Yale and Vassar did not merge, though Yale extended an offer to do so, and Vassar became a coeducational college in 1969, remaining independent. Barnard College still exists as a separate legal entity, but is closely affiliated with Columbia. Radcliffe College no longer exists as a separate institution admitting students, dissolving in 1999 after a slow integration with Harvard beginning formally in 1963 with joint diplomas. Of the seven colleges, four still function as independent, private women's colleges. A cluster of stars in the constellation Taurus is also called the Pleiades or Seven Sisters. The title "Seven Sisters" also alludes to the Pleiades, seven daughters of the Titan Atlas and the nymph Pleione in Greek myth. The name "Seven Sisters" came into use officially with the 1926 Seven College Conference, which was aimed at organizing common fund-raising for the colleges. The colleges were founded to promote education for women that would be at an equal level to the education offered to men. Like the Ivy League (originally men's colleges), to which they were considered a parallel, the Seven Sisters have had a reputation of being top-notch and elite. Founded in the mid to late 19th century, these seven women's colleges in the Northeast of the United States have been called the Seven Sisters.
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