UNIVERSITY NEWS - NOVEMBER 2005
MEDIA CONTACT: Kristine M. McGrath
561-297-1168, kmcgrath@fau.edu
Former Congresswoman Pat
Schroeder Speaks at FAU
Discussion focused on women's issues, women
in politics
BOCA RATON, FL (December 9, 2005)
- Former Congresswoman Pat Schroeder spoke today
about women's issues and women in politics at an
open forum at Florida Atlantic University's Boca
Raton Campus. The lecture was sponsored by
FIRE/NOW, Planned Parenthood, FAU's chapter of the
College Democrats and the Women's Studies
department at FAU.
Schroeder, who represented Colorado's First
Congressional District in the United States House
of Representatives for 24 years, spoke to attendees
about the status of women in politics, the
prospects for electing a female president and
current hot topics of special interest to women
such as healthcare and reproductive rights.
"During her tenure as a member of the U.S.
House of Representatives, Congresswoman Schroeder
was the first woman to serve on the House Armed
Services Committee and championed several
initiatives of special interest to women," said Dr.
Robert Watson, associate professor of political
science at FAU's Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts
and Letters. "She is an excellent example of a
woman who broke through the glass ceiling and set
an example for those who followed."
Schroeder graduated magna cum laude in 1961
from the University of Minnesota and went on to
Harvard Law School, one of only 15 women in a class
of more than 500 men. She earned her J.D. in 1964
and moved to Denver, Colorado with her husband,
James, who in 1972 encouraged her to challenge an
incumbent Republican for the House seat
representing Colorado's First Congressional
District.
The mother of two young children at the time
she was elected to the House, Schroeder went on to
serve 12 terms. During her tenure in the House, she
became the dean of Congressional Women, co-chaired
the Congressional Caucus on Women's Issues and
served on the House Judiciary Committee, the Post
Office and Civil Service Committee. As chair of the
House Select Committee on Children, Youth and
Families from 1991 to 1993, Schroeder guided the
Family and Medical Leave Act and the National
Institutes of Health Revitalization Act to
enactment in 1993, a fitting legislative
achievement for her lifetime of work on behalf of
women's and family issues. She was also active on
many military issues, expediting the National
Security Committee's vote to allow women to fly
combat missions in 1991 and working to improve the
situation of military families through passage of
her Military Family Act in 1985.
Schroeder left Congress undefeated in 1996.
For a brief period of time in 1986, she considered
running for President but withdrew for lack of
funds despite the fact that she ranked third in a
Time magazine poll. Currently, the former
congresswoman is president and chief executive
officer of the Association of American Publishers
(AAP), the national trade organization of the U.S.
book publishing industry, a post she assumed on
June 1, 1997.
In addition to heading AAP, Schroeder also
leads New Century/New Solutions, an out-of-the-box
think tank, for the Institute for Civil Society in
Newton, Massachusetts and serves on the Marguerite
Casey Foundation Board of Directors and the
American Bar Association's Center for Human Rights
Executive Committee. She also serves on various
advisory committees dealing with literacy and
issues affecting children and women.
Schroeder is the author of two books:
Champion of the Great American Family (Random
House, 1989) and 24 Years of House Work...and the
Place Is Still a Mess (Andrews McMeel, 1998). She
is in the National Women's Hall of Fame and the
Colorado Women's Hall of Fame.
-- FAU --