BeritaSeo: People

Appstracted

Apps make our lives easier...or, do they?


To be appstracted is to be distracted by an app.


Girls wanna...


What do women/girls want?



  • Women make up 80% of all refugees and displaced people. 
  • Women are seldom included in formal peace processes.
  • More than 16.4 million women in the world have HIV/AIDS.
  • 603 million women live in countries where domestic violence is not yet considered a crime.
  • Over 60 million girls worldwide are child brides, married before the age of 18.
  • Women account for 70% of the population living in absolute poverty (on less than $1.00 a day).

Convenient Conventions

On 22 August 1864, several European states congregated in Geneva, Switzerland and signed the Geneva Convention.

photo credit pixabay.com

~
In 1991 following a decision by the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland, Appenzell Innerrhoden became the last Swiss canton to grant women the vote on local issues.

Fatima Mangre: 4 Years Old


An eight year old girl has become the youngest person ever to be divorced in India after she was married off aged just four.


photo credit Kevin Dooley

Fatima Mangre was given away by her father Anil, from the Shravasti district of Uttar Pradesh state, in an arranged a marriage with 10-year-old Arjun Bakridi.

However when the boy arrived four years later to collect his new bride, Anil said he wanted the girl to wait until she was 18 before leaving.

He said: 'I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that.'

However Arjun's father Dipak was unhappy with the decision, and an argument broke out after which Anil filed for divorce.

The state government of India's has called for an inquiry into the incident that happened last week at Nakhi village in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

It ordered the probe after the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women (NCW) member Nirmala Samant sent a letter, demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.

She said: 'This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action. The girl's father must answer why he married her off at four years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely eight years old.

'This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable,' she added.

[source: Mail Online]

Working Women of WWI


During World War I, with vast numbers of men either enlisting or conscripted to fight in the various forces, women stepped up to take their place as workers.
photo credit NATIONAL LIBRARY OF FRANCE VIA EUROPEANA: 

As well as traditionally female occupations at the time, such as nurses or teachers, many women undertook conventionally male roles in transport, for example, fire fighting, hauling coal and piloting. 

Many younger women worked in munitions factories, where they were known as "Munitionettes." 
This work was dirty and dangerous, in unheated and noisy factory sheds. There was little, if any, regulation regarding the chemicals and fumes the workers were exposed to, with lax procedures and little protective equipment. A large number of women suffered from reactions to these substances, as well as from the stresses and strains of the hard and heavy physical work.
Accidents in munitions factories were common but news of these was suppressed to keep morale high. In January 1917 an explosion at a TNT plant in East London killed 73 people and destroyed hundreds of nearby homes. The TNT turned workers' skin yellow; such women were called "canaries." '
Although women earned a little more money than before the war, they typically still took home roughly half the money of the men whose jobs they filled.
After the war, women were considered surplus to what most workplaces required. In Britain the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act of 1919 made it illegal to exclude women from the workplace and it did enable some women to enter the professions. But the 1919 Restoration of Pre-War Practices Act forced women from their wartime roles as men returned home and factories switched back to peacetime production.

[source: Mashable]

Ruth Law: A Pioneer American Aviator


Aviatrix: a woman who is an aviator
source, Mashable / Retronaut

In 1917, after the U.S. entry into WWI, "aviatrix" Ruth Law had fought for women to pilot aircraft in battle. When her campaign was unsuccessful, she published an article in Air Travel magazine with the title "Let Women Fly!" 

Tips for Single Women, 1938: Awkward Positions


Don't sit in awkward positions--and never look bored, even if you are. Be alert, and if you must chew gum (not advised), do it silently, mouth closed.


credit Mashable, Rretronaut

Mothers

Every day, approximately nearly 830 women die from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.
photo credit Johan Larsson

  • 99% of all maternal deaths occur in developing countries.
  • Maternal mortality is higher in women living in rural areas and among poorer communities.


[source: WHO]

Disney Rejection Letter, 1938


Women do not do any of the creative work in connection with preparing the cartoons for the screen, as that work is performed entirely by young men.


photo credit Kevin Burg

June 7, 1938

Miss Mary V. Ford
Searcy,
Arkansas

Dear Miss Ford,

Your letter of recent date has been received in the Inking and Painting Department for reply.

Women do not do any of the creative work in connection with preparing the cartoons for the screen, as that work is performed entirely by young men. For this reason girls are not considered for the training school.

The only work open to women consists of tracing the characters on clear celluloid sheets with Indian ink and filling in the tracings on the reverse side with paint according to directions.

In order to apply for a position as “Inker” or “Painter” it is necessary that one appear at the Studio, bringing samples of pen and ink and water color work. It would not be advisable to come to Hollywood with the above specifically in view, as there are really very few openings in comparison with the number of girls who apply.

Yours very truly,

WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS, LTD

Colour(s) of Life

African-American women dealt not only with the sexism of being withheld the vote but also the racism of white suffragists.
The struggle for the vote did not end with the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. In some Southern states, African American women were unable to freely exercise their right to vote up until the 1960s.


photo credit Egor Kraft

Erotomania

Erotomania is a type of delusional disorder where the affected person believes that another person is in love with him or her.


photo credit Alexander Mueller

This belief is usually applied to someone with higher status or a famous person, but can also be applied to a complete stranger. 

[source: Wikipedia]

Broken Heart Is Not Just A Metaphor

When you think of a broken heart, you may picture a cartoon drawing with a jagged line through it. But a real-life broken heart can actually lead to cardiac consequences. There are established ties between depression, mental health and heart disease.


photo credit bored-now

Broken heart syndrome is a temporary heart condition (even if you are healthy) that's often brought on by stressful situations, such as the death of a loved one. People with broken heart syndrome may have sudden chest pain or think they're having a heart attack.

In broken heart syndrome, a part of your heart temporarily enlarges and doesn’t pump well, while the rest of your heart functions normally or with even more forceful contractions. Researchers are just starting to learn the causes, and how to diagnose and treat it.

The bad news: 

Broken heart syndrome can lead to severe, short-term heart muscle failure.

The good news: 

Broken heart syndrome is usually treatable. Most people who experience it make a full recovery within weeks, and they’re at low risk for it happening again (although in rare cases in can be fatal).

[sources: Mayo Clinic & American Heart Association]

First Day, Post Blizzard

Only female Senators showed up to work during the giant blizzard of 2016.



None of the 83 male Senators could make it?
Really? 

:)
Something was a little different in the Senate on Tuesday morning. And Sen. Lisa Murkowski noticed it.

The Alaska Republican was one of only a few lawmakers in the Capitol building following the weekend blizzard, and it was her job to handle the formalities of delaying Senate business until her colleagues could get back to work. After finishing a bit of parliamentary business, she described what she saw in the ornate chamber.

“As we convene this morning, you look around the chamber, the presiding officer is female. All of our parliamentarians are female. Our floor managers are female. All of our pages are female.”

She theorized that the lack of men in the ranks of members and staffers might not have been a simple fluke

“Perhaps it speaks to the hardiness of women,” she added, “that put on your boots and put your hat on and get out and slog through the mess that’s out there.”

 [source: Washington Post]

Forget Me

Mary Abigail "Abby" Wambach (born June 2, 1980) is an American retired soccer player, coach, two-time Olympic gold medalist and FIFA Women's World Cup champion.

Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images

A six-time winner of the U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year award As a forward, she currently stands as the highest all-time goal scorer for the national team and holds the world record for international goals for both female and male soccer players with 184 goals. In 2012, Wambach was awarded the 2012 FIFA World Player of the Year, becoming the first American woman to win the award in ten years. In May 2015, she was included in Time Magazine's Time 100 list as one of the 100 most influential people in the world.



"Forget me. Forget my number. Forget my name. Forget I ever existed. Forget the medals won, the records broken and the sacrifices made. I want to leave a legacy where the ball keeps rolling forward, where the next generation accomplishes things so great that I am no longer remembered. So forget me, because the day I’m forgotten is the day we will succeed." 

Waterloo Bridge

Waterloo Bridge is called the Ladies Bridge because it was mainly built by women.
photo credit Moacir P. de Sá Pereira


It was a time when London was being pummelled by the Luftwaffe (the official name for the Nazi air force founded in 1935), causing mass destruction to buildings that had stood for centuries.

Undeterred by the nightly raids during the Blitz, however, a group of women who have largely gone ignored until now never lost their resolve to build what is now one of the city's most important bridges.

Their work on Waterloo Bridge left it with the moniker of Ladies Bridge, but this fact has been ignored by all but a few.

There is no remaining photographic or written evidence of the women building the bridge, indeed many people who saw the construction efforts say they cannot recall seeing any women there.

Their work is now being recognised after construction historian Christine Wall worked with filmmaker Karen Livesey, looking into the reason why they have been ignored.

'The Ladies Bridge' reveals that their absence from historic records is put down to the liquidation of Peter Lind, the construction firm behind the bridge.

Peter Mandell, manager of the company, explained: 'The difficulty with the Peter Lind records were that when the company went into liquidation in the late 1980s, a lot of their information was kept or pillaged by people who wanted a keepsake of their time with Peter Lind.

'But it was generally well known that, anecdotally if you like, that there were women working, and in fact names of a particular lady was given to me at the time.'

Because of the lack of pictorial and written evidence, it is not known what work the women carried out on the bridge, but because many men were out fighting in World War Two, their effort is believed to be significant.

Mr Mandell told the Smithsonian: 'There's no hidden agenda behind their unacknowledged achievements - the archive was simply lost when Lind temporarily suspended trading in the 1970s.

'We're very proud of our female workforce. We're rebuilding this archive and want to honour them with a plaque on the bridge.'

In 1944, two years after the bridge was partially opened, 25,000 women were in the construction industry working as brick layers, labourers and joiners.

They worked on the understanding that they would be paid less than their male counterparts and would give up their new jobs when the men returned to war.

The bridge was opened with a proper ceremony in December 1945 once the war was over, but the women were not acknowledged for their work.

Labour politician Herbert Morrisso said: 
'The men who built Waterloo Bridge are fortunate men. They know that, although their names may be forgotten, their work will be a pride and use to London for many generations to come.'

Although they were not called upon to go into combat, they could join the Women's royal Naval Service (Wrens), Women's Auxiliary Air Force (Waffs) or the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS).

Elsewhere in the war, women were drafted in to jobs that were previously carried out by men and in the metal and chemical industries they made up one third of the total workforce.

They worked in factories creating weapons that would be used on the battlefield at the same time as running their homes and coping with rationing.

More women were employed in industrial sectors in the early forties as the segregation between men and women diminished.

[source: DailyMail]


Red Red Red

At the court of Louis XIV women used lemons to redden their lips.




Women have used the lemon for centuries to help relieve colds, sore throats, asthma, rheumatism, upset stomachs, sweeten breath and whiten teeth. It was even used by the ladies of Louis XIV's court to redden their lips.


Keeping Company


In Saudi Arabia, it is illegal for women to enter hospitals unaccompanied by men.



The Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Haia) has officially prevented women from visiting medical clinics without male guardians.
This came after a member of the Council of Senior Scholars issued a “fatwa” (edict) prohibiting women from visiting male doctors without having male guardians present.

[read more: arabnews]

Streets of Rome


Rome has 7,575 streets named after men but only 580 after women.

Size Doesn't Matter, or Does it?


88% of women routinely wear shoes that are too small for their feet.


Trousers in Paris

Until January 2013, it was illegal for women in Paris to wear trousers.

Amazon wearing trousers, 470BC