Good afternoon and welcome to Trinity College's celebration
of Women's History Month!
We are so pleased to have the opportunity to observe this
important month by honoring one of the women who is truly
writing the new chapters of women's history in Washington,
our friend Linda Rabbitt. The Trinity College Washington
Women of Genius Awards began two years ago on the occasion
of Trinity's Centennial, when 100 distinguished women of
Washington gathered to help this great college celebrate
100 years of life as the first, and now only, undergraduate
college for women in the nation's capital. Trinity today
is a comprehensive university with extensive coeducational
programs in our two schools that serve the workforce, the
School of Education and School of Professional studies.
But our historic primary mission to women continues in the
College of Arts and Science, and influences all that we
do on this campus.
We are grateful to our friends from the business community
who have taken a few minutes from your busy days to share
this celebration with Linda and the students and faculty
of Trinity.
Over my 13 years as Trinity's president, I have had the
privilege of getting to know so many terrific leaders in
Washington, and I have felt a special kinship with the women
who are the builders of organizations, the sustainers of
so many human communities, the public figures and quiet
motivators behind the scenes. I have learned from all of
these great role models --- the need for role models does
not stop when you graduate from college, but rather, it
continues throughout your entire life.
We gather today to honor someone who is truly a great role
model for all people looking for inspiration and a model
of determination, excellence and success. Linda, we are
so pleased to be able to recognize all that you have achieved.
You are truly a Washington Woman of Genius!
The phrase "women of genius" emerges from a darker
social and intellectual history that denied the ability
of women to have anything remotely resembling genius. Rousseau
himself said flat out that there was no such thing as a
woman of genius, and throughout history we see that attitude
reflected time and again in the words of male philosophers
and pundits. But women always knew differently, and in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries, women's rights advocates,
philosophers and writers began to take up the question of
why history denied women's genius. The answer provided by
such thinkers as Virginia Woolf or Anna Garlan Spencer was
that women had been denied the time, the space, the money
and financial support, to cultivate their creative powers.
Spencer wrote, pungently, that no woman would be hailed
as a genius who wrote books and plays but appeared to neglect
her primary duties to husband and children. Woolf said that
a woman needed "A Room of One's Own" to provide
the creative space and support for her genius, a point that
women's colleges celebrate every day.
All of this may seem quaint in the fast-paced life of 21st
Century Washington, a place where many would say that women
have truly displayed their genius and power for decades,
where the idea of equality is hailed as, of course, correct,
unquestioned, a given. Some might even dare to say that
the revolution is over, that we've made it. So, why celebrate
women's history? Why lift up and honor women of genius?
If we forget the past, we will repeat its mistakes. If
we do not recognize the hard work and determination of those
on whose shoulders we stand, we may well collapse from neglect
of our foundation. Women's history month gives us an opportunity
to celebrate all that has come before us, and to set our
sights on all that can still be achieved to ensure equality
and freedom for women, not only here where so much as already
been done, but around the world where we see the majority
of the world's women still living in conditions that manifest
the ancient prejudices and oppression of women.
I am so pleased and grateful that another great Washington
Woman of Genius is going to join me here at the lectern
to read the citation for Linda Rabbitt. Catherine Meloy
is one of Washington's greats, with so many honors to her
name, including, notably, the most coveted award in the
business community, the Washington Leader of the Years.
Catherine is senior vice president at Clear ChannelCommunications,
and she is one of the most influential women in communications
and media in this town. She is a leader of the Board of
Trade, and active in numerous organizations. And, I'm most
proud to say, she is a Trustee of Trinity College
Citation Honoring Linda Rabbitt: Click
here to read the citation.
Congratulations, Linda! You are truly a Woman of Genius!
I invite our guests to take a moment as you leave campus
to take a stroll or drive out back to see the new Trinity
Center for Women and Girls in Sports rising in the middle
of the campus. We'll invite you all back in November for
the opening ceremony, and this time next year, we'll be
swimming in the new pool!