“On the advisability and feasibility of women at Yale”What they said then The problem of introducing women into a men's college need not be as laborious as the Yale Administration seems to believe. . . . Yale faces the likelihood of being the last Ivy school, excepting Dartmouth, to include women as undergraduates.—“So Where Are the Women?” (editorial), Yale Daily News, September 23, 1968 Like many absolute human needs, coeducation has been classified as a “reform.” . . . Psychosexual repression (horniness) is not a possible issue for reform. The all-male university should never have happened, and should be integrated immediately.—“Women Now, Talk Later,” by Mark Zanger ’71, Yale Daily News, October 4, 1968 Yale will not fully take its place as one of the few great universities in the country until we admit women on the undergraduate as well as the graduate level to our community.—“Duties of the Faculty,” by Adam Parry, chair of the classics department, Yale Daily News, October 21, 1968 Mr. Brewster claims that Yale cannot afford to reduce the number of leaders it offers the country every year. Call it “male chauvinism” or what you will, but he is pointing to a genuine problem. It is reasonable to assume that Yale women just will not assume the same roles in society that Yale men have and will, and there is no reason why they should.—“A Question of Forms” (editorial), Yale Daily News, November 12, 1968 Yale College still has no women. It has waited long enough.—“A Question of Forms” (editorial), Yale Daily News, November 12, 1968 Late in the afternoon of November 14, the faculty of Yale College met in an upstairs room of Connecticut Hall and voted overwhelmingly to admit women beginning next fall. . . . The chairman of the newly formed Planning Committee on Coeducation is a housewife, mother of two, skating and skiing enthusiast, sometime interior decorator, chemist, teacher, and former assistant dean of the Graduate School. Let those who desire a different environment go to any of those institutions of learning which are coeducational—there are plenty of them—and let us keep Yale very much the same kind of place that it has been for over 200 years. There is only one Yale.—letter to the editor, George E. Peirce Jr. ’22, Yale Alumni Magazine, December 1968 As Yale surrenders her identity, it seems appropriate to me that she should also change her name. Let all graduates through June 1969 be correctly identified in their proud tradition of Yale men. Let the new melange develop an identity and tradition -- perhaps better ones -- of its own. In brief, do what you will but don't call it Yale.—letter to the editor, Arthur S. Lord ’26, ’31LLB, Yale Alumni Magazine, February 1969 Donna: In discussion groups and seminars where I was the only girl, it was very difficult. I either had to keep absolutely silent or assert myself all the time because otherwise I would be attacked on every point. One upperclassman . . . said, “Goddamn, there are all these girls walking around who won't let me sleep with them.” That was the most blatant example of this that I've encountered. Part of the push for coeducation last year was sincere, but at some level there was also the idea of getting sleeping partners.—Patricia Mintz ’73, quoted in “Coeds on Coeducation: A Discussion,” Yale Alumni Magazine, April 1970 I love the Yale . . . that is a group of dynamic and almost electric people, who in and among the buildings of Yale College create the experiences that are so exciting, so important, and so unique to Yale. I came expecting a great deal, and I have found a great deal. . . .
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