var now = new Date();
var day = now.getDate();

if (day==1)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Lucille Ball</span><br>One of the most powerful personalities in the world of television, Lucille Ball virtually defined an era of entertainment. Along the way, she established herself as a brilliant comedienne, built a small Hollywood empire, and even shot down a few antiquated notions about women. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="lball.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==2)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Josephine Baker</span><br>Think Josephine Baker and you think glamour-a wild, dangerous kind of glamour that makes you want to run off to Paris and do something reckless. Maybe you would scandalize Parisian nightclubs, or work for the French Resistance.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="jbaker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==3)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Nellie Bly</span><br>Nellie Bly would do anything to get her story. Fueled by righteous rage and a rebellious nature, Nellie would take on the world for a good lead. She crashed asylum gates and factory floors, was tossed into prisons and out of countries-all to get at the truth she knew the public deserved to know.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="nbly.html"><b>Learn More</b></a>');
}

if (day==4)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Margaret Bourke-White</span><br>There was nowhere Margaret wouldn\'t go for a photograph. She would snowshoe to logging camps, hang out of helicopters, and clamber up construction-site girders to capture an image she knew was right. If the action was at the front lines or across the globe, she made sure she was there, camera in hand.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mwhite.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==5)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Maria Callas</span><br>Maria Callas became the most celebrated opera star in history not because of her flawless voice, but because of the raw emotion she brought to her work. Maria knew she was born to be a diva, and simply made it so.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mcallas.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==6)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Amelia Earhart</span><br>Amelia was ten years old when she saw her first plane at the Iowa State Fair and she was not impressed. "It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and not at all interesting," she later said. But she ultimately became one of the most famous aviators in history.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="aearhart.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==7)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Althea Gibson</span><br>While the world watched Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson cross color barriers, Althea Gibson was quietly building her skills at another game whose color barrier she would destroy. Against all odds, Althea would become the next great American hero, and, for a time, the greatest tennis player in the world. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="agibson.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==8)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Jane Goodall</span><br>When Jane Goodall was about eight years old, the Dr. Doolittle story inspired her dream of living in Africa and writing about wild animals. Many years later, she saved her waitressing tips, left London, and sailed to Africa on the Kenya Castle.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="jgoodall.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==9)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Harlem Renaissance Women</span><br>If you had been lucky enough to sit in on any of the café gatherings or artsy dinner parties of the Harlem Renaissance, chances are you would have found writer Zora Neale Hurston at the head of the table. The other great female voice of the Harlem Renaissance was Nella Larsen, who contributed two of the most important novels to the movement.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="harlem.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==10)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Mother Jones</span><br>If you\'d been present at one of the many violent miners\' strikes that erupted during the late 1800s, you probably would have seen Mother Jones at the head of the crowd. It must have been an amazing sight-a small, grandmotherly woman suddenly coming alive to fire up the proceedings with an explosive mix of passion and eloquence.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mjones.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==11)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Lozen</span><br>Riding in an Apache war party must have been the wildest kind of rush. Imagine, if you can, that kind of feeling, and you\'ve got a window into the soul of one of the greatest female fighters of all time-Lozen, the bravest Apache maiden. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="lozen.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==12)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Annie Oakley</span><br>Dubbed "Little Sure Shot" by the great Sioux warrior Sitting Bull, Annie Oakley sure was little-about five feet tall and under a hundred pounds-and her shot sure was sure. Annie was both wholesome and daring, which made her simultaneously reassuring and provocative to her fans.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="aoakley.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==13)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Georgia O\'Keefe</span><br>One of the greatest artists of the twentieth century, Georgia O\'Keeffe challenged notions of style, theory, and possibility when she emerged on the modern art scene. In her day, women were sorely underrepresented in the male-dominated art world, but that didn\'t stop Georgia from painting her way to becoming an American legend. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="gokeefe.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==14)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Dorothy Parker</span><br>As the wittiest member of the smart set, Dorothy Parker embodied everything that was glamorous, smart, and sparkling about New York in the 1920s. As part of the inner circle of the famed Algonquin Round Table, she traded wisecracks and opinions with the sharpest literary minds of the day.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="dparker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==15)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Suffragists</span><br>The Suffragists were the toughest group of rabble-rousing rebels ever to wreak havoc on a system stuck in the past. Along the way they were spit on, beaten up, and ridiculed by all sides. But these women were on fire for something they knew we all deserved-the right to vote. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="suffragists.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==16)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Harriet Tubman</span><br>Fierce Freedom Fighter, Adventurer, warrior, master spy-you name the dangerous calling and Harriet took it on. During her lifetime, Harriet Tubman developed into one of the most effective and daring rebels in American History. Harriet\'s courage was fueled by her resentment at the system into which she had been born-slavery. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="htubman.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==17)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Madame C.J. Walker</span><br>The fact is that Madame C.J. Walker became the first black woman millionaire in the United States because of a bad hair day. The year was 1905, her hair was falling out and she prayed to God to save it. Her hairy situation gave her the idea to start a company featuring hair care products.   &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mwalker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==18)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Lucille Ball</span><br>One of the most powerful personalities in the world of television, Lucille Ball virtually defined an era of entertainment. Along the way, she established herself as a brilliant comedienne, built a small Hollywood empire, and even shot down a few antiquated notions about women. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="lball.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==19)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Josephine Baker</span><br>Think Josephine Baker and you think glamour-wild, dangerous kind of glamour that makes you want to run off to Paris and do something reckless. Maybe you would scandalize Parisian nightclubs, or work for the French Resistance.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="jbaker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==20)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Nellie Bly</span><br>Nellie Bly would do anything to get her story. Fueled by righteous rage and a rebellious nature, Nellie would take on the world for a good lead. She crashed asylum gates and factory floors, was tossed into prisons and out of countries-all to get at the truth she knew the public deserved to know.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="nbly.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==21)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Margaret Bourke-White</span><br>There was nowhere Margaret wouldn\'t go for a photograph. She would snowshoe to logging camps, hang out of helicopters, and clamber up construction-site girders to capture an image she knew was right. If the action was at the front lines or across the globe, she made sure she was there, camera in hand.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mwhite.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==22)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Maria Callas</span><br>Maria Callas became the most celebrated opera star in history not because of her flawless voice, but because of the raw emotion she brought to her work. Maria knew she was born to be a diva, and simply made it so.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mcallas.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==23)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Amelia Earhart</span><br>Amelia was ten years old when she saw her first plane at the Iowa State Fair and she was not impressed. "It was a thing of rusty wire and wood and not at all interesting," she later said. But she ultimately became one of the most famous aviators in history.&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="aearhart.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==24)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Althea Gibson</span><br>While the world watched Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson cross color barriers, Althea Gibson was quietly building her skills at another game whose color barrier she would destroy. Against all odds, Althea would become the next great American hero, and, for a time, the greatest tennis player in the world. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="agibson.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==25)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Jane Goodall</span><br>When Jane Goodall was about eight years old, the Dr. Doolittle story inspired her dream of living in Africa and writing about wild animals. Many years later, she saved her waitressing tips, left London, and sailed to Africa on the Kenya Castle.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="jgoodall.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==26)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Harlem Renaissance Women</span><br>If you had been lucky enough to sit in on any of the café gatherings or artsy dinner parties of the Harlem Renaissance, chances are you would have found writer Zora Neale Hurston at the head of the table. The other great female voice of the Harlem Renaissance was Nella Larsen, who contributed two of the most important novels to the movement.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="harlem.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==27)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Mother Jones</span><br>If you\'d been present at one of the many violent miners\' strikes that erupted during the late 1800s, you probably would have seen Mother Jones at the head of the crowd. It must have been an amazing sight-a small, grandmotherly woman suddenly coming alive to fire up the proceedings with an explosive mix of passion and eloquence.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mjones.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==28)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Lozen</span><br>Riding in an Apache war party must have been the wildest kind of rush. Imagine, if you can, that kind of feeling, and you\'ve got a window into the soul of one of the greatest female fighters of all time-Lozen, the bravest Apache maiden. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="lozen.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==29)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Georgia O\'Keefe</span><br>One of the greatest artists of the twentieth century, Georgia O\'Keeffe challenged notions of style, theory, and possibility when she emerged on the modern art scene. In her day, women were sorely underrepresented in the male-dominated art world, but that didn\'t stop Georgia from painting her way to becoming an American legend. &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="gokeefe.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==30)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Dorothy Parker</span><br>As the wittiest member of the smart set, Dorothy Parker embodied everything that was glamorous, smart, and sparkling about New York in the 1920s. As part of the inner circle of the famed Algonquin Round Table, she traded wisecracks and opinions with the sharpest literary minds of the day.  &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="dparker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}

if (day==31)
{document.write('<span class="main03">Madame C.J. Walker</span><br>The fact is that Madame C.J. Walker became the first black woman millionaire in the United States because of a bad hair day. The year was 1905, her hair was falling out and she prayed to God to save it. Her hairy situation gave her the idea to start a company featuring hair care products.   &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="mwalker.html"><b><font color="#FF6633">Learn More</font></b></a>');
}
