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Hummus and Rye Rusks: Lip-Smacking PM Snack

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Knowledge and Acceptance: Qualities of an Immensely Persuasive Mind

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Beets, Cukes, and Cherry Tomatoes: A Lunch-Time Party In My Mouth

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What Leaders Can Learn from the Life of Sally Ride

What Leaders Can Learn from the Life of Sally Ride July 24 2012

Sally Ride, the United States’ first woman astronaut, died too soon this week at the age of 61.  In 2012, it’s perhaps easy to forget what she was up against when she rode into space on the shuttle Challenger in 1983. As the New York Times pointed out in its obituary of Ride, the comedian Johnny Carson joked on the Tonight Show that Ride would probably delay the shuttle launch while looking for a purse to match her shoes. It wasn’t funny then or now.

Ride was a woman and a person to be taken seriously. She was smart, determined and not one to allow biases to hold her back. In obvious and not so obvious ways, she was a pioneering role model of a leader. A close read of the Times’ obit on Ride yields a number of lessons for leaders from her life.

Here are three that I noticed:

See Yourself in the Role: Ride became an astronaut after responding to a recruiting ad she read when she was a student at Stanford. With degrees in physics, astrophysics and English, Ride recalled that she read the qualifications from NASA and said, “I’m one of those people.” It didn’t matter that she didn’t fit the gender stereotype (or, for that matter, the age expectations – when she flew at age 32 she was also the youngest U.S. astronaut in space). One of the core challenges for leaders is to confidently see themselves in the role. Ride did that and more.

Stay Flexible: After being accepted into the astronaut corps, Ride switched her academic focus from physics to engineering because she thought that would have more application in her new profession. She went on to help develop the space shuttle’s robotic arm and was chosen for the Challenger crew by its commander in part because of her proficiency with the device. Leaders consistently face changing requirements to achieve the goal. The successful ones stay flexible and adapt to the situation.

Seek the Full Story: Ride was the only person to serve on the investigative boards for both the Challenger and Columbia shuttle disasters. She balanced her love for the space program and loyalty to NASA with tough questions during the hearings and support for witnesses who had the courage to say what went wrong and why. It can be tough for leaders to get the full story because people often tell them what they think they want to hear. Sally Ride didn’t settle for anything less than the full story.

What leadership qualities do you admire the most from the life of Sally Ride?

Sally-ride

 

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On This Day: July 25

Updated July 24, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On July 25, 1956, the Italian liner Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish ship Stockholm off the New England coast, claiming the lives of 51 people.

Go to article »

On July 25, 1848, Arthur James Balfour, the British statesman best remembered for issuing the British declaration of support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine, was born. Following his death on March 19, 1930, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1593 France’s King Henry IV converted from Protestantism to Roman Catholicism.
1868 Congress passed an act creating the Wyoming Territory.
1952 Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.
1956 The Italian liner Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish ship Stockholm off the New England coast, claiming the lives of 51 people.
1965 Bob Dylan shocked his fans at the Newport Folk Festival by playing electric guitar.
1975 The musical “A Chorus Line” opened on Broadway.
1978 The first baby conceived by in-vitro fertilization was born in Oldham, England.
1984 Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya became the first woman to walk in space.
1994 Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan’s King Hussein signed a declaration at the White House ending their countries’ 46-year state of war.
2000 Texas Gov. George W. Bush selected Dick Cheney to be his running mate on the Republican presidential ticket.
2008 California became the first state to ban trans fats from restaurant food.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Iman, Model, actress

Model-actress Iman turns 57 years old today.

AP Photo/Peter Kramer

Robert Zoellick, World Bank president

World Bank President Robert Zoellick turns 59 years old today.

AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

1935 Barbara Harris, Actress, turns 77
1941 Nate Thurmond, Basketball Hall of Famer, turns 71
1951 Verdine White, Rock musician (Earth, Wind and Fire), turns 61
1965 Illeana Douglas, Actress, turns 47
1967 Matt LeBlanc, Actor (“Friends”), turns 45
1969 D.B. Woodside, Actor, turns 43

 

Historic Birthdays

Arthur James Balfour 7/25/1848 – 3/19/1930 British statesman.Go to obituary »
56 Henry Knox 7/25/1750 – 10/25/1806
American Revolutionary war general and first U.S. secretary of war
78 Maria Weston Chapman 7/25/1806 – 7/12/1885
American abolitionist
74 Richard Oglesby 7/25/1824 – 4/24/1899
American governor of Illinois (1865-69, 1873, 1885-89) and U.S. senator (1873-79)
71 Thomas Eakins 7/25/1844 – 6/25/1916
American painter
77 David Belasco 7/25/1853 – 5/14/1931
American theatrical producer and playwright
95 Maxfield Parrish 7/25/1870 – 3/10/1966
American illustrator and painter
49 Davidson Black 7/25/1884 – 3/15/1934
Canadian physician and physical anthropologist
80 Eric Hoffer 7/25/1902 – 5/21/1983
American longshoreman, philosopher and writer
89 Elias Canetti 7/25/1905 – 8/14/1994
Bulgarian Nobel Prize-winning novelist and playwright (1981)
63 Johnny Hodges 7/25/1906 – 5/11/1970
American jazz saxophonist; soloist in Duke Ellington’s orchestra

 

 

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Veggie Garden Progress Report: A+

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