NYT: Wellesley Class Sees β€˜One of Us’ Bearing Standard

Wellesley Class Sees β€˜One of Us’ Bearing Standard

For her Wellesley classmates, Hillary Clinton’s quest to become the first female president is a generational mirror. Some like what they see; others are less certain.

They were there for her fiery commencement speech, delivered at the height of the Vietnam War, when she described her class’s search for a β€œmore immediate, ecstatic and penetrating mode of living” and said that every protest was β€œunabashedly an attempt to forge an identity in this particular age.” The speech landed Hillary Rodham in the spotlight as a celebrated archetype of a new generation of women.

β€œWe were very proud of her: she was a feminist; she was outspoken,” said Jane Moss, a classmate who now teaches French at Colby College. β€œHillary was speaking for all of us, for a generation that felt we weren’t being heard.”


Jenny Hatch