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Lily Tomlin | 03/08/2008 12:59 pm

Women's Work

Lily Tomlin

 

I was born 68 years ago – three years before the article below was written. My mother’s O.B. doctor came into her hospital room after she’d recovered from anesthesia and identified the sex of her newborn baby girl — me — by saying, "Mrs. Tomlin, congratulations! You’ve got a brand new little dishwasher."

For International Women’s Day, a friend sent me a fuzzy photocopy of a page from something called Transportation Magazine, 1943. It was written for male supervisors of women in the work force during World War II.

1943 Guide to Hiring Women

Eleven tips on getting more efficiency out of women employees: there’s no longer any question whether transit companies should hire women for jobs formerly held by men. The draft and manpower shortage has settled that point. The important things now are to select the most efficient women available and how to use them to the best advantage.

Here are eleven helpful tips on the subject from Western Properties:

1. Pick young married women. They usually have more of a sense of responsibility than their unmarried sisters, they’re less likely to be flirtatious, they need the work or they wouldn’t be doing it, they still have the pep and interest to work hard and to deal with the public efficiently.

2. When you have to use older women, try to get ones who have worked outside the home at some time in their lives. Older women who have never contacted the public have a hard time adapting themselves and are inclined to be cantankerous and fussy. It’s always well to impress upon older women the importance of friendliness and courtesy.

3. General experience indicates that “husky” girls – those who are just a little on the heavy side – are more even tempered and efficient than their underweight sisters.

4. Retain a physician to give each woman you hire a special physical examination – one covering female conditions. This step not only protects the property against the possibilities of lawsuit, but reveals whether the employee-to-be has any female weaknesses which would make her mentally or physically unfit for the job.

5. Stress at the outset the importance of time the fact that a minute of two lost here and there makes serious inroads on schedules. Until this point is gotten across, service is likely to be slowed up.

6. Give the female employee a definite day-long schedule of duties so that they’ll keep busy without bothering the management for instructions every few minutes. Numerous properties say that women make excellent workers when they have their jobs cut out for them, but that they lack initiative in finding work themselves.

7. Whenever possible, let the inside employee change from one job to another at some time during the day. Women are inclined to be less nervous and happier with change.

8. Give every girl an adequate number of rest periods during the day. You have to make some allowances for feminine psychology. A girl has more confidence and is more efficient if she can keep her hair tidied, apply fresh lipstick and wash her hands several times a day.

9. Be tactful when issuing instructions or in making criticisms. Women are often sensitive; they can’t shrug off harsh words the way men do. Never ridicule a women – it breaks her spirit and cuts off her efficiency.

10. Be reasonably considerate about using strong language around women. Even though a girl’s husband or father may swear vociferously, she’ll grow to dislike a place of business where she hears too much of this.

11. Get enough size variety in operator’s uniforms so that each girl can have a proper fit. This point can’t be stressed enough in keeping women happy.

66 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Ann Ray
I’m so thankful I’ve avoided discrimination personally (except during booth duty at tech tradeshows), and that many of these attitudes have changed, but unfortunately some stereotypes persist. This recent article http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/21/fashion/21webgirls.html talks about how teenage girls are generating more online content than boys. What’s irksome is it’s in the FASHION section, not spun as the business or technology trend it is. Likewise we continue to be under-represented in scientific and technical careers, with all the studies indicating not a lack of capacity or interest, but a severe failing in how that interest is cultivated through school and career.
By Ann Ray on 03/10/2008 10:59 am
K. F.
The 1943 article is old news, but the attitude expressed is contemporary. Polls reported upon in the news media indicate that Hillary Rodham Clinton has encountered opposition to her candidacy not in the male population, as might be thought, but with white, middle-aged, well-educated women. Her contemporaries! Why this attitude from women? Ignorance is still fostered in the home, in the schools, and in the places of worship in the United States. We have a lot to learn, do you agree?
By K. F. on 03/10/2008 11:40 am
Cindy B
I’m sure there are still some employers out there somewhere who still adopt these beliefs in some way or some form. They’re probably just worded a little bit better in a clever disguize to suit the way the world works today.
By Cindy B on 03/10/2008 12:25 pm
Abbie Hill
In 1988, I placed an ad for a healthy male sperm donor and wondered if at 35 I could still get pregnant. Then, when I did, I wished for a daughter. I felt more confident about my ability to share interests with a daughter. We could read and talk about people and dress-up. It’s been all that and more. She is now a high school senior, very strong in math and science and hopes to major in engineering. She has a button on her purse (that she made out of duct tape) that says “I <3 Pro Choice Boys!” It used to be that women weren’t even permitted legal custody of their own children. Men wanted sons to carry on the family name/values. I wanted a daughter to live on after I’m gone and keep pushing for equal rights for women.
By Abbie Hill on 03/10/2008 1:13 pm
Heddigret K
PBS last week had a program on the new trend toward sex-segregated public education. A lot of the ‘differences between girls and boys’ offered as justification for separate schools sounds just like the differences between male and female workers. This stuff never goes away. Watch out, girls, when fashion starts pushing frilly dresses and ‘pink’ for the girls sports equipment, they’ll soon be pushing women out of jobs in favor of the men who have to raise families; recession rears it’s ugly head, and women are expected to be the most adaptable.
By Heddigret K on 03/10/2008 2:27 pm
Nancy Hamilton
When I was a little girl, I told my mother that I wanted to be a nurse when I grew up. She said “why not a doctor?” She was at home mom, but she made sure that I had a female pediatrician and was exposed to other high-achieving women. As women, we do the best we can and then work like hell to make sure it is even better for our daughters.
By Nancy Hamilton on 03/10/2008 2:29 pm
Laura Marshall
In the late 1970s, I’d started a career in radio as a news announcer and disc jockey. When I applied for a job at a Southern radio station (OK, so that’s really gilding the lily) I was told, “Gee, we really liked your tape, but we already have a woman on the air.” When I asked how many men they had on-air, the hiring manager let a long silence go by. Never did answer the question, and no, I didn’t get the job.
By Laura Marshall on 03/10/2008 5:27 pm
AMY ANDERSON MILLER
WOW! ISN’T IT INTERESTING TO KNOW THAT IN THIS NEW MILLENIUM MORE AND MORE PROFICIENT COMPANIES ARE LOOKING TO BE LEAD BY WOMEN? WE ARE MULTI-TASKERS. WE WORK EFFECTIVELY IN A PARALLEL HIERARCHY, RATHER THAN THE MORE PHALLIC PYRAMIDIC PECKING ORDER THAT HAD BEEN SO DOMINANT IN THE 20TH CENTURY.
By AMY ANDERSON MILLER on 03/10/2008 5:53 pm
Sue West
My first introduction to the fact that I was not able to do anything I wanted to was in high school when playing basketball. Not only were we restricted to two bounces and then had to pass but the defense could not cross center court. Also we were limited to intramural competition, no traveling to other schools to test our teams out. Since that was in the 50s I had a long wait until the women’s “movement” of the 70s though my Mother and Father had taught me well. Thank you Title Nine. It was a long wait.
By Sue West on 03/10/2008 5:56 pm
Ann  Robinson
In 1958 I began teaching. So far so good until I was 3 months pregnant at the beginning of the next school year. I only was allowed to teach for the month of September because I was beginning to show. At that point my place was at home according to the male school board members. Now when I tell young teachers this story they find it hard to believe.
By Ann Robinson on 03/10/2008 9:31 pm
W. M. Marx
I drove bus for a number of years. Studies show, over and over, that women bus drivers have far fewer accidents than men drivers do. When I started at the metro transit company, the last of the WWII women drivers was still driving the line. Jeez, did she have the seniority. She had driven over a million miles. My back hurts just thinking about it. I think she was honored for having driven a million miles without an accident. Wowser! Now that’s some driver.
By W. M. Marx on 03/11/2008 12:41 am
P Braswell
I went to an all girls college in 1959 in the deep south..at that time the best I could hope for was teacher, home economics, nurse, wife/mother..I became a wife/mother which was a fab. carrer…today I own my own business and employ young women still hoping to become wife/mother..what a gift all of this has been. WOMEN ARE FABULOUS!!!!!!!!
By P Braswell on 03/11/2008 12:54 am
Mac D
Am I the only person here who doesn’t see the inherent sexism claimed in that list? For the time, it was appropriate….and actually a few of them still hold true.
By Mac D on 03/11/2008 5:31 am
Chari Bonagua
I was born in a household where both parents work. I took it for granted that it was normal for a wife/mother to work outside the home. When I entered high school, my father would say that I should take up medicine because it would be a good career choice for me. Whe I was in college, I found out that the set up in my family was not the norm but the exeption. What an eye opener that was.
By Chari Bonagua on 03/11/2008 8:30 am
Jeanne Findlay
I’ve been a nurse BY CHOICE for over 30 years. So in response to the posting <”When I was a little girl, I told my mother that I wanted to be a nurse when I grew up. She said “why not a doctor?” She was at home mom, but she made sure that I had a female pediatrician and was exposed to other high-achieving women”>, I need to add that I used to frequently hear this comment when I graduated from college…in the 70’s! Nurses ARE ‘high-achieving women’. Our profession continues to face subtle—and not so subtle—sexism. Nurses save lives but the general public persist in focusing on the medical role in the provision of health care. This is changing with very little thanks to the media but with great thanks to the women and men who CHOOSE whatever profession within the health care provider continuum!
By Jeanne Findlay on 03/11/2008 11:55 am