SJNEW1503 (Mar 2015) - South Jersey NOW Alice Paul Chapter

Transcription

SJNEW1503 (Mar 2015) - South Jersey NOW Alice Paul Chapter
 March 2015
Chapter Program Meeting
March 11, 2015
Meet the 23nd Annual Feminist Essay Contest
Winners!
7:30 PM First Baptist Church, 19 West Main Street, Moorestown, NJ Contents
Feminist Calendar ................ p.2
News Bites &
Good Reads (New!) .............. p.7
Contacts ............................... p.7
Become a member! .............. p.7
Chapter Events
Planning Meeting: Tues. Mar. 3, 7:30 pm,
at the home of President, Judy Buckman
(see Contacts). Participate and vote on
chapter actions. To request time on the
agenda, call Judy Buckman. Open to
members.
NOW in the Afternoon Wed, Mar. 4, 1:30
pm at Moorestown Library. Contact:
Marion Steininger, 856-772-0689.
Program Meeting Wed. Mar. 11, 7:30 pm
at First Baptist Church, 19 West Main
Street, Moorestown.
Newsletter Mailing: Sun, Mar. 15, 10am-­‐
noon, home of Judy Buckman (see Contacts). Please volunteer! This issue of The Equal Write is partially
underwritten by the Judith Glick Buckman
Fund for the Future. To make a tax-deductible
contribution to the Fund, please make check
payable to JGB FFF and mail it to Judith
Glick Buckman Fund for the Future, P.O. Box
4725, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034.
In honor of Women's History Month, we will present awards and checks to
the wonderful students who submitted winning entries to our annual Feminist
Essay Contest. Expect to be invigorated by the enthusiasm of the next
generation of feminists —girls and boys alike. Show them the recognition they
deserve in taking on this critical topic, and come out to represent our chapter as
we salute the students, their families and their teachers. This year’s Essay
Contest topic was:
There are currently 99 female members of Congress out of 535 members. Of that number, there are 20 female Senators (20% of the total) and 79 female House members (18.2% of the total). That’s only 18.5% of Congress representing a country where approximately 51% of the population is female. Why is this? In 300 words or less, please consider the following: “You are running for the U.S. Senate or the House of Representatives. 1. What women's rights issues would be on your platform? 2. What obstacles are faced by female candidates? 3. What can be done to overcome these obstacles?” Our Winners Are:
Grade 12
1st prize: Amy Ribinsky, Shawnee High School
Grade 11
1st prize: Victoria Gilstrap, Eastern Regional High School
2nd prize: Hannah Morrissey, Eastern Regional High School
Grade 10
1st prize: Sarabeth Coyle, Cinnaminson High School
Apart from being extremely memorable for the students, the evening is inspiring
and affirming for those who attend. Chapter members have often said it is one of
their favorite program meetings of the year! Please join us!!
Program includes announcements, refreshments, and letter writing. Meetings are open to members and non-­‐members. Feminist Calendar
For phone numbers of chapter
members referenced below, see
Contacts, page 7.
Women’s Opportunity Center. There will be no
orientation session at the Women’s Opportunity
Center (WOC) in March or April but please make
an appointment to discuss their services. New
location is the Riverside Branch YMCA of
Burlington and Camden counties, 302 Commerce
Square Blvd, Burlington, NJ 08016. WOC assists
women who have lost financial support due to
separation, divorce, death, disability of spouse by
providing educational/vocational info, community
referrals, interest/aptitude testing, life skills
workshops, free career clothing. Childcare
available (reservations needed), 609-543-6200,
x224, www.woc-bc.org. WOC is now on Facebook
(like their page by visiting their website and
following the Facebook link). See also Gloucester
County’s program, People in Transition (2/25).
FEBRUARY 17
Kathleen Sebelius, former U.S. Secretary of
Health and Human Services, speaks on “The
Future of Health Care in America”, Princeton
University, Robertson Hall, Dodds Auditorium,
4:30-6. Open to the public, tickets required:
www.princeton.edu or 609-258-8909.
FEBRUARY 17-18
Intro to the Internet. How to perform a search,
navigate between pages and the basics of e-mail.
Women’s Opportunity Center (see top of calendar),
10:30-1.
FEBRUARY 18
“Going to Mississippi: If I Don’t, Who Will? The
Pursuit of Reproductive Justice” by Dr. Willie
Parker, who is serving the last remaining abortion
clinic in Mississippi (only one of two doctors
performing abortions at the last remaining clinic in
the state). In 2013, Parker received the George
Tiller M.D. Abortion Provider Award after the
doctor who was assassinated in 2009. Princeton
University, 4:30-6pm (see 2/17).
FEBRUARY 19
National Assoc. of Women Business Owners
(NAWBO) South Jersey’s Beyond the Glass
Ceiling Awards Gala featuring Pamela Slim who
created a powerful online site at Escape from
Cubicle Nation designed for corporate employees
who wanted to make the shift to entrepreneur.
Slim’s keynote will center on her most recent book
Body of Work; Finding the Thread that Ties Your
Story Together. The Mansion, Voorhees, 5-9pm,
85-722-8125, [email protected].
FEBRUARY 21
Clinic Escorts Needed. Two or three volunteers
needed on Saturday mornings to escort patients at
the South Jersey Women’s Center (across from
Wegmans) or the Cherry Hill Women’s Center
(Kings Hwy near Chapel Ave.). If you have had
the mandatory training but haven’t signed up for a
shift, please contact Joy Booth (see contact box).
FEBRUARY 22
National Stop the Violence Alliance presents
“The What About Youth Male Initiative Rites of
Passage” and Black History Month Celebration,
Rutgers University–Camden Student Center, free,
2-5pm, Stephanie Coney: 856-952-6291 or
[email protected].
FEBRUARY 23
Free Unemployment Workshop. Held every
Monday, Camden County College, Rohrer Center,
Rte 70 and Springdale Rd, Cherry Hill, 856-8746004 or see PowerPoint at www.camdencc.edu/
ce/train_unemployed.cfm.
FEBRUARY 24
Chapter Fundraiser: Bob Evans, Rte. 73 and
Fellowship Rd, Mt. Laurel. Eat-in or take-out from
7am-9pm. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, gluten–free,
$5 value menu, family meals to go, bakery,
desserts and more. Give your server the flyer
enclosed with last month’s issue or the coupon on
the back page of this issue, and 15% of your
check will be donated to South Jersey NOW. If
you want to have dinner in a private room with
other chapter members at 6:30 pm, RSVP to
Norma Blake (see contact list).
FEBRUARY 25
How to Start the Next Chapter of Your Life.
People in Transition, 7-9pm, at Rowan College at
Gloucester County (RCGC), 1400 Tanyard Rd,
Sewell,
NJ
08080,
856-468-5000,
www.RCGC.edu. Workshops are free and open to
those 18+ years. Registration is mandatory. The
group also assists women who have lost financial
support due to separation, divorce, death or
disability of a spouse by providing counseling,
community
referral,
job
search
skills,
vocational/personality surveys, and life skills. See
also Women’s Opportunity Center, Burlington and
Camden County’s program (see top of calendar).
FEBRUARY 26
Women in Transition—Financial Strategies for
Divorcees with Monique Castillo, Financial
Advisor. People in Transition (see 2/25), 7-9pm.
FEBRUARY 26-27
Job Searching Using Technology for InDemand Careers. Popular job websites, set up a
search profile, upload resumes, research
employers. Prior to workshop, participants must
have a WOC-approved resume and cover letter,
both must be mailed to your e-mail account.
Women’s Opportunity Center (see top of calendar),
9:30-noon.
FEBRUARY 28
NOW-NJ State Board Meeting hosted by Morris
County NOW, 9:15-3pm. To car pool, contact
Michelle McMullen, Rita Spaulding, Dea Evans,
Anita Sopenoff or Rick Gray. See: www.nownj.org.
Clinic Escorts Needed (two or three escorts are
needed, see 2/21).
Women, Families and Immigration presented
by WOMEN’S WAY, Moore College of Art, 20th
and the Parkway, Philadelphia, 9am-3:30pm, free
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but registration required: www.womensway.org or
215-985-3322.
MARCH 1
Single Payer Conference Call sponsored by
Healthcare-NOW!, 8pm. Dial-in number: 1-218862-1300; code: 441086. After introductions,
participants will be muted. If you have a question,
“raise your hand” by dialing 5* (organizers will unmute your line and call on you). Info on NJ’s
efforts to attain “Medicare for All” (unanimously
endorsed by South Jersey NOW, contact chapter
member Lynn O’Connell at LynnMarlton@aolcom.
MARCH 2
Nicholas Kristof, New York Times Op-Ed
columnist and Sheryl Wu Dunn, both are
Pulitzer Prize winner and co-authors (Women
Hold Up Half the Sky) present “A Path Appears;
Transforming Lives, Creating Opportunity”.
Princeton University, 4:30-6 (see 2/17).
MARCH 3
Chapter Planning Meeting at Judy Buckman’s
home, 7:30. If you’re a chapter member, please
plan to attend (call for directions).
Chapter newsletter deadline to submit stories,
articles or info to our new newsletter editor Janis
Hines ([email protected]).
MARCH 4
NOW in the Afternoon. South Jersey NOW’s
group for those unable to attend evening meetings
but anyone can participate. Instead of the
Moorestown Library, the group will meet at the
home of one of the members, 1:30 pm. Location
address, call Marion Steininger, 856-772-0689.
MARCH 7
Clinic Escorts Needed (two or three escorts are
needed, see 2/21).
MARCH 8
International Women’s Day. A celebration whose
origins trace back to protests in the U.S. and
Europe to honor and fight for political rights for
working women. U.S. women organized the first
Women’s Day in response to the 1911 Triangle
Shirtwaist Factory that killed 146 women trapped
in a locked workroom (our Program Meeting topic
several months ago). This inspired International
Women’s Day on March 8th. Feminists initiated
Women’s History Week which, in 1987, was
expanded to the entire month of March, through
the efforts of Congresswomen Bella Abzug. Plan a
community, group or school celebration with the
help of the National Women’s History Project’s
catalog (print or on-line) including posters,
calendars, placemats, speeches, videos,
Women’s
History
Performers,
all-in-one
celebration kit and more. 707-636-2888;
www.nwhp.org.
ERA Rally, Washington, D.C. Gather at noon on
the steps of the U.S. Capitol. As was the case with
our chapter namesake, Alice Paul, who authored
the original Equal Rights Amendment in 1923,
some activists said that they will chain themselves
to the White House until women’s rights are
included in the U.S. Constitution. One of the rally
speakers will be activist Helene Swanson who
started at the Golden Gate Bridge and walked for
the past year through 15 states that have not yet
ratified the ERA. Car pools to the rally from our
area will be arranged. Please share this
information and ask friends to go with you. Info:
415-233-2049 or www.ERArally.org.
MARCH 10
Mother-Daughter Self Defense with certified
trainer and mixed martial arts professional to learn
tips and techniques to create awareness of
surroundings and protect yourself both physically
and on social media. Ripa Center for Women,
Centennial Blvd. Voorhees, 6-7:30, free, 1-800826-6737 or www.CoperHealth.org.
MARCH 10-APRIL 28
Bereavement Workshop. Learn to cope with
feelings, learn community resources, speak with
others in the same situation. Most benefit from
attending all eight sessions. Registration
mandatory. No new members after second
session. People in Transition (see 2/25), 7-8:30.
MARCH 11
Chapter Program Meeting, see front page.
What to Do When the Second Year Feels
Harder Than the First. People in Transition (see
2/25), 7-9pm.
MARCH 12
Nuts and Bolts of Elder Law. Bring lunch and
have your questions answered by Victoria Dalton,
Esq. People in Transition (see 2/25), 1-2:30pm.
MARCH 13-14
Ready to Run: Campaign Training for Women
sponsored by the Center for American Women
and Politics, for those who are considering
seeking public office, running for higher office or
working on a campaign. On Friday, preconference programs aimed at increasing the
participation of women of color in NJ politics will
be held (three separate sessions for Latina,
African American and Asian women). Douglass
Campus Center, Rutgers–New Brunswick. Info:
Deanna-Marie Norcross, 732-932-9384 ext.223
[email protected].
MARCH 14
Clinic Escorts Needed (two or three escorts are
needed, see 2/21).
MARCH 15
Chapter Newsletter Mailing, 10am-noon, Judy
Buckman’s home (see contact box). We’ll train
and feed you. Please volunteer—the work is easy
but very important. This is a great activity for new
or longtime members.
MARCH 16
Chapter’s Free Support Group for Separated
and Divorced Women facilitated by therapist Dr.
Donna Pellegrino, third Monday of each month,
6:30-8pm. The Psychology Group, 1030 N. Kings
Hwy, Suite 303, Cherry Hill 08003. Reservations
required!! If you don’t call ahead, the group might
not continue. Leave name and daytime phone on
Dr. Pellegrino’s voicemail, 856-667-9277 (speak
clearly and repeat number twice). You’ll be called
if the group is cancelled. Next meeting is 4/20
(reserve now!).
MARCH 17
Financial Aspects of Divorce, Navigate the
complicated and stressful process, avoid costly
mistakes, clarify your expectations and begin
planning for a “successful” divorce. People in
Transition (see 2/25), 6:30-8:30.
MARCH 18
Basic Budgeting Life Skills workshop.
Essential and non-essential purchases, short- and
long-term savings needs, use of credit and
insurance. People in Transition (see 2/25), 6-8pm.
MARCH 19
Alice Paul Institute Equality Awards honors
women who capture the spirit of Alice Paul and
advance women’s equality, including South Jersey
NOW members Barbara Irvine, Chris Borget and
Judy Buckman. The Westin Mount Laurel, 555
Fellowship Rd. (Route 73 intersection). Cocktail
hour and Raffle (6-7pm), followed by dinner and
awards presentation, $135 benefits API Girls
Leadership program ($63 is tax-deductible).
Tickets, program book or sponsorships: Paige,
856-231-1885 or [email protected].
Financial Strategies for Widows. Ninety-nine
percent of all women will be solely responsible for
their finances at some point in their lives. People
in Transition (see 2/25), 7-9pm.
MARCH 20-MAY 22
Advanced Computer Workshop, 40 hours of
intermediate level Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and
brief section on Access (no class 4/3 or 5/15).
People in Transition (see 2/25), 9:30-2:30.
MARCH 21
Clinic Escorts Needed (two or three escorts are
needed, see 2/21).
MARCH 21-23
11th Annual National Young Feminist
Leadership Conference sponsored by the
Feminist Majority Foundation. Workshops,
assemblies, special caucuses, mentoring, regional
caucuses, congressional briefing and visits.
http://feministcampus.org/conferences.
MARCH 22
Gathering to Celebrate the Life of George
(Peter) Wachtell. Last month, the chapter
expressed condolences to the family of Pete
Wachtell, member of South Jersey NOW for 24
years, who passed away on Dec. 31 at the age of
91. His memorial service will be held at the
Friends Meeting House, 800 S. Cropwell Rd.
Marlton, 1pm. Those who wish to can say a few
words, read a poem or share a remembrance.
Small reception will follow (please RSVP to Marion
Steininger: [email protected]).
MARCH 23
Barney Frank discusses his new book “Frank: A
Life in Politics from the Great Society to Same Sex
Marriage. America’s most influential gay politician
discusses his Congressional career, personal
struggles and successes and roadmap for
meaningful political change. Philadelphia Library,
7:30pm, $15, 1-800-595-4849.
MARCH 24
Save the date!—March 24, 2015, Chapter
Fundraiser at Iron Hill Brewery in Voorhees.
Please join us at the Iron Hill Brewery and
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Restaurant, 13107 Voorhees Town Center Blvd,
Voorhees, NJ, 856-545-9009 for lunch, dinner or
take-out. South Jersey NOW–Alice Paul Chapter
will receive 20% of the food proceeds. Our
monthly dine-out fundraisers are one more way
that we are trying to raise badly needed funds to
keep our Chapter going. We so appreciate your
support! If you have any questions, please call or
email Fran Forte (see contact box). Remember
to bring your voucher on March 24. Hope to
see you there!
Health Care Costs: How Do I Financially Plan
For Them? A new job or marital status or early
retirement can change the options available to you.
Learn to proactively prepare. People in Transition
(see 2/25), 7-9pm.
MARCH 25
How to Focus on the Most Important
Relationship: The One with Yourself. People in
Transition (see 2/25), 7-9pm.
MARCH 26
Outstanding Women of Burlington County
Awards. Michele Dorris (former Board Chair of
the Alice Paul Institute) will receive the award for
mentorship. The Merion, 1901 Route 130,
Cinnaminson. 5pm reception, 6:30 dinner. $75
(less if you join a table of 10), 609-265-3219.
How to Sell or Buy a House During Divorce.
Learn how to avoid nine critical mistakes. People
in Transition (2/25), 7-9pm.
MARCH 28
Clinic Escorts Needed (two or three escorts are
needed, see 2/21).
APRIL 9
Candice Bergen (winner of five Emmys and two
Golden Globes for her portrayal of Murphy Brown,
who also earned critical acclaim for Boston Legal
and her role in the Starting Over film for which she
won an Oscar nomination) discusses her new
book, A Fine Romance, which explores her life as
a wife and mother, acclaim as a film and TV star,
and the ups and downs of a singular life.
Philadelphia Library, 7:30pm, $15, 1-800-5954849.
APRIL 11
Women in the NAACP (WIN) Empowerment
Conference, Kennedy Center, Willingboro, 8am.
Info on tickets, vendor opportunities, program ad
or sponsorships: [email protected].
APRIL 12
Indigo Girls in concert at the Kimmel Center for
the Performing Arts, www.kimmelcenter.org.
APRIL 23
Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day.
Created in 1992 by the Ms. Foundation for
Women, this event is celebrated annually on the
4th Thursday of April for 37 million children,
parents, schools in over 3.5 million workplaces
across the country, and in over 200 countries
around the world. The day is scheduled on a
school day in the U. S., and schools are provided
with literature and encouraged to promote the
program. Educators are provided with materials
for incorporating career exploration into school
curricula on the day before or after the event. This
is a unique and fun way for children to explore the
many ways that adults earn a living. If you don’t
have a school-aged child to take to your
workplace, take your niece or nephew, or a
neighbor’s or friend’s child. For how-tos,
testimonials, products and so much more:
www.daughtersandsonstowork.org.
Laws of Separation and Divorce. Attorneys
speak on court procedures and timing, grounds of
divorce, selecting and helping your attorney,
setting goals, equitable distribution, custody,
visitation and alimony. People in Transition (see
2/25), 7-9pm.
APRIL 26
Women’s Medical Fund Bowl-A-Thon, bowling
fundraiser to knock down barriers to abortion
access, North Bowl, Northern Liberties,
Philadelphia, 4-7pm. judy@womensmedical
fund.rg.
APRIL 27
Navigating Child Support. For those who want to
establish paternity, file for support, enforce
existing order, learn what to expect in court; also
role of family court, probation and social services.
People in Transition (see 2/25), 6:30-8pm.
APRIL 30
WOMEN’S WAY 38th Annual Powerful Voice
Awards, Sheraton Center City. Join 1,200 other
women (the estrogen in the room is intoxicating!),
corporations and law firms who have purchased
tables at WW’s signature event that raises onequarter of its annual budget, 5-8:30 pm.,
www.womensway.org/events or 215-985-3322.
MAY 2
Camden County Women’s Health Conference,
“Mothers and Daughters”. Eastern Regional
High School, Laurel Rd, Voorhees, 8-3. Free
continental breakfast and box lunch, four sessions
of workshops, free parking and child care, exhibits
(on-line registration begins mid-March). If you
would be able to help staff our chapter table
selling t-shirts, buttons and bumper stickers,
please contact Judy Buckman.
MAY 11
WOMEN’S WAY Book Prize awarded to Janet
Mock for her memoir Redefining Realness: My
Path to Womanhood, Identify, Love and So Much
More, 5-7pm, www.womensway.org or 215-9853322.
MAY 28
NJ Citizen Action Annual Awards Dinner
salutes champions of social and economic justice,
including Legislator of the Year Bonnie Watson
Coleman, newly elected to NJ’s 12th
Congressional District and the only woman
representing NJ in the U.S. House of
Representatives, 6pm. Forsgate Country Club,
Monroe Township. Tickets: www.njcitizen
action.org.
JUNE 19-21
National NOW Conference, Hyatt Regency,
New Orleans. In addition to amazing speakers,
valuable skill-building workshops, and great local
food, the conference will also tackle the critical
issues of shaping the future of women’s rights as
well as bylaws and organization changes to make
NOW more relevant. Registration is $125 but
there is a sliding scale for members only ($5-100).
Online registration until 5/31 (if $5, register onsite).
Free childcare and alternate housing for members
only. Info: Meghan Czaikosi; [email protected],
1-202-628-8669, ext. 112 or Natalie, 1-800-8331354.
Your Ad Can Go Here, Too! Please see page 7 for Options and Pricing. WEBSITE MANAGER NEEDED
So that Lorraine Petrie can take over as our
Database Manager, we need someone to replace
her as our Website Manager. This is a job that can
be done on your own time and without attending
any meetings. Lorraine will send you a complete
job description, train you and answer questions as
needed, but here are the main responsibilities:
—Make monthly updates based on info from the
newsletter (new Program Meeting info and
Calendar items)
—Updates as needed (front page of website with
latest timely events, check webmail accounts).
—Annual updates to the website (after the
February elections, forward e-mail addresses
associated with website e-mail addresses)
–Other updates as needed (i.e., links page)
If you have additional questions, please contact
Lorraine Petrie or Judy Buckman (see contact
box).
PROGRAM MEETING REFRESHMENT
COORDINATOR NEEDED
South Jersey NOW’s current Program Meeting
Refreshment Coordinator, Michelle McMullen, has
recently become NOW-NJ’s new treasurer, so we
need someone to take over her chapter duties.
The Coordinator contacts refreshment volunteers
the weekend before our monthly Program Meeting
to remind them. Then, at the meeting, she sets up
the refreshments, paper goods and drinks (which
are stored at the First Baptist Church). This is an
easy, but important job, since having refreshments
at the meetings creates a warmer and more
inviting atmosphere especially for newcomers.
Michelle will be happy to train you and answer any
questions that arise. Please call Judy Buckman to
volunteer.
HELP NEEDED
In addition to the above, there are several other
openings that need to be filled. Term of office is
mid-Feb. 2015 to mid-Feb. 2016. Complete job
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descriptions are available for all vacancies. To
request one or several, send an e-mail to
[email protected]. In addition, the
person who held the job previously will be glad to
answer questions as well as to offer support
throughout the year. South Jersey NOW–Alice
Paul chapter is the largest chapter in the state. But
we need your help to be as active and productive
as we need to be. Please consider helping us with
one of these positions:
—Data Processing Manager (keep database upto-date and print labels for the newsletter)
—Program Speaker Coordinator (contact and
make arrangements with speakers on women’s
rights issues)
—Program Meeting Set-Up (set up tables, chairs
and materials from 6:30-7:15 the night of each
Program Meeting, you don’t need to stay for the
meeting unless you want to)
—Alice’s List Chair (contact candidates running
for local office, interview them with an assistant,
write up responses, determine which ones will be
endorsed or supported, collect checks on their
behalf, send to candidates).
—Women in NEED (WIN) Fund Coordinator
(fundraise to provide partial financial assistance to
low-income women who need help obtaining a
safe, legal abortion)
—Feminist Essay Contest (select topic, send
letter to list of teachers from our database, give
entries to readers, select and notify winners,
present awards).
Many of these jobs can be done by more than
one person. Please let us know if you’d be willing
to help with any of them!!
CHAPTER CONGRATULATIONS
South Jersey NOW wishes to congratulate former
South Jersey NOW newsletter editor, Jill Nash, on
her marriage to Anthony Arot on December 27,
2014. Their wedding was held at Mary Queen of
All Saints Church in Pennsauken, and the
reception was at the Atrium at the Curtis Center in
Philadelphia. Jill kindly consented to let us share
one of her wedding photos with you. We wish you
and Anthony a long and happy life together, Jill!!!
Also, congratulations to former South Jersey NOW
chapter president, former NOW-NJ Vice President
for Administration and our current Facebook
Coordinator, Jess Van Liere, who will complete
her MBA in March. Way to go, Jess!!
A Perilous Year for Abortion Rights
By The Editorial Board, New York Times, Jan. 20, 2015
The start of 2015 finds no letup in the attacks
on a woman’s constitutionally protected right to
make her own childbearing decisions. Republican
lawmakers and organizations devoted to
dismantling reproductive freedom have succeeded
in shrinking the already inadequate number of
abortion providers, making it exceedingly difficult,
if not impossible, for women—especially young
and poor women—to obtain safe and legal
abortion services in large swaths of Texas and
other parts of the country.
The dismal situation, created by the wave of
new state abortion restrictions in Republican-led
states over the past four years, would be even
worse if not for the willingness of some judges to
block unconstitutional laws. Defenders of abortion
rights have had their hands full trying to block or at
least minimize new restrictive laws, totaling 231,
according to the Guttmacher Institute, exceeding
the total for the entire previous decade.
Even as court battles play out in Texas and
elsewhere over aggressive limitations, such as
medically unnecessary hospital affiliation
requirements for doctors who perform abortions
and rules forcing abortion facilities to meet
hospital-style building codes, legislatures in states
like Missouri and Tennessee are gearing up to pile
on more restrictions.
So is Congress, where Republicans now
control both the House and Senate.
Already, six bills reviving old, bad ideas have
been introduced in the new Congress, including
one that would deny federal funds for family
planning to any organization that provides
abortions. Its main target is Planned Parenthood,
which provides access to birth control, and breast
and cervical cancer screening for millions of lowincome women, and offers abortion services.
On Thursday, the House is expected to vote on
the deceptively named Pain-Capable Unborn
Child Protection Act, sponsored by Representative
Trent Franks, Republican of Arizona. This
measure would prohibit almost all abortions 20
weeks after fertilization, flouting the Supreme
Court’s standard of fetal viability, generally put at
22 to 24 weeks post-fertilization.
It has other problems, too. It contains no
exception to protect a woman’s health, as current
law mandates, or for the majority of rapes and
incest crimes that go unreported. Its dangerously
constricted exception for situations in which a
woman’s life is in jeopardy would require women
to wait until their condition becomes lifethreatening before terminating a pregnancy. And it
would force women to decide whether to go
forward with a pregnancy before learning of a
major fetal abnormality or serious risks to their
own health.
Criminal penalties, fines and reporting
requirements would scare off doctors from helping
women in need of competent and compassionate
care.
The bill’s supporters cite polls showing the
popularity of a 20-week ban. But polls also
indicate that opinions can change quickly when
the real-world impact is better understood. The
proposed 20-week ban on the 2013 ballot in
Albuquerque was defeated by a vote of 55 percent
to 45 percent. Although it would have applied just
in Albuquerque, it would have affected the entire
state, since the only New Mexico clinics that
perform post-20-week abortions are in that city.
It remains to seen whether the Senate majority
leader, Mitch McConnell, will be able to muster the
60 votes needed to pass the bill in his chamber,
but he has vowed to try, notwithstanding President
Obama’s past veto threat.
Republicans scoff at accusations that they are
waging a war against women. But this should not
obscure a basic fact: The ability of women to
control their reproductive lives is essential for their
health, careers and equality.
White, Male
by Michele Kort, Ms. Blog, January 15, 2015
The 2015 Oscar nominations, announced this
morning, loudly echo Martha Lauzen’s most recent
report on the “celluloid ceiling” for women in
Hollywood. What Lauzen said about her findings
can equally be said of today’s nominees:
[They] drive home the point that men continue
to construct the vast majority of the visual and
aural worlds featured in U.S. films.
Let’s start with the “good news”: There are two
categories completely dominated by women—best
actress and best supporting actress!
The rest of the nominations, as a whole, are
disproportionately dismal for women and for
people of color. The biggest disappointment is the
lack of recognition for Ava DuVernay and the
African American actors in her film Selma. Yes, it
got a best picture nomination, and one for best
song, but why wasn’t DuVernay on the Best
Director list? Is it because of criticism of how she
handled LBJ’s role in the civil rights movement?
Here’s what Melissa Silverstein had to say about it
in Indiewire:
This snub feels like a kick in the teeth to
women directors everywhere. [DuVernay] ticked
all the boxes. Made a movie about a historical
figure whom people know. Made a movie about a
man [indeed, all the best-picture nominees are
about men]. Great reviews. Great lead
performance. … Movies that women direct don’t
usually get the studio financial support of millions
of dollars to compete in the Oscar race. Selma
did. It played hard. But the LBJ partisans played
harder, and clearly they won. They knocked down
a movie of towering significance, and quite frankly
it makes the Academy members look like idiots.
And here’s what Scott Mendelson added in
Forbes:
Selma is not the first “based on a true story”
picture that has come under fire for historical
inaccuracies. But it is the rare black-centric
historical drama told explicitly from the point of
view of its black protagonists. So it is both ironic
and infuriating that it has now been defamed
because of the (I would argue false) notion that it
isn’t nice enough to a really powerful white guy
who plays a key supporting role.
And, by the way, why wasn’t David Oyelowo
nominated for his much-praised portrayal of Martin
Luther King, Jr.? In fact, there are no actors of
- 5 - Equal Write
color among the best acting nominees, let alone
recognized—or given a chance to be
recognized—in so many other categories of
achievement. As The Atlantic put it, “The Oscars
Haven’t Been This White in 19 Years.”
Then there are all those categories in which
women are left out of the clubhouse:
cinematography, film scoring, screenplays, visual
effects, sound mixing. Not surprisingly, women are
best represented in fashion-related categories:
costume design, makeup, set decoration. And
documentary film—in which “Hollywood” has little
involvement—is rich with women in its credits; this
time, two of the five Best Documentary Feature
films and two of the five Best Documentary Short
films are directed by women. (You go, Laura
Poitras, Rory Kennedy, Ellen Goosenberg Kent
and Aneta Kopacz!)
And what about Mica Levi? She’s one of the
rare women composers getting “Hollywood”
attention these days. And that’s not surprising,
since women scored only 1 percent of the top 250
films in Lauzen’s study. But while others have
recognized Levi’s talent on the film Under the
Skin—she won Best Composer at the European
Film Awards and was tied for the honor of Best
Music/Score from the Los Angeles Film Critics—
the Oscars had no room for her. Instead, the
Academy stuck with standard favorites such as
Alexandre Desplat (two nominations) and Hans
Zimmer.
I suppose the only other good news this
morning is that so many people are pissed off
about the nominations. That indicates a growing
recognition that the film industry needs much more
diversity and gender parity. And even if Academy
voters are behind the curve, regular moviegoers
are showing their love for DuVernay’s Selma and
also-unnominated Angelina Jolie’s Unbroken.
Keep casting those votes at the box office so that
Hollywood knows how much we want to see films
about, and made by, women and people of color!
And prepare yourself for the stupid red-carpet
questions that will be asked of the women at the
upcoming Oscar ceremonies. …
West Virginia Republican Says Rape Can Be
‘Beautiful’ if It Produces a Child
By David Ferguson, Alternet, February 6, 2015
A Republican state lawmaker in West Virginia
said on Thursday that while rape is horrible, it’s
“beautiful” that a child could be produced in the
attack.
According to the Huffington Post, Charleston
Gazette reporter David Gutman was on the scene
when Delegate Brian Kurcaba (R) said, “Obviously
rape is awful,” but “What is beautiful is the child
that could come from this.”
Kurcaba made the remarks during a House of
Delegates discussion of a law outlawing all
abortions in the state after 20 weeks’ gestation. At
20 weeks, anti-choice activists and lawmakers
allege, a fetus can feel pain and is therefore too
viable to abort.
The bill was passed by West Virginia
Republicans in 2014, but vetoed by Democratic
Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin. Now the state GOP has
revived the bill and voted to remove an exception
for victims of rape and incest.
Kurcaba’s remarks echo a string of
embarrassing statements by Republicans
regarding rape and women’s bodies:
In 2012, Missouri’s Rep. Todd Akin said that
pregnancy can’t result from rape because “If it’s
legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to
shut the whole thing down.”
Indiana Senate candidate Richard
Mourdock said that while sexual assaults are
unfortunate, the resulting pregnancy is a “gift from
God.”
Libertarian favorite Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX)
made statements of his own implying that women
routinely fabricate rape stories in order to get
abortions. “If it’s an honest rape,” said Paul,
physicians should allow the victim to abort, but
otherwise, women should not be able to terminate
their pregnancies just because they claim to have
been raped.
Republican leaders convened an emergency
meeting in 2013 urging the rank and file to stop
talking about rape altogether lest it further alienate
women voters, who have been abandoning the
Republican Party in droves.
Nonetheless, Kurcaba—a financial advisor who
was elected in 2014—appears eager to bring
discussions of rape back into the dialogue about
women’s access to reproductive health care.
Doctors Say Politicians Who Question
Vaccines ‘Fail At the First Duty Of A Politician’
By Tara Culp-Ressler, Think Progress, February 3, 2015
This week, potential presidential contenders
are increasingly weighing in on the issue of
vaccine safety—sparking considerable
controversy amid a worsening measles outbreak
that’s sickened more than 100 people in the past
month alone.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) kicked it off
on Monday by telling reporters that the
government must “balance” public health concerns
with parents’ rights to refuse vaccines if they
believe the shots may harm their children. The
comments put the spotlight on Christie’s long
history of pandering to anti-vaccine parents, who
have a strong presence in New Jersey, a state
with a particularly high rate of autism.
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul (R) further fueled the
debate by saying that most vaccines should be
voluntary, claiming that some children develop
“profound mental disorders” after being immunized
even though there’s no evidence to back that up.
Paul, who is an eye doctor, attracted particular
scrutiny for his comments because of his medical
background.
Hillary Clinton waded into the firestorm late on
Monday, tweeting that “The science is clear: The
earth is round, the sky is blue, and vaccines work.
Let’s protect all our kids.” Her statement echoes
recent comments from President Barack Obama,
who said in an interview with NBC News that the
science is “indisputable” and “you should get your
kids vaccinated.”
And Dr. Ben Carson, a former pediatric
neurosurgeon, broke from his fellow GOP
candidates on Monday and told Buzzfeed that
“certain communicable diseases have been
largely eradicated by immunization policies in this
country and we should not allow those diseases to
return by forgoing safe immunization programs, for
philosophical, religious, or other reasons when we
have the means to eradicate them.”
The unfolding controversy threatens to turn
vaccinations into an election issue. But making
measles into election fodder comes with some
risks. Medical experts are wary about the recent
vaccine controversy stemming from potential
presidential contenders. They say that
approaching vaccine safety as if there are two
equal sides to the debate gives anti-science
conspiracies too much credibility.
Seth Mnookin, an MIT professor who
has authored a book about the myth that vaccines
are linked to autism called The Panic Virus, told
the Washington Post that the latest remarks from
Christie and Paul “basically fail at the first duty of a
politician, which is to calm his constituents in
moments of irrational crisis.” He called their
statements about vaccines “incredibly, incredibly
irresponsible.”
Writing in the Daily Beast on Monday, one
pediatrician argued that “clueless politicians” have
made his job even harder. “Between them, Sen.
Paul and Gov. Christie have left a shameful mark
on their party’s prospects in two years. Neither of
them have any business being in charge of
American public health policy,” the doctor, who
writes under a pseudonym, concluded.
Controversy over vaccines has flared up during
previous elections, too. During the 2012
presidential race, GOP contender Michele
Bachmann attacked one of her opponents, Texas
Gov. Rick Perry (R-TX), for mandating that girls in
his state receive the recommended doses of the
HPV vaccine.
The medical community sharply chastised
Bachmann for stoking unfounded fears that the
HPV vaccine, which helps prevent a range of
cancers, could lead to “mental retardation.” But
the damage was done—Perry publicly reversed
his position on vaccine, and public health experts
lamented the potentially negative effects of the
bad press. The United States’ HPV vaccination
rates are still extremely low, and about a quarter
of parents surveyed by the CDC in 2013 said they
don’t believe the immunization is necessary for
their kids.
Visiting Marissa Alexander
By Barbara Nehmad, Member, South Jersey NOW
In May 2012, 31-year-old African American
Marissa Alexander was prosecuted for aggravated
assault with a deadly weapon for firing a warning
shot toward the ceiling after her husband attacked
her and threatened to kill her. She received a
mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in
prison.
Since January 21st of this year, when I visited
Ms. Alexander in her Jacksonville Florida jail, I
- 6 - Equal Write
have been struggling over what to write about it.
While not wanting to betray any confidences, I do
wish to share the experience of meeting her with
the NOW community, so I've decided to write my
own experience of it, rather than "reporting" a
detailed conversation.
When I reached the visitor area to speak to Ms.
Alexander on the phone through a glass wall, she
immediately knew who I was, even though there
were three other people there to visit other
prisoners. Having never seen a close up photo of
her, I did not recognize her. I honestly had no clue
what would be the appropriate things to say—and
how to explain why I was there to visit—other than
to say that we were all supporting her.
To my surprise, she immediately welcomed me
with a smile and made me feel as if she were
hosting me in her home. She knew nothing about
me, other than that I was a supporter. When I
expressed my discomfort, she told me that she
naturally welcomed visits from all her supporters. I
told her that I was a member of NOW NJ, and that
we had donated to her fund. She told me how truly
blessed she was for all the support she was
receiving—she'd even received international
letters of support.
What followed was one of the most comfortable
conversations I've had with someone I’d just met.
For an hour we shared stories of common
viewpoints and experiences about abusive men,
the legal system, and our attitudes in dealing with
them. I learned facts of her case that I hadn't read
in the news reports, which only made me feel
even more compatible with her, and more
admiring of her and of how gracious, courageous
and strong she was. We talked like friends, we
made each other laugh, and she told me how
funny it was that I’d thought she'd be able to eat
the Christmas candy (Peeps) I’d mailed her. (She
remembered that they were "red velvet," so she at
least heard about it!) I asked if our phone call was
being listened to, and she said that it was. Once
again, I was reminded of the routine privileges
which I take for granted.
She told me that she had accepted the hand
that was dealt her, but that she was going to use
her time under house arrest as productively as
possible. She wanted us to know that she is doing
fine—and looking damn good as well!
When I asked what NOW, specifically, could do
for her, she gave me an infectious smile and said
we could throw a party on her release date and
send her the pictures. And she meant it. Happy
January 27th, Marissa—you will always be in my
prayers.
News Bites & Good Reads
MEMBERSHIP FORM (New Members Only)
I wish to join NOW and commit myself to take action to bring women into
full participation in the mainstream of American society now, exercising all
rights and responsibilities in truly equal partnership with men.
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Make checks payable to: South Jersey NOW-NJ 0385. Send form and
check to: South Jersey NOW, PO Box 2801, Cherry Hill, NJ, 08034
All membership dues include national, state, and chapter newsletters. To join the chapter or
state, you must become a national member. NOW's policy is that no person shall be denied
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you are committed to NOW, but are unable to pay the membership dues, we urge you to
speak to our Membership Vice President to make some other arrangement.
NOW-NJ State Office, PO Box 10299, Trenton, NJ 08650 ...........................609-393-0156
NJ State Legislative Services (Legislators/Bills) ............................................800-792-8630
SOUTH JERSEY NOW CONTACTS MAR. 2014 - FEB. 2015
CHAPTER PHONE (Voice Mail) ..................................................................856-778-8320
CHAPTER E-MAIL............................................................. [email protected]
CHAPTER WEBSITE ................................................................ www.southjerseynow.org
CHAPTER MAILING ADDRESS ........................ South Jersey NOW–Alice Paul Chapter
P.O. Box 2801, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
PRESIDENT:
V.PRESIDENT/ADMINISTRATION:
V.PRESIDENT/FUNDRAISING:
Judy Glick Buckman ....................856-234-8649
Roxanne Sutocky .........................609-287-2698
Norma Blake ................................856-235-1698
Fran Forte Gomolson ...................856-547-9413
V.PRESIDENT/MEMBERSHIP:
Rick Gray .....................................856-685-0679
TREASURER:
Shirley Gregory ............................609-871-9380
RECORDING SECRETARY:
Roxanne Sutocky..........................856-287-2698
DATA PROCESSING MANAGER:
Rick Gray .....................................856-685-0679
WEBSITE COORDINATOR:
Lorraine Petrie ..............................609-471-5763
NOW in the AFTERNOON:
Marion Steininger ........................856-772-0689
NEWSLETTER EDITOR:
Janis Hines....................................609-923-6805
PUBLICITY & AD COORDINATOR: Anita Sopenoff .............................856-768-0080
PROGRAM SPEAKER
Marilyn Quinn ..............................609-439-6541
COORDINATORS:
Marge Morris................................856-848-4949
Judy Glick Buckman ....................856-234-8649
PROGRAM MEETING SET-UP:
Roxanne Sutocky..........................856-287-2698
Dea Evans .....................................856-667-0692
PROGRAM REFRESHMENTS MGR: Michelle McMullen .....................609-949-3058
FACEBOOK:
Jessica Van Liere ........................... via Facebook
NOW-NJ BOARD DELEGATES:
Michelle McMullen. .....................609-949-3058
Dea Evans .....................................856-667-0692
NOW-NJ PAC DELEGATE:
Barbara Nehmad ...........................609-271-0977
ALICE’S LIST CHAIR:
vacant
WOMEN IN NEED FUND:
Lorraine Petrie ..............................609-471-5763
CLINIC ESCORT COORDINATOR: Joy Booth......................................856-486-1574
CHAPTER PHONE/DIVORCE
INFORMATION KIT:
Linda Delany ................................856-779-2890
FEMINIST ESSAY CONTEST:
Casey Olesko ................................201-647-5502
Janis Hines....................................609-923-6805
Marissa Alexander’s Out of Jail, but Not Yet Free, by Leonard
Pitts Jr., Miami Herald, 02/03/ 2015
El Salvador Pardons Woman Jailed After Birth Complications
Led to Death of Child, by Liz Ford, The Guardian, 01/22/2015
Obama Condemns “Horrific Acts” In The Name Of Religion, by
Scott Neuman, npr.org, 02/05/15 Exposing the Junk Science of the Anti-Choice Movement, by
Anita Little, Ms. Blog, 01/13/2015
This Year’s State of the Union Had a Historic Emphasis on
Women, Feminist Newswire Blog, 01/21/2015
Spending Bill Includes Abortion Funding for Peace Corps Rape
Survivors (Corps members are currently excluded from federal
abortion coverage, without exception), By Sophie Novack, National
Journal, 12/11/14
GOP Women Stopped the 20-Week Abortion Bill. That’s Not
Standing Up for Reproductive Rights, by Amanda Marcotte,
Slate.com, 01/22/2015
Unspinning the Spin: The Women’s Media Center Guide to Fair
and Accurate Language by Rosalie Maggio. By combining eye-opening
facts plus wit, Unspinning the Spin helps you decode the hype and say what
you actually mean. Consumers and creators of media are the most obvious
beneficiaries, but everyone can benefit from this timely guide on the
background, current uses, accuracy, nonbiased alternatives, and best
practices for choosing and de-coding commonly used words and phrases.
Six Amendments : How And Why We Should Change The
Constitution by John Paul Stevens. By the time of his retirement in June
2010, John Paul Stevens had become the second longest serving Justice in
the history of the Supreme Court. Now he draws upon his more than three
decades on the Court, during which he was involved with many of the
defining decisions of the modern era, to offer a book like none other. SIX
AMENDMENTS is an absolutely unprecedented call to arms, detailing six
specific ways in which the Constitution should be amended in order to
protect our democracy and the safety and wellbeing of American citizens.
Please send your bites & reading recommendations to [email protected] THE EQUAL WRITE
Editor ..................... Janis Hines
Calendar/News ....... Judy Buckman
Proofreader..... Lorraine Petrie
Labels ..................... Rick Gray
The Equal Write is published monthly. All input is welcome and subject to
editing. Email articles, ads, and tributes to [email protected].
Call Judy Buckman to submit items to the calendar.
Newsletter Mailing Staff in January
Joy Ellen Booth, Judy Buckman, Robyn Cianci, Mike DeLozier, Dea Evans, Suzan Preiksat, Kathy Pritz, Larry Pritz, and Susan Reel-­‐Panish. Advertising Rates Business Card: $15/1 mo., $40/3 mos., $75/6 mos. Back Page: 3”x8”, $35/1 mo., $90/3 mos., $150/6 mos. Newsletter Flyer Inserts: If you supply the copies: $20/1 mo., $35/2 mos., $45/3 mos. If Chapter makes the copies: $50/1 mo., $90/2 mos., $120/3 mos. The number of newsletters sent out varies each month. To determine the exact number needed (if you are making the copies), contact our Database Coordinator, Rick Gray. Personal Business: (Buy/Sell/Rent): $15/mo. Personal Greeting: (5 lines max, inner pg): $10/mo. Ads should be sent electronically to [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected] by the first Tuesday of each month.
Checks (payable to South Jersey NOW) should be sent to Ad Coordinator, South Jersey NOW, P.O. Box 2801, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 - 7 – Equal Write
Bob Evans Voucher
For South Jersey NOW–Alice Paul Chapter
February 24th, 2015 between 7:00 a.m–9:00 p.m.
Bob Evans
601 Fellowship Rd (Rte. 73 and Fellowship), Mt. Laurel.
856- 231-9125
Please present this voucher to your server when dining at Bob Evans on
February 24th, between 7:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m., to support South Jersey NOW–Alice
Paul Chapter. The Chapter will receive 15% of sales from members that day.
Over Forty Years Strong 1971-2015
If you renewed your NOW
membership this month,
thanks!
Your voice counts. South Jersey NOW –
Alice Paul Chapter
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED South Jersey NOW–Alice Paul Chapter
PO Box 2801
Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
NONPROFIT ORG
US POSTAGE PAID
PERMIT #731
CHERRY HILL, NJ South Jersey NOW—Alice Paul Chapter March Soup Sale Chase away blustery March winds with hot and delicious Bob Evans soups brought to you by South Jersey NOW. The soups will be brought ready to heat and eat or freeze to South Jersey NOW’s Essay Contest Program Meeting on March 11 at the First Baptist Church of Moorestown, 19 West Main St., Moorestown at 7:30 PM. (Arrangements can also be made to pick up the soups in Moorestown in the daytime on March 12.) Simply fill out the order form below, attach payment and send to Norma Blake at 125 West Maple Ave., Moorestown, NJ 08057 no later than Friday, March 6. The soups will be ordered Saturday March 7. Text or phone Norma at 609-­‐923-­‐2164 with questions. Each container of soup has four servings. NJ state tax is included in the price. Buy one quart to eat right away and purchase others for future easy mealtimes! Chicken-­‐N-­‐Noodles ____(quantity) X $5.50 = $_______ Farm Festival Bean ____(quantity) X $5.50 = $_______ Hearty Beef Vegetable ____(quantity) X $5.50 = $_______ Broccoli Cheddar ____(quantity) X $6.50 = $_______ Cheddar Baked Potato ____(quantity) X $6.50 = $_______ Sausage Chili ____(quantity) X $6.50 = $_______ Total number of soups ____(quantity) Total amount attached = $______ Please make checks out to South Jersey NOW—Alice Paul Chapter Alice Paul Professional
Leadership Institute (APPLI)
APPLI: Weekends
Programs for high-school girls
Professional development workshops for high-school girls.
Saturday dates in the 2015 season include:
February 28:
March 21:
April 18:
October 3:
November 7:
Communicating with
Confidence
Resume Rescue
Networking Nutrition
Pro from Head to Toe
How to Get Your Dream
Job & Keep It!
Ask about
scholarship
opportunities!
Each workshop 9:00am-12:45pm; $30/workshop or 5 workshops for $120
Register at www.alicepaul.org.
APPLI: College July 13-17,2015
A one-week program for teen girls to explore college programs, locations
and costs through campus visits and workshops. $150 for five-day workshop;
scholarships available. Apply at www.alicepaul.org.
APPLI: Careers August 10-14, 2015
A one-week program designed to introduce teen girls to a variety of careers
through workplace visits, workshops and mentorship opportunities. $250 for
five-day workshop; scholarships available. Apply at www.alicepaul.org.
128 Hooten Road,
Mount Laurel, NJ 08054
856-231-1885 (phone)
856-231-4223 (fax);
[email protected]
The Alice Paul Institute is located at historic
Paulsdale in Mount Laurel, NJ.
www.alicepaul.org
South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)
Alice Paul Chapter
Coupons may not be distributed on Iron Hill premises.
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IRON HILL BREWERY & RESTAURANT
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South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)
Alice Paul Chapter
856 545.9009
WWW.1RONHILLBREWERY.COM
Coupons may not be distributed on Iron Hill premises.
On-site solicitation will result in termination of your event.
Redeem only at Iron Hill Brewery in Voorhees, NJ
Offer Valid 03/24/15 ONLY
GIVE % 20...means dine with us on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, and we’ll donate 20% of your food bill
(excluding alcoholic beverages, gratuity and taxes) to the South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)- Alice Paul Chapter.
Thank you for your support.
IRON HILL BREWERY & RESTAURANT
{ reservations strongly suggested }
13107 VOORHEES CENTER BLVD VOORHEES, NJ 08043
South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)
Alice Paul Chapter
856 545.9009
WWW.1RONHILLBREWERY.COM
Coupons may not be distributed on Iron Hill premises.
On-site solicitation will result in termination of your event.
Redeem only at Iron Hill Brewery in Voorhees, NJ
Offer Valid 03/24/15 ONLY
GIVE % 20...means dine with us on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, and we’ll donate 20% of your food bill
(excluding alcoholic beverages, gratuity and taxes) to the South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)- Alice Paul Chapter.
Thank you for your support.
IRON HILL BREWERY & RESTAURANT
{ reservations strongly suggested }
13107 VOORHEES CENTER BLVD VOORHEES, NJ 08043
South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)
Alice Paul Chapter
856 545.9009
WWW.1RONHILLBREWERY.COM
Coupons may not be distributed on Iron Hill premises.
On-site solicitation will result in termination of your event.
Redeem only at Iron Hill Brewery in Voorhees, NJ
Offer Valid 03/24/15 ONLY
GIVE % 20...means dine with us on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, and we’ll donate 20% of your food bill
(excluding alcoholic beverages, gratuity and taxes) to the South Jersey Now (Nat. Org. for Women)- Alice Paul Chapter.
Thank you for your support.
IRON HILL BREWERY & RESTAURANT
{ reservations strongly suggested }
13107 VOORHEES CENTER BLVD VOORHEES, NJ 08043
856 545.9009
WWW.1RONHILLBREWERY.COM