and ovita in houston was much the same way. she was of a national figure because she had married the governor, william p. hobby. but ovita ran the houston post and expanded it into owning television stations which were sold for hundreds of millions toward the end of her life of. but she also started the wax in world war ii and made it such a success that it was clearly the precursor to women actually being able to come into the military. and ovita is the only woman that has an inscription in the world war ii memorial. now in washington d.c. and she was asked by president roosevelt to write a description of what volunteer women would do in the war, was -- because they needed the men to be able to fight and fly airplanes. and they wanted women to do the desk jobs, and they began also to be pilots, the wasps also were part of world war ii training pilots to fly. and ovita set up a plan, and roosevelt looked at it and said you have to be the head of this. and she said, oh, no, no, i'm going back to houston where i belong. and her h