Harvard, Princeton, and Yale Have Betrayed Christendom
"This is what the Christ our Lord says: 'Because your lewdness was poured out and your nakedness uncovered through your obscene practices with your lovers and with all your detestable idols, and because of the blood of your sons that you gave to idols, therefore, behold, I am going to gather all your lovers whom you pleased, all those whom you loved as well as all those whom you hated. So I will gather them against you from every direction and expose your nakedness to them so that they may see all your nakedness. So I will judge you as women who commit adultery or shed blood are judged; and I will bring on you the blood of wrath and jealousy. I will also hand you over to your lovers, and they will tear down your shrines, demolish your high places, strip you of your clothing, take away your jewels, and will leave you naked and bare.'"
---Ezekiel 16:36-39
Harvard, Princeton, and Yale Universities establish the curricula and the policies for every school in North America and Asia. This includes preschools, grammar schools, and other institutions of higher learning. Each abandoned the values prescribed to them through their charters. By definition, charter agreements are non-separable.
Harvard was established as a Jesuit institution, Princeton as an Ecumenical school, and Yale as a Presbyterian academy. All three schools abandoned their faith-based curriculums long ago. Yale was first in 1858, Harvard in 1911 and Princeton in 1914. They were the first and the seven the other eight Ivies followed suit. Cornell was established as a hotel management school.
The world's four other elite academic institutions (Oxford, Cambridge, the University of Vienna, and Tokyo University) followed Princeton's lead after Princeton's provosts abandoned the university's requirement that students and faculty attend weekend services without fail. That decision was made to allow Princeton upperclassmen to intern at Wall Street brokerage firms.
ABANDONMENT OF LETTERS REQUIREMENTS
The abandonment of letters was the first charter violation for each academic institution. Harvard, Princeton, and Yale's once required students be proficient in Greek, Latin, and English to matriculate. So too did Oxford, Cambridge, the University of Vienna, and Tokyo University. Besides English, Greek, and Latin, Tokyo University once required students be fluent in Japanese, Cantonese, and Mandarin.
Each school required students provide written synopses of Old Testament teachings when they were first established. Harvard abandoned that requirement in 1837. Yale followed suit in 1858 after Charles Goodyear submitted a synopsis of the Old Testament his father had plagiarized on Goodyear's behalf. That synopsis had a summary sheet titled "Testyment" and Goodyear's application to Yale's divinity school was rejected.
Goodyear's father William Henry bribed Yale's Dean of Students Theodore Woosley $11MM GBS to admit Goodyear into Yale's divinity school. Goodyear practiced in the occult and became a Mennonite preacher. Goodyear's connections to Cosa Nostra seeded the Skull and Bones fraternal order throughout North America and his connections to the Woodbridge Foundation paved the way for Joseph Smith Sr.'s exploitation of his son's prothetic gifts.
Princeton abandoned its letter requirement in 1914 after two freshmen students of Asian descent scored the highest scores ever achieved on the school's entrance exams. Princeton's Dean of Students Woodrow Wilson remarked "Those niggers are going to beat us to Mars." and terminated the institution's letters exams without notifying Princeton's Provosts.
In 1916, Cosa Nostra patriarch David Nelson Rockefeller bribed Princeton's Provosts the present cash equivalent of $111MM GBS to deny reinstatement of the university's letters requirements.
THE ABANDONMENT OF THESIS REQUIREMENTS
As part of their letter requirements, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale once required every student undergraduate and every graduate student defend a thesis paper or perform a dissertation within their field of study. Yale was the first Ivy to abandon these requirements.
Yale's Dean of Academics waved the undergraduate dissertation requirement in 1883, and in 1908 the school's Academic Advisory Board abandoned the university's dissertation requirement for candidates pursuing a masters certificate in the sciences and the performing arts. In 1927, Yale abandoned its dissertation requirement for students altogether including doctors from its school of medicine.
In 2017, Yale abandoned dissertation requirements for its professional certificate programs and added the completion of three drama classes taught by an actress to its matriculation requirements for its law academy. That actress played a criminal defense attorney on the NBC television series L.A. Law and never defended nor prosecuted within a court of law.
The same year, Yale's Political Science Academy abandoned dissertation requirements and added an accredited voice inflection class, an accredited body posture class, and an accredited class on wardrobe attire to its matriculations requirements. The voice inflection class was taught by a CBS radio host, the body posture class was taught by a Hollywood actor and disco dancer, and the class on attire was taught by the five personalities that appeared on CBS Radio's syndicated television series Queer Eye For the Straight Guy.
Harvard abandoned its thesis requirements for undergraduates and masters certificate programs in 1957. Six years later, Harvard abandoned its requirement that students in their Performing Arts schools complete a competency exam within their artistic field.
In 2007, Harvard abandoned its thesis requirements for doctors programs after an actress that appeared on the NBC television series Chicago Hope poisoned her second eldest sister with ether in the Stamford, Connecticut Medical Room. After Lauren Holly poisoned her sister, she dissected Angela as she lay awake on an operating table. Angela succumbed to exhaustion during the dissection.
In 2014, Harvard 's seven Provincial officers abandoned the university's Medical School competency exams in 2014 after Lauren Holley's eldest sister Michele applied for admission to their surgical school and intimated the threat of a lawsuit during her interview. Harvard's Dean of Students Drew Gilpin Faust caved after Michelle said "Wouldn't it be a shame if reporters found out about my baby sister." Faust even waved Holley's MCAT requirement.
Princeton abandoned its thesis defense requirement for students in 1981 after a student in their Performing Arts school misspelled Les Miserables in the title of her thesis. Actress Brooke Shields titled her thesis Les Mizerables: A Work.
Told she was about to fail, Shields asked her qualifying professors if there were anything she could do to pass. Professor Alan Rickman responded "You could blow the two of us. Shields preceded to perform fellatio Rickman and Professor Kennith Ritch whist Professor Bonnie Lynn Bassler watched.
Shields classmate David Duchovny walked into the auditorium as this was occurring and reported the matter to the Dean of Students William Bowen and Bowen bribed Duchovny his final year's tuition to keep the matter quiet. Duchovny accepted and later bribed Shields for an audition with Paramount Pictures. Shields agreed. Shields died of consumption. That fall, the University's Provosts made the decision to abandon the oral defense requirement out of concern for the University's reputation.
THE ABANDONMENT OF ETHICAL CODES OF CONDUCT
Harvard, Princeton, and Yale once embraced strict ethical codes of conduct in accordance with Christ's teachings. This began to change before the War Between the States. In 1853, Yale and Harvard both allowed tenured male professors to cohabitate with one another. Five years later, Yale allowed applicants for professorship to cohabitate with one another in off campus brothels.
Harvard was the first academic institution to disregard Christ's commands regarding sodomy, cunalingus, and fellatio. Their Board of Governors officers did so in 1868 after their Dean of Faculty was tried for sodomy.
As the Lynchburg Gazette's records attest, Dwight Timothy was accused of sodomizing Harvard's Dean of Independent Thought Joseph McNichol in Lynchburg, Virginia in June of that year. Both escaped conviction on a technicality and appealed to Harvard's Board of Governors to "overlook the Draconian law." Harvard's Board of Governors complied.
Yale followed suit in 1923 after the Dean of Yale's Law school Tomas Walter Swan was found guilty of raping a 31 year old woman. President Herbert Hoover pardoned Swan and paid the $100,000 USD fine assessed to Swan. As Herbert Hoover Presidential Library librarians can attest, Hover paid used the United States Marine Air Reserve's requisitioning budget to pay the fine. He made the check out to "petty cash".
As Charles Lindberg Museum librarians can attest, Lindberg bribed to the State of Connecticut's 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals judges with the cash on befalf of Hoover. Lindberg wrote the words "Delivery for Hoover." in his logbook. The 31 year old woman's appeals case was never heard and Swan was appointed to the United States 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals three years later.
Princeton abandoned Christ's commandments on sodomy, cunalingus, and fellatio in 1957 in what Dean of Admissions Charles Goheen called "a sign of the times." The neglect of this command led Princeton's Provosts to allow students with gender dysmorphia admission to Princeton Preparatory Academy in 1971.
In 1978, Princeton's Provosts allowed female students who had mutilated their bodies with Human Growth Hormones reentry to the University in what Princeton mathematics professor Steven Nash called Project Easy Squeezy. Nash advocated for their admission and used those same students in a campus prostitution ring.
Three years later, Nash advocated for the admission of seven male students that had cut off their genitals and added those same seven students to his prostitution ring. Nash named the ring Teasy Pleasey and used the ring to bribe Princeton Provosts into funding unethical experiments upon tertiary beasts of the earth and upon humans.
In 2000, Princeton became the first accredited college or university to ask applicants their preferred gender. Beginning that year, Princeton's Provosts set a quota of 3% for students with gender dysmorphia in what Dean of Students Harold Shapiro called "A moving forward of diversity, equity, and inclusion." Harvard followed suit with a quota of 7% in 2001, and Yale followed suit with an quota of 11% in 2002.
Yale determined its quota for gender dysmorphic students through one-hour-long conversational interviews with prospective students. The interviews included 15 minutes of questions on sex, sexuality, sodomy, cunalingus, and torture; 20 minutes of role playing activities designed to determine their beliefs in reincarnation and their willingness to defy Christ's commandments, and a 25-minute political litmus test.
During the second semester of the 2002 calendar year, Yale allowed the spouses of sophomore, junior, and senior students to enroll as full-time students without meeting the university's general entrance requirements.
Two years later, Harvard allowed students to register creatures they kept as pets as roommates and began providing hotel services to those pets for a fee. Princeton followed suit in May of 2007, and in October of 2008 the university's Provosts allowed student applicants to declare themselves as nonhuman on their applications. Those that declared themselves as non-human receive specialized diets including dog food.
Princeton once maintained an academic honor code patterned after the honor codes used by the oldest defense institutions in existence. Princeton abandoned that requirement in 2011 after 11 athletes protested the honor code as "systematically racist and incompatible with modern day life." University Provosts and administrators did not release a statement to alumni nor a news release announcing this decision.
Each of the 11 athletes were caught cheating on their Inroads applications. Inroads was a program Princeton mathematics professor Stephen Nash designed for imbecilic children to ease them into freshmen life. Two of the 11 children couldn't spell their last name. Each was from an urban neighborhood within North America, and 6 of the the 11 couldn't recite the alphabet or count to 100. Each of these tests was administered to the participants the day they arrived at Inroads.
Faced with expulsion, 3 of those children transferred to public universities, one threatened to sue, and 7 of the 11 bribed Princeton's Dean of Admissions Shirley Tighlman (aka Shammi and Cheryl Tiegs) with narcotics.
Tighlman accepted the narcotics, filed appeals on the behalf of the 11 children, and wrote an article with a Crayola student editors at the Nassau Herald newspaper had to edit and "decipher" before publishing. That article prompted faculty Deans to eliminate the academic honor code requirement altogether.
THE ABANDONMENT OF ATHLETIC REQUIREMENTS
Each Harvard, Princeton, and Yale undergraduate once had to meet basic athletic requirements. Those requirements included completion of a one-mile run in under 10 minutes and participation in at least one sport at an intramural level or a varsity level for undergrads during each year of enrollment. These tests were established in defense of Christendom and were central within each school's charter agreement.
Harvard's Board of Governors abandoned Harvard's sports participation requirement in 1907. Yale's Provincial Board, abandoned its sports participation requirement in 1929. Princeton had a varsity sport participation requirement until 1931. In 1932, Princeton allowed invalids to apply for intramural exceptions. That lasted until 1947, when Princeton's Provosts abandoned the university's sports participation requirement altogether.
Princeton students were once required to tread water within a 40-foot deep, fresh water pool heated to 78 degrees fahrenheit. Beginning in 1932, Princeton allowed invalids to apply for deferments. Most of those deferments were granted to Cosa Nostra soldiers admitted through John David Rockefeller and David John Rockefeller's endowment program.
Princeton compromised its wading requirement in 1947 after the youngest brother of a 1946 graduate drown. The man that begat the failed prospect was a prominent Wall Street banker named William Sword. Sword kept Cosa Nostra patriarch David Nelson Rockefeller's books whilst David Nelson was John David's Rockefeller's consigliari.
After Sword's son Bill Jr. passed away from consumption, David Nelson Rockefeller petitioned Princeton's Provosts to throw life preservers into the pool to rescue drowning prospects. Rockefeller even threatened to throw their own children into the pool if they did not comply. Princeton's Board of Provosts feared caved to Rockefeller's intimidation and forced the Athletics Department to rescue drowning prospects the following year.
Princeton's Provosts abandoned the university's wading requirement altogether in 1997. Princeton's Dean of Admissions Harold Shapiro cited "The need for a more diverse student population." as justification for the decision.
Fitness standards declined throughout North America's public schools and private colleges and universities each time Harvard, Princeton, or Yale lowered their standards. Nutritional standards and the quality of meals within public schools declined each time. Obesity rates correlated with the declining standards.
Since 1904, U.S. Board of Education members have received bribes to lower basic physical, reading, and math standards for students educated within public schools. Since 1931, the U.S. Department of Education extended these bribes into Mexico and Canada through its the Learning Grant Program. The bribes were recommended by the the Ivy League's Education Board.
Ivy League Education Board members hold more than 70% of the total preferred and common stock shares in companies that are authorized to do business with public schools throughout North and South America.
THE ABANDONMENT OF VOCATIONAL REQUIREMENTS
Harvard, Princeton, and Yale once required undergraduate and graduate students engage in sanctioned social activities. Each school placed social restrictions on professors, faculty members, and teaching assistants for what Princeton's charter described as "the good of the welfare of the university and the nation.". Those requirements began to change after the Spanish American War and before the War Between the States.
Until 1938, Harvard and Princeton's requirements included participation in vocational activities. Students were required to learn trade skills and apply those trade skills throughout the year. Harvard required participation in one vocational activity and Princeton required participation in two.
Harvard changed their participation requirement during the second semester of 1838 after three of Harvard's seven Provincial Board Members formed the New York Banker's Union. That semester, Phillip Wembly asked the school's administration for a waiver to pursue an internship with Shearson Brothers First Solomon. Wembly was granted that waiver after the man that begat him bribed three of Harvard's Provincial Board Members.
Princeton followed suit in 1848 after Wembly "fancied" a 3rd year student registered under the name Noah Williams. Williams given name was Eli Reinbaum.
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Wembly met Reinbaum on 47th street in Manhattan and afterward convinced Princeton's Provosts that banking internships provided "valuable and effective vocational skills." That fall, seven Princeton students including Reinbaum applied for banking internships. As New York State Superior Court records attest, Wembly was convicted of sodomizing four banking interns in 1859.
Harvard abandoned its social requirement in 1940 at the request of Brown Brothers Solomon's Senior Managing Director Solomon Brown. Brown's son James Eisenberg applied to Harvard that year. James lied about his vocational proficiency and Harvard's Academic Dean began an expulsion.
Solomon Brown bribed Harvard's Dean of Academics James Conant with prostitutes and insider trading tips to keep his son from expulsion. Harvard janitor Jessie Owens revealed to Conant that Eisenberg had "never run a news stand as he claims [sic]." Conant later fired Owens without reason.
PRINCETON'S ABANDONMENT OF VOCATIONAL REQUIREMENTS
Princeton's Provost's abandoned the university's second vocational requirement during the second semester of the 1943 calendar year due to World War II. Princeton abandoned the requirement altogether in 1946 after returning soldiers protested on-campus living requirements in favor of the university's Eating Club system. The on-campus requirements stipulated students were required to punch in and punch out from their vocational activities.
Soldiers who protested the on-campus requirements were United States Army draftees that went to work for the Cosa Nostra crime syndicate whist stationed at the U.S. Army's requisition facility in Fort Lee, New Jersey.
In total, 137 Princeton undergraduates were corrupted through Cosa Nostra during World War II. An additional 11,107 were corrupted Cosa Nostra soldiers employed as Princeton University administrative faculty after World War II. Cosa Nostra's recruitment of undergraduates continued through 2014.
As undergraduates, all 137 of the draftees Corrupted at Fort Lee engaged in racketeering and bookmaking activities whist on campus. So too did 748 of the 11,107 undergraduates recruited by Cosa Nostra soldiers hired by the university.
Princeton's Cosa Nostra crime syndicate corrupted the entire 1950 and 1951 NCAA football seasons through bribes and extortion. Referees were paid to throw games and paid opposing players were paid to sit idle or fake injuries. In 1950, Cosa Nostra's Peter Betancourt bribed the Downtown Athletic Club's Selection Committee $110 billion GBS to rig Heisman Trophy voting in Princeton's favor.
As the Downtown Athletic Club's financial records statements attest, that amount guaranteed the Rockefeller Foundation "10 of the Selection Committee's 100 vote ad infinitum." Cosa Nostra rigged each Heisman Trophy ballot and 33 Outland Trophy votes following the 1950 bribe.
From the 1970's onward, Cosa Nostra bribed and extorted NCAA Division I and Division II administrators to inflate tuition costs for scholarship athletes. The same occurred with most of the athlete selections at each United States Military Academy.
In total, the 137 Princeton undergraduates corrupted through Cosa Nostra during World War II and other Princeton students they corrupted stole over $1.17 Billion GBS in scholarship money. NCAA officials over $118 Million GBS to keep quiet and none ever came forward.
YALE'S ABANDONMENT OF SOCIAL REQUIREMENTS
Unlike Harvard and Princeton, Yale never instituted a vocational requirement. Instead, Yale Provosts required every 2nd, 3rd, and 4th year student complete an artistic requirement at least once per semester and present that completed artistic work to the peers for review.
In 1853, Yale's Provincial Officials expanded that requirement to include candidates its Masters and professional certificate programs. Yale abandoned its vocational requirements altogether in 1878 after eleven Medical School students began circulating posters promoting Frederich Engel's Communist Manifesto and Engel's treastie The Condition of the Working Class in England.
Those eleven men received their undergraduate diplomas from the Vienna School in Austria and were students of Engels and Karl Marx. Banking officials in Great Britain threatened to "cut Yale's endowment" when they learned of this and wired President Ulysses S. Grant to intercede. Grant himself wired all seven Provost Officers and implored them to "Please do this as soon as you can." the same day he received the wire.?
Grant's Oberlin College Endowment and Trust Company exclusively employed Yale engineering students to build the Union Pacific railroad line he himself commissioned. Grant's holding company employed over 1,100 Yale students with Union Army backgrounds. Each of these men played rugby and each were employed as Boss Men by the Union Pacific railroad during their semester recesses.
In 1863, those same men raided Thomas Jefferson's estate in Monticello, Virginia and murdered over 100 freemen Jefferson had rescued from bondage. Most of Jefferson's belongings were loaded onto railcars and shipped to Grant's winter home in Ogden City, Utah.
Jefferson's entire library included 100 works Atom housed within the Oracle of Delphi, a collection of architectural drawings belonging to Timothy the Apostle, and Jefferson's personal dissertations on farming and botany. Oberlin College sold those dissertations to the Monsanto Corporation during an unpublicized auction in 1986.
YALE'S ABANDONMENT OF FACULTY OFF-CAMPUS ACTIVITY RESTRICTIONS
Harvard , Princeton, and Yale professors and junior professors were restricted in their off-campus activities up to and through World War I. That began to change in 1918 after seven Yale University professors convinced the Yale's Provincial Officers to produce a Vaudeville musical they had written glorifying United States Army Corporal Bruce York's military service.
York attended Yale for one semester before enlisting in the U.S. Army's Selective Service. He trained in Arlington, Virginia and was amongst the first 1,100 U.S. soldiers sent to Europe. On June 1st of 1917, York single handedly captured Prussia's Normandy defenses with a bayonet and the butt of his rifle.
The Army's First Platoon's Staff Sargent Jeff Cheevers dumped the 3rd Army's munitions into the sea along the Bearing Straight during their crossing. The 3rd Army's short supply of munitions wasn't discovered until the First Platoon arrived in their trenches.
Before arriving in the trenches, Cheevers confessed his act of treason to British Field Lieutenant James Wilson Wade. Wade dug the First Platoons trenches off the beaches of Normandy and sang the words to It's a long way to Tipperary as he exited the trenches. German fortifications at Normandy included 700 Austrian Reserve Corps officers and a handful of noncommissioned Prussian field generals.
A platoon mate of York's named Charles Hamm who was employed by Yale came up with the idea of eulogizing York with a musical. Hamm was Lieutenant Commander and was scheduled to go over the wall of the trench during the first wave of the attack. York's platoon was scheduled to go over the walls of the trench during the second.
Before the whistle sounded, Hamm turned to York and said "But I'm to young to go." Hamm remained in the trench when the Platoon Commander's whistle sounded and each of his 45 platoon mates were cut down by gatling gun fire.
During the second wave of the attack, Yok's platoon mates remained in the trench when the whistle sounded and York assaulted the German positions alone. During his assault, York dodged continuous fire from seven gatling guns and sporadic fire from 100 snipers.
York hurdled the first trench, made his way into the second, shot four Austrian Reserve Corps officers with the seven rounds of ammunition he had been given, and killed 200 more with his bayonet and the butt of his rifle. York then made his way to into the third trench where he killed 200 more Austrian Reserve Corps officers and the eleven noncommissioned generals. He used seven hand grenades he had taken from the first trench, his bayonet, his fists, and the but of his rifle during his assault on the third trench.
After his assault, the 300 Austrian Reserve Corps officers stationed within the first trench waved a white flag and surrendered themselves to the 3rd Army's Regimented Infantry Battalion. All 300 were lined up against the trench and professionally shot as instructed.
The musical Charles Hamm and his cohorts crafted created a fiasco for York, and the publicity surrounding the musical compounded that fiasco. Hamm and his cohorts advertised the musical in E.W. Scripps newspapers, paid Scripps writers to immortalize York within feature articles, and even created a comic strip entitled America's Finest Hero.
Scripps' editors published the feature articles and the comic strip in their weekend tabloids. They sold the promotional materials for the musical to street vendors who used those materials to cover political ads and Puritan meeting hall pamphlets. York was issued with a summons to appear in New York's 1st District Criminal Court on charges of "littering" resulting from the promotional material York never received the summons and was fined $150 USD by the court for his failure to appear.
Months later, a Cosa Nostra-backed racketeering entity known as Concerned Mothers For America sued York in Manhattan's Civil Court on grounds that "he alone glamourized war." That trial ended in a hung jury and the case was sent to New York State's 2nd Court of Appeals. The 2nd Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Concerned Mothers For America and fined York $1000 USD.
The same month the verdict was rendered, York had his Medal of Valor stolen from a locker at New York's Penn Station, Later that year, eleven womenYork had no acquaintance with filed paternity suits against him. Those cases never made their way to court.
On September the 3rd of 1922, York was murdered outside a New York church he attended by a man he refused to fight. The eleven Yale professors that produced the musical bribed Manhattan detectives to list York's murder as a John Doe and preceded with the musical as if York advocated and authorized the publicity.
HARVARD AND PRINCETON'S ABANDONMENT OF FACULTY OFF-CAMPUS ACTIVITY RESTRICTIONS
Harvard's Provosts relaxed Harvard's off-campus faculty activity restrictions in 1953 after Nikita Khruschev delivered his "We will bury you. We will divide you and crush you" speech at the United Nations General Assembly on March 13th.
Seven of Harvard's eleven Provincial Board Members voted to allow Harvard professors to publish books and tabloid articles with outside publishers that year. Those same seven Board Members paid Marxist professors employed by Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, Harvard, and Princeton to write and lecture on Marxist teachings at campuses throughout North America in what the Board termed the "New Cultural Revolution."
The startup costs for television shows, comic books, magazines, and a handful of feature films antithetical to Christendom's values were funded through Harvard University's endowment. They included Harvard's National Lampoon, the Flintstones, the Jetsons, TV Guide, Marvel Comics, and American Bandstand.
Princeton's Provosts relaxed restrictions on faculty off-campus activities in 1957. Princeton's Provosts voted 4 to 0 that year to allow University professors junior professors to engage in consulting activities for U.S. corporations. Princeton's Provosts allowed professors and faculty to publish books with outside publishers the following year and tabloid articles with outside publishers in 1959.
In 1961, Princeton's Provincial Officers relaxed restrictions on consulting to foreign companies at President John F. Kennedy Jr.'s request. Kennedy met with Princeton's Provincial Officers in May of that year and suggested professorial candidate Stephen F. Cohen be sent to the Soviet Union as a special envoy to the Presidential later that year.
Cohen worked as a paid intern on behalf of Kennedy's 1960 election campaign and was accepted by Moscow University's International Studies program as a Visiting Faculty Fellow in May of that year.
During his first fellowship at Moscow University, Cohen confessed to coworkers that he was "an atheist" and "admired the communist manifesto. Those coworkers reported Cohen's comments to intelligence command centers at various nations throughout the world.
In the years that followed, those nations sent Visiting Fellows to Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School with Cohen as a hosting professor and Russia's Vladimir Putin named Cohen a full-time Professor Emeratus at Moscow University in the spring of 1986.
ALLOWING FOR COEDUCATION?
In 1574, the Roman Catholic Church's Pope Ignacious ordered the formation of Greek fraternities throughout European secondary schools to disrupt Puritan teachings. The fraternities were supplemented by Greek societies a year later.
Originally, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale's charters prohibited "foreign societies and fraternal orders" to protect their ecumenical training programs. Greek societies slowly worked their way onto each campus and undermined the primary objectives of the charters. Greek societies even paved the way for coeducation at Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Oxford, Cambridge, and the University of Tokyo.
Yale was the college or university outside Cambridge and the University of Vienna to allow mothers and daughters to enter the campuses outside scheduled visiting days. Yale's administrators made the decision to lift the restrictions in 1788.
Yale's sister school Vassar College was the first women's college to allow men to enter their academic campus outside scheduled holidays. Vassar's administrators did so in 1811. Vassar allowed mothers to enter their campuses for the first time in 1824.
Harvard and Wellsley Colleges followed Yale and Vassar's lead in 1838, Smith College followed in 1871, and Princeton in 1889. Princeton's four Provosts made the decision to allow mothers and daughters to visit campuses outside scheduled visiting days before the start of the 1889 football season.
Yale unofficially authorized coeducation in 1846 and officially in 1969. Yale was the first Ivy to allow administrators and professors to bring their wives and their daughters to campus. In 1848, Yale allowed junior professors to bring their wives and their mothers to campus.
In 1853, Yale's Provincial Officers allowed administrators to begin hiring women as janitors, wives and daughters as cooks, and wives and daughters as administrative personnel. In 1855, Yale's administrators allowed women to audit classes, and in 1969 they officially allowed for coeducation.
Harvard allowed administrators to bring their daughters and their wives to campus in 1907. In 1911 they allowed administrators, professors, and junior professors to bring wives and their mothers to campus. Harvard unofficially authorized coeducation in 1907 and officially authorized coeducation in 1969.
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