{"id":272,"date":"2004-03-23T09:34:48","date_gmt":"2004-03-23T14:34:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/"},"modified":"2010-10-20T09:37:29","modified_gmt":"2010-10-20T13:37:29","slug":"remarks-college-of-new-rochelle-graduation","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/remarks-college-of-new-rochelle-graduation\/","title":{"rendered":"Remarks: College of New Rochelle Graduation"},"content":{"rendered":"<span id=\"Creativity_Innovation_Celebration:\"><h1>Creativity, Innovation, Celebration:<\/h1><\/span>\n<span id=\"The_Future_of_Women8217s_Colleges\"><h1>The Future of Women&#8217;s Colleges<\/h1><\/span>\n<p>Congratulations to the College of New Rochelle on the occasion of  your Centennial! Your colleagues and friends at Trinity in Washington  are cheering for you! We, too, recently celebrated our Centennial, and  we know how important this historical moment is in the life of an  institution of higher learning, especially one with the special mission  in women&#8217;s education. May this celebratory year be a strong foundation  for your second century.<\/p>\n<p>Thank you, President Sweeny, for inviting me to share  this day with you. I am so grateful to you for this magnificent honor  and your wonderful, warm friendship and collegial wisdom as we work  together on the Women&#8217;s College Coalition board and so many other  endeavors.<\/p>\n<p>The College of New Rochelle first came onto my radar  screen in 1987 when I had the pleasure of meeting Sister Dorothy Ann  Kelly. I say &#8220;pleasure&#8221; even though the occasion was a somewhat  stressful time at Trinity, when Sr. Dorothy Ann was chairing a special  Middle States team to our campus. I was on the board, not yet president.  We were in a rough patch, with enrollment declining, spirits sagging,  hope in our future fading. With the fire of her conviction about the  absolute rightness of our mission as a Catholic college for women, Sr.  Dorothy Ann called us out of our confusion, challenged us to seize our  mission and make it work for the contemporary women who need us so very  much. From the bottom of my heart, thank you, Sr. Dorothy Ann, for your  inspiration. Trinity salutes all that you have done to make the College  of New Rochelle the exemplar for the ideal of the Catholic women&#8217;s  college of the 21st Century.<\/p>\n<p>And, what exactly is that women&#8217;s college of the 21st  Century? Can such an institution persist in a world of homogenized,  commoditized, mass market higher education? I think it&#8217;s particularly  appropriate for me to try to answer this question in the middle of the  season known as &#8220;March Madness,&#8221; a peculiarly American sociological  phenomenon that exposes the persistent gender gap in higher education.<\/p>\n<p>This year, the College of New Rochelle has already won its most important championship!<\/p>\n<p>The 100th anniversary of the College of New Rochelle  is a triumph of vision, persistence and creativity for the sake of this  great mission. This mission has always been one of the most complex in  all of higher education, particularly for the women&#8217;s colleges who also  share our Catholic tradition. We who are the stewards of the nation&#8217;s  Catholic women&#8217;s colleges are the heirs of the legacy of giants, women  like St. Angela Merici and Mother Irene Gill and their Ursuline sisters  through the years here at New Rochelle; or St. Julie Billiart and Sister  Julia McGroarty and the Sisters of Notre Dame who followed them at  Trinity. (Our Sisters of Notre Dame, by the way, are celebrating their  200th Anniversary this year.)<\/p>\n<p>Their stories are simply remarkable. In days long  before women&#8217;s liberation, before women could vote, before women could  hold property or most positions of authority, these women were powerful  leaders in both the spiritual and temporal realms. They created their  institutional legacies in times when Catholic women religious were just  about the<em> only <\/em>women who could be founders and owners and  presidents and CEOs of schools and hospitals and institutions. As late  as 1970, according to statistics compiled by the American Council on  Education, only 5% of the college and university presidents in the  United States were women, but 90% of those women were Catholic  religious.<\/p>\n<p>Calling the establishment of Catholic women&#8217;s colleges a tale of &#8220;female initiative on a grand scale,&#8221; the editors of <em>Catholic Women&#8217;s Colleges in America<a name=\"_ftnref1\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn1\"><sup>1<\/sup><\/a><\/em> cite this quotation from Rosemary Reuther and Eleanor McLaughlin&#8217;s <em>Female Leadership in the Jewish and Christian Traditions<\/em>:  &#8221; &#8216;Catholic nuns, though they belonged to an extremely patriarchal  church&#8230;were in some ways the most liberated women in nineteenth  century America.&#8217; Their religious vocation allowed them to transcend  gender roles considered normative.&#8221; As a result, they persisted and  triumphed in founding institutions of higher education that were  gateways for thousands of women, largely the daughters and  granddaughters of immigrants, to achieve professional success, economic  security and personal fulfillment.<\/p>\n<p>To a large extent, whether religious or lay, Catholic  or not, the founders of the nation&#8217;s women&#8217;s colleges generally faced  considerable opposition in their effort to establish these institutions.  I recall reading in one history of Smith College a passage written by a  female physician warning of the inevitable collapse of a woman&#8217;s  nervous system under the rigors of advanced study. At Trinity, our  archives include numerous press clippings about the vigorous public  opposition to Trinity&#8217;s founding, lead by right-wing clerics who viewed  women&#8217;s education as part of the heresy of &#8220;Americanism.&#8221; Here at New  Rochelle, your historian James Schleifer reminds us that skeptical  clerics called the effort &#8220;Irene&#8217;s Folly.&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref2\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn2\"><sup>2<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The first century of great success in women&#8217;s  education eloquently refuted the original critics, but ironically, as  each women&#8217;s college turns the page on a new century, new skepticism  abounds at the intersection of mission and market. Despite the fact that  women&#8217;s colleges produced some of the greatest leaders in a broad span  of professional and civic arenas throughout the 20th Century, invidious  stereotypes continue to plague us &#8212; go no farther than this year&#8217;s  unfortunate depiction of Wellesley women in <em>Mona Lisa Smile<\/em>. We  who are the stewards of women&#8217;s colleges today certainly have our share  of wakeful moments when we wonder if we can sustain this good work, if  we are persisting more because of hubris than common sense.<\/p>\n<p>My imagination wanders through the possibilities, thinking about a world without women&#8217;s colleges.<\/p>\n<p>Imagine a world in which women were  denied the opportunity to learn broadly, where millions of women were  unable even to read or write, a world where women were disenfranchised,  treated as property, denied a separate existence apart from men. That  was the world our founders knew just a century ago. That <em>is <\/em>the  world that millions of girls and women inhabit today around the world. A  recent UNESCO report indicates that upwards of 65 million girls in our  global village are not in school today. Even more alarming, U.N.  Secretary General Kofi Annan pointed out in a speech last year that,  &#8220;There are nearly 900 million illiterates in the world today &#8212; and two  thirds of them are women.&#8221; <a name=\"_ftnref3\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn3\"><sup>3<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Imagine a world without female role  models to inspire the rising generations. Imagine a world in which women  could not aspire to be doctors or lawyers or bankers or physicists  because they were not allowed to attend college. That was the condition  for almost all women just 100 years ago. Little has changed in large  parts of the globe. Imagine a world in which women are expected to do  only the most menial manual labor, as migrant farm workers or trapped in  sweatshops or working two and three jobs as maids and custodians  without any hope of advancement. You need not go very far to find such  conditions even in the wealthiest nation on earth.<\/p>\n<p>Imagine a world deprived of <em>Silent Spring<\/em> and the environmental intelligence of Rachel Carson; a world without the <em>Good Earth<\/em> and Pearl Buck&#8217;s Nobel Prize-winning writing; a world without the  path-breaking leadership of Frances Perkins, Jeanne Kirkpatrick,  Madeleine Albright, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, the first  women, respectively, in the Cabinet, UN Ambassador, Secretary of State,  elected Senator after serving as first lady, leader of a major party in  Congress. Imagine a world without New Rochelle&#8217;s own Lt. Governor Mary  Donoghue, or Katherine Hepburn, Ella Grasso, Hanna Holborn Gray &#8212; all  graduates of women&#8217;s colleges.<\/p>\n<p>A world deprived of women&#8217;s colleges  would be, quite simply, unimaginable. Our time is not past; our greatest  work unfolds each day in each new life we touch and transform through  the great work of the faculty and staff who give our mission life, and  graduates who infuse the values of this mission in their work with  families and schools and hospitals and corporations and communities and  countless places throughout the world.<\/p>\n<p>Yes, certain realities have  challenged us greatly in recent years. women&#8217;s colleges were so  successful in changing the perceptions of the elite ruling classes about  women&#8217;s capacity for education and work and leadership that we nearly  put ourselves out of business. By the middle of the 20th Century, men&#8217;s  colleges and universities saw what the women&#8217;s colleges had achieved and  decided that they wanted those bright, capable women on their own  campuses. And, of course, in the 1960&#8217;s and 70&#8217;s women were more than  delighted to flock through the open gates at Harvard and Yale,  Georgetown, and Fordham, Penn State and Virginia and UCLA because that  new-found access to the ultimate men&#8217;s clubs signified equality at long  last.<\/p>\n<p>Later on, of course, women would  learn that access did not necessarily mean equality of opportunity.  Women needed a law, Title IX, to give them true opportunity in higher  education. But even with the hassles and scandals of chilly classrooms  and abusive locker rooms on coed campuses, there was no turning back.  New generations of women accepted coeducation as normative and rejected  single-sex education as retrograde, in spite of all evidence to the  contrary. &#8220;The list&#8221; is flaunted endlessly : from a high of nearly 300  women&#8217;s colleges in 1960, 65 institutions continue to identify as  women&#8217;s colleges today. How many will be on the roster five and ten and  twenty years from now? I&#8217;ll have another thought about that list at the  end.<\/p>\n<p>Skeptics about our future say that  what was necessary, essential, indeed, revolutionary in the late 19th  and early-to-mid 20th centuries clearly went out of fashion by the end  of the 20th. Women are now the majority throughout higher education.  Isn&#8217;t it true, ask the skeptics, that women no longer need a &#8220;Room of  One&#8217;s Own&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref4\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn4\"><sup>4<\/sup><\/a> to unleash their creative powers, their leadership abilities, their self-confidence and potential for genius?<\/p>\n<p>Frankly, no.<\/p>\n<p>Americans have notoriously short  attention spans. In the last decade we&#8217;ve seen a great eagerness to  declare important social revolutions to be &#8220;so over,&#8221; &#8220;so 20th Century.&#8221;  Civil rights, women&#8217;s rights, human rights &#8212; such talk seems out of  fashion in an age that&#8217;s more concerned about the future of <em>Martha Stewart Living <\/em> than the history of <em>Ms. <\/em>Magazine. Talk of racial and economic and social justice is condemned as so much &#8220;political correctness.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The women&#8217;s revolution, we hear, is  over. Tell that to the women who take home 77 cents for every male  dollar on a good day. Tell that to the women who clean your hotel rooms,  who sew your garments, make your Nikes, who pick your strawberries and  cabbages through back-breaking mind-numbing days on end in hot fields,  who struggle to raise their children alone while earning a minimum wage,  or worse.<\/p>\n<p>For most of the world, the revolution has not even begun &#8212; and it&#8217;s not coming anytime soon.<\/p>\n<p>What does all of this have to do with the future of women&#8217;s colleges?<\/p>\n<p>women&#8217;s colleges are the witnesses,  the memory, the voice of women&#8217;s intellectual freedom and liberation. In  an educational marketplace that exalts super-sized, homogenized  credentialing machines, we need women&#8217;s colleges as places that continue  to give meaning to the ideals of justice and equality through the  careful, attentive education of each person. We need women&#8217;s colleges to  ensure that the power of educated women can continue to influence a  society that relentlessly objectifies and demeans women, that still  betrays its children by impoverishing their mothers in low-paying jobs  and unequal opportunities, that still has too many places where men  abuse and degrade women privately and then aren&#8217;t sure what all the fuss  is about when they are found out.<\/p>\n<p>True, there were times in our history  when the inherent elitism of historic educational models obscured the  fact that our founding impulse was rooted in the idea of justice and  human dignity. But the cultural revolution of the postwar years blew  away the old social conventions, leading women&#8217;s colleges to consider  the true meaning of our mission. The DNA of Catholic women&#8217;s colleges,  in particular, is entwined with the Gospel imperative of social justice.  In her essay &#8220;Faith, Knowledge and Gender&#8221; in <em>Catholic women&#8217;s Colleges<\/em>,  former Smith College President Jill Ker Conway notes that &#8220;The  conventional perception of Catholic women&#8217;s institutions as  backward-looking agents for fostering middle-class ideals of gentility  overlooks their striking capacity to institutionalize ideals of social  justice left out or ignored within the larger higher educational  system,&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref5\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn5\"><sup>5<\/sup><\/a> largely as a result of the infusion of the charism of the founding congregations into the mission of the college.<\/p>\n<p>Having said all of this in defense of  women&#8217;s colleges, however, I must also admit the truth of our current  situation: if we think this mission is still worth it, then we must  change completely. This is the deeply counter-cultural paradox of the  women&#8217;s college mission. As President Sweeny has written in his  Centennial message, we are not curators of a museum. We are stewards of  the dynamic and transformative force of learning, delivered in a focused  way to those who need us the most: women excluded from educational  opportunity. That&#8217;s not different from what we&#8217;ve always done &#8212; but,  oh, how different we are today and will be even more so in the future.<\/p>\n<p>The counter-cultural paradox of our  mission requires us to embrace the possibilities inherent in making  higher education accessible to the millions of women for whom the dream  of a college degree is still so elusive. The morality of our mission  requires us to ask of ourselves: if we don&#8217;t offer such women the  opportunity of transformation through education, who will? Think of how  much more we could achieve in the future if we acted on the U.N.  International women&#8217;s Day challenge to worldwide women educators to take  a lead in educating the daughters of the world<a name=\"_ftnref6\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn6\"><sup>6<\/sup><\/a>.  Secretary General Annan makes the case this way: &#8220;We know from study  after study that there is no tool for development more effective than  the education of girls and women.&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref7\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn7\"><sup>7<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s a price to be paid, of  course, for embracing the essence of our mission as places of access for  excluded women. The counter-cultural paradox requires us to leave  behind our old notions of elitism in access as a surrogate for academic  quality; to stop shrinking inside when our alumnae ask us, &#8220;But what  about SAT scores?&#8221;; to part company with that intransigent impulse of  regret pinching our hearts when somebody mentions the <em> US News<\/em>rankings. There&#8217;s no place in <em> U.S. News<\/em> that measures how well a college lives up to the moral imperative of  its mission; how many lives transformed, how many families made more  secure by the greater earning capacity of the mother, how many children  persisting in school because they saw Mom working so hard to earn her  college degree; how many school children educated more fully, clients  served better, patients saved, readers enlightened, corporations  transformed, communities and cities and nations improved because of the  relentless quest of our graduates to live out the expectations of this  mission with passion, with excellence and with conviction.<\/p>\n<p>The counter-cultural paradox of our  mission requires us to become better advocates for the absolute  rightness of educational access for underserved women, without apology.  We can start at home. As I study census and demographic data and data on  who attends college, I continue to be struck by the very large gap in  levels of educational attainment for all Americans. In fact, there&#8217;s no  shortage of women in this country who could and should attend women&#8217;s  colleges in the future. They are women who have been radically  underserved by education in the past: low income white women, African  American, Latina, Asian and immigrant women from all backgrounds. We  made it possible for the daughters and granddaughters of our old markets  to graduate from Harvard; shouldn&#8217;t we be doing the same for the  daughters and granddaughters of new markets of women previously excluded  from higher learning?<\/p>\n<p>Last week there was a flurry of news  stories about the fact that by the Year 2050, Caucasians will no longer  be the majority in this nation. But this is old news. In particular the  rapid increase in the Hispanic population, and continued growth in the  African American population, will be a significant challenge for all  institutions of higher learning. The Educational Testing Service has  already predicted that 80 percent of the nearly 3 million student  increase in collegiate enrollment to the year 2010 will be among Black  and Hispanic students. The nation&#8217;s women&#8217;s colleges have an astounding  leadership opportunity to ensure the education and advancement of great  women leaders for the future from among these rising populations of  women of color.<\/p>\n<p>The College of New Rochelle was among  the first of the nation&#8217;s women&#8217;s colleges to recognize that our  historic mission could only make sense going forward if we understood  women&#8217;s education as broadly inclusive, as a gateway for the  transformation of entire families through the education of people from  all social classes and life conditions.<\/p>\n<p>In her comments in <em>Catholic Women&#8217;s Colleges in America <\/em>Jill  Ker Conway recognized the College of New Rochelle as one of her  exemplars of the &#8220;special genius&#8221; of Catholic institutions founded by  women religious &#8220;to find and serve important late twentieth century  constituencies&#8230;&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref8\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn8\"><sup>8<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Our stewardship to our founders, our  graduates and the students who will be here in generations to come  requires that we take the actions necessary to ensure the vitality,  quality and durability of our institutions for the future. These actions  may differ from institution to institution, depending upon geography  and history and resources and the charism of the founding congregation  where one exists. I predict, however, that many if not most women&#8217;s  colleges will, of necessity, pursue these strategic actions going  forward:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Women&#8217;s colleges will illuminate  more clearly the core values of woman-centered education in justice,  equality, freedom and human dignity; if this be &#8220;political correctness&#8221;  then let&#8221;s be guilty, that&#8217;s our counter-cultural paradox!<\/li>\n<li>Women&#8217;s colleges will be voices and  advocates for those values not just within our own institutions, but  for women and people throughout the world. Women&#8217;s colleges cannot not  be afraid to use the bully pulpit of our privileged places to speak out  on behalf of those who cannot. We must and will be places that offer  solutions and actions for the worldwide problem of education for women  and girls, summarized in the 2003 UNESCO Global Monitoring Report: <em> &#8220;In no society do women yet enjoy the same opportunities as men&#8230; The  continuing prevalence of educational inequality is a major infringement  of the rights of women and girls, and it is also an important impediment  to social and economic development.&#8221;<\/em><a name=\"_ftnref9\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn9\"><sup>9<\/sup><\/a><\/li>\n<li>Women&#8217;s colleges will,  increasingly, become models of access both domestically and  internationally, and in this regard, we will built-out our technological  capacity so that we can reach those future students who cannot travel  to our campuses. We will create models for online learning that also  deliver our characteristic careful attention to each student&#8217;s growth  and needs.<\/li>\n<li>Women&#8217;s colleges will be more  affirmative about the ethic and culture of opportunity and student  success that characterizes our learning enterprises; in particular, we  will promote even more vigorous women&#8217;s leadership programs for our new  populations for whom the idea of public leadership is so urgent. We will  enhance our tradition of rigor and excellence through demonstrating  ever more pointedly the success of our mission among women from vastly  different backgrounds.<\/li>\n<li>(Here&#8217;s where you might think I&#8217;ve  lost my mind) Women&#8217;s colleges will throw off the stifling armor of  &#8220;single-sex&#8221; language and attitudes, a posture that persists in keeping  us isolated and exclusive, an outmoded existence that cannot exist  online, at work sites, and in all of the places that we need to be in  order to deliver our educational programs. women&#8217;s colleges today are  woman-centered places of learning that cannot be anti-male, afraid of  men, or unwilling to include men who share our sense of mission and who  can benefit from our programs.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>We must stop allowing ourselves to be defined by absence; we need to be defined by action.<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s retire the phrase &#8220;going coed&#8221; as a relic of that old exclusive, isolated past.<\/p>\n<p>Remember that infamous list of 300,  now 65? Let&#8217;s burn that list of who&#8217;s in and who&#8217;s out of the women&#8217;s  college world. Many of us who proudly call ourselves women&#8217;s colleges  today are, in fact, comprehensive universities with a broad range of  programs that serve students who need us, male as well as female, young  and old, in liberal arts and professional programs. Our woman-centered  mission is not defined by excluding men, but by serving women&#8217;s needs  affirmatively. Let&#8217;s join in solidarity with all like-minded sister  institutions! Let&#8217;s get our Women&#8217;s College Coalition to abolish the  litmus test that determines who may be in the club &#8212; it&#8217;s in the way  of real transformation.<\/p>\n<p>In short, 21st Century women&#8217;s  colleges will move strategically with a spirit of creativity,  innovation, and celebration for all the good that we do. We&#8217;ll take a  page from the instructions of St. Angela Merici: &#8220;If with change of  times and circumstances, it becomes necessary to make fresh rules, or to  alter anything, then do it with prudence, after taking good advice.&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref10\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn10\"><sup>10<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>We will do what it takes to flourish,  because we know, as the College of New Rochelle has demonstrated to the  world for 100 years, that to learn in a place such as this is to  acquire &#8220;Wisdom for Life.&#8221;<a name=\"_ftnref11\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftn11\"><sup>11<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<span id=\"Tracy_Schier_and_Cynthia_Russett_editors._Catholic_women8217s_Colleges_in_America_Baltimore:_Johns_Hopkins_University_Press_2002_pp._3_and_4.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn1\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref1\"><\/a><sup>1<\/sup> Tracy Schier and Cynthia Russett, editors. <em>Catholic women&#8217;s Colleges in America<\/em> (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002), pp. 3 and 4.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"James_T._Schliefer_The_College_of_New_Rochelle:_An_Extraordinary_Story_The_Donning_Company_1994_p._14.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn2\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref2\"><\/a><sup>2<\/sup> James T. Schliefer, <em>The College of New Rochelle: An Extraordinary Story<\/em> (The Donning Company, 1994), p. 14.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"U.N._Secretary_General_Kofi_Annan_in_a_speech_for_the_U.N._Literacy__Decade_launch_at_the_New_York_Public_Library_February_13_2003.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn3\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref3\"><\/a><sup>3<\/sup> U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan in a speech for the U.N. Literacy  Decade launch at the New York Public Library, February 13, 2003.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Virginia_Woolf_A_Room_of_One8221s_Own_1929._\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn4\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref4\"><\/a><sup>4<\/sup> Virginia Woolf, <em>A Room of One&#8221;s Own (1929). <\/em><\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Jill_Ker_Conway_in_Schier_and_Russett_eds._Catholic_women8217s_Colleges_in_America_p._13.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn5\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref5\"><\/a><sup>5<\/sup> Jill Ker Conway in Schier and Russett, eds., <em>Catholic women&#8217;s Colleges in America<\/em>, p. 13.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"International_women8217s_Day_8_th_March_2003_Education_International_statement.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn6\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref6\"><\/a><sup>6<\/sup> International women&#8217;s Day, 8 th March 2003, Education International statement.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Annan_February_13_2003.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn7\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref7\"><\/a><sup>7<\/sup> Annan, February 13, 2003.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Ibid._p._14.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn8\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref8\"><\/a><sup>8<\/sup> Ibid., p. 14.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"UNESCO_Global_Monitoring_Report_Gender_and_Education_for_All:_The_Leap_to_Equality_2003.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn9\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref9\"><\/a><sup>9<\/sup> UNESCO Global Monitoring Report, Gender and Education for All: The Leap to Equality, 2003.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Irene_Mahoney_OSU_Saint_Angela_Merici:_Foundress_of_the_Ursulines_p._18.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn10\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref10\"><\/a><sup>10<\/sup> Irene Mahoney, OSU, <em>Saint Angela Merici: Foundress of the Ursulines<\/em>, p. 18.<\/h5><\/span>\n<span id=\"Centennial_slogan_of_the_College_of_New_Rochelle.\"><h5><a name=\"_ftn11\" href=\"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/offices\/president\/Speeches\/2004\/032304_newrochelle.htm#_ftnref11\"><\/a><sup>11<\/sup> Centennial slogan of the College of New Rochelle.<\/h5><\/span>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Creativity, Innovation, Celebration: The Future of Women&#8217;s Colleges Congratulations to the College of New Rochelle on the occasion of your Centennial! Your colleagues and friends at Trinity in Washington are cheering for you! We, too, recently celebrated our Centennial, and we know how important this historical moment is in the life of an institution of higher learning, especially one with the special mission in women&#8217;s education. May this celebratory year be a strong foundation for your second century. Thank you, President Sweeny, for inviting me to share this day with you. I am so grateful to you for this magnificent &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-272","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/272","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=272"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/272\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=272"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}