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April 04 2008 Scholarship OpportunitiesZONTA CLUB OF MILWAUKEE SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION 2008
Technical Specialty Occupations ($1,000). Support technical and vocational educational efforts of a woman in the area of Health Care or Non-traditional occupations, specifically aimed at low income or otherwise disadvantaged women. Applications must show evidence of dedication to advancing the status of women. Applications due 4/30/2008.
Jane M Klausman Women in Business Scholarship ($1,000). Women pursuing undergraduate business degrees who demonstrate outstanding potential in business, and are entering their third or fourth year of an undergraduate degree program at an accredited university/college/institute program at the time the funds are received. Applicants may initially be limited to students at local universities with accredited business programs (Note: The award recipient would be eligible to be advanced to the District and International Level (US$5,000 award). This is limited to students at local universities. Applications are due 4/30//2008.
Women in Science ($1,000). Women pursuing undergraduate degrees in science, technology, engineering or math who demonstrate outstanding potential in the field, and are entering their third or fourth year of an undergraduate degree program at an accredited university/college/institute program at the time the funds are received. Preference will be given to Wisconsin residents. Applications are due 4/30/2008.
Applications for the 2008 Zonta Scholarships are now available from the Zonta Club of Milwaukee by contacting: Norma Voorhorst at 414-281-3022 or sending an email to Zonta Club at zontamilwaukee@hotmail.com.
January 30 Summer in the City Fashion ShowFashion Show Fundraiser Saturday, April 12, 2008 "Summer in the City"Reservations $50 per person ($400 for table of 8)
Please reserve seats (Max. 8/table - print names on back)
Enclosed is my check for $______________ made payable to the I understand that $25 per ticket is tax deductible.
I want to support Zonta. Please accept my donation of $________ .
For questions about my reservation contact me at:
Name:_________________________________________________________
Address:_______________________________________________________
City:_____________________________ State:_________ Zip:___________
Phone:_______________________________ Email:____________________________________ Please PRINT the first and last names for you and your guests: _________________________________ ________________________________ _________________________________ ________________________________ _________________________________ ________________________________ _________________________________ ________________________________ I would like to sit with (seating preferences will be accommodated to the extent possible):______________________________ Please note any special needs here: Reservations must be received by March 20, 2008 Make checks payable to: Zonta Foundation, Inc. Mail reservations with payment to: Helen Ludwig W213 S7772 Annes Way, Muskego, WI 53150 November 29 2008 Fundraiser Fashion Show
Voice: 262-628-3505 E-Mail: zontamilwaukee@hotmail.com NEWS RELEASE
For more information contact: Connie Thoma
Phone: 262-628-3505
For Immediate Release
ZONTA CLUB OF MILWAUKEE’S
“SUMMER FASHION IN THE CITY”
FASHION SHOW/FUNDRAISER Saturday, April 12, 2008
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, November 30, 2007…
The Zonta Club of Milwaukee and its Foundation will present its 2008 Fashion Show/Fundraiser on Saturday, April 12, 2008 at the Italian Community Center. Our theme is “Summer Fashion In The City.” Mark your calendar now! Join us to enjoy the latest in women’s, children’s and men’s fashions by Boston Store.
The reception, raffle, and silent auction begin promptly at 10:30 A.M. There will be many opportunities to win tickets to many of Milwaukee’s great events. There will also be a wide variety of baskets of wines, beauty products, sports items, and more – something to appeal to the entire family.
A warm, delicious luncheon will be served followed by the Fashion Show, Raffles and special prizes for our guests.
Tickets for the event are $50.00 per person, and must be purchased in advance. Tables of eight will be available. Reservations must be made not later than Sunday, April 1, 2008. Call us at 262-628-3505 for more information and we will send an invitation to this “Do Not Miss Event.”
Proceeds benefit scholarships and programs that advance the status of women in Milwaukee and worldwide. February 15 2007 Fashion Show FundraiserNEWS RELEASE
For more information contact: Christine Todd Phone: (414) 281-6358
For Immediate Release
ZONTA CLUB OF MILWAUKEE’S
“A TRIBUTE TO MOTHERS…A FAMILY AFFAIR”
FASHION SHOW/FUNDRAISER Saturday, April 21, 2007
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, January 26, 2007…
The Zonta Club of Milwaukee and its Foundation will present its 2007 Fashion Show/Fundraiser on Saturday, April 21, 2007 at the Italian Community Center. Our theme is “A Tribute to Mothers…A Family Affair.” Plan to come and enjoy the latest in women’s Spring fashions by Talbots and men’s wear by Bachrach at Mayfair.
Come for the reception, raffles, and silent auction beginning at 10:30 A.M. A few items to get your bidding juices flowing include: An area flight with an experienced pilot in his Cirrus plane, an autographed baseball by a popular Milwaukee Brewer, a passport to WI that includes restaurant certificates en route to a 2-night stay in a Bayfield B&B and cruise around the Apostle Islands, chances to enjoy many of Milwaukee’s great 2007 events, join in a cooking class with an expert chef, wine and dine at one of our best area restaurants, try for a basket of wines, beauty products, special facials, and more for the entire family. A delicious luncheon will be followed by the fashion show, raffles and special prizes.
Tickets are $50 per person, and $400 for a table of 8. Tickets will not be sold at the door. Reservations are required by Sunday, April 1, 2007. Contact us for more information and we will respond with an invitation to this special Spring event!
In 2007, Zonta will continue to support financially with Fashion Show proceeds the Zonta International global service projects as well as several local service projects initiated in 2005 and supported in 2006:
- Mental Health Association in Milwaukee County Invisible Children’s Program - Meta House “Seeking Safety” - Our Next Generation, Inc. Homework Club
We will also continue support of a past agency but with a new project:
- Milwaukee Women’s Center Older Abused Women’s Program
The Zonta Foundation also supports several local scholarships for young women, also initiated in 2005:
- Young Women in Public Affairs Award - Jane Klausman Women in Business Award - Technical Speciality Award—Just renamed the “Ernestine O’Bee Scholarship Award” for our long-standing Zonta Club member of 44 years who passed away in January 2007. - Women in Science Award
For the past 81 years, the Zonta Club of Milwaukee has been fundraising and actively volunteering service to support more than 50 charitable organizations in the southeastern Wisconsin area that benefit women and children.
Zonta International, with world headquarters in Chicago, IL, USA, and 1,240 clubs in 68 countries, is a worldwide service organization of executives in business and the professions working together to advance the status of women. Zonta International programs supported by the Milwaukee club scholarships in aerospace/engineering, public service, and business; Zonta International Strategies to address Violence Against Women (ZISVAW), and service projects in Niger (HIV/AIDS), Afghanistan (access to education and health care), Bolivia (literacy, health education and life skills development for working girls and young women), and Sri Lanka (women’s economic self-sufficiency post-tsunami).
For more information about Zonta, please contact us at zontamilwaukee@hotmail.com January 24 Death of a beloved Zonta Club memberErnestine O'Bee was a treasured member of the Zonta Club of Milwaukee for many decades. We will miss her widom, insights and kindness as well as her warm, loving smile.
State's first female mortician brought energy, humor to jobBy AMY RABIDEAU SILVERS
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After her marriage to Emile O'Bee, owner of the O'Bee Funeral Home, she became the first woman licensed as a mortician in Wisconsin. That was in 1952.
She also became a presence in the community. Her name was synonymous with the funeral home, even after the death of her first husband in 1972, and later with a new firm, the Northwest Funeral Chapel. She later married Clifford Wilson, taking the name O'Bee-Wilson, but continued to be known as Mrs. O'Bee in her professional life.
O'Bee accumulated more than a few stories in nearly a century of life. A favorite involved the time she saw two boys studying her portrait at the funeral home.
"See, I told you," one boy said. "She looks just like that dead lady on the wall."
"I am that dead lady on the wall," O'Bee said, explaining that a person did not need to be dead to have a photograph hanging in a funeral home.
"People think that funeral directors don't have a sense of humor," she said, laughter in her voice. "But we do."
O'Bee died of natural causes Monday. She was 99.
Friends and colleagues praised her as a dynamic woman of character.
"There was a consistency of love and wisdom and caring," said Amanda Gray, a bereavement minister and hospice nurse. "She was one of the community. You never had any doubt about that.
"My mom died when I was 18, and she helped me through that," said Gray, now 56. "A lot of what I know, I learned from her."
O'Bee kept working part time at the funeral home until recent weeks.
"I come because one of the most important jobs I do is greet people at the front door," she said. "I like to be in the front when people come in. I want them to feel like they're home."
For O'Bee, attitude was everything. Although she lost much of her sight, people did not always realize that she was legally blind.
O'Bee began life as Ernestine Singleton, the only child of an African-American dentist in Omaha, Neb. Race attitudes in America were a fact of her life, but not one on which she wished to dwell.
In 1931, she graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
"In college, I worked as a domestic for 50 cents an hour because that's the only job I could get because of my color," she said in her quiet way.
"I wanted to be a journalist," O'Bee said. "The dean of women told me, 'If you graduate at the head of your class, I could not get you a job in America.' "
Instead, she earned a degree in social work, first working with the Children's Aid Society in Detroit. She also worked on the radio, as a junior rifle instructor and as a lifeguard.
Her involvement with the YWCA brought her to a conference in Milwaukee. She called the only person she knew in Milwaukee, Emile O'Bee, also from Omaha. When they met, he immediately stood out of respect.
She was taken with the man with good manners. The feeling was apparently mutual because she was soon Mrs. O'Bee. They married in 1948.
Her husband wanted her to become a licensed funeral director, too, so she applied to mortuary school. The school denied her application, saying that she needed to show a high school diploma, not a college one.
"They wouldn't accept my sheepskin from the University of Michigan, and I was so proud of it," she said. "But that wasn't it. They didn't want a woman, and they certainly didn't want a black one.
"Mr. O'Bee went in anger to the school and, when he came back, I was enrolled," she said proudly.
She survived both her husbands, continuing as an owner of the funeral home and its board president. She also served as the first woman appointed to the State Board of Examiners for Funeral Directors and Embalmers. O'Bee also worked with children at Parkway Elementary School every Wednesday.
Survivors include cousins Betty Sullivan and Mary Byrd; and daughter-in-law Lillie O'Bee.
Visitation will be from noon to 7 p.m. Friday at Northwest Funeral Chapel, 6630 W. Hampton Ave. A funeral will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at All Saints Cathedral, 818 E. Juneau Ave.
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