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Sunday, November 8, 2009

Life in the FAST LANE! Catching up!

Well it’s been awhile (AGAIN!) but here I am ready to post some new and exciting stuff for all you cyber groupies!

There have been several events in which Ronn and I had attended, most recently Plaza Community Services annual fundraiser this year once again at Union Station, Los Angeles, CA. This years honorees were Monica Garcia, President Los Angeles School Board and Frank J. Quevedo, retired VP Equal Opportunity, Southern California Edison. Cecilia Mercado once again did a FANTASTIC job coordinating the event (with the always watchful eye of Gabriel Buelna) and her hard work showed as the event was a success! It was nice go see my very best GIRL friend, Celina Meza and her handsome husband Lucio that nite, we just don’t get to see enough of those two. This evening also was my first attempt at putting together a video where I NARRATED… I guess my funny voice isn’t that bad! Please visit plazacs.org and make a donation to a wonderful organization!



The gang having a great time!



The table settings were fabuloso!



Mr. Ronn Savala and our friends Diane and Henry Yuen



Buena Vista Furniture's Ruthie & Joseph Torre... aren't they a handssome couple!



Ms. Monica Garcia and friends



Piliar Buelna and Xavier having a good time!



Some other friends we don't get to see enough of... Willie and Rosanna Perez-Trivino and mama



ITALIAN HALL FOUNDATION


Ronn and I went up to Sacramento to take down/pack up the exhibit for the Italian Hall Foundation, which is scheduled to be displayed in San Pedro, CA during the month of December. It’s a great bit of Italian American history so as soon as I get the official info I will post and alert all! And once again if you’d like to make a contribution to another great organization please visit ItalianHall.org


PROYECTO PASTORAL


Proyecto Pastoral is doing this a little differently this year with their fundraiser… it’s a luncheon! Fatima A. Djelmane and the gang over at Proyecto promise it will be nice afternoon with special guest Fr. Gregory Boyle! Visit Proyecto for more info.

2010 NATIONAL BLACK HISTORY MONTH - FEBRUARY

We have new posters up at Diversity Graphics for 2010. The theme for National Black History Month 2010 is "The History of Black Economic Empowerment". The question: Who is an Economic leader? A person who makes choices that lead to changes in the kinds of opportunities people have. Our poster was designed to list a few of the many Black Americans who have changed economics through leadership, invention, performance, and many other forms... bringing change and opportunities to all Americans. To name a few: PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA, SHIRLEY ANITA ST. HILL CHISHOLM, ROSA PARKS, PRINCE, FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS HARPER, ERWIN MAGIC JOHNSON, GENERAL COLIN POWELL, JACKIE ROBINSON, LENA HORNE, REV. JESSIE JACKSON, OPRAH WINFREY, ELIZABETH “BESSIE” COLEMAN, ROBERT L. JOHNSON, GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER, MADAM C.J. WALKER, DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR., SOROR CORETTA SCOTT KING, MAYA ANGELOU, ELLA FITZGERALD, VENUS AND SERENA WILLIAMS, MICHAEL JORDAN, BILLIE HOLIDAY, RUSSELL SIMMONS, JOHN JOHNSON, JOSEPINE BAKER, BERRY GORDY, JR., FREDERICK DOUGLASS, MUHAMMAD ALI, TIGER WOODS, MARIAN ANDERSON, WILLIAM EDWARD DUBOIS, SIDNEY POITER, DANIEL “CHAPPIE” JAMES, JR., MICHAEL JACKSON, EDUCATORS, PARENTS, AND THE LIST GOES ON…



2010 National Black History Month Poster

2010 NATIONAL WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH - MARCH

2010 marks the 30th Anniversary of Women’s History Month. The theme for this historic celebration is “Writing Women Back into History”. Not that they ever left but we want to recognize many who left their impact in the last 30 years.

Here is our historical list:
1980: President Jimmy Carter issued a Presidential Message to the American people, encouraging the recognition and celebration of women’s historic accomplishments during the week of March 8th, Women’s History Week • New guidelines from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission prohibit sexual harassment. 1981: Sandra Day O’Connor is named the first woman justice of the Supreme Court • Los Angeles based all girl band the “Go-Go’s” became the first girl band that played their instruments to have a Number 1 Record. 1982: Only three states short of ratification, the ERA expires. 1983: Sally Ride becomes the first U.S. woman in space. • The Color Purple, a novel by Alice Walker published in 1982, won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, making Alice Walker the first African American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction • Toni Morrison became the first African American winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. 1984: Geraldine Ferraro becomes the first woman nominated by a major political party to run for vice president of the United States. • Leontine T. C. Kelly became the first woman bishop of any major American religious denomination, the United Methodist Church • Vanessa Williams became first African American selected as Miss America; when she resigned after a scandal, Suzette Charles, Miss New Jersey, became the second African American Miss America. 1986: The space shuttle Challenger explodes, killing seven crew members including teacher Christa McAuliffe • Willie B. Barrow became President of Operation PUSH • Ella Baker died (civil rights activist). 1987: Carrie Saxon Perry, elected mayor of Hartford, Connecticut, becoming the first African American woman mayor of a large American city. 1988: Florence Griffith Joyner sets a world record in the 200-meter sprint at the Olympics. 1989: Oprah Winfrey, first African American woman to host a nationally-syndicated talk show, founded Harpo Productions to produce television shows and movies • (January 29) Barbara Harris elected first woman bishop of the Episcopal Church. 1990: Sharon Pratt Kelly elected mayor of Washington, DC, the first African American mayor of a major American city • Roselyn Payne Epps became the first woman president of the American Medical Association • Debbye Turner became third African American Miss America • Sarah Vaughan died (singer). 1991: The U.S. Department of Labor establishes the Glass Ceiling Commission to eliminate the barriers that block qualified women from advancements in the workplace • Clarence Thomas nominated for a seat on the US Supreme Court; Anita Hill, who had worked for Thomas in the federal government, testified about repeated sexual harassment, bringing the issue of sexual harassment to public attention (Thomas was confirmed as Justice) • Marjorie Vincent became fourth African American Miss America. 1992: The 1992 election doubles the percentage of women in Congress; as a result, 1992 is dubbed the Year of the Woman • (August 3) Jackie Joyner-Kersee became the first woman to win two Olympic heptathlons • (September 12) Mae Jemison, astronaut, became the first African American woman in space • (November 3) Carol Moseley Braun elected to the US Senate, the first African American woman to hold that office. 1993: Young girls are introduced to the workplace as the Ms. Foundation for Women launches its first annual Take Our Daughters to Work Day • The Vietnam Women’s Memorial is erected in Washington, D.C. • Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Attorney General Janet Reno are appointed • Rita Dove became the first African American poet laureate • (September 7) Joycelyn Elders became the first African American and first woman US Surgeon General. 1994: The Violence Against Women Act is passed to combat gender-based violent crimes • Kimberly Aiken became fifth African American Miss America. 1995: (June 12) Supreme Court, in Adarand v. Pena, called for “strict scrutiny” before establishing any federal affirmative action requirements • Ruth J. Simmons installed as president of Smith College in 1995. becoming the first African American president of one of the “Seven Sisters”. 1997: Madeleine Albright is confirmed as the first woman U.S. secretary of state. • U.S. Army General Claudia Kennedy becomes the first woman three-star general. • The Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) debuts. • (June 23) Betty Shabazz, widow of Malcolm X, died of burns sustained in a June 1 fire in her home. 1998: • DNA evidence was used to test the theory that Thomas Jefferson fathered the children of his slave, Sally Hemings -- most concluded that the DNA and other evidence confirmed the theory. • (September 21) track and field great Florence Griffith Joyner died (athlete; first African American to win four medals in one Olympics; sister-in-law of Jackie Joyner-Kersee). 2000: (July) Venus Williams became the first African American to win the women’s title at Wimbledon since Althea Gibson (1957-58) • Condoleezza Rice named as the next Secretary of State, the first African American woman to hold that position 2001: • Arkansas named a state holiday for Daisy Bates, the first state to name a holiday for an African American woman • Ruth Simmons, Brown University, became the first African American president of an Ivy League university. 2002: (March 24) Halle Berry became the first African American to win the Best Actress Oscar • (May 22) Bobby Frank Cherry found guilty of murder in the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham which killed four African American girls, ages 11-14. 2003: (January) bus, made famous by Rosa Parks’s refusal to give up her seat, added to exhibit at Henry Ford Museum, Michigan • (June 23) Supreme Court upheld affirmative action used in university admissions • (September) Carol Moseley Braun announced her candidacy for US president, the second African American woman to run for that office. 2004: (January 14) Carol Moseley Braun dropped her race for the US presidency. 2008: Sarah Palin Makes History as First Female Vice Presidential Nominee of Republican Party • Millions of Americans have voted for Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton for President of the United States...more than for any other woman primary candidate in history. 2009: Senate Votes 68 to 31 to Confirm Sonia Sotomayor to Supreme Court making her the first Latina/Latino to serve on the US Supreme Court.



2010 National Women's History Month Poster

Well that's it for now, I guess it was a eye full!

Peace to everyone.

Congratulations to our Rachel Braver of GLAD!




Council District 14 resident/businesswoman received honor at Women in Business Awards luncheon- Oct. 2nd


GLAD’s Director of Public Relations received the prestigious Outstanding Non-Profit Employee Award



Los Angeles, October 9, 2009: Rachel Braver, Director of Public Relations for the Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness, Inc. more commonly known as GLAD, received the prestigious Outstanding Non Profit Employee Award appointed by the California State Legislator last week at the Women in Business Awards luncheon. State Senator Carol Liu (D-La Cañada Flintridge), Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) and Assemblymember Anthony Portantino (D-La Cañada Flintridge) honored Braver and 24 other exceptional businesswomen at the 10th Annual Women in Business Legislative Update and Awards Luncheon on Oct. 2, 2009, at the Pasadena Hilton.




Braver is committed to ensuring equal access of the deaf and hard of hearing community to the same opportunities afforded their hearing counterparts. With purpose directed around the social, recreational, cultural, educational, and vocational well-being of GLAD’s deaf and hard of hearing consumers, Braver handles public affairs, donor relations, promotions and marketing for this social service agency. (www.gladinc.org) She oversees the implementation of booths, exhibits, community events and fundraisers; provides sensitivity trainings, produces agency-wide printed materials with a universal positive image and serves as a community liaison with community leaders, corporate sponsors, organizations and media representatives. Her bold efforts continue to bridge the gap between deaf and hearing worlds.



A certified sign language interpreter by the National Association of the Deaf (NAD IV), her professional/personal affiliations include: Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf (RID), Southern California chapter (SCRID), Perinatal Foundation for the Deaf (www.perinatalfoundationdeaf.org), and Sign World TV (www.signworldtv.com). She is actively involved in the Eagle Rock Chamber of Commerce, Jewish Big Brother/Big Sisters program and Center for the Arts Eagle Rock. Braver and childhood friend are developing an affirmation t-shirt line for women who desire to inspire (www.thebeewear.com). Braver enjoys singing duets with dad, shopping for greeting cards with mom, participating in walk-a-thons for various causes close to her heart, traveling the world and salsa dancing the night away.



Each year, the Women in Business Awards recognize businesswomen who have contributed to the economic growth and well-being of Southern California. These women exemplify the broad range of accomplishments that women have achieved in our communities. Braver extends warm thanks to Renee Dominique (Center for the Arts), Jim Omahen (Councilmember Jose Huizar’s District Office), Linda Allen (ERCPR), Denise Miller (Glendale Adventist Medical Center) and Mark Martinez (Diversity Graphics) for nominating her for this honor.



The Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness, Inc. (www.gladinc.org) has been improving the lives of the deaf and hard of hearing since its establishment as a volunteer organization in 1969. Founded on the philosophy…”of, by, for and with the deaf and hard of hearing”, GLAD’s Deaf Community Center encompasses a wide array of specialized health and human service programs for the deaf and hard of hearing community.


Photo credit- Richshell Allen (Braver w/ parents, ILY photo and Rachel B.)