MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD

MARJORIE STOCKFORD
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MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
MARJORIE STOCKFORD
Marjorie
Stockford
Marjorie Stockford had a 13 year career in corporate America before focusing her efforts on telling stories of women's capabilities and successes.  She has  served as Assistant Executive Director of the YWCA of the U.S.A., produced a website that highlighted women's competence, researched women's advancement in American institutions through The 50/50 Project and has written The Bellwomen about the landmark 1973 AT&T sex discrimination case.  She lives in Arlington, Massachusetts. 
In the early 1970s, a young, long-haired, liberal lawyer and his government colleagues clashed with the mature and staid executives of AT&T over the company’s treatment of its female and minority employees.  Their disagreement resulted in a $38 million settlement that benefited 15,000 employees, more than 13,000 of them women, and changed our perceptions of women’s and men’s roles in the workplace forever.
The Story of The Bellwomen
This page was last updated: June 20, 2007
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Your Thoughts
“…an important American story…written with a cinematic flair along the lines of Erin Brockovich.”

– MA Bar Association Lawyers Journal
“What a story!”

– Cokie Roberts
ABC News, NPR and author of Founding Mothers


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