Women’s college draws outrage as trustees vote to admit men in 2007

? Amid boos and shouts of “traitors!” Randolph-Macon Woman’s College officials announced Saturday that men would be admitted to the 115-year-old institution starting in 2007.

In the eyes of the board of trustees, going coed could help stabilize the school’s finances as interest in all-women schools wanes.

But when officials floated the idea last month, it drew a sharp response. Online petitions and campus protests decried the move, angry e-mail flooded in and one alumnae group even hired a lawyer to try to discourage the board by citing legal concerns.

Saturday morning, an agitated crowd of some 400 students, alumnae and their supporters greeted the board’s announcement by drowning out trustees president Jolley Christman as she tried to explain.

“Today we begin to heal. We begin to write the next chapter in our history,” Christman said, barely audible over the shouting.

Christman said the 25-2 vote – she wouldn’t say who the dissenters were – followed 2 1/2 years of study. The board determined coeducation was the best way to preserve the school’s mission of high academic standards for undergraduate students and said a coed version of Randolph-Macon Woman’s College would emphasize global honors programs.

Randolph-Macon Woman's College students and alumnae react to the board of trustees decision Saturday in Lynchburg, Va., to admit men to the 115-year-old institution, beginning in the fall of 2007.

Interim President Ginger Worden told the students and supporters, “Do not, I implore you, turn your back on this college,” but many in the crowd turned their backs on her in response.

“I’m sad. I’m really sad,” said Gabriella Medina, a freshman from Puerto Rico. “If we can’t reverse this, I guess I’m going to transfer.”

Before Saturday’s vote, supporters of single-gender education gathered on campus, many wearing yellow T-shirts distributed by the students’ Coalition to Preserve Women’s Education. A red-brick campus wall was lined with bedsheets turned into banners, one reading: “115 Years of Women Can’t Be Wrong.”

College officials expected resistance but said the move was necessary. Enrollment this fall was about 700, down from a student body of nearly 900 in the 1960s.

Worden said the school has had to dip into its $140 million endowment for operations because of the large financial incentives required to attract good students. The retention rate has been about 61 percent.