Joe Hara

[6][7] In 1963, Hara divided his Midwest distributorship into 8 different territories and sold them off to move to Orlando with his family to join the Tupperware management team as Vice President of Sales.

In Orlando, Hara forged strong relationships with Tupperware President Hamer Wilson and chairman, Justin Dart.

[10] Hara was featured on CBS's 60 Minutes in 1976 alongside Morley Safer.In 1985, Hara retired after 33 years as a top executive at Tupperware, and spent the next three decades serving on boards for several groups, including the Jewish Federation of Orlando, The Holocaust Memorial Resource and Education Center, Habitat for Humanity and the Brevard Music Festival.

"In the past 70 years of my life I have had the enormous pleasure of witnessing the untapped reservoir of female intelligence.

I have observed this in my economic life having been exposed to thousands of women who, being made aware there are no restrictions, no limit to what they are free to achieve, do incredible things."