Margery tabankin biography of donald
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Madison, February 1969 – Depiction Black Studies Strike, allotment 2
Madison huddle together the 1960s – Feb, 1969 representation Black Studies Strike, zenith 2
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Overview
* Former board member of the Arca Foundation
* Executive director of Barbra Streisand Foundation
* Onetime member of the Students for a Democratic Society
Born in 1948 in Newark, New Jersey, Margery Tabankin was inspired to become part of the New Left as a result of a speech she heard Tom Hayden, then-president of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), deliver in her hometown in 1963. “He had an absolutely profound effect on me,” recalls Tabankin.
From 1965-69 Tabankin attended the University of Wisconsin, where she became an anti-war activist and civil-rights demonstrator while pursuing a degree in political science. She also joined SDS. Recalling that “part of being a woman [in the Sixties] was this psychology of proving I was such a good radical, ‘better than the men,’” Tabankin says: “Most guys didn’t take women seriously, however. They [women] were things to f**k…. You went through this intense experience [at demonstrations], and you went back and had sex. [But] It was much more on men’s terms.”
After completing her formal education, Tabankin studied community organizing at Saul Alinsky‘s Industrial Areas Foundation in Chicago. She then went to Washington, DC to work on the Youth Citizenship Fund‘s campaign to pass a Constitutional Amendment lowering the
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THE SUNDAY PROFILE : Woman Warrior : She’s known as a relentless and uncompromising activist for liberal causes--and as a workaholic. But Margery Tabankin is about to change jobs and take a vacation.
She was sprayed with tear gas during a college Vietnam War protest, has met with Fidel Castro and Yasser Arafat, and headed a 200-member political action committee of heavy hitters in the entertainment industry.
So it’s a tad odd to find teddy bears among the Ralph Lauren linens in Margery Tabankin’s bedroom.
“When people get to know me really well, they know I’m incredibly vulnerable and a complete marshmallow on the inside,” Tabankin says, trailing off into a from-the-gut laugh. “To the outside world, I think I present a forceful, sort of assertive presence.”
The teddy bears must be the yin to her yang. An uncompromising, driven career activist for liberal political causes and human rights issues, Tabankin is a political force in Washington, Los Angeles and points in between. The college anti-war campaigns were a preamble to a career that has zigzagged from government jobs to foundation work.
In 1988, she moved west and became executive director of the Streisand Foundation (as in Barbra), parceling out $7 million over several years to groups supporting the environment and h