Skip to main content
 Collection
Identifier: MC 1434

New Jersey Women's Equity Action League Records

Dates

  • Majority of material found within 1970-1974, 1971-1974

Scope and Content Note

The records of the New Jersey Women's Equity Action League cover the period 1970-1974, although the bulk dates from 1971-1974. They consist of Jane F. Robens' files as vice-president (1971-1973), president (1973-1974), and member of the national board (1974- ), as well as material which Phyllis Zatlin Boring, the previous president of the state division (1971-1973), passed on to her.

Jane F. Robens' files as vice-president (1971-1973) and president of New Jersey WEAL (1973-1974) are divided by subject. They primarily contain correspondence between Robens and government officials, business and educational administrators, other WEAL members and women's organizations, and members of the public. They also contain a large number of press clippings about WEAL's activities and issues of concern to WEAL members. Interspersed are press releases, WEAL reports, conference programs, and copies of federal documents. Some of this material dates from 1974, as Robens continued to be active in New Jersey WEAL after the conclusion of her term as president.

There is also a small amount of material--correspondence, mailing lists, financial statements, and minutes--received by Jane F. Robens in her capacity as membership secretary of national WEAL in 1974. In addition, the collection contains incomplete runs of several WEAL publications from the period 1970-1973: the Washington Report, the national newsletter, the New Jersey newsletter (New Jersey Potpourri), and several newsletters from other states.

The three folders of Phyllis Zatlin Boring's correspondence contain material relating to various New Jersey WEAL initiatives during the period 1971 to 1973, including the campaign against sex-segregated advertising, discrimination against women in educational institutions and government agencies, and inequities in social security payments.

The wealth of correspondence in the New Jersey Women's Equity Action League records makes this collection a valuable resource for those researching the revived feminist movement of the early 1970s, women in New Jersey politics, and the evolution of civil rights legislation.

Extent

1.33 Cubic Feet (4 manuscript boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Restrictions

No restrictions.

Acquisition Information

The New Jersey Women's Equity Action League records were given by Jane F. Robens to the Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College, which donated them to Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, in 1986.

Abstract

The New Jersey Women's Equity Action League existed from 1971 through 1981 as a division of the Women's Equity Action League (WEAL). The New Jersey division worked to end sex-segregated classified advertisements, to increase the number of women students in veterinary schools, to monitor the records of pharmaceutical companies in employing women (as well as their depiction of women in medical journal advertising), to fight discriminatory credit policies, to study the number of women employed as bank directors (and to promote affirmative action plans in banks holding government funds), to bring about compliance with Title IX, to challenge government agencies' hiring practices and to help place women seeking college teaching and administrative positions. These records, created by two successive presidents of New Jersey WEAL, consist chiefly of correspondence and press clippings, but also include press releases, reports, conference programs, copies of government documents and state and national newsletters.

<emph render="bold">Administrative History</emph>

The Women's Equity Action League (WEAL) was founded in 1968 by Elizabeth Boyer. Boyer, a native of Ohio, had been active in the National Organization for Women, but believed that a more conservative association was needed to attract women in the Midwest. Avoiding the controversial abortion issue, WEAL focused on women's education, employment, and other economic issues, although in 1972, the organization began to openly support abortion rights. WEAL did not seek a mass membership. Its members were directly involved in research, monitoring, advocacy and litigation in order to end discrimination against women.

The New Jersey Women's Equity Action League was founded in September 1971, when the Rutgers University Spanish professor Phyllis Zatlin Boring became its first president. Jane F. Robens became president of New Jersey WEAL in 1973. She had been active at the national level, and previously served as vice-president of the New Jersey division. Robens, trained as a veterinarian, worked as Technical Coordinator for Drug Regulatory Affairs at the Hoffmann-La Roche Corporation in Nutley, New Jersey. After she was succeeded as president of New Jersey WEAL by Eileen Thornton in 1974, Robens served on the national board as membership secretary. The New Jersey and other state divisions were disbanded in 1981 when national WEAL merged with the WEAL Educational and Legal Defense Fund.

During Phyllis Boring's administration, New Jersey WEAL conducted a campaign against sex-segregated classified advertisements, which were in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which banned discrimination on the basis of sex. During this period, Jane F. Robens was involved in efforts to increase numbers of women students in veterinary schools. She fought to have an anti-discrimination clause included in contracts between the State Department of Higher Education and out-of-state veterinary schools for the acceptance of New Jersey residents. Robens also conducted a study of the pharmaceutical industry, one of New Jersey's major employers. She investigated the record of pharmaceutical companies in employing women, as well as the portrayal of women in advertisements placed by these companies in medical journals.

Under Jane F. Robens' leadership, WEAL campaigned against credit policies which discriminated against women. The efforts of WEAL and others eventually led to the passage of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act in 1974 which forbade banks and credit firms from using sex or marital status as a reason for denying credit. New Jersey WEAL also conducted a survey of banks which showed that very few women were employed as directors. Banks holding government money qualified as federal contractors, and were thus required to develop affirmative action plans.

New Jersey WEAL filed dozens of lawsuits against institutions of higher education, among them Montclair State College, for failing to comply with Title VII, and after 1972 with Title IX, which explicitly banned sex discrimination in educational institutions receiving federal funds. WEAL successfully used Title IX to force public schools to allow girls to participate on boys' athletics teams if no comparable provision existed for girls. The organization also filed charges against some state and local government agencies, which they felt failed to hire sufficient numbers of women.

In addition, in 1971 New Jersey WEAL established Project Monitor, which helped place women seeking college teaching and administrative positions. Project Monitor was discontinued in 1973, and its function was taken over by the New Jersey Talent Bank, the employment resource center for women operated through the State Office on Women.

Title
Inventory to the New Jersey Women's Equity Action League Records MC 1434
Status
Edited Full Draft
Author
Fernanda Perrone
Date
August 1992
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.