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March 8, 2016

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Valentina (@valzarya) here. Maria Sharapova makes a shocking announcement, Erin Andrews wins her lawsuit, and we say good-bye to an Ivy League’s leading lady. Happy International Women’s Day!

EVERYONE'S TALKING

What's the deal with IWD? Fortune sat down with Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, executive director of UN Women, to better understand what International Women's Day is all about. She had one very specific recommendation for how businesses of all sizes can help promote gender equality.  Fortune

ALSO IN THE HEADLINES

 Sharapova shocker. Tennis champion Maria Sharapova announced on Monday that she had failed a drug test at the 2016 Australian Open. Fortune

 Can I get a refund? Scientist Vivienne Ming calculated the "cost" of being a minority—or how much harder one has to work to achieve the same things as a straight, white man. According to her calculations, women in the U.S. tech industry pay a "tax" of anywhere between $100,000 and $300,000.  Quartz

 Women help reps. A study shared exclusively with Fortune finds that within a given industry, companies with the best reputations have more than twice as many women in senior management as those with weaker reputations.  Fortune

 You can, Icahn. Since the beginning of 2011, five of the largest U.S. activist investment funds have sought at least 174 board positions and landed 108. Women were nominated just 11 times and got eight seats, or 7% of the total.  Bloomberg

 Andrews' award. Fox Sports reporter Erin Andrews was awarded $55 million on Monday, in her lawsuit related to a stalker who bought a hotel room next to her and secretly recorded a nude video. Time

Goodbye, Professor Garrett. Cornell University president Elizabeth Garrett died on Sunday of colon cancer. She was the first female leader of the Ivy League school. Huffington Post

CONTENT FROM DELOITTE

Women in IT: How to Succeed. U.S. Technology, Media & Telecommunications Leader Sandy Shirai offers strategies for making it to the top of the IT pyramid — and beating the odds, since women will hold fewer than 25% of IT jobs in developed countries by the end of 2016, Deloitte LLP predicts. Read more…

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

 Move over, Hef. Arsenic is a two-year-old media startup that's been called "the sexiest magazine in the world," and is emerging as a serious competitor to Playboy. It's run almost entirely by women, and its (free) content is submitted by female models themselves.  Business Insider

Oy, Aussies! According to a new study, about half of Australian women in media-related professions face harassment in the workplace. HelloGiggles

 Chic shoe-shiners. Women in Italy are transforming shoe-shining from an old-fashioned men's job into a hip industry.  New York Times

Pageant ugliness. Racked looks at the sexist, racist history of beauty pageants: "The whole idea of pitting women against one another and judging them primarily based on their looks is unsettling in and of itself. The fact that here is overt racism ingrained in the Miss America story adds to the unsettling legacy of American pageants." Racked

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ON MY RADAR

 Theranos ran tests despite quality problems  WSJ

What Melissa Harris-Perry's show meant to women of color Cosmopolitan

Ambassador Susan Schwab: Being the only woman in the room made me memorable Fortune

Dolly Parton announces biggest tour in 25 years Entertainment Weekly

Final Thought....

Don't be afraid to speak up against any injustice you experience.
-- Kesha, while accepting the Human Rights Campaign’s Visibility Award for her stance against the harassment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth. Hollywood Reporter
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