Foot Soldiers of the Law

The paramount mission and destiny of women are to fulfill the noble and benign offices of wife and mother. This is the law of the Creator.

It was also the doctrine of the Supreme Court in 1873, when Justice Joseph Bradley wrote those words in a decision upholding the right of Illinois to deny a license to practice law to the first woman applicant, Myra Bradwell. Women, the court in effect ruled, could be barred from becoming lawyers.

Nothing dramatizes the changes that have taken place in the past 108 years more than the nomination of Sandra O'Connor to the bench where Bradley once sat. Today some 50,000 women are going beyond their "paramount mission and destiny" by pursuing careers as lawyers. They represent about 10% of the profession, and the proportion is growing: one out of three students now graduating from law school is a woman. Female attorneys are no longer considered "a bizarre thing," as Shirley Hufstedler, Secretary of Education under Jimmy Carter, recalls they Eleanor Holmes Norton were when she was one of two women graduating from Stanford University's law school in 1949 ("It was a bumper crop that year"). Nor do law firms now tell female applicants that "we just don't hire women; the secretaries might resent it," as one informed Orinda Evans, 38, now a federal district judge in Georgia, as recently as 1968. In addition, women no longer restrict themselves to the genteel specializations of real estate and probate law, as they did when former Watergate Prosecutor Jill Wine Banks finished Columbia Law School in 1968.

Yet women are still "the foot soldiers of the profession," says Eleanor Holmes Norton, former chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. "You don't find many in the upper reaches of bench or bar." Recent studies have shown that women account for only 2% of the partners in the 50 largest U.S. law firms, 5% of the nation's full professors of law, and about 5% of all judges. Nor has a woman ever served as president of a state bar association or on the powerful 23-member board of governors of the American

Bar Association, though one is expected to be elected next month.

The main difficulty, most female attorneys agree, is that the boom in women law graduates has essentially come about since 1970, when women accounted for only 2.8% of the profession. Thus there has not been enough time to yield a sufficient pool of experienced practitioners. "You can't appoint women judges if you don't have a large number of women lawyers who are trained," says Carla Hills, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under President Ford. Until 1977, only ten women had been named to the federal bench. During the Carter Administration, partly because of the establishment of 152 new judgeships, 41 women were named. "That," says Brooksley Landau, chairman of the A.B.A. federal judiciary committee, "was a real revolution."

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RON WYDEN, Democratic Senator of Oregon and a member of the Senate Finance Committee, on health care reform; experts say it's impossible to know if the bill will meet cost-cutting goals

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