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(02/09/15 9:09pm)
One hundred years ago, Westhampton Lake was much more than a Facebook cover photo. It served as both a physical and metaphorical divide between Richmond men and Westhampton women. Although classes have since integrated and students can live on either side of the lake, the roots of gender separation still remain in what is known as the coordinate college system. Two deaneries, two student governments and two mission statements coexist under one university, though debate over the validity of the system divides the campus community.
(02/28/13 6:55am)
"The Feminine Mystique," the novel that launched a generation of feminists, was published 50 years ago last week.
(09/06/12 4:17am)
I must admit, when I came to University of Richmond in 2009, I was a little confused about what exactly it meant to have a coordinate college system.
(08/30/12 2:54am)
As the campus tour begins, my fellow prospective students and I settle into seats in a large lecture hall on campus.
(11/10/11 4:46am)
Two Richmond College men and two Westhampton College women, in a drunken foray, climbed to the roof of the Jepson Alumni Center, obstreperously hung out for a half hour, took down an ample banner that read "Welcome Back Alumni," and climbed down with their memento to Crenshaw Way where they were accosted by University Police officers who said they could hear them all the way from the University Forest Apartments during their patrol on homecoming weekend at about 3 a.m. on Saturday.