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This profile was automatically generated using 24 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 24 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 24 references Web References
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1. empirezone.blogs.nytimes.com
empirezone.blogs.nytimes.com/2 - [Cached]Published on: 6/1/2007 Last Visited: 4/28/2008
Rosalind Rosenberg, Professor of History, Barnard College, Columbia University; Executive Board of the Society of American Historians -
2. AAUW Tucson - Join AAUW
www.aauw-tucson.org/join.htm - [Cached]Published on: 3/26/2006 Last Visited: 2/11/2008
(Much of the information about her I have shared came from a speech given at the 50th reunion of the class of Barnard '45, the class that gave their Dean to the UN, by Prof. Rosalind Rosenberg, Chair of the History Dept. at Barnard.) -
3. www.collegejournal.com
www.collegejournal.com/success - [Cached]Published on: 9/1/2004 Last Visited: 12/12/2007
"Aside from these residences, living on your own in New York was impossible to afford because even women who were college graduates were limited to low-paying jobs," says Rosalind Rosenberg, a professor of history at New York City's Barnard College. Women's residences provided a needed veil of respectability to the notion of an unmarried woman living independently of her family, she says.
By the end of the 1960s, those considerations had withered in importance. Today, apart from some college dorms and women's residences run by religious organizations, the Webster is one of the last of its breed. "The feminist and sexual revolutions killed them," says Prof. Rosenberg.

