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THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Monday, June 23, 1997- a women's institute conference Saturday. Ted Brellisford. The Spectator Astronaut Dr. Roberta Bondar, former McMaster University neurologist, spoke at Bondar tells Wis to blaze a path Youth need mentors, Women's Institute conference told By JOSH BROWN The Spectator HAMILTON Indebted to the past; committed to the future. That was the slogan used by the Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario during their 100th anniversary conference at Hamilton Place last week. And what better woman to represent the " changing role of women than Saturday's keynote speaker, Dr. Roberta Bondar. A former McMaster professor, Bondar has just finished a book, starred in an IMAX film, has honourary degrees from 20 universities in Canada and the United States, holds a private pilot's licence, swims in shark- infested waters and is currently researching the effects of weightlessness on the blood flow to the brain. . Oh yes, she also flew aboard the space shuttle Discovery in January 1992. •• " She's done a lot for women all around the world, but the fact that she's Canadian makes us all really proud," said Mildred Keith, president of the Federation of Women's Institutes of Canada. Bondar was welcomed by a group of distinguished guests including British High Commissioner Sir Anthony Goodenough, Stoney Creek Mayor Anne Bain, Ontario's deputy minister of agriculture and food Ken Knox, as well as more than 1,900 Women's Institute members from around the world. It was 1897 when a small group of women facing changes brought on by the industrial revolution started the organization. They had a dream to give women a public voice and develop their minds and skills. One hundred years later. Bondar, a Sault Ste. Marie native, echoed the importance of keeping the dream alive. Dreams She said she always wanted to be four things when she was four years old; a doctor, a scientist, a photographer and an astronaut. Her parents were keen and let her follow her dreams, which she said was very important growing up. " I had a great collection of rocket models as a child." said Bondar. " But in high school I bent to peer pressure and starting playing sports. I threw the models out of my window and almost trashed a dream. " I wanted to belong to social groups at school but I would think about space at night." ^ Later in life, when she figured out that she really wanted to be an astronaut, her mom gave her a big box with a red bow out for her. Inside were all the space models from her childhood. " My mom hid them in the attic all those years. Mothers know stuff," said Bondar. She said while it's important to achieve a goal, it's just as important to always have a new goal. It's the only way to move forward. Before blasting off from the packed theatre. Bondar complimented the FWIO for helping women realize their importance in society, and paving the way for the future generations of young women. " It will be a difficult struggle. We constantly have to have mentors and monitors in the community and I think the Women's Institute is case in point of someone trying to make a change."
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Scrapbook FWIC 1997 Convention |
Subject | Conventions; Reports; FWIC |
Description | Scrapbook FWIC 1997 Convention |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811103 |
Date | 1997 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 37 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Monday, June 23, 1997- a women's institute conference Saturday. Ted Brellisford. The Spectator Astronaut Dr. Roberta Bondar, former McMaster University neurologist, spoke at Bondar tells Wis to blaze a path Youth need mentors, Women's Institute conference told By JOSH BROWN The Spectator HAMILTON Indebted to the past; committed to the future. That was the slogan used by the Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario during their 100th anniversary conference at Hamilton Place last week. And what better woman to represent the " changing role of women than Saturday's keynote speaker, Dr. Roberta Bondar. A former McMaster professor, Bondar has just finished a book, starred in an IMAX film, has honourary degrees from 20 universities in Canada and the United States, holds a private pilot's licence, swims in shark- infested waters and is currently researching the effects of weightlessness on the blood flow to the brain. . Oh yes, she also flew aboard the space shuttle Discovery in January 1992. •• " She's done a lot for women all around the world, but the fact that she's Canadian makes us all really proud," said Mildred Keith, president of the Federation of Women's Institutes of Canada. Bondar was welcomed by a group of distinguished guests including British High Commissioner Sir Anthony Goodenough, Stoney Creek Mayor Anne Bain, Ontario's deputy minister of agriculture and food Ken Knox, as well as more than 1,900 Women's Institute members from around the world. It was 1897 when a small group of women facing changes brought on by the industrial revolution started the organization. They had a dream to give women a public voice and develop their minds and skills. One hundred years later. Bondar, a Sault Ste. Marie native, echoed the importance of keeping the dream alive. Dreams She said she always wanted to be four things when she was four years old; a doctor, a scientist, a photographer and an astronaut. Her parents were keen and let her follow her dreams, which she said was very important growing up. " I had a great collection of rocket models as a child." said Bondar. " But in high school I bent to peer pressure and starting playing sports. I threw the models out of my window and almost trashed a dream. " I wanted to belong to social groups at school but I would think about space at night." ^ Later in life, when she figured out that she really wanted to be an astronaut, her mom gave her a big box with a red bow out for her. Inside were all the space models from her childhood. " My mom hid them in the attic all those years. Mothers know stuff," said Bondar. She said while it's important to achieve a goal, it's just as important to always have a new goal. It's the only way to move forward. Before blasting off from the packed theatre. Bondar complimented the FWIO for helping women realize their importance in society, and paving the way for the future generations of young women. " It will be a difficult struggle. We constantly have to have mentors and monitors in the community and I think the Women's Institute is case in point of someone trying to make a change." |
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