Women’s International Center [WIC] was founded in 1982 as a non-profit education and service foundation [501c3] with the mission to ‘acknowledge, honor, encourage and educate women’. Since its inception WIC has fulfilled its purpose in many ways. Beginning in 1983 the LIVING LEGACY AWARDS began to ACKNOWLEDGE, HONOR and ENCOURAGE WOMEN. read more

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WIC Biography Index

 


[ A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | T | U | W | Y | Z ]


-A-
Aker, Dee
Alexander, Jane
Anchondo, Sr. Dolores
Anderson, Dame Judith
Angelou, Maya
Aquino, Corazon
Ash, Neil
Azzarolo, Ana Maria

-B-
Bailey, Pearl
Bakoyiannis, Dora
Bashkiroff, Anne
Beam, Lillian Kennedy
Bhutto, Benazir
Blow, Lieutenant Elizabeth D.
Blyth, Ann
Borsum, Bente
Brenner, Sister Antonia
Brigitte, Bridget McDonald Ph.D.
Brophy-King, Reba
Burch, Laurel
Burrows, General Eva
Buxton, Laura

-C-
Calderone, Mary S.
Caldicott, Helen
Capobianco, Gigi
Carroll, Pat
Carter, Elaine
Chadwick, Florence
Clinton, Hillary Rodham
Conner, Elizabeth Barrett
Colarusso, Jean
Crea, Captain Vivian S.
Crean, Donna

-D-
Dailey, Ann Armstrong
DaMetz, Claudia
Dassanowsky, Elfi von
Debakey, Michael E.
Debolt, Dorothy and Robert
Diamant, Kathi
Diller, Phyllis
Dirk-Uys, Pieter
Dunlap, Brigadier General Lillian

-E-
Embery, Joan
Emerald, Marti
Engstrand, Iris H. W., Ph. D.

-F-
Fabray, Nanette
Feinstein, Dianne
Figueredo, Anita
Finnbogadottir, Vigdis
Fisher, Maria
Ford, Betty
Foster, Pauline M.
Fouque, Antoinette
Ronne, Froman
Fromm, Hanna

-G-
Garson, Greer
Gatzoyiannis, Eleni
Glenner, Joy and George
Gilot, Francoise
Goodall, Jane
Grobstein, Dr. Ruth
Gutierrez, Annie
Gwinn, Casey

-H-
Hayworth, Rita

Hagen, Uta
Hale, Clara
Hallaren, Colonel Mary A.
Harder, Sarah
Harris, Elaine K.
Harris, Major General Marcelite J.
Hayes, Alice
Hayes, Helen
Hayslip, Le Ly
Hazard, Roberta
Hedren, Tippi
Hepburn, Audrey
Hope, Dolores
Hopper, Rear Admiral Grace
Howell, Doris A., M.D.
Huxley, Laura

-J-
Jeffries, Herb
Jeffreys, Anne
Johnson, Barbara Piasecka
Jones, Jeanne

-K-
Khan, Princess Yasmin Aga
Keating, Cathy
Kennedy, Lieutenant General Claudia J.
Kennedy, Rose Fitzgerald
Killea, Lucy
King, Billie Jean
Knopf, Mildred O.
Kroll, Lucy
Krupp, Robin Rector

-L-
Labouisse, Eve Curie
Laine, Frankie
Lappin, Debra R., Esq.
Launer, Pat
Lee, Peggy
Lightner, Candy
Longenecker, Martha

-M-
MacCurtain, Margaret
Mamonova, Tatyana Valentina
Mann, Rhonda Fleming
McBrayer, Sandra
McDonald Ph.D., Bridget Brigitte
McDonald, Professor Marianne
McMillan, Gloria
Mead, Margaret
Meir, Golda
Merrill, Dina
Miller, Ann
Mitchell, Grace
Muray, Major General Raymond L.
Murray, Zona D.
Mutter, Lieutenant General Carol A.

-N-
Neal, Patricia
Nielsen, Charlotte
Newkirk, Ingrid

-O-
O'Brien, Margaret
O'Brien, Mavourneen

-P-
Page, Anita
Page, Patti
Parrish, Phyllis
Pauling, Linus
Petrie, Dorothea
Pintasilgo, Maria da Lourdes
Powers, Diane
Prisk, Jenni

-R-
Rector, Robert
Remick, Lee
Reno, Janet
Rhodes, Zandra
Ride, Sally Kristen
Rinpoche, GankarTulku
Robbins, Pauline Frederick
Robinson, Rachel
Rogers, Ginger
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Ross, Elisabeth Kuber
Ross, Marion
Russell, Jane

-S-
Sadat, Jehan
Sagan, Ginetta
Salk, Jonas
Sally, Jones
Scobee, June
Shouse, Catherine Filene
Silbert, Mimi
Sills, Beverly
Simpson, Master Chief Petty Officer Ginger Lee
Singh, MU3 Francine
Slater-Price, Pam
Smith, Linda
Smith, Sally
Snyder, Gloria Penner
Starr, Kay
Strauss, Iris Lynn
Szekely, Deborah

-T-
Thornton, Sally B.
Thornton, John and Sally
Thorson, Lisa
Tracey, Vice Admiral Patricia Ann
Turner, Lee

-U-
Uqualla, Anita

-V-
Vaughn, Mary
Vaught, Brigadier General Wilma L.
Veil, Simone

-W-
Walker, Bree
Walther-Meade, Yolanda
Wayne, June
Weatherford, Lily Fern
Weber, Shirley
Welsh, Anne Marie
Westheimer, Dr. Ruth
Weston, Elsie
Wexler, Nancy
White, Betty
Widnall, Sheila E., Ph.D.
Williams, Betty Jo
Wilson, Gayle
Withers, Jane
Witrogen McLeod, Beth
Wood, Beatrice
Wyeth, Henriette

-Y-
Yarnall, Agnes

-Z-
Zukor, Alice


 

Women's history: the examination of individual woman of historical significance, and the effect that historical events have had on women. Inherent in the study of woman's history is the belief that more traditional recordings of history have minimized or ignored the contributions of women and the effect that historical events had on women as a whole; in this respect, woman's history is often a form of historical revisionism, seeking to challenge or expand the traditional historical consensus // related search womens day,1920s womens,womens 1920,womens right to vote,womens rights movement,womens rights,womens right,women leaders,women politics,women rights movement,womens history,women movements,rights for women,women suffrage,1960 women,1960s women,womens politics,women timeline,history of women,1920 women,great women history,international women leaders,greatest women history,abortion women. Women's history: Women's rights refers to the social and human rights of women. In the United States, the abolition movements sparked an increased wave of attention on the status of women, but the History of feminism reaches far back before the 18th century... important women history,womens civil rights,civil rights women,great women,sponsor women,extraordinary women,womens international league for peace and freedom,all about women,women first,women's movement. Women's history: The advent of the reformist age during the 19th century meant that those invisible minorities or marginalized majorities were to find a catalyst and a microcosm in such new tendencies of reform. The earliest works on the so-called "woman question" criticized the restrictive role of women, without necessarily claiming that women were disadvantaged or that men were to blame. In the UK, the Feminism movement began in the 1800s and continues in the present day. // related search to women international,women's right movement,women right,women's movement history,charities for women,women leadership,historical women,famous women history,women in politics,most important women history,women rights today,women human rights,website for women,forum for women,history of women's rights,honor women,women of honor,women medal of honor recipients,women medal of honor winners,woman of honor,women medal of honor, 2010,2011,2013 Women's history: In the early 20th century, Simone de Beauvoir wrote a detailed analysis of women's oppression. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, feminist movements, such as the one in the United States substantially changed the condition of women in the Western world. The trigger for the revolution was the development of the birth control pill in 1960, which gave women access to easy and reliable contraception. Religion; The Hindu, Jewish, Sikh, Islamic and Christian views about women vary considerably today and have varied even more throughout the last two millennia, evolving along with or counter to the societies in which people have lived. For much of history, the role of women in the life of the church both local and universal has been downplayed, overlooked, or simply denied.When some women have interreligious marriage, or marriage (either religious or civil) between partners professing different religions, they seldom can do so without disobeying both of these religions.