
Ciber-brating U
Women of DistinctionWNYWOMEN will be honoring women of distinction in the coming months. Women that have made enormous contributions throughout the history of our nation. These women are a small sample of countless women who have enriched the quality of life in our world. Their achievements should be a source of pride and inspiration to all women.
SUSAN B. ANTHONY (1820-1906) Susan Brownell Anthony was a zealous and tireless advocate for the rights of women and blacks. From the age of 17, when she was a teacher in rural New York State, she lobbied for equal pay for women tearchers, for coeducation, and for college training for girls. When Sons of Temperance refused to admit women into their movement, she organized the first women's temperance association, the Daughters of Temperance. Anthony lectured on women's rights and abolition, along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton. They secured the first laws in the New York State Legislature guaranteeing women rights over their children and control of property and wages. Early in the Civil War, Anthony worked with abolitionists and organized the Women's Loyal National League, which argued for emancipation. After the war, she unsuccessfully challenged the 14th Amendment to allow women and "Negroes" the right to voite. In 1869, Ms. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton formed one of several women's suffrage organizations. In 1890, the groups merged to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association, of which Anthony was president from 1892 to 1900. In 1872, Susan led a group of women to the polls in Rochester to test their right to the franchise under the 14th Amendment. She was arrested and fined, but she refused to pay. An early target of abuse and scorn, Susan B. Anthony eventually became a national heroine. With the issue of a dollar coin in 1979, she became the first woman to be depicted on United States currency. She spent most of her life in the Rochester area and died there in 1906. Text sources: Merriam-Webster, Inc,? www.encyclopedia.com/articles/00574.html Honoring Women's Contributions to New York compliment of Senator Mary Lou Rath
Labor & Business
Louise Blanchard Bethune (1865-1913) Louise Blanchard Bethune was the first American woman known to work as a professional architect. She also was the first woman to be elected a member of the American Institue of Architects, and the first woman to be named a fellow of that organization. A native of Waterloo in Seneca County, Ms. Bethune made a significant mark on the street scape of Buffalo. In 1888 she opened a Buffalo practice with her husband Robert, and she designed many buildings, including schools, factories, hotels, housing developments, residences and a bank. Ms. Bethune designed the Hotel Lafayette in Buffalo. A Buffalo music store she designed was one of the country's first structures with a steel frame and poured concrete slabs. . Text source: The Book of Women's Firsts: Breakthrough Achievements of Almost 1,000 American Women, by Phyllis Read and Bernard Witlieb From CS to CS5:From CS to CS5: 3ds Max 2011 Essential Training with: Aaron F. Ross In 3ds Max 2011 Essential Training, author Aaron F. Ross demonstrates how to use this top-tier application for digital content creation, widely used in diverse industries such as architecture, industrial design, motion pictures, and games and virtual worlds. This course covers modeling with polygons, curves, and subdivision surfaces, defining surface properties with materials and maps, setting up cameras and lights, animating objects, and final output rendering. Running Time: 10:04 SharePoint 2010 Getting Started with: Simon Allardice In SharePoint 2010 Getting Started, senior author Simon Allardice walks through the first few hours a new user will spend with SharePoint working with Web sites, communities, content, and search. This course covers creating and using SharePoint sites, lists and libraries, how SharePoint streamlines teamwork, Office integration, and solutions for workflows and business intelligence. Running Time: 2:29 with: Christopher Brooks In Pro Tools 8: Film Scoring, author Christopher Brooks introduces the tools in Avid’s digital recording, editing, and mixing software used for creating music for films, television and other visual media. Its wide-spread use on scoring stages and dubbing stages makes it the ideal choice for many of the tasks associated with creating music for films, television, and other visual media. This course also covers creating effective session templates, preparing recording sessions, and final mixing techniques. Running Time: 2:38 Photoshop CS5 for Photographers: Camera Raw 6 with: Chris Orwig In Photoshop CS5 for Photographers: Camera Raw 6, Chris Orwig provides in-depth training on Camera Raw 6, the CS5 component that enables photographers to open and manipulate images in non-destructive and now even more efficient ways. This course covers the benefits of the raw processing, which makes it possible to more precisely control an image’s appearance—exposure, shadow and highlight detail, color balance, sharpness, and more—including new workflow procedures and technical concepts and issues. Learn the entire Camera Raw workflow, from opening and resizing, toning and cropping, to sharpening and saving. Running Time: 6:28 with: AIGA As a long-time member of AIGA and newly elected member of its national board of directors, lynda.com founder Lynda Weinman was invited to attend the organization’s annual design awards gala in New York City last fall. A few days before the event, she spent some time getting to know some of the AIGA’s key members and touring the organization’s offices and archives. Lynda’s journey introduces us to the professional association for design, through the eyes of some of the most talented and influential designers of our time. Lynda visits AIGA’s National Design Center on Fifth Avenue, home to the breathtaking design archives (dating back to the 1920’s) as well as this year’s premiere of 365: AIGA’s Annual Design Exhibition. She also touches down at New York’s School of Visual Arts and at Sterling Brands, the largest brand consultancy in the country, located in the Empire State building. Those interviewed include executive director Ric Grefé, national AIGA president Debbie Millman, former president Sean Adams, and editor Steven Heller from Voice: AIGA’s Journal of Design. Running Time: 1:01 with: Karen Fredricks In Outlook 2010 New Features, Karen Fredricks demonstrates the new and upgraded features in Outlook 2010. This course teaches how to create Quick Steps to automate commonly performed tasks, find email faster with enhanced search, and connect to social networking sites such as LinkedIn directly within Outlook. Running Time: 0:44 Excel 2007: Managing Multiple Worksheets and Workbooks with: Dennis Taylor In Excel 2007: Managing Multiple Worksheets and Workbooks, author Dennis Taylor shows how to move and copy data to multiple worksheets and gives tips for adding, moving, and navigating worksheets and workbooks efficiently. This course covers how to make global changes, create simple formulas that connect different worksheets, make super-efficient 3-D formulas to calculate summary totals from multiple worksheets, and use pivot tables to summarize data from multiple workbooks. Running Time: 1:12 with: David Diskin In PowerPoint 2010 New Features, David Diskin explores the latest version of Microsoft’;s presentation software. This course covers themes and transitions, the ability to add equations and over forty new SmartArt diagrams to presentations, new photo retouching and video editing features, and new ways to collaborate and share presentations across the Internet. Running Time: 1:05 with: Dennis Taylor In Excel 2007: Macros in Depth, author Dennis Taylor demonstrates common tasks for which macros are used, and walks through the process of creating and running simple macros. This course also covers more advanced topics, including making macros widely available through the Personal Macro Workbook, recording a macro in stages, absolute and relative recording, and using Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) for actions that can’t be recorded. The course wraps up with a macro project that brings together each of the elements in a real-world scenario. Running Time: 2:29 with: David Rivers In OneNote 2010 New Features, David Rivers demonstrates the new and enhanced features in Microsoft’s robust application for gathering and sharing information. The course reviews OneNote 2010 interface features, including the Ribbon and Backstage View, and workflow enhancements such as quick filing, linked notes, and Word styles. It also teaches new and improved ways to collaborate on notebooks with others. Running Time: 0:58 with: Simon Allardice In SharePoint 2010 New Features, Simon Allardice highlights the new tools and user interface enhancements Microsoft includes in the 2010 version of SharePoint Server. This course covers document collaboration and the social computing features in SharePoint, editing pages, creating themes, and integration with Office 2010. Improvements to the user interface, as well as updated permission controls, are also demonstrated. Running Time: 1:59 with: Steve Nelle In 3ds Max 2011 New Features, author Steve Nelle introduces the new features and productivity enhancements in 3ds Max 2011, with a special emphasis on the Slate Material Editor and CAT character animation system. The course examines enhancements to existing features, customization options to the modeling ribbon, scene management improvements, as well as creating scene objects using the Object Paint tool. Running Time: 2:44 with: George Maestri Author George Maestri explores the significant and robust feature set in Maya 2011 that add functionality for its 3D workflows in Maya 2011 New Features. This course covers the addition of Bezier curves for NURBS modelers, the Connect Component and Spin Edge tools in the polygonal modeling mode, and rigging tools for character animation. Enhancements to rendering and special effects are also reviewed. Running Time: 1:22 How Women's History Month Came AboutWomen’s History Month, now celebrated annually in the United States, grew out of a week long celebration of women’s contributions to culture, history and society organized by the school district of Sonoma, California, in 1979. The idea quickly caught on within communities, schools and organizations across the country. In 1981, the U.S. Congress made it official, passing a resolution establishing Women’s History Week. Six years later, the event was expanded into the entire month of March. Each year, the National Women’s History Project selects a theme that highlights achievements by distinguished women in specific fields, from medicine and the environment to art and politics. The 2010 theme, “Writing Women Back into History,” commemorates the project’s 30th anniversary and recognizes efforts to document women’s accomplishments and experiences in textbooks and other educational materials.
BLUE FRIDAYSWILL YOU WEAR BLUE??? |










