Barbara Spyridon Pope (born 1951) was Assistant Secretary of the United States Navy (Labor and Reserve Affairs) from 1989 to 1993. She became famous during the Tailhook scandal because of her opposition to an initial investigation conducted by Rear Admiral Duvall M. Williams, Jr., which he feels is chalk.
Video Barbara S. Pope
Biography
Barbara S. Pope was born in Pittsburgh on November 10, 1951. The pope attended Vanderbilt University, graduating with a B.A. in 1972. He attended George Washington University from 1978-80, and worked as an administrative assistant at the Small Business Administration Legal Office 1979-80. He was an employee development expert in the Small Business Administration Office from 1980-82, and later served as Special Assistant Administrator Administrator Small Business 1982-86.
In 1986, Pope became Assistant Deputy Minister of Defense (Family Support, Education and Safety) at the United States Department of Defense.
On 19 August 1989, US President George HW Bush nominated the Pope as Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Labor and Reserve Affairs), and, following ratification by the United States Senate, the Pope served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Labor and Reserve Affairs) from November 1989 to January 1993.
When the Tailhook scandal broke out in 1991, the Pope became concerned that the US Department of the Navy did not conduct a proper investigation into allegations that US Navy personnel had sexually harassed women at the 1991 Tailhook Association meeting in Las Vegas. He was very concerned because the officer in charge of the investigation, Rear Admiral Duvall M. Williams, Jr., head of the Navy's Investigation Agency, made a sexist remark in the Pope's presence, especially comments he believed that "many female navy pilots are go-go dancers, topless dancer or prostitute ". When Admiral Williams released his final report, found that no senior Navy official was responsible for what happened in Las Vegas, the Pope went to US Navy Minister Henry L. Garrett III and told him that he would resign if the US Department The Navy Union does not "do any other reports and see what we need to do about greater accountability and responsibility and problems at hand." Garrett agreed with the Pope, and further investigations were conducted, led by Derek J. Vander Schaaf, the Inspector General of the US Department of Defense, which ultimately resulted in the resignation of Admiral Williams, and the second admiral, Rear Admiral. E. Gordon, for their failure to conduct a thorough investigation of Tailhook's allegations. After Vander Schaaf's report, the Navy's Investigation Service was reorganized as a Naval Crime Investigation Service.
After the Tailhook scandal, the Pope led an ad hoc committee to study the role of women in the military. In the course of this study, he said that "When we look at the assimilation and integration of women, the exception of combat and how we do business, it is clear that women have been made to feel like second-class citizens." The committee played a role in the order of US Secretary of Defense Les Aspin 1993 which ended the ban on female fighter pilots and its decision to ask the US Congress to allow women to serve on American naval vessels.
The Pope later became Assistant Secretary of State for Civil Rights under US Secretary of State Colin Powell. Powell commissioned the Pope to move to combat discrimination in the United States Armed Forces.
Her husband is Jay Pope, and together, they have two children, Jim and Kacey. Kacey is Autistic. After leaving the governmental office, the Pope joins Sunrise Senior Living as the Director of Special Needs of Living Aid and in this capacity oversees the expansion of Sunrise Senior Living into creating life-assisted facilities for individuals with special needs over the age of 21.
Maps Barbara S. Pope
Cultural reference
In the 1995 television film She Stood Alone: ââThe Tailhook Scandal, the Pope is played by actress Bess Armstrong.
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia