<p>I am going to offer an opinion with a lot of historical perspective. In 1974 I graduated from a women’s high school with a total of 200 students. In 1974 I would have told you it was true waste of time and loss of potential experience. </p>
<p>Then I went to George Washington University, with 20,000 others. I was shocked at how professors would call on men before women. I was appalled at girls who simpered and made themselves look foolish because someone with a Y chromosome was offering an opinion different from theirs. </p>
<p>I came from a school where women counted. We were the dominant culture. And I was unwilling to accept a back seat to someone simply because they were male. I became a film producer, made a lot of money, married a very nice guy, had a baby, quit work, raised my child and started a new career this year, when my daughter got into Bryn Mawr after attending a coed public high school.</p>
<p>IMO every woman owes herself the opportunity to live in a community where women’s voices are the dominate voices. You won’t let yourselves be pushed around ever again.</p>