Word: gloria
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...jailer who she says attacked her sexually. When Inez Garcia, a Chicane woman in Soledad, Calif., shot a man to death 27 minutes after he allegedly held her down during a rape, a smattering of feminists loudly applauded the act. Though troubled by this vigilante version of justice, Feminist Gloria Steinem asked: "But what do we do with our rage...
...academic seriousness. In any case, today 71 colleges-a record-now have women in the president's chair, including Hunter, Wellesley, Goucher and Wheaton. Last month Smith College, the nation's largest private women's college (2,600 students)-and the school that produced Feminists Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan and Sylvia Plath-installed its first woman president. She is Jill Ker Conway, 40, an Australian who grew up on a sheep ranch and obtained a Ph.D. in history from Harvard. A prime virtue of women's colleges, Conway is persuaded, is that they tend to take...
Jones, 53, is also marking another return. He has come back to the U.S. after having lived for 16 years in Paris and is now settled on a farm in eastern Long Island with his wife Gloria and two teen-age children. He gives three reasons for his repatriation: "If there is any real cultural revolution going on in the world, it is here. Second, Europe is sinking back into separatism; it is stopping dead in the water. And, third, there is old age. I wanted to come home...
...whom disagree with each other." And the way she usually makes that point. In this collection of 25 deftly written little essays most of which originally appeared in Esquire or New York magazines, is to zero in on all sorts of different women, all of them indisputably individual--Gloria Steinem. Julie Nixon Eisenhower, Linda Lovelace. But there is one highly individual woman who is present in all of them--sometimes lurking in the background, more often right up front--and that is Nora Ephron herself...
...When Gloria Steinem turns to her at the Democratic Convention, tears of frustration rolling down her cheeks, all Ephron can think is, "I have never cried over anything remotely political in my life, and I honestly have no idea of what to say." Here Ephron is obviously trying to underline the difference between herself and Steinem, between two individual women who both consider them selves part of the movement. But her underlining is gratuitous; what we're interested in at the moment is what's going on in Steinem's mind, not in Ephron...