Word: radcliffeã
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...Founded in 1879, the institution soon to be called Radcliffe College was comprised of female students who were taught separately by Harvard’s male professors. Starting during World War II and continuing into the 1970s, Harvard’s and Radcliffe??s classrooms and undergraduate Houses were fully integrated, and by 1977, Radcliffe ceded many of its educational responsibilities to Harvard. Radcliffe still existed in name, though, through women’s formal admittance to and graduation from “Harvard-Radcliffe College.” In 1999, a second phase of merging involved...
...Radcliffe??s evolution has serious ramifications for women’s lives at Harvard. While some effects of the merger can be read as positive signs of gender equality, others leave a gaping inequity that it is the University’s responsibility to emend. Until the 1970s, women at Harvard enjoyed a huge amount of physical space designated as theirs. They also had guaranteed administrative support for, among other things, maintaining such places. While men had and still retain the option of joining final clubs for social space and networking, women’s prior access...
...Radcliffe??s only loss came in the second novice four race, where Dartmouth (7:47.8) edged out the Black and White “A” boat (7:51.6), Syracuse (7:52.9), the Radcliffe “B” boat (8:23.7) and the Engineers...
Cornell claimed both varsity four events, taking the A race in 7:44.0 to Princeton’s 7:46.6 and Radcliffe??s 7:57.3, and seized the B competition with a time of 8:04.8 to the Black and White?...
...Bears covered the course in 6:10.57, not even a second faster than Radcliffe??s finish of 6:11.51. Brown’s time was the second-fastest women’s finish ever posted on the Seekonk River...