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JUST ANNOUNCED: Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame Honorees!

MWF_finallogo-01-768x402 CroppedMichigan Women Forward is proud to add six inductees into the HERstory Women’s Hall of Fame in 2020. The selected honorees were nominated by fellow Michiganders and voted on by an exceptional cohort of Michigan women judges.

 

Carolyn-Cassin“Today’s strong women can learn so much by studying the paths of those who came before us,” said Carolyn Cassin, president and CEO, Michigan Women Forward. “These amazing honorees have conquered so many obstacles and accomplished so much throughout their life. We are proud to salute them and want to be sure their stories are told.”

Michigan Women Forward will be celebrating the induction of the 2020 honorees at a ceremony on October 15. Sign up here to receive details about the event. 

Najah Bazzy, RN, is an internationally recognized healer, humanitarian and interfaith leader and founder of Zaman International. The Metro-Detroit based nonprofit empowers marginalized women and children to break the cycle of extreme poverty. In 2019, she was recognized as a Top Ten CNN Hero highlighting Zaman’s growth from a grassroots team of volunteers to a world-class organization with a global reach that has helped more than 2.1 million people in 20 countries since 2010.
Dr. Price was the first African American president of Marygrove College. Prior to this, she served as Provost of Spelman College where she participated in a program that raised over $100 million for the institution. She has held positions as dean of the School of Allied Health Professions at the University of Connecticut, and professor and assistant dean at Temple University. She is the only African American that has served as the national president of the American Society for Medical Technology.

Martha Teichner has been a correspondent for CBS Sunday Morning since 1993, where she covers major breaking national and international news stories. Since joining CBS News in 1977, she has earned multiple national awards for her original reporting, including 10 Emmy Awards and won five James Beard Foundation Awards. She was part of the team coverage of the Newtown  elementary school shooting which earned CBS News a 2014 duPont-Columbia Award.

Dorothy is the co-founder and co-owner of the Frankenmuth Bavarian Inn, one of the top independent restaurants in the country, and she is in charge of the operations of the many businesses under the umbrella of the Bavarian Inn Corp. She is the author of three popular cookbooks. At 98 years old, she is still running the business 6 days a week.

Liz Jackson (1918-2020) was a founding member and officer of the Trade Union Leadership Council, a nationally recognized organization credited with advancing black political development within the UAW. In 1966, she made history when she became the first African American woman to serve as a UAW International representative, and she became the first woman to sit on the national negotiation team during UAW and Ford contract talks.

Ruth Westbrook (1941-2017) was a middle and high school math teacher and counselor in Southeast Michigan. Notably, as part of NASA’s Apollo 11 project, she wrote a program for all the steps used to get a man to the moon and back and see how long it took in real time to be completed. Essentially, Ruth was one of the “Human Math Computers” depicted in the movie Hidden Figures. In 1985, she earned her Juris Doctorate degree from The Detroit College of Law.

We will be celebrating the honorees with a virtual awards ceremony on October 15. Please mark your calendar and sign up to get reminders! 
I’m interested in attending the awards ceremony!
To view a full list of the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame Honorees through the years, visit our website.

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