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Betty Bone Schiess : ウィキペディア英語版 | Betty Bone Schiess Betty Bone Schiess (born April 2, 1923) is an American Episcopal priest. She was one of the first female Episcopal priests in the United States, and a member of the Philadelphia Eleven: leaders of the movement to allow the ordination of women in the American Episcopal Church. ==Early life and education== Betty Bone was born on April 2, 1923 in Cincinnati, Ohio to Leah and Evan Bone. She attended Hillsdale College Preparatory School where she was president of the student body in her senior year.〔p. 7 She then attended the University of Cincinnati and was the chaplain for Tri Delta.〔p. 8 Bone earned her BA in 1945. After graduating, she worked in the personnel department at Wright-Patterson Field.〔pp. 8–9 Bone earned her master's degree in 1947 from Syracuse University. She married William A. Schiess the same year and lived with him in Algiers for several weeks. She later wrote that they returned from their travels determined to "do something about the plight of the Negro." They took part in demonstrations and marches in the Southern United States.pp. 158–159 During the late 1960s, Schiess worked with the Syracuse National Organization for Women chapter to reform the Episcopal church. She earned her Master of Divinity degree in 1972 from the Rochester Center for Theological Studies, but was denied ordination due to her sex. In 1974 the Episcopal Church did not allow women to be ordained: efforts at two general conventions of bishops had failed.〔 Schiess credited Betty Friedan's 1965 book ''The Feminine Mystique'' and the foundation of a chapter of the National Organization for Women in Syracuse with inspiring her to pursue priesthood and change in the Episcopal Church.〔Schiess, Betty Bone (2003). ''Why Me, Lord: The Story of One Woman’s Ordination'' (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press).〕
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