If rats (or myself) drink alcohol, we will probably wanna do it again.
Neuroscience & Behavior, Barnard College

seen from Malaysia
seen from Argentina

seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from Argentina

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from France
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Ireland
If rats (or myself) drink alcohol, we will probably wanna do it again.
Neuroscience & Behavior, Barnard College

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
You get what you pay for.
Political Science, Bryn Mawr College
"From the White House to the Ground: The Implementation Variable Problem and the National HIV/AIDS Strategy in Philadelphia"
History of Women at Bryn Mawr College
In light of recent discussions on gender and race at Bryn Mawr College, here's an institutional history compiled by a student a couple years ago:
A HISTORY OF BRYN MAWR
February 19, 1877 â Dr. Taylorâs will states that the remainder of his estate, real and personal is to go towards the building of a Corporation under the laws of Pennsylvania for a College or Institution of learning, âhaving for its object the comfort and advanced education and care of young women, or girls of the higher classes of societyâŠâ
April 24, 1880- Friendsâ Review: A Religious, Literary and Miscellaneous Journal: âThe College will admit students irrespective of denomination, preference being given to members of the Society of Friendsâ
1885- Bryn Mawr College opens its doors and is also the first college in the country to grant a PhD degree to women
March 18, 1886- Friendsâ Review: A Religious, Literary and Miscellaneous Journal: ââŠBryn Mawr was founded on motives of Christian benevolence. Dr. Taylor desired that it should ever maintain and teach an evangelical and primitive Christianity as set forth in the New TestamentâŠâ
1889- International students were being admitted to BMC starting with students from Japan
1892- Self-government association found
1901- âExamining Our History: Inclusion/Exclusion at Bryn Mawrâ: Jessie Fauset, a âcolored girlâ, won a scholarship to Bryn Mawr and decided to enroll. She was allowed to attend classes for a month and then went off to Cornell
1916- President Thomas gives a speech to the student body saying: âIf the supremacy of the white race is maintained, as I hope it will beâŠit is the only race to educate womenâŠcertain races have not intellect, governmentâŠâ
1920- A student presumed to be African-American stayed at Bryn Mawr for a week before leaving
1921- The Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers opened by M. Carey Thomas. The director of the program was Hilda Jane Smith and all summer students loved her.
VIDEO:Â The Women of Summer (Published 1986)
1922- First student from China arrives at Bryn Mawr
April 1923- Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin on the new entrance requirements to the college: âHereafter no student will be admitted with conditions.â
March 1926- Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin: Bryn Mawr has the reputation of âgiving its maids an opportunity to study so that working here will be a stepping stone to other work like nursing or stenographyâ. There are three branches at this time: the night school, the Sunday school, and the Maidsâ Club and students act as tutors.
1927- âcoloredâ students will be admitted as only non-residential students
October 1929- Pictorial Review: âDue to its system of unequally priced rooms which sets a maximum annual expenditure at more than two thousand dollars, Bryn Mawr has often been accused of snobbery.â
February 7, 1931- Letter from an Alumna, Class of 1922 to President Park: âI now read in the Alumnae Bulletin that the question of taking colored students into the dormitories has arisen. I feel I must oppose with all my vigor such a course of actionâŠmy sentiments do not arise from any blind prejudice against the colored race. In fact I think we have shirked, so far, in dealing squarely with the negro problem in America.â
February 24, 1931- Response to the alumna from President Park: âPersonally, I agree with all the premises of your letter and arrive at the opposite conclusion as to Bryn Mawrâs responsibility but officially I shall not bring up the matter of the residence of negro students this yearâŠâ
April 1931- Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin: Enid Cook (1907-1989), first African American student to graduate from Bryn Mawr. Enid lived with a Bryn Mawr professor her freshmen year then with a black family in the town during her remaining years.
1934- Lillian Russel, an African American student, graduates from Bryn Mawr. In her time at the school she lived with families in the area.
May 19, 1943- College News: Bryn Mawr College goes co-ed! âFrom 1944 to 1951 six men, all recently returned GIs, enrolled at Bryn Mawr. Although all six took courses, only one, Richard Logan graduated in 1949.â
1948- Gloria Millicent White, first residential African- American student receives her AB
October 19, 1949- College News: More than 10% of the undergraduate school is made up of foreign students
1954- Evelyn Jones Rich, African-American student, receives support from the school: âthe College rallied to my support when a local restaurant which I had patronized for four years refused to serve me and a Negro male escort. Miss McBride believed that the collegeâs responsibility to me extended beyond the following months after we won a change in policy thereâŠthe College came through when the chips were downâquietly, firmly, successfully.â
June 4, 1955- Philadelphia Inquirer: Bryn Mawr plans to improve its science facilities, which would be âthe first such center in any womenâs college for students at all levels from the first degree to Ph. D.â
1959- âWomen at Bryn Mawrâ: Bryn Mawr refuses to take federal funds because it would have meant taking loyalty oaths as well. This was a part of the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Act, which was later declared unconstitutional
October 12, 1960- College News: A student from Kenya, Wamere Mwangi, comes to Bryn Mawr as a transfer student to the sophomore class
1960- Only 9 African-American women had graduated from the institution at this time
May 1, 1963- College News: At present, there is three price levels for room and board. Those students that are receiving scholarship aid can only live in the low price rooms. This system âcauses uncalled for discrimination among studentsâ.
February 7-9, 1964- College News: Bryn Mawr and Haverford Colleges sponsor a civil rights conference
March 6, 1964- College News: Bryn Mawr joins other colleges in encouraging ânegro applicantsâ. However, at this time âfew negroes apply to Bryn Mawr. Some high school advisersâŠare often surprised to learn that Bryn Mawr is willing to accept their students.â
January 3, 1967- College News: article written by Kit Bakke, class of 1968. âAttention Must be Paidâ asks for the college to provide âdecent, dignified human life for its maids and portersâ.
1968- College debates proâs and conâs of going coed
April 15, 1969- News: âBryn Mawr black students submit proposals on studies to communityâ resulting in Herbert Aptheker, historian and author, being named as BMCâs director of black studies
March 12, 1971- News: Trustees of Bryn Mawr grant students complete autonomy in SGA. Before this all major Self Government and Undergraduate actions required Board approval.
February 25, 1972- News (Bryn Mawr-Haverford): âA sit-in by 35 black students and 45 white students resulted in President McBrideâs agreeing to a list of 10 demands presented to her by the blacks.â
March 24, 1972- News (Bryn Mawr-Haverford): Sisterhoodâs all-black magazine RA is to be published next fall
March 31, 1972- News: âA womenâs college has a responsibility to give its students a sense of what women are and what âcultureâ women have and donât have.â Other advantages of a womenâs college include: less discrimination, more general respect, and a chance to know the female mind.
January 24, 1974- News (Bryn Mawr-Haverford): Haverford men living at Bryn Mawr are now eligible to run for all SGA offices
November 5, 1976- News (Bryn Mawr-Haverford): Article published on differing attitudes on gays in the bi-co. Responses ranged from disgust to indifference.
April 22, 1977- News (Bryn Mawr-Haverford): An attempt at a statistical analysis was made in which a specific date was proclaimed Gay Day. Students who were gay were supposed to wear blue jeans. There were fewer people wearing jeans than usual, but there was no evidence that these people were gay.
February 2, 1982- College News: President McPherson responded to the question of âWhat is the relevance of a womenâs college to modern society?â In her answer she stated that: âYou remember that Miss Thomas said that Bryn Mawr should be a college for women as long as that is necessary. We have asked ourselves about that necessity several times in the past and probably will ask it several times in the futureâŠâ
Fall 1984- Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin: Everybody votes but women. / They have lots of sense/ When they get the ballot/ The thing will be immense/ When they get the franchise/ Good citizens they will be/ And if you donât believe us/ Just wait and see/ Oh, votes for women!
December 12, 1985- College News: Over a two-day period Bryn Mawr students protest, displaying signs, and singing protest songs in support of divestment.
February 5, 1986- College News: BMC admits older women (McBride Program) March 3, 1986- Letter to Bryn Mawr College Community from President McPherson: The trustees in response to the 1985 protest by the students, âcontinuing its process of reviewing its investment policies with regard to those companies doing business in South Africa, approved the prompt sale of stocks in five companies that did not appear to be attempting activity to oppose institutionalized racism in South Africa.â
1986-Â Bryn Mawr Now: Bryn Mawr starts having discussions on sexuality (Human Sexuality seminar offered)
April 1995- Agenda for the Future: ââŠBryn Mawr is and should attempt to remain: a college with a special commitment to the education of able undergraduate women and to graduate men and women in the Collegeâs two graduate schools; a college composed of a faculty devoted to fine teaching and first rate scholarship; and a college composed of staff members and administrators whose desire for professional growth contributes to the enhancement of the Collegeâs educational enterprise.â
2006- Teaching and Learning Initiative starts at BMC
2007- Transgender Task Force is created
October 4, 2008- Inaugural Address of Jane McAuliffe: âAccess to excellence was the reason Bryn Mawr was born. From its earliest days, this College has sought to offer the most rigorous education to those who were otherwise excluded from the best undergraduate colleges and the most challenging graduate programs.â November 2008- Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin: The first Black alumnae/i conference in more than a decade was held in October 2008
August 28, 2009- Bryn Mawr Now: the newly arrived class of 2013 is âthe most internationalâ yet
Fall 2009- Transgender Task Forceâs proposals are approved
 The definition of women has changed drastically since the beginning of Bryn Mawr College. While at some point women were not worthy of education, the opportunity was provided to women, that is "women of the higher classes of society", at Bryn Mawr College amongst some other schools. Women at Bryn Mawr worthy of education were rich and white. The school has always been very selective in it's admission of women who have great record of schooling before coming to Bryn Mawr as well. So far women=rich, white, and privileged enough to be educatedÂ
Women from countries other than the United States gain admissions, first from Japan, then from China, though "certain races have never yet in the history of the world manifested any continuous mental activity nor even any continuous power of organized government. Such are the pure negroes of Africa, the Indians, the Exquimauz, the South Sea Islanders, the Turks, etc..." (M. Carey Thomas, 1916)Â
Women now includes certain international students
1921- Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers Women now includes the working womenÂ
1927- "colored" students are now allowed to attend the college, but they cannot live in the dorms. Are African-American students considered women in 1927?Â
1948- First residential African-American student graduates
Women now includes African-Americans
By 1960 only NINE African-American women have graduated from Bryn MawrÂ
1977- Bryn Mawr and Haverford discuss gay, some students agree and others do not in "homosexuality"Â
Women now includes gay
Women of Bryn Mawr include transmen
Women of Bryn Mawr need to have vaginas
Women of Bryn Mawr does not include transwomen
Bryn Mawr yearbook, 1949
Period rooms are kinda fucked up.
History of Art, Bryn Mawr

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
People write plays about virgin martyrs because lady parts are theologically confusing, so it's easier if the girl dies before anyone gets to touch her.
Religion, Barnard College
"Keeping Their Parts: The Archetype of the Virgin Martyr in Performance"
Nonfiction novels are the only source of truth
English Literature, Bryn Mawr College
Midwives are sometimes depicted in Birth of the Virgin scenes and I have feelings about it but no one else does.
History of Art, Bryn Mawr College
"Resurrecting the Midwife: Reexamining 15th-Century Birth of the Virgin Scenes"