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WellYou Don't Look Like an Accountant There have always been women working in accounting but never before in such numbers. In recent years the influx of women into this traditionally male field has been impressive. In 1960 women represented 16.5% of the total number of accountants according to the U.S. Census Bureau. By 1970 this figure had climbed to 25%. At this point there are no accurate figures on how many women are practicing certified public accountants; even the AICPA does not have that information. Universities have been aware of the change, too. Abraham Gitlow, Dean of the College of Business and Public Administration of New York University, reports that in 1960 8.9% of the College's student body were women. By 1969 this figure had risen to 11.7% and by the spring of 1974 there were no less than 23% women. Lawrence Lansner, placement director for Baruch, the business college of City University of New York, adds that in his eighteen years of affiliation with the school there have never been so many women as are now enrolled. According to him, women are finding out that accounting is satisfying and rewarding work and they are responding. Haskins & Sells, as of August 1974, had 323 women on its professional staff, including ten managers and forty-one seniors. This represents a gain of 147 since October 1970 when there were three managers and eleven seniors. This year a new statistic has been added to the roster since H&S named a woman partner, Judy Wilson Walsh, tax specialist in the Los Angeles office. Clearly the numbers are encouraging. But the more revealing side of the story lies not in the data but in the careers of the women themselves. A few short years ago the major concerns of the Firm in hiring women were client acceptance, travel and marriage. The detail of how H&S women have coped with these concerns shows a positive step forward. Client resistance has proved to be less of a problem than originally anticipated; according to the women it generally fades in the face of professional competence. Indeed, at this point clients may request a woman accountant for the particular insight she may bring to a 20 situation. Travel problems have been reduced by the addition of offices and suboffices outside the major cities. The final consideration, marriage and motherhood, has also been dealt with, as is evidenced by the number of women who have achieved professional status while running homes at the same time. The route a woman chooses will be highly personal — she may decide to postpone having children or she may hire a housekeeper to help out. Whatever the decision, all adhere to the basic tenet that a career and a family can no longer be considered mutually exclusive and that they may even complement one another. The first question frequently asked of women, with raised eyebrows and an inflection of surprise, is: "What made you decide to become an accountant?" The implication of this query is that the woman has somehow presumed upon a man's prerogative and must have an unusual reason for doing so. The truth of the matter is that women share with men the same reasons for choosing accounting—"I liked math and numbers'."! was interested in business'."! was looking for a satisfying remunerative profession'.' Sound familiar? It is true that until recently these interests were often diverted into more typically feminine roles such as teaching and that women were justifiably reticent about seeking careers in public accounting. But now the field is open and women are taking their place in it along with their male counterparts. Partner Judy Walsh chose accounting because she was looking for a practical career. In her junior year at Rice University in Houston a professor warned her that the possibilities for a woman were very slim, so she changed her major to economics—for two weeks—but quickly decided to switch back again. When she was a senior, the same professor who had cautioned her about her choice, told the recruiters that she was his most capable student. "There were problems!' Judy recalls, "and one of the firms had a national policy against hiring women at all!' She decided to join Phillips Sheffield, a local CPA firm, because of her acquaintance with other Rice alumni on their staff. When they merged with Haskins & Sells a year later, Judy's career with the £f.:. '.**£ Firm began. "I was interested in tax work from the beginning, although I was scheduled to begin with audit work. Within a week of my employment, Ken Studdard, partner in the Houston office, took me into the tax department to help out and I stayed on. I think tax is a good specialty for a woman. In audit you're running from place to place, managing a large crew and you have an independent relationship with the client. In tax, our position is more that of an advocate for the client. T never really felt discriminated against. In the beginning I didn't go to tax meetings or even to the seniors' meeting, which didn't really disturb me. As a matter of fact, being a woman can sometimes be an advantage. When I did start to attend meetings, I was highly visible which can be beneficial in a large firm'.'Judy maintains that she has never had any difficulty working with men. "They may be nonplussed at first, but if you are fair, give adequate instruction and are unemotional, they will be good working partners. For a time I was the only woman on the staff in Houston, but you get used to it. Anyway, the men regard you as a fellow professional'.' Judy is more interested in her professional career than in women's liberation rhetoric. Her course has always been to perform in her most capable manner and at a top level of competence. "I am not interested in the advancement of women per se',' she says. "I don't believe that equal population dispersion is the function of business. The onus now is too often on an employer to hire Copyrighted -- License from Black Star