| The
1999 Commencement Address
By
Sarah Weddington
"We Stand Taller
Because We Stand on the Shoulders of Others"
I am grateful for the opportunity to share the experience of this Commencement
exercise with you, and to gather with your college administrators and faculty
members, your family members and your friends to honor you and your accomplishments.
When your president, Lisa Marsh Ryerson,
called to invite me, I couldn’t help but respond to her argument in your
favor. I’ve long admired the quality of Wells College, which was first
brought to my attention by your former president, Sissy Farenthold. In
President Ryerson’s words, Wells College is "an institution whose mission
is to educate and empower women." Visiting with her by phone made me think
I would enjoy meeting and getting to know her, a leader in the field of
women’s education.
Then she used the clinching argument:
She said I was the choice of the senior class. My response was an instant
"yes" to the invitation. Why? Because you are so important to the future
of issues I care about deeply. There is no place I could be today that
contains a greater possibility of having an impact on the future. Why?
Because of your status as graduates from a women’s college and because
of the accomplishments symbolized by your graduation.
Those of us who gather to honor you
are in awe of your talents and your knowledge. While I teach leadership
and law to students at the University of Texas at Austin, I also learn
from them. For example, they take pity on my kindergarten level of computer
knowledge and are gradually coaxing me to enter the high-tech age.
I remember a story about a dean at
a fine Ivy League school who seemed very upset one morning at work. A colleague
asked what was the matter, and the dean replied that he hadn’t slept well.
"I had the most frightening nightmare last night. I dreamed that I was
required to pass the freshman examination for admission." If I had to take
the senior exams you recently completed, I’m sure I would be quaking.
The topic for my brief remarks is:
"We Stand Taller Because We Stand on the Shoulders of Others." Contained
in those words is my appreciation of women of prior decades who fought
to expand opportunities for us. I feel that I and others of my generation
truly stand taller because we stand on their shoulders. I have dedicated
my time and talents to making still broader the ability of women to define
themselves and to creating a world with expanding choices and opportunities
for them. And as I look to their future, I am thinking of your shoulders.
Will others stand taller because they stand on your shoulders? What will
be your legacy to those who follow you?
I was delighted to be able to come
to this area yesterday and take advantage of an offer by Assistant Professor
of Political Science Nan DiBello to take me to Seneca Falls and other local
monuments to the work of an earlier era of women. As you know, in 1848
- over 150 years ago - a women’s rights convention met not far from here.
The sponsors endured ridicule, marital strife, and a lockout; but they
persevered and gathered to discuss the rights of women. The result of their
efforts was a resolution demanding that women be allowed to vote. Today
we can.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton headed that
Seneca Falls Convention, calling on America to fulfill its promise of equal
citizenship for all. A few short years later, Susan B. Anthony joined the
movement. One of the actions I was involved in, as Assistant to President
Jimmy Carter, was placing her image on the U.S. one dollar coin.
These two women worked in partnership for 50 years to bring about a change
in the nation’s laws limiting women’s participation in civic life. Stanton
raised seven children at the same time she wrote brilliant speeches that
Anthony fearlessly delivered coast-to-coast. Together they laid the groundwork
and developed the ideas which were the cornerstone of the women’s rights
movement for generations.
Since then, millions of American women
from all walks of life have planned, organized, lectured, written, marched,
strategized, petitioned, lobbied Congress and state legislatures, canvassed
voters, staged parades, run for office, debated-issues, argued court cases,
and broken new ground in every field imaginable. Our world was irrevocably
changed as a result of their commitment.
The vision and courage of the Seneca
Falls Convention organizers and others who have followed have inspired
succeeding generations of American women to challenge obstacles to a just
and fair society. During my visit to Seneca Falls with Professor DiBello,
I saw truly historic places. In contrast, I was introduced at another
college as being "historic." It’s true that my work is studied in history,
social studies, government, and other classes; but I still can’t see myself
as "historic." However, I have been involved in a historically important
period and events.
Long ago I heard Indira Gandhi’s words:
"I have felt like a bird born in too small a cage." I was growing up in
a time when I was often told, ‘Women don’t…. Women can’t…. Women shouldn’t…."
I saw - I felt - barriers for women, and I wanted to change them.
Recently, I participated in a symposium
at Albany Law School, at which they gave me the daunting task of synthesizing
the defining moments in my life. I shared with its audience memories that
caused me to work for change.
Growing up, I played basketball. But
like everyone in rural Texas, and most other states, girls played half-court
basketball. We were allowed two dribbles; a third was considered "traveling,"
a technical violation. Half of our basketball team would be on one end
of the court and the other half on the other end. I played guard position;
after two dribbles, I had to pass the ball to a teammate, who, after two
dribbles, would have to pass it to another. That would continue until we
could get the ball to our teammates waiting at half-court who played the
forward position and could try to score points. I was one of the players
asking, "Why can’t we just keep running?" And coaches or adults would say,
"Oh no, all that bounding and running and rebounding, why you might
hurt your innards!" Those limitations kept women from getting college
athletic scholarships. It took Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972 to end those limitations. Now we know that women can run full court
- and participate in a women’s professional basketball association besides.
Women high school students who became
pregnant were forced to drop out of school. There were no alternate programs
for them to continue their education, as there often are today. For the
young man who caused the pregnancy there were no education consequences.
Later, pregnant students who were in honor societies were often forced
out, but that was not true for a young father.
While getting my English and speech
secondary education degree in college, students in an education class were
told that women teachers in public schools would have to quit teaching
if pregnant or else they could be fired. Women were not allowed to be pregnant
in the classroom. The question posed in class was whether one had an ethical
duty to tell the principal as soon as she knew she was pregnant, or whether
one could wait until the principal figured it out. I saw no reason that
women couldn’t teach and be pregnant at the same time. Around 1973, the
law in Texas was changed so that public school teachers could not be fired
for being pregnant. Still later, national laws were passed to prohibit
larger employers from firing women on the basis of pregnancy.
If a woman applied for graduate school, she was often told that her application
would not be approved because she would probably get pregnant and drop
out, so her place should instead go to someone who would actually use the
degree. My case was slightly different. During my practice teaching, I
tried to make eighth graders love Beowulf. Since then, I have discovered
that I love teaching college students, but eighth grade was not the right
place for me. Searching for a direction my senior year, I went to the dean
of my college, McMurry College (now University), a small Methodist-affiliated
liberal arts institution in Abilene, Texas. I told him I wanted to go to
law school. He replied that it was not a good idea. I explained that I
had very good grades and asked why he said that. His reply was, "No woman
from here has ever gone to law school. It would be too tough." I think
you can surmise the exact moment that I decided I would go to law
school.
When I graduated from the University
of Texas School of Law in 1967, I could not get a job with a law firm.
Getting a job in a top-notch legal setting was not an option for me upon
graduation. As an aside, I’ve read that neither of our two current female
Supreme Court Justices, Sandra Day O’Connor or Ruth Bader Ginsburg, had
a job with a law firm upon graduation, despite the fact that O’Connor was
number three in her class at Stanford. (Current Chief Justice William Rehnquist
was number one in that class.) It was a time that denied women a variety
of professional opportunities because of prejudices. Although at the time
I worked very hard in the interview process to land an offer, I now look
back and am glad I failed to get an offer from a firm. If I had gone to
work for a firm, I would not have had the time nor the opportunity to do
Roe v. Wade.
It was a time when a woman’s salary
was not counted if a couple applied for a mortgage. The supposition was
that the woman would soon get pregnant and her income would be lost. It
was a time when credit was generally not available to a woman without her
father’s or her husband’s signature. After law school graduation and getting
a job with one of my law professors as his research and drafting assistant,
I applied for a credit card. The gentleman across the desk explained that
I would have to get my husband’s signature on the application. I explained
in my best new-lawyerly way that I was the lawyer and the income earner
in the family, that he was back from military service and I would
be putting him through law school, and that I hoped someday he would
produce an income; but at that moment the income was produced by me.
The man across the desk explained that he really didn’t care what I thought;
I had to get my husband’s signature in order to receive a credit card.
Credit on that basis was unacceptable.
Instead, I ran for the Texas legislature and won, passed an Equal Credit
Bill, and went back and got a credit card based on my signature alone.
Another change while I served in the Texas House from 1973 to 1977 was
that laws regarding rape were strengthened. While I worked in the White
House for President Jimmy Carter, I participated in making funding available
for the first domestic violence shelter, in expanding opportunities for
women in the military, in appointing women to a number of high-level positions
(including the appointment of Ruth Bader-Ginsburg to the federal district
bench), and so much more.
The case of Roe is rooted in
a time when women often felt bound in too small a world by laws, by stereotypes,
and by societal concepts. A key issue of that time revolved around making
birth control available. Some states, like Connecticut, had made the use
of birth control a criminal offense. The 1965 U.S. Supreme Court decision
Griswold v. Connecticut ended state-enforced prohibition of the
use of contraception and affirmed a constitutional right of privacy. Later
in a Massachusetts case, Eisenstadt v. Baird, the U.S. Supreme Court
held that both married and unmarried people have a right of access to contraception.
When we began Roe, there was
no legal prohibition against birth control use in Texas. However, it was
often unavailable for other reasons. For example, the University of Texas
Health Center, as I remember, had a policy that no woman could have access
to contraception there unless she certified she was within six weeks of
marriage. I assume the thought was that she needed to start taking contraceptive
pills, if that was the contraceptive method she chose, several weeks before
her wedding night in order to be protected against pregnancy. There were
a number of efforts at that time to tell women about how to prevent pregnancy
and how to find and use various contraceptive methods.
Beginning Roe, we never considered
our work to be "for abortion." Rather, we were struggling for the right
of women to make decisions relating to pregnancy. To us, those decisions
should not be made by strangers or the government.
Today, 30 years after I filed that case, I think of myself as "emeritus."
That designation represents a change in my level of involvement. A professor
emeritus, for example, continues to have an office and to follow with devotion
his or her areas of expertise, but the main action shifts to other players.
Lest I give the wrong impression, let me clarify that it would be inaccurate
to say that I will never again speak on the topic. I will continue to be
a participant in related events; I care too much to do otherwise. However,
my role will be one of support for others who are taking the leading legal
and advocacy responsibilities.
That and other issues are among those
you inherit. Women in my generation have paved the way for your generation
to enjoy many opportunities previously denied to women. I earnestly wish
my generation of women had been able to solve critical community issues,
or at least key issues for women, but such victories have eluded us.
-
Of the 1.3 billion people living in poverty
worldwide, 70% are women. On average, women worldwide earn 30% to 40% less
than men.
-
Developing nations invest less in health
care and education for their daughters because they will earn less than
sons. Poor health care affects women abroad and at home.
-
Women’s health has been neglected due
to a history of researchers using only male subjects. Because they have
not found a way to compensate for women’s more variable body chemistry,
researchers have been wary of studying the effects of drugs on women. But
scientists have recently acknowledged that drugs do affect women and men
differently. Therefore, studies must also include female subjects. More
research on disease processes that primarily affect women, like breast
cancer, has only recently been emphasized.
-
Women have entered the workforce in unprecedented
numbers in the last two decades. Yet women often have two jobs, combining
career and caretaker responsibilities. As a nation we have not effectively
addressed the problem of a shortage of quality childcare.
-
Access to reproductive choices is under
constant, high-pressured attack.
Soon all eyes will turn to you, as you
receive your diploma and the official college congratulations. I’m sure
there will be picture-taking and hugs from family and friends in abundance.
As you cross, I will be looking at you and seeing those important professionals,
those involved family members, those activists involved in civic activities
that we need you to be.
But I will also be looking at your
shoulders. Will they be shoulders that lift future generations of women
to stand taller still? Will they be part of a continuation of women who
have worked for the betterment of others? Will you someday be called "historic"?
I believe you will, and that is why I traveled from Texas to join you today.
I ask your help to preserve the victories of the past. I ask your courage
in continuing ongoing battles. And I ask your faithfulness to your dreams
created through your years at Wells.
Wells graduates of the Class of 1999,
I salute you for your accomplishments. I thank you for the invitation to
participate, and I commend to you the care and the creation of our future.
May future generations say of you: "We stand taller because we stand on
their shoulders."
Delivered Saturday, May 22, 1999
Last updated 1/23/2002
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