; The Women Running in the Midterm Elections During the Trump Era; There’s a rapist in the White House’ projected onto Trump Hotel; Stacey Abrams, the Candidate for Georgia Governor Who Could Make History; "The Home Team" by Brenda Shaughnessy

The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote - YouTube






The Women Running in the Midterm Elections During the Trump Era








Stacey Abrams, the Candidate for Georgia Governor Who Could Make History

"Should Abrams win, she would be Georgia’s first Democratic governor in fifteen years, its first black governor, and the first black woman to be the governor of any state in the country."





"The Home Team" by Brenda Shaughnessy

View this email on a browserForward to a friend
facebook-icon                                   tumblr-icon   twitter-icon 
April 17, 2018
 

The Home Team

 
Brenda Shaughnessy

I liked Jane’s team. I’d bet money on them but it wasn’t that kind of thing. Too disorganized, plus it was just lunchtime pickup winterball with deflated goal bulbs and not enough of the good knee-gel to go around. The kids were tough. The kids goofed. Jane shone.

 

She worried that winter ball like a craft, then, like it was nothing, she’d plffft it dead center while everyone else looked sleepy, sidewise, a full surprise every time. Her main move always a low private conversation with the air. Then lightning knees you could never see.

 

The rest of the team shot sparks on occasion. Tella’s swift half-bank could rattle the shoulder of the thickest bulb-guard, and The Brain (a sticky girl in Advanced Graphmatics) had all the angles. We stood in the stands like snipers, trying to see what The Brain saw but never did till the fluke-score landed from outer space. Jane again, invisibly.

 

Some girls thought winterball too mean-streaked, too psychic. My oldest daughter could hardly watch, preferring hockey. They shared a season so it was one or the other in our town. My younger daughter would rather ice-swim, but even in her ice-hole in the lake, her eyes followed Jane.

 

Our hearts were in Jane’s feet, her hands. All the bills we couldn’t pay, the wishing for electricity and lit-up screens of pleasure, the food gone rotten because no one could bring themselves to eat it—Jane gave us so many more chances to do it right this time.

 

We couldn’t give our kids the bountiful, bullet-proof homes we wanted, but we could insist on watching them try to win their childhoods back, inspecting their scraped knees before the raw red and pink dappled wounds turned burgundy, into crusts of edible leather.

 

 

 
Facebook Like Button  Tweet Button
 
 
 

There’s little debate about Wood’s intentions with “Daughters of Revolution,” from 1932. His depictions of three spinsterish, ghostlike women in the painting drew vehement charges of being satirical, especially from the D.jpg
Lady Liberty brings VOTES FOR WOMEN in The Awakening.jpg
seneca_falls.pdf
Zinn Important US Legislation to Women and Children.pdf
Audre Lorde from Literary Witches, an illustrated celebration of trailblazing women writers.jpg
Zinn Votes for Women Broadside.pdf
Portrait of women shirtwaist strikers holding copies of “The Call,” a socialist newspaper, in 1910.jpg
Women burning the draft cards of their husbands and sons during an anti-war protest in 1968.jpg
League of Women Voters members in front of the White House, 1924..jpg
paul-schutzer-kennedy-six-day-war-03.jpgYoung women swoon at a campaign appearance of presidential candidate John F. Kennedy, late 1960..jpg
women leaders.jpg
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages