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- <text>
- <title>
- (Women) Great Changes, New Chances, Tough Choices
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Women Portrait
- </history>
- <link 00020>
- <link 00197><link 00177><link 00194><link 00241><article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 5, 1976
- WOMEN OF THE YEAR
- Great Changes, New Chances, Tough Choices
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> They have arrived like a new immigrant wave in male America.
- They may be cops, judges, military officers, telephone linemen,
- cab drivers, pipefitters, editors, business executives--or
- mothers and housewives, but not quite the same subordinate
- creatures they were before. Across the broad range of American
- life, from suburban tract houses to state legislatures, from
- church pulpits to Army barracks, women's lives are profoundly
- changing, and with them, the traditional relationships between
- the sexes. Few women are unaffected, few are thinking as they did
- ten years--or even a couple of years--ago. America has not
- entirely repealed the Code of Hammurabi (woman as male property),
- but enough U.S. women have so deliberately taken possession of
- their lives that the event is spiritually equivalent to the
- discovery of a new continent. Says Critic Elizabeth Janeway: "The
- sky above us lifts, the light pours in. No maps exist for this
- enlarged world. We must make them as we explore."
- </p>
- <p> It is difficult to locate the exact moment when the
- psychological change occurred. A cumulative process, it owes much
- to the formal feminist movement--the Friedans and Steinems and
- Abzugs. Yet feminism has transcended the feminist movement. In
- 1975 the women's drive penetrated every layer of society, matured
- beyond ideology to a new status of general--and sometimes
- unconscious--acceptance.
- </p>
- <p> The belief that women are entitled to truly equal social and
- professional rights has spread far and deep into the country.
- Once the doctrine of well-educated middle-class women, often
- young and single, it has taken hold among working-class women,
- farm wives, blacks, Puerto Ricans, white "ethnics." The Y.W.C.A.
- embraces it; so do the Girls Clubs of America and the Junior
- Leagues. A measure of just how far the idea has come can be seen
- in the many women who denigrate the militant feminists' style
- ("too shrill, unfeminine") and then proceed to conduct their own
- newly independent lives. At year's end a Harris poll found that
- by 63% to 25%, Americans favor "most of the efforts to strengthen
- and change women's status in society." Five years ago, it was 42%
- in favor, 41% against.
- </p>
- <p> 1975 was not so much the Year of the Woman as the Year of
- Women--an immense variety of women altering their lives,
- entering new fields, functioning with a new sense of identity,
- integrity and confidence. Those whom TIME has selected as Women
- of the Year accomplished much in their own right in 1975, and
- they also symbolized the new consciousness of women generally.
- </p>
- <p>-- In the White House, Betty Ford, though she used a platform
- that she owed wholly to her husband, enlarged the customarily
- dutiful role of First Lady.
- </p>
- <p>-- In the Cabinet, Carla Hills took command of the Department
- of Housing and Urban Development, the third woman to serve in the
- Cabinet (after F.D.R.'s Labor Secretary Frances Perkins and Dwight
- Eisenhower's HEW Secretary Oveta Culp Hobby).
- </p>
- <p>-- In the statehouse, Connecticut's Ella Grasso took office
- as the first woman Governor elected in her own right. (Governors
- Nellie Tayloe Ross of Wyoming, Miriam Ferguson of Texas and
- Lurleen Wallace of Alabama had succeeded their husbands.)
- </p>
- <p>-- In Congress, Texas' Barbara Jordan emerged as a rising
- star in the House of Representatives and the Democratic Party.
- </p>
- <p>-- In the law, Susie Sharp of North Carolina served with
- distinction as the first woman to be popularly elected chief
- justice of a state supreme court.
- </p>
- <p>-- In education, Jill Ker Conway was named the first woman
- president of Smith, the nation's largest women's liberal arts
- college (2,468 students).
- </p>
- <p>-- In sports, Billie Jean King, who almost singlehanded has
- put women into the mainstream and helped greatly to raise the pay
- of women athletes, became a kind of business and sports
- conglomerate.
- </p>
- <p>-- In literature, Susan Brownmiller, made a scholarly,
- disturbing contribution to the discussion of the sexes with her
- much-bruited book Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape.
- </p>
- <p>-- In labor, Addie Wyatt, women's affairs director of the
- 550,000 member Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen,
- fought successfully to eliminate wage differentials between men
- and women workers.
- </p>
- <p>-- In the military, Kathleen Byerly, a Navy lieutenant
- commander who is one of the many fast-rising women executives in
- the armed forces, became a top aide to the fleet's Pacific
- training commands.
- </p>
- <p>-- In journalism, Carol Sutton, the first woman to be
- managing editor of a major U.S. newspaper, brightened the
- editorial content while she successfully ran the Louisville
- Courier-Journal, one of the nation's best dailies.
- </p>
- <p>-- In religion, Alison Cheek, the first woman to celebrate
- Communion at a U.S. Episcopal church, was hired as a priest at
- Washington's Church of St. Stephen and the Incarnation.
- </p>
- <p> The backgrounds, achievements and views of these women are
- amply detailed. Scores of others might be added to the list--distinguished lawyers, economists, business executives,
- actresses, writers. For example, Economist Alice Rivlin, chief
- of the new Congressional Budget Office, has taken on the tough
- job of analyzing for Senators and Congressmen just how their
- legislation will probably affect national spending, budget
- deficits, prices and employment. Sarah Caldwell, the formidable
- director of the Opera Company of Boston, week after next will
- become the first woman to conduct at the New York Metropolitan
- Opera. Journalist Charlotte Curtis wields powerful political
- influence as editor of the New York Times Op-Ed page. NBC-TV's
- Barbara Walters, co-host of the Today show, is one of the best
- interviewers in journalism. Joan Ganz Cooney, who launched
- Sesame Street in 1969, now presides over the Children's Television
- Workshop, is a member of the media-monitoring National News
- Council and a director of Xerox and the First Pennsylvania Corp.
- </p>
- <p> What was exceptional in the year of American women was the
- status of the everyday, usually anonymous woman, who moved into
- the mainstream of jobs, ideas and policymaking. The mood was
- summed up by Lawyer Jill Ruckelshaus, the Administration's leading
- feminist, who is head of the U.S. International Women's Year
- Commission. Said she: "The women's movement is burning."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the scope and maturity of the movement--and in
- some ways, because of it--women suffered a number of setbacks
- in 1975. The organized women's movement fell into factional
- disputes. The National Organization for Women designated Oct. 29
- as "Alice Doesn't" Day and called on women to stage a nowork
- strike; it was a spectacular failure. Betty Friedan, a godmother
- of feminism, joined twelve other current and former NOW members
- in a splinter group called Womensurge, arguing that NOW is growing
- too radical and alienating the masses of American women. The
- dissidents were especially disturbed that last October NOW pledged
- to make lesbian rights a priority issue.
- </p>
- <p> There were legal defeats. To feminists, the most startling
- and discouraging setbacks came when both New Jersey and New York
- voters rejected state equal-rights amendments. Meantime, the
- national Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution remained
- stalled, with four states still needed for ratification.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the problems of the ERA could not be entirely interpreted
- as a rebuke to women's rights. The sweeping simplicity of the
- amendment--"Equality of rights under law shall not be denied or
- abridged on account of sex"--made many voters, especially women,
- nervous. The anti-ERA lobby, led by Phyllis Schlafly--a
- conspicuously liberated woman who at 51 is working for a law
- degree--conjured up the prospect of unisex public toilets, an
- end to alimony, women forced into duty as combat soldiers. In
- fact, the effects of the ERA are not known, and some
- constitutional lawyers argue that it would be better to rely on
- specific antidiscrimination laws rather than on an amendment that
- might have unpredictable social results.
- </p>
- <p> Far more important than such setbacks was the psychological
- momentum that gathered force and made many changes in everyday
- life in 1975. Says Connie Birmingham, an aide to U.S. Senator
- Richard Clark of Iowa: "Ten years ago, the thing to do at a
- party was for the women and the men to break up into groups.
- Well, they still do that, but instead of talking about toilet
- training and where they get their hair done, women are talking
- about feminism. They discuss what they are doing, and it is
- definitely more interesting, even more interesting than the men."
- Her view of women ten years ago may be partly caricature, but the
- sense of change is real.
- </p>
- <p> Mothers' mind-sets have altered about their children,
- especially their daughters. Says Kathy Snell, 25, an Illinois
- farm wife, speaking of her four-year-old daughter: "I hope she
- doesn't spend her whole life learning how to please people. I
- spent so much of my energy making other people like me that it
- took 23 years to like myself. I want my daughter to be
- independent."
- </p>
- <p> More and more older women are now finding lives of their own
- once their children are grown--if not before. Says Sue Shear,
- 57, who was elected to the Missouri state legislature in 1972: "I
- used to feel guilty when Harry went into the jungle, and I was a
- cook and chauffeur for the kids. I felt he was doing everything,
- and I was doing nothing. Now I'm finding that the jungle is not
- any harder or scarier than being home."
- </p>
- <p> But it is particularly among young women that the
- psychological changes have taken hold. Carol Driver, 38, a twice-
- divorced Portland, Ore., woman who runs her own building
- maintenance service, detects the shifts in her teen-age girls.
- Says she: "They don't view marriage as an automatic end. They are
- much more aware of possible alternatives, to marry or not marry,
- have children or not. We never used to question the inevitable
- marriage-and-motherhood route."
- </p>
- <p> It is the young who seem most likely to overcome the
- psychological handicaps under which many women labor. In a
- classic study eleven years ago, Psychologist Matina Horner, now
- president of Radcliffe College, concluded that as a result of
- their childhood training and various social pressures of home and
- family, many women are hobbled by fear of success--a learned
- fear that the risks of succeeding are "loss of femininity," loss of
- womanly identity. The "fear" is also quite practical--in the
- face of expected discrimination, a woman may decide that the
- effort to succeed is not worth it.
- </p>
- <p> Margaret Hennig and Anne Jardim, co-directors of the Simmons
- College graduate program in management, believe women's attitudes
- toward work are so different from men's that it is not surprising
- so few have risen to the top in many fields. Women, they have
- found, often view a job as something to be done competently and
- carefully. Indeed, women not uncommonly are such perfectionists
- that they get bogged down in detail. Females have been (or at
- least used to be) shaped by society to have no broad perspective
- of career, whereas men go after long-range goals and set
- priorities.
- </p>
- <p> "When a woman achieves," says Jardim, "the clear inference
- is that her home and family suffer. So it becomes a horrid
- psychological trick." But this happens only a long as the woman's
- feminine identity remains fundamentally rooted in marriage and
- home. As attitudes toward women's roles change, and especially as
- the young grow up with more expansive and varied expectations,
- that kind of crippling guilt will recede.
- </p>
- <p> Men's attitudes are shifting along with women's. The Harris
- survey found that 59% of men advocated greater opportunities for
- women. In some ways, the recession brought a kind of enforced
- enlightenment: husbands badly needed their wives'--or
- daughters'--paychecks to help support the family. Many men may
- still ask their oafish versions of Freud's infuriating question,
- "What does woman want?" But a surprising number of them have--guiltily perhaps--acknowledged the seriousness of women's
- complaints. While some advances have come because of women's push
- for equality or from affirmative-action programs, others have
- also resulted from a dawning recognition of the justice of women's
- demands for equal rights.
- </p>
- <p> In almost all areas--business, the professions, blue-collar
- work, education, politics, the family--a new sensibility among
- both men and women has led to more enlightenment--and a restless
- understanding of how far away sexual equality remains.
- </p>
- <p> BUSINESS: Inroads to Management
- </p>
- <p> At the top, business is almost wholly a men's club. In the
- 1,300 biggest U.S. companies, there are about 150 women directors
- v. about 20 five years ago. With rare exceptions, women have not
- risen as high as vice president in the big, old, basic industries,
- such as steel, autos, oil, railroads. Generally, women have done
- better in less tradition-bound fields: computers, communications,
- and finance, though those who have climbed to vice presidencies
- tend to be in personnel, corporate relations and other ancillary
- areas.
- </p>
- <p> Yet worlds hitherto closed to women are opening.
- Increasingly, women are seen attending business conventions,
- sometimes with their husbands--when the spouse is invited. More
- and more women are becoming junior executives and sales
- representatives, positions that often lead to the top; roughly 12%
- of Xerox's traveling sales force and 7% of Levi Strauss's are
- women. AT&T's booklets no longer refer to operators as she and
- managers as he. Businessmen are increasingly scouting for women
- management trainees, and women are rising fast in the nation's
- graduate business schools. Between 1971 and 1975, the percentage
- of women in the incoming business class rose from 4% to 24% at
- Pennsylvania's Wharton, 5% to 19% at Stanford, and 6% to 33% at
- Columbia.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, a business degree does not guarantee success or
- equality. Carol McLaughlin, a graduate student at Wharton, has
- surveyed Wharton graduates from 1945 to 1974. Among her findings:
- after being out of Wharton for 7 1/2 years, men were earning an
- average salary of $23,000 a year v. $17,000 for women. On the
- average, the men had a staff of 30 people reporting to them;
- women averaged two or three. Observes McLaughlin: "The staff
- size is really startling. It shows that women are kind of doing
- things, but they are not really managing." From the comments on
- her questionnaires, McLaughlin has determined that "there are an
- awful lot of discouraged women out there." One Wharton alumna
- wrote, "I work twice as hard as a man just to prove I am not a
- dumb woman." Anti-female prejudice leaves a mark even on the most
- successful women. Virtually all harbor memories of slights and
- obstacles that were--or are--put in their paths.
- </p>
- <p> But whatever the traumas, an increasing number of women have
- successful business careers. After working up through the
- corporate ranks, Marion Kellogg now earns more than $100,000 as
- General Electric's first woman vice president. Mary Wells,
- chairman of the Manhattan agency she helped found, Wells, Rich,
- Greene, Inc. is the advertising world's most heralded woman.
- Banker Catherine Cleary, president of First Wisconsin Corp., sits
- on the boards of AT&T, Kraftco and General Motors. Kay Knight
- Mazuy, senior corporate vice president of Shawmut Association
- Inc., New England's second largest banking firm, is an odds-on
- favorite to become Boston's first woman president of a major
- corporation.
- </p>
- <p> THE PROFESSIONS: Finally Making It
- </p>
- <p> Some 17% of women in the nation's work force are
- professionals, though most of them are teachers and nurses. But
- growing numbers are gaining access to law and medicine, in part
- because those professions demand specific skills that can disarm
- sex prejudice. About 25% of entering medical students are now
- women, up from 11% in 1971. Some 20% of law students are women,
- v. 8.5% in 1971.
- </p>
- <p> Today, 7% of U.S. lawyers are women--an increase from 2.8%
- in 1972. Says one of them, Ann Quill Niederlander, 60, of St.
- Louis: "There is no question that women in the legal profession
- have made great strides. Women are now willing to go to women
- lawyers. We are finally making it."
- </p>
- <p> The new willingness of women to consult women professionals--often their insistence on it--extends to doctors, notably
- gynecologists. Women make up a remarkable 80% of the work force
- in the nation's health services, but overwhelmingly, they are
- nurses and technicians--helpers rather than leaders. Only 9% of
- physicians are women. Female med students still find much to
- complain about. Says one: "Guess what part of a male cadaver I'm
- assigned to dissect first." But, says Dr. Frances K. Conley, 35,
- a top neurosurgeon at Standford University Medical Center, "I've
- been well accepted by professionals and patients all along the
- way. If you pull your own weight, do a competent job, you're
- accepted." Conley is both amused and irritated when she goes to a
- party with her husband Philip, a financial analyst: "Everybody
- asks him what he does, and conversation revolves around that.
- Nobody asks me what I do. They think they know."
- </p>
- <p> Atlanta's Dr. Nanette Wenger, 45, who is director of the
- cardiac clinics at Grady Memorial Hospital, notes a change since
- she got her M.D. 21 years ago: "Women are now referred to as Dr.
- Smith or Dr. Jones--not `that woman doctor' as I was." Because
- of sheer ability, Wenger is in great demand as a physician and
- consultant round the world. In one week recently, she jetted to
- Israel to deliver a paper to the International Society of
- Cardiologists; then she popped over to Geneva for a meeting of
- the World Health Organization; next she flew to Dallas for a
- conference of the American Heart Association, of which she is a
- vice president; from there she headed for New York City for a
- gathering of the American College of Cardiology. At 6 p.m.
- Saturday, she was welcomed home by their three teen-aged
- daughters--just in time to bustle off to a party with her
- husband Julius, a gastroenterologist.
- </p>
- <p> Women have long had some positions of influence in American
- religion, but now they are gaining in power. The most notable
- disputes have been over admitting women to equal status as
- clergymen. Ever since St. Paul's strictures on the subordination
- of women ("I permit no woman to teach or to have authority over
- men"), Christianity has been patriarchal. Yet Roman Catholic
- women are now participating in the Mass as lectors, and in the
- distribution of the Eucharist. Nuns, of course, have undergone
- an astonishing transformation in the past decade, doffing habits
- and leaving cloisters to live in the community at large.
- </p>
- <p> In Protestant churches, a small but rising number of
- parishioners look up at the pulpit on Sunday morning--and see
- a woman. The United Methodist Church has 576 ordained women, up
- from 332 in 1970, and the United Presbyterian Church has more than
- 200, compared with 103 in 1972. The Lutheran Church in America,
- which began ordaining women in 1970, has 27 women in clerical
- posts.
- </p>
- <p> The Episcopal Church has yet to recognize women as priests.
- But 251 women are attending seminaries, some with hopes of
- becoming priests, others with plans to teach in seminaries. Over
- the past 18 months, 15 women have been ordained as priests by four
- bishops. One of the women, Nancy Wittig, 30, served for four
- months as a deacon at St. Peter's Church in Morristown, N.J., but
- resigned because of lack of support from the vestry. In some
- perplexity, Wittig demands, "How come, if the church proclaims we
- are all God's children, I am considered less?" Among the others
- ordained one is a part-time prison minister in Rochester, two are
- professors at the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge,
- Mass., the Rev. Lee McGee is a chaplain at Washington's American
- University. Alison Cheek, of course, has her church work in
- Washington. But most of the others are working at secular jobs--because they cannot get anything else.
- </p>
- <p> WHITE COLLAR, BLUE COLLAR: Out of Women's Ghettos
- </p>
- <p> More than 40% of all employed women work in the traditional
- female ghettos, as salesclerks, secretaries, bookkeepers,
- receptionists, telephone operators. Their wages are low, averaging
- $4,700 for sales clerks and $6,400 for clerical workers. Even
- these jobs are becoming harder to find, as college graduates,
- including many men, are competing for them in a tight job market.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes learning more physical blue-collar work can be a
- way out of the white-collar ghettos. Ann Serrano, 25, was a
- telephone operator for Pacific Telephone in Inglewood, Calif., a
- few years ago. Now, after on-the-job training, she has doubled
- her salary by learning to repair and maintain telephone
- equipment. "Some men resent it and still don't have confidence
- in women," she says. "But they will have to recognize that from
- now on this is the way it's going to be."
- </p>
- <p> In Los Angeles, Janis Stark, 26, a telephone installer, drags
- around 60 lbs. of equipment and says that "going up telephone
- poles was fearsome at first. Now it's second nature." Still less
- usual is the work of Evelyn Newell, 28; tired of her deadend job
- as a railway clerk, she apprenticed as a fireman and attended a
- locomotive training school, becoming the first woman locomotive
- engineer in the U.S. With three years' experience, she now earns
- close to $25,000 annually. The support from the men on the job has
- been terrific, she says. "There are no conflicts in my life. But
- it would probably take another railroadman to understand."
- </p>
- <p> Until the weather stalled construction for the winter, more
- than 3,000 women were working on the Alaska pipeline as craftsmen,
- clerks, cooks. Adele Bacon, 22, for a time was an apprentice
- pipefitter on the line. "The men watched their language when I
- was around," she admitted, "so I had to watch mine." At Prudhoe
- Bay, petite Kathleen Cotten, 26, was a warehouse checker. Among
- her duties: helping to get 17,000-lb. sections of pipe moving on
- rollers as they were being cleaned. The women on the pipeline,
- although their bedrooms are sometimes side by side with the men's,
- encountered few problems in coed living. "They're treated just
- like everyone else," said one electrician. "I walk down the halls
- in my shorts. If they don't like it, too bad. Most of us are
- family men. If one guy starts giving a woman a hard time, there
- are twelve others ready to knock him down. We sort of watch out
- for them."
- </p>
- <p> One complaint of blue-collar women in several areas is the
- prevalence of calendar nudes around the shops. A woman working
- in construction near Seattle was appalled to climb into the cab
- of a truck and find its ceiling papered with crotch shots.
- Sometimes the hazards are more serious. Because many men fear
- women will take their jobs away, there is much hostility. One
- woman apprentice machinist in Seattle was told by men workers
- that it was safe to put her hands into a container of acid. She
- did not. Others in the construction trades complain that they
- have been given the silent treatment for months.
- </p>
- <p> Breaking into the male unions is often difficult. Says a
- staff member of San Francisco's Advocates for Women, which places
- women in nontraditional jobs: "We had a woman who tried to get
- into the plumbers' union. She went through three tests and finally
- got to the oral interview. They accused her of being a spy for
- women's lib. They said she just wanted to juice up her master's
- thesis. But this woman was on welfare. She needed a job." Others
- are having better luck. In Seattle, an organization called
- Mechanica, which helps women find blue-collar jobs, has placed
- women as carpenters, machinists, diesel mechanics, laborers and
- truck drivers. One 24-year-old has a bachelor's degree in
- psychology from Antioch College but now works in Seattle as an
- auto mechanic, for $5.45 per hour, which, she says, "is better
- than being an unemployed psychologist."
- </p>
- <p> THE MILITARY: Some Amazing Gains
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. military has moved ahead of industry in eliminating
- sex barriers. Of a total 2.1 million people in the armed forces,
- 91,000 are women; 4,600 are nonmedical officers, including two
- brigadier generals. Fully 92% of the job categories in the Army--everything except the infantry, artillery and other direct-
- combat roles--are open to them. So are all but the topmost
- chief-of-staff ranks. Young women like Commander Byerly can aspire
- to positions that older women officers never dreamed of--they
- came up when females in the services were circumscribed and
- largely segregated in separate corps. Now women are so fully
- integrated that the Navy WAVES and Air Force WAFs have been
- disbanded, and the days of the Army WACs are numbered.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the women are in staff jobs, but the Air Force will
- soon begin a pilot-training program in which women will fly C-130
- Hercules hospital or weather-reconnaissance planes and T-39
- trainer jets. The Air Force has women in fatigues maintaining and
- repairing missiles, airplanes and weapons. The Army has women
- chaplains, helicopter pilots and tank drivers and 136 drill
- instructors. The Navy has anti-submarine warfare technicians,
- line handlers and tugboats, airplane welders, bulldozer operators
- and a deep-sea diver. All recruits go through rugged basic
- training, learning to shoot and strip rifles (just in case they
- ever have to in an emergency) and slog through mud, with full
- packs, to cadence-counting chants ("Standin' tall and lookin'
- good/We ought to be in Hollywood...")
- </p>
- <p> The service academies are preparing for women in the classes
- that will be admitted next summer. West Point will take in about
- 100 women cadets, the Naval Academy 80 and the Air Force Academy
- 100. The women will wear handsomely cut uniforms, basically like
- the men's, except that the females will carry purses and wear
- knee-length skirts, as well as slacks.
- </p>
- <p> Men in the services seem to be accepting the women easily
- enough. For a time, there was a preoccupation with shower and
- toilet arrangements, but the construction of a few doors,
- partitions and separate shower rooms has relaxed the
- apprehensions. The services do their best to assign married women
- to the same posts as their uniformed husbands. When that is
- impossible, the couple must make a choice. For one woman Navy
- ensign married to an Army captain, the choice is clear. If he is
- transferred to a landlocked base, she will stay with the Navy in
- Washington. Says she: "I joined the Navy before I married him, and
- that is my loyalty."
- </p>
- <p> No longer must a pregnant woman leave the services. At
- military bases, some soldiers are finding themselves saluting
- pregnant officers. Now an expectant mother must apply for
- discharge or else accept maternity leave (normally ten weeks) and
- then return to duty. Even an unmarried woman with children may
- remain in the services.
- </p>
- <p> POLITICS: A New Importance
- </p>
- <p> Women make up 53% of the nation's registered voters but hold
- only 5% of the elective positions. Still, the total--7,000 women
- in elective office--is double five years ago. And in this year's
- elections, predicts Barbara Jordan, "the candidates will play to
- women's issues wherever they think it will help them."
- </p>
- <p> In all, 18 women serve in the 94th Congress, up from 16 in
- the 93rd. Mississippi and Kentucky last fall elected women as
- Lieutenant Governors (New York already had one). More than 1,200
- women in 1974 were candidates for state legislative office, one-
- third more than in 1972. About half of them won.
- </p>
- <p> Like blacks, women are making their greatest gains on the
- lower levels: mayor's councils, city councils, various boards and
- commissions. From there, more and more will be percolating up to
- state and federal office in future years. "When you write stories
- about the women's movement now," Jill Ruckelshaus told the
- National Press Club recently, "don't look for us in the streets.
- We have gone to the statehouse."
- </p>
- <p> Female candidates must often overcome the inbred mistrust of
- some women voters, who can be even more critical than the male
- constituency. Yet, says Susan Block, a member of the Iowa Women's
- Political Caucus, "the public is beginning to look at women with
- less suspicion. Voters often view a woman candidate as someone who
- has lived the human experience, had kids, done volunteer work,
- cooked supper and been to the grocery store. People can relate to
- her better than to a man."
- </p>
- <p> That thought comes close to the theory--less prevalent now
- than a few years ago--that women in positions of leadership
- would somehow humanize public affairs and gentle down the
- truculent, aggressive style practiced by men. It is a sexist
- notion, attributing superior virtues to women. As Smith's Jill
- Conway says, "There are lots of inhumane women in the world." (Two
- women who went far to prove that point were Lynette ["Squeaky"]
- Fromme and Sarah Jane Moore; both made attempts on the life of
- President Ford.)
- </p>
- <p> Janet Gray Hayes, the first woman mayor of San Jose, Calif.,
- points out a kind of reverse handicap for women in politics: "The
- other night, when George Moscone won the mayoral election in San
- Francisco, he cried on television. I would never do that in
- public. I could never allow myself. You know what people would
- say--`emotional woman.'"
- </p>
- <p> Margaret Hance, the first woman mayor of Phoenix, is
- optimistic. "Obviously," she says, "the males of the country have
- overcome their fear of women in politics. Every success creates an
- aura of confidence for the next woman who tries it." (Women are
- also mayors of San Antonio, Oklahoma City, Wichita, Kans.,
- Cincinnati and Lincoln, Neb.) Not long ago, a Gallup poll found
- that 73% of the American people would support a qualified woman
- running for President.
- </p>
- <p> THE FAMILY: The Delicate Dilemmas
- </p>
- <p> The ruination of the American family, so widely proclaimed
- during the '60s and frequently welcomed as a symptom of the
- liberating deluge, was obviously far from total. But American
- attitudes toward marriage and family have indeed changed. In many
- cases, it was the instability of the family that drove women
- toward greater independence and self-assertion. Sometimes it was
- the other way around. Greater independence, of course, is not
- necessarily incompatible with family stability--but it does
- bring considerable strains.
- </p>
- <p> "Most women," says Boston Psychologist Rose Olver, "almost
- have to defend themselves for staying at home these days. I think
- it is unfortunate. I would prefer it somewhere in the middle,
- where we all question our lives, and there is good deal of choice--and acceptance."
- </p>
- <p> For the first time in American history, the Census Bureau
- reported last year, the average household consisted of fewer than
- three persons. Marriages are declining, divorce rates increasing,
- more women remaining single longer--and having fewer children
- if and when they do marry. As much as anything, it is this
- widening of domestic alternatives that has led women to assert
- themselves in the world outside the home.
- </p>
- <p> Husbands and wives are working out new arrangements in which
- the men--supposedly--share household chores equally. "When we
- first got married in 1968," says Joyce van Deusen, an official of
- the Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Human Rights Commission, "I taught school
- and Bob was in the military. I did the laundry, kept the house,
- and Bob read, sat and ate." In 1972 they drew up a contract
- covering the household chores, and the arrangement is second
- nature now. Very often, however, Americans follow the Soviet and
- Eastern European pattern of "liberation"--women are
- theoretically equal, but their new freedom merely means that when
- they return from their jobs they still have to do all the
- housework. "It's the same old baloney," says Polly Ely, who works
- as a counselor in a rape-crisis center in Cedar Rapids. "I come
- home so tired I can hardly see, and John flops down with the
- paper while I stumble into the kitchen."
- </p>
- <p> Some couples have reversed their traditional roles--the
- men stay home and tend house and children, while the women go off
- to work. The practice can be enlightening and often demoralizing
- to the househusband. The man finds himself lolling distractedly
- around the house, watching soap operas, complaining when his wife
- comes home late from the office.
- </p>
- <p> Even for the best organized women, meeting the multiple
- demands of career and family takes great effort. Carla Hills and
- her husband Roderick, chairman of the Securities and Exchange
- Commission, get up about 6 a.m. Before leaving at 7:15, she tries
- to spend some time with at least a couple of their four children--braiding a daughter's hair, playing with another for a few
- minutes. She keeps a kitchen bulletin board, telling who will be
- home for dinner (one of the parents always tries to make it),
- listing each child's chores and times for piano lessons. Both
- Carla and Rod bring home work at night, but they often pore over
- it in the living room in order to sit with the children. Says she:
- "I often feel like a piece of salami, with a slice here for one
- and a slice there for another, and there isn't enough to go
- around."
- </p>
- <p> Mothers and fathers, increasingly aware of sex stereotyping,
- sometimes seek out schools where their children will find
- different expectations. At Manhattan's Educational Alliance Day
- Care Center, for example, little girls learn to use hammers and
- nails, boys practice rolling dough for cookies. The object is not
- a reversal of roles so much as an interchange of them. Similarly,
- girls are moving more than ever into traditionally male sports.
- High school and college gym classes are becoming coed as a
- consequence of a new Government regulation that orders equal
- treatment of the sexes in schools receiving federal aid. The
- Little League, under court pressure, agreed to admit girls in
- 1974. In just the past couple of years, hundreds of thousands of
- young women in high schools and colleges have begun competing in
- team sports.
- </p>
- <p> Novelist Anne Riophe has movingly written of the often
- difficult choices women must make about careers and marriages and
- children. Speaking of the ideological urge of some to discourage
- motherhood entirely, she says, "The very idea of removing by
- social surgery a woman's or man's connected love for a child is
- part of a coming ice age of relationships--the dehumanizing of
- mankind. We may find that intellectual activity is not enough,
- that achievement in the industrial, technological world, while
- important, is not sufficient, and that we also, man and woman
- alike, need the roots into biology, the touch of one another that
- child rearing brings."
- </p>
- <p> Both men and women now seem to be edging toward Roiphe's
- idea: "As women, we have thought so little of ourselves that when
- the troops came to liberate us, we rushed into the streets,
- leaving our most valuable attributes behind as if they belonged
- to the enemy." It is not an argument for sweet maternal submission
- to the household gods but for an admission that, unless society is
- transformed in an almost utopian way (far beyond merely providing
- daycare centers), women cannot free themselves totally from the
- destiny of raising children. It is also a recognition that the
- hard choices about families, children and careers cannot be made
- entirely through cold ideology.
- </p>
- <p> WOMEN ABROAD: Breakthroughs and Bickering
- </p>
- <p> Abroad, women are also moving forward, notably in developed
- countries. Economic progress is the necessary road to female
- emancipation. As a nation is industrialized, women are freed from
- much of the routine burden of the farm and the household.
- </p>
- <p> Outside the U.S., European women fare best. In France, for
- example, some 22% of lawyers are women; so are 18% of doctors,
- 40% of medical students and 90% of pharmacists. President Valery
- Giscard d'Estaing has two women in his Cabinet: Simone Veil
- (Health) and Francoise Giroud (Women's Affairs). Divorce and
- abortion laws recently have been liberalized, as have been
- property rights, which until recently sharply discriminated
- against women. Many of the changes are more apparent than real.
- Career women are largely a Paris phenomenon; in the provinces,
- the laws have changed much faster than the customs that limit
- many women to home and minor jobs.
- </p>
- <p> British women have taken a rather relaxed approach to
- feminism, with a minimum of confrontation. Nevertheless, a bill
- guaranteeing women equal pay for equal work went into effect at
- year's end. And no one has made a better case for the competence
- of women than Margaret Thatcher, the Tory Party leader, who
- happens to be cool to feminism.
- </p>
- <p> Italy is in the process of catching up with its northern
- neighbors. Last month some 20,000 women marched through downtown
- Rome, urging abortion on demand and chanting: "The womb is mine/
- and I'll manage fine!" A compromise bill is likely to be enacted,
- permitting abortion in the first 90 days of pregnancy if a doctor
- approves.
- </p>
- <p> The battle for equality is almost totally won in Scandinavia.
- Divorce is relatively easy, abortion is mostly free, and in
- Sweden, either parent can receive temporary compensation from the
- state for staying home with a baby or a sick child, instead of
- going to work. To demonstrate that the country cannot function
- without them, Icelandic women staged a one-day strike in October;
- schools, theaters and telephone service were all shut down.
- </p>
- <p> More Japanese women that ever are working in fields that
- range from physics to zoology. Yet most women still wield their
- power in the home, following the ancient saying: "A wise falcon
- hides its talons."
- </p>
- <p> In the less developed countries of Asia, Africa and Latin
- America, women are much further behind. The profound differences
- among women of varying cultures were starkly revealed at the U.N.
- World Conference for International Women's Year in Mexico City
- last summer. The meeting bogged down in bickering and
- accomplished little. Women in much of the Arab world remain
- isolated and subservient; in Saudi Arabia, they still inhabit
- harems. But in Egypt and Lebanon, stirrings of emancipation are
- evident.
- </p>
- <p> By becoming the first modern woman dictator last year, Indira
- Gandhi proved anew that women can be as domineering as men. An
- ardent feminist, she has fought the Indian practice of bridegrooms
- demanding dowries. (One telling vignette: in response to a
- suitor's request for a motor scooter as a dowry, one village girl
- jilted the man; he had to settle for a sheep from a less affluent
- bride.)
- </p>
- <p> Indonesian women are scarcely concerned with equal pay and
- abortion, since they must still contend with forced marriage and
- polygamy. A marriage law passed in October makes it harder for a
- man to take a second wife or to dismiss a spouse with the curt
- command: "I divorce you." In 1975 Thai women won the right to run
- for election as village chief or attain the rank of general in
- the army. But they still cannot sign a contract or apply for a
- passport without their husband's permission.
- </p>
- <p> China furnishes proof that total revolution does not
- necessarily bring equality of the sexes. Women dress like men,
- walk like men, work like men, but, with the exception of Chairman
- Mao's wife Chiang Ching, few have attained positions of importance
- in the country.
- </p>
- <p> THE FUTURE: Reordering the Roles
- </p>
- <p> American women, if they have not arrived, are in the process
- of arrival. Just how far they will go--and how fast--is not
- totally clear, for women are themselves altering the destination,
- changing it from a man's world to something else.
- </p>
- <p> A lot of men are enjoying the change. They are discovering
- there is much in women's liberation that is to their benefit--a
- loosening of their own role as breadwinner, for example. But it
- would be foolhardy to ignore the many men who regard the women's
- upsurge as a threat and try to keep women--wives, daughters,
- co-workers--in "their place." As more women arrive on the job
- market, more men may wonder if they will lose their own posts and
- promotions in the new competition.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, the gravest difficulties of the women's movement are
- now economic: How can women find equality in jobs if the jobs are
- not there? Equality may be possible only in a fairly rapidly
- growing economy. Lacking that, justice may require a greater
- reordering of the old sex roles, with men assuming more of the
- domestic workload as women move into the job world. Such a
- reordering will be difficult to achieve, but for men--as well as
- women--the psychological advantages could be enormous.
- </p>
- <p> Women in their dependence have always exacted a price in the
- guerrilla war of the sexes. Philip Wylie's devouring Mom of 30
- years ago or Alexander Portnoy's horrific mother or countless
- wives and mistresses of fancy and fact were really figures of
- thwarted womanhood, exacting an understandably neurotic revenge.
- Women's liberation, while it thrusts women into a new world of
- difficult choices and questions of identity, should ultimately
- accomplish much for the sheer sanity of both men and women. In
- any case, as Addie Wyatt says, "All we're asking is that we be
- recognized as full partners--at home, at work, in the world at
- large. Is that too much?"
- </p>
- <p> The drama of the sexes remains--the Old Adam and the New
- Eve. As 1976 begins, the plot and characters are changing--for
- the better of both.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-