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Oct 24 2017

Women Who Leap: Ursula Burns

Ursula Burns, CEO Xerox
First black woman to run a Fortune 500 company

I grew up in Manhattan in the late 1950s through the mid-’70s within about 10 blocks on the Lower East Side, in the Baruch housing projects. It was actually fun and good. I look back on it often, because if you see the neighborhood, there would be assumptions that we lived in squalor and fear and hunger. But there was none of that.

We started out in the tenements, and we kept moving up. We ended up in the housing projects, which were outstanding. If you went to them now, you would say, This is outstanding? But for us, the transitions were marked, and they were always a transition of improvement—from a tenement house to a little apartment in the projects to a bigger apartment in the projects. Those were all signs of progress for us.

Someone once characterized what they called “three strikes” against me. I thought it was an interesting thing to say, but I try not to characterize them as strikes: I was poor, I was black and I was female.

For women and women of color, if you walk into a STEM environment, you will be the minority in the room. Everybody has their eye on your work. Instead of your differences becoming a burden, it should be an opportunity for you to distinguish yourself. That’s what I turned those two “strikes” into.


Time Magazine’s full interview
Excerpt from TIME Firsts: Women Who Are Changing The World

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Written by Dana Bristol-Smith · Categorized: I Leap, Video, Women's Empowerment

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Leap to Success
Leap to Success

The FREE Leap to Confidence® program provides women with the strategies they need to handle challenges with grace and resilience. We specialize in working with women overcoming domestic violence, homelessness, and other major life challenges.

To learn more, visit us at www.leaptoconfidence.org/programs/leap-to-confidence/

#LEAPtoSuccess #leaptoconfidence #confidence #empoweringwomen
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4 days ago
The FREE Leap to Confidence® program provides women with the strategies they need to handle challenges with grace and resilience. We specialize in working with women overcoming domestic violence, homelessness, and other major life challenges. 

To learn more, visit us at www.leaptoconfidence.org/programs/leap-to-confidence/

#leaptosuccess #leaptoconfidence #confidence #empoweringwomen
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Leap to Success
Leap to Success

The History of Juneteenth
Freedom finally came on June 19, 1865, when some 2,000 Union troops arrived in Galveston Bay, Texas. The army announced that the more than 250,000 enslaved black people in the state, were free by executive decree. This day came to be known as "Juneteenth," by the newly freed people in Texas.

The historical legacy of Juneteenth shows the value of never giving up hope in uncertain times. The National Museum of African American History and Culture is a community space where this spirit of hope lives on. A place where historical events like Juneteenth are shared and new stories with equal urgency are told.
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5 days ago
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