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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
This month in Harvard historyDisavowing himself as a "burning feminist," Hooton observes that "[i]f women had run the affairs of the world for the past few thousands years, they could hardly have made a worse mess of them than the men have. [. . .] I believe that the greater honesty of women springs from their lesser ability to befuddle their own consciences with specious excuses and fallacious reasoning. Their capacity for moral deception is smaller than that of males. [. . .] The trouble is that there are at present too few women holding office to provide adequate knowledge of the legislative and administrative ability of the sex. [. . . ] I still look forward to a time when a woman will be sitting in the Presidential office of the White House. We should then have a First Gentleman of the land, and some of us would rather be that than President." (As quoted in "Harvard Alumni Bulletin," Nov. 4, 1944)
- From the Harvard Historical Calendar, a database compiled by Marvin Hightower
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