" You've got to have fun while you're fightin' for freedom 'cause you don't always win."  --- Molly Ivins
A
n Evening with Molly IvinS1
Organized by Radford University's
Center for Gender Studies

Preston Auditorium
held: wednesday, march 21st, 2001
7:30 pm
[Admission was Free]
Center Director, Hilary Lips & Molly Ivins
{click above for more images}


STUDENTS, STAFF, FACULTY and the PUBLIC
were invited to
"Molly Ivins Can't Say That, Can She?"

a talk by

Molly Ivins: Political Columnist -Star-Telegram

Molly Ivins, best-selling author and widely syndicated political columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, says politics, particularly in Texas, is great entertainment -- "better than the zoo, better than the circus, rougher than football, and even more aesthetically satisfying than baseball."
     One of the nation's wittiest and best-known political pundits, Mary Tyler Ivins, better known as Molly, was born August 30, 1944 in Monterey, Calif., but grew up in Houston. Ivins, the author of the best-selling book, "Molly Ivins Can't Say That Can She?", is the former co-editor of the liberal monthly Texas Observer and former Rocky Mountain bureau chief for the New York Times. She has also worked for the Houston Chronicle, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune and the Dallas Times Herald. Ivins' freelance work has appeared in Esquire, Atlantic, The Nation, Harper's, the Progressive, Mother Jones, TV Guide and numerous other publications. She is a frequent guest on network radio and television shows.

          Ivins has a B.A. from Smith College, a master's in journalism from Columbia University and studied for a year at the Institute of Political Science in Paris. She served for three years on the board of the National News Council, is active in the Amnesty International's Journalism Network and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. She writes about press issues for the American Civil Liberties Union and several journalism reviews.
          She has been a Pulitzer Prize finalist three times, and has won numerous journalism awards, including a 1991 Headliner's Award for best Texas column. She was named Outstanding Alumna by Columbia University's School of Journalism in 1976, and was a member of the 1992 Pulitzer Prize jury. She speaks both French and Spanish and has a love of the outdoors.

          Visit Google's:  Molly Ivins' Great ~ 1944-2007:  Her column appeared in 113 newspaper besides the Star-Telegram. She died in 2007

1Sponsored by: an Anonymous Donor, the Radford University Foundation, the College of Arts & Sciences

Molly Ivins' Images & Quotes       Molly Ivins at Ru       Molly Ivins Announcement      Molly Ivins' Archive      
Center for Gender Studies       Psychology Home       Radford University Home

Created by  W. Andrew  &  H. Lips     ©2001 H. Lips & W. Andrew     Last updated September 16th, 2019