Wellesley Class Sees βOne of Usβ Bearing Standard
For her Wellesley classmates, Hillary Clintonβs 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 classβs search for a βmore immediate, ecstatic and penetrating mode of livingβ and said that every protest was βunabashedly an attempt to forge an identity in this particular age.β The speech landed Hillary Rodham in the spotlight as a celebrated archetype of a new generation of women.
βWe were very proud of her: she was a feminist; she was outspoken,β said Jane Moss, a classmate who now teaches French at Colby College. βHillary was speaking for all of us, for a generation that felt we werenβt being heard.β
