3. Ivy League Universities Used to Take Nude Photos of Their Students
In the late 1970s, a Yale employee unlocked a long unopened room in one of the university’s buildings. He found a big surprise when he entered: thousands upon thousands of photos of nude young men, showing their fronts, sides, and rears.
Accordingly, there even seemed to be sharp metal pins sticking out of the naked men’s spines. What could it be? Was it the trove of some weirdo, with a niche fetish for uncommon erotic practices? No…because from the 1940s to the 1970s, Yale, plus some other Ivy League schools such as Harvard, Vassar, and Brown, required their freshmen to pose nude for a photo shoot.
The goal was to provide material for a huge study into how rickets developed and that involved sticking pins to the backs of the subjects, male and female. Generations of the country’s elite who went to the Ivy Leagues posed and the archives included the naked photos of well known persons such as George W. Bush, Hillary Clinton, Diane Sawyer and Meryl Streep.
The photos were burned after news leaked and the study was denounced. However, it is possible that some might have escaped the flames, and are still circulating out there, to potentially end up on the internet someday.