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Marie
Wilson Visits Campus as this Year’s Margaret A. Johnson Speaker |
| February 2007 |
When
Alexandra Desaulniers (I) visited the White House as an eight-year
old, she wondered why all the portraits on the walls were of men.
Alex wrote a letter posing her question to Marie Wilson, founder
and president of the White House Project. Ms. Wilson visited Milton
on January 31 as this year’s Margaret A. Johnson Speaker,
which brings noted female leaders to campus each year.
Introducing Ms. Wilson, Alex described her as “an advocate
of women’s issues for more than 30 years, [leading]…in
her efforts and dedication to educate the American public on a woman’s
capacity to lead.”
Former president of the Ms. Foundation for Women, and now working
on major education initiatives through the White House Project,
Ms. Wilson has had a hand in several well-known programs that highlight
the importance of women’s roles in leadership positions in
our country and around the world. Ms. Wilson is the co-creator of
Take Our Daughters to Work Day, which she told students “is
the largest public education campaign in the history of the nation.”
She also, in conjunction with Mattel in 2002, introduced President
Barbie to the world. “I know you’re thinking, ‘International
security and President Barbie—an interesting combination,’”
she laughed, “but we have noticed the connection between pop
culture and what goes into the development of leadership. It’s
interesting to go into popular culture and take into account the
things that people touch, watch and hear. There is a real strategy
in a doll.”
Ms. Wilson has been at the head of the White House Project since
it began in 1998. “I started the White House Project because
women’s leadership in America is stuck,” she said. As
Alex explained, “The project has performed innovative research
and established numerous initiatives in the past nine years, highlights
of which include the convening of women CEOs and executives for
two national leadership summits, a conference of international women
leaders, a partnership with The Girl Scouts of America to launch
the Ms. President patch, and groundbreaking research centering on
influencing popular culture.”
Ms. Wilson told students, “The United States is 68th in the
world as far as women in leadership, and one of the main problems
is that people think that women are already IN roles of power across
the board. Not true. What we need are women in numbers. Numbers
are what make things normal. For instance, when one woman is in
a position or a race, she is always looked at through the lens of
gender. Two women becomes a catfight, or a comparison. But three
women really messes them up. With three women it stops being about
gender and starts being about agenda. When there
are enough women in a group, they change the product and the process
of what goes on.”
Ms. Wilson implored students to encourage one another, to speak
up and to advocate for women with the interest and passion to lead.
“Young boys and girls do pay attention, and because of this,
we need to ask, ‘What parts of the country are being left
out? What voices are left off the table?’”
Ms. Wilson has extensive leadership experience herself: she was
the first woman elected to the Des Moines City Council as a member-at-large
in 1983, and she served as an official government delegate to the
United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women held in Beijing,
China, in 1995. She is co-author of the critically acclaimed Mother
Daughter Revolution and author of Closing the Leadership
Gap: Why Women Can and Must Help Run the World. She has been
profiled in The New York Times and has appeared on The
Today Show, CNN and National Public Radio.

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