For fun: When were women admitted to the Ivy League Schools.

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But although classes were together, exams weren’t. Radcliffe had an honor code and and didn’t procotor exams Harvard did. (According to my Mom who attended Radcliffe in the 50s.) Apparently women were more trustworthy!</p>

<p>Harvard degrees said, “Harvard College, Harvard University” and Radcllife ones said, “Radcliffe College, Harvard University” I think, so I don’t see what the big hoopla was about not going to Harvard. (Well it said it in Latin back then IRC.) H-R was more integrated than Barnard was in those days. I remember being told that you could cross register between classes at Barnard and Columbia, but it sure didn’t look like that much was happening when I sat in on a couple of classes in the 70s. Coming from a girl’s school that was a big minus. Harvard/Radcliffe had co-ed dorms and co-ed classes which was what I cared about especially since I was coming from an all-girls school and really, really wanted a change from that.</p>