|   
    BETTY NEWCOMB  HAS LEFT US· 
 Betty, who was born and lived most of her life in Baltimore, had lived in Indiana with her husband, Bob and three sons for several years. There she cofounded the NOW chapter, was active on NOW’s national board and worked hard for all NOW issues like the ERA. In 1973 she founded the American Association for 
            Affirmative Action (AAAA), an organization for directors of equal 
            opportunity affirmative action programs that now numbers more than a 
            thousand institutional 
            members. When she wasn’t working for VFA Betty was traveling
    to Paris, London, Madrid, Rome or New York City  to visit art museums  and 
          local feminists. About three years ago
    she lost her ability to speak and sadly, this Gemini woman, who loved to
    talk, was unable to communicate. Betty and Bob, her husband, who passed on last year,
    had three sons and in later years, when they were retired, they  raised their
    granddaughter, Ming Lee, who is now in college. Betty is survived by her sons, Blaine, Philip and Murray, three grandchildren, Nicolas, Arielle, and Ming-Lee.      
              A Memorial Service for Betty will be held Saturday, January 26 at the Stony Run Quaker Meeting House 5116 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21210 from 1 to 2 PM. Later reception 3 to 8 PM. In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations be given to the Alzheimeer's Association ( ALZ.ORG) 
     Hopefully, Betty’s
    work and influence will be recognized in history.  She’s left her influence on VFA, and her
    love and devotion to us cannot  be replaced.  VFA never received her bio, though we
    begged her to send it, so we will be  featuring her this month, in memorium. Jacqui Ceballos   Betty’  s son, Philip says: My mother did not seek the limelight, but
    she had major and lasting influence on our society. I seriously doubt Obama
    would be president without the AAAA taking off and assuring that Title 9
    policies and procedures were implemented uniformly across colleges and
    university throughout the country.  
      She also had a major impact on national implementation of sexual
    harassment policy.  I think it was via the AAAA because Affirmative
    Action officers were involved in implementation of sexual harassment
    policies and procedures at Universities.     Betty was a significant pathfinder for the Affirmative Action
    process that she had partially to invent, and for her leadership of the
    rest of us who were thrust into the administration of affirmative action in
    the face of disinformation and resistance, particularly among university
    faculty who believed themselves to be outside the pale of employment
    law.  Thank you Betty for that good
    fight…….Sheila Tobias, Co
    and Vice President, Veteran Feminists of America.     Comments to Jacqui Ceballos jcvfa@aol.com | 
 
This Web Page Created with PageBreeze Free
HTML Editor