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                  <text>University of Santa Clara, Santa Clara, California, Friday, April 10, 1970

GLOBE

Trustees Approve of
Coed Dorm Proposal

Election Code Changed

10% Allocation Voting Measure

Nixed; Judiciary Established

Initial approval for a coed dorm greater sense of responsibility for
system for Santa Clara next year their own actions and a great concern for the welfare of others. If
was given Wednesday with the rethis program is achieved, the prolease of a statement from Univer- gram
o
can be enlarged.”
sity President Fr. Thomas Terry,
Trustees at their recent meeting.

i

j

re-1

MRS. GARLAND WHITE of the Placement Office chats at
Wednesday's BREAK THRU: The Now Emergence of Women. The
woman's career day program features Mrs. Alieen Hernandez,
national president of National Organization for Women (NOW).
—Battaglia Photo

Yet

amendment.

INSURE HUMAN RIGHTS

Election Campaigning,
Procedural Insights

KEEPING ’EM DOWN ON FARM
Again, the polling will be arranged In a graduated point system, designed to keep the Indians
down on the reservation, the patriarchs in power, and the old folks
dabbling in the Alumni fund. Freshman votes count one point, sophomore votes count two points, Junior
votes count three,points, and senior votes count Iwo points.

son 228.

BUSY SCHEDULES

|

I
|

|

Lecture Airs Views on
Thelogy of Revolution

NOBELI EXPERIMENT
'

i

Assistant Dean of Students Miss
,

Pat McCarthy also commented on

the “definitely strong” possibility
of coed dorms next year. One plan

now being discussed, she said, is

to designate Nobill a special kind

By

TERRY PFEIFFER

Dr, Peter Henriot

lectured last

looks to the future in hope, all institutions must be viewed as provisional since "we are not yet
where we are headed." The poor
and poorest must be respected and
helped, and sinful institutions must
be changed. But "we must not
seek to baptize revolution as revalation."

She stressed that women must night in Nobili 7 to an audience of
lows: 9 a.m. to 12—obscene slan- realize that along with liberation
about 60 people on “The Theology
dering and mud-slinging; 12 to S—- and equal rights come responsibilof Revolution?" Dr. Henriot is on
backroom power games and in- ity. Women must leam to be ecoleave from Seattle University Potrigue; and S to 6—political assas- nomically independent of the male.
litical Science department and is
sinations, preferably over the seccurrently teaching at the Graduate
NOT ANTI-MALE
onds table in Benson cafeteria.
Theological Union in Berkeley.
NOW is not an anti-male moveAny student who will be away
Dr. Henriot stated violence
MORTAL SIN?
the 23rd and 24th is urged ment, according to Mrs. Hernanshould only be used when all poduring
joint concert
Dr. Henriot began with a con- litical measures have failed and
to file an absentee ballot. This can dez, but works in
from with men. There are several troversial line by Camilio Torrens, then extremely carefully, or it will
be done on April 20, 21 or 22
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the ASUSC husband-wife teams in NOW and “Ever) Catholic who is not a revo- spread out of control. A Christian
indicates
that lutionary lives in mortal sin.” Statpast experience
office.
must avoid violence whenever posequality “expands the relationship ing that although he did not fully sible, and when its use is unrather than contracts it."
agree with this, it brought up some avoidable, use it with caution.
Mrs. Hernandez stated that interesting questions Dr. Henriot

! of

coed dorm, with one class each
quarter being offered for the “girls
and guys” who live there. This
would be “more than just a coed

,

thing; it’s a living-learning situa-

tion.” She said she would probably

i

meet next week with the students
who proposed the living-learning

dorm idea. The students’ original

i

potential candidates still thinking
about it or still saying they're not
going to run are reminded that all
petitions must .be returned to the
ASUSC office by the 15th.
Carolyn Wilde (Sanfilippo 734),
Election Committee chairwoman,
has called a meeting for aR candidates on April 16 at 7 p.m. (H Ben-

Mrs. Whalen stated that she
finds homemaking a satisfying and
challenging career. She said she
did not wish to compete with her
husband, but chose to “complement did
! ing to help the students develop a
him.”

■

April 23 and 24 will be the selected dates when the mystical
body of Santa Clara files en masse
through the voting parlors in Benson Mall. Booths will be open from
9 to 5 each day, and voters must
present their student body cards.

men.

McGrath said he thinks it will
be a “big mistake for anyone to
ond floor of Nobili. Here the recre- construe” the Trustees’ acceptance
ation rooms would be available to of coed dorms as “a throwing oat
both men and women, but the men of all rules.” “It’s not so much a
would be excluded from the womquestion of rules,” he said, “as it is
en’s area except during the par- of developing positive goals.”
ietal hours, and the women would
What kind of goals? “Everysimilarly be excluded from the
body talks about this being a
men’s area. The Trustees also apChristian value-oriented school...
proved making one wing of Camand any kind of program we empisi a men’s residence and the
bark on in the housing area ought
other wing a women’s residence,
have as one of its essences” the
with recreation rooms the only- to
development of those values.
shared space.
McGrath said he was concerned
“While the Trustees left to the
that students don’t get the idea
administration the evaluation of that they have won a big battle
the effects of these changes, they one that doesn't have to be folemphasize that they were try- lowed up with “lots of hard work.”

proposal picked

Nobili.

:

By BILL SIGNET

Alicen Hernandez pointed out
that the amendment “liberates"
men as well as women. It reads
“Congress shall make no law
abridging the rights of human beings on the basis of sex.” Alimony
laws were cited as an example of
“legalized” discrimination against

commitment.

“They also approved the possibility of housing men on the sec-

j

explained that
is attemptin'.!: to shatter
some of the legislative and psychological barriers that exist for
women. She referred to an Equal
Rights Amendment that has been
The Student Judiciary bill was
Alleen Hernandez, national pres- introducd to the Senate every
finally passed. It establishes a ident of the National Organization year since 1919 and still has not
left committee. She stated that
this year the Senate has finally
decided to hold hearings on the

Mrs. Hernandez

NOW

Dr. Foster praised the medical
field for being; the only professional
field in which women have the
same pay scale iis men. She was
encouraged by the fact that although there is some discrimination in getting into medical school,
“once you get in it disappears.”
Mrs. Modi Vitale criticized those
women Who “dabble” in the arts at
home and call themselves artists.
She referred to them as “happy
hands at home” and stated that
art needs total involvement and

j

No Kissing Babies

for Women (NOW) and keynote
speaker at the conference, remarked that women liave suddenly been “discovered as an item
of Interest.” She suggested that
women “re-orient their own thinking” and “redefine what a male
society has decided is feminine.”

-

Noon, April IK, to S p.m. the
22nd, will be that anxious period
of time when campaign bluster
hits the S.C. campus. Miss Wilde
will try to steer the campaigning
so that more direct personal contact between candidates and voter
will be Involved, and less widespread advertising. This reporter
Pattie Beattie’s announcement
Petitions for candidacy are cur- has learned as well that each cam- yesterday afternoon that she is a
rently being signed and filed. All paign day will be broken up as fol- candidate for- president brings to
five the number of students running for that office. Other presidential hopeful* are Paul Hogan,
Mike McGreevy, Lee Van Chilton,
and Barbara Cecil.
This marks the first time that a
Ricard Observatory will be open this weeknd for the following hours: girl has been a candidate for presSaturday from 1-5 p.m. and from 8-11 p.m.; Sunday from 1-5 p.m. The ident.
telescopes will be in operation Saturday evening given proper attroFour persons have taken out pescopic conditions.
titions for executive vice-president:
￿
￿
￿
John Garvey, Roy Fugimoto, John
Coors Brewing Company is paying the San Francisco Symphony Fennell, and Bill Orme.
Unopposed are Pat Kelly, social
$2OO per ton for all aluminum cans deposited in Crown-Zellerback
Plaza in San Francisco by April 16. The Ecology Action Program re- vice-president; Craig Borba, treasquests your help in this drive. Please deposit all aluminum cans in the urer; Jeanne Labozetta, recording
secretary; Cheryl Samarzich, corboxes found in the dorms.
responding secretary.
￿
￿
￿

Five Vie for

Presidency

Campus Kiosk

Head cheerleader candidates are
Oscar Winners Joan Crawford and Rod Steiger and director Robert
on "The Best of David Frost,” the Group W special Peter Bosco, Chip Kurzeka. and
Gist are the guests
Bruce Mazzei.
to be telecast on KPIX April 20, from 9-10 p.m.
Completed petitions must be
￿
￿
￿
fUed in the ASUSC office by 3
Anyone wishing to help Task Force with its secretarial work should p.m. Wednesday. This list can still
contact either Fred All in the Task Force Office in Dunne Basement be expanded with candidates drawing petitions today.
or Patti Beattie in 406 Graham (241-6957).

myth that men must be strong and
women weak. She asked if It were
possible for men to “cry more
about the things that count” and
women to “cry less about the
things that don’t count.”

PANEL DISCUSSION
The second part of the conference included a panel of speakers

that represented the divergent roles
of women. Betty Concannon, chairman of/ the California Advisory
Committee on the status of Women,
led this panel. Other panel participants included E&gt;r. Tiah Ann Fos-

ter, a psychiatric resident physiAgnews State Hospital;
Lydia Modi Vitale, director of the
cian at

de Saisset Art Gallery; and Elea-

nor Riordan Whalen, Saratoga
homemaker and wife of Dr. John
Whalen, economics professor at
Santa Clara.
Mrs. Concannon, a candidate for
State Assembly and mother of
seven, emphasized that a woman
can have both a family and a career without major conflicts. She
said she had an understanding
husband Who encouraged her to
“get out into the mainstream and
contribute what I have.”

Graham 100, not

If the idea goes through there
will be sign-ups, then interviews,
to pick those who live in Nobili
next year.

!

bill. If the student Insfy wishes a
change next year in the Tusk

THE SANTA CLARA, April the body of University Vice Presidents in conjunction with Fr. Ter3, 1970.)
ry approve of the measure. So,
The Trustees’ decision on the
although the initial permission for
coed dorm proposal was not
coed dorms has been given, the
leased following the March 25 final decision now rests with the
meeting to give Fr. Terry more administration. Fr. Terry said he
time to work out the final form considered it "very likely” that
Santa Clara would have coed
which was “not identical with any
dorms in the fall.
of the proposals submitted.”
Dean of Students Gerald McGrath said he considered the
EXCERPTS
MEMORANDUM
Trustees’ decision “really a major
Excerpts from Fr. Terry’s Wedstep in the whole idea qf providnesday memorandum of the Trusting' a variety of living situations
ees' meeting concerning the coed
for students.”
dorm proposal read: “In general,
the Trustees left it up to the ExecSTUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
utive Vice President and the Dean
“Implicit in this is the realizaof Students to work out the detion of a strong dorm council setup
tails of the program. However, the
where students really do take on
Trustees did approve the possibilthe responsibility for governing
ity of making Walsh Hall a womtheir own lives in partnership with
en's residence and Mae Swig a the
faculty and administration,” he
men's residence.
said.
(See

Career Day Asks Women
To 'Re-Orient Thinking'
—

ADMINISTRATION DECISION
The gist of the Trustees’ decision on coed dorms permits the establishment of coed dorms should

S.J. Ft. Terry’s statement synthesized the feelings of the Board of

|

The three hour Senate meeting Force allocation, let them raise Board of Constitutional Review
of April 5 saw the Senate's power the cry to the Senate, and the and will consist of five students
from there.”
appointed by the ASUSC Presiof allocating funds challenged, the Senate will act
dent and ratified by the Senate.
‘SLAP IN FACE’
ASUSC Election Code revised, and
This Board will hear and make dethe establishment of the ASUSC
Fred Ali, Task Force co-chair- cisions concerning cases which do
man, told the Senate "you might not come under
judiciary,
the jurisdiction of
as well go home, and leave all the
the other student boards and
ALLOCATIONS MOTION
allocations to the vote of the stuThe most controversial bill watt dent body. This bill is a slap in the courts of appeals.
Senator Mike Moore, chairman
Senator Ogden Lilly’s resolution face to you as Senators-—it’s sayconcerning ASUSC allocations. ing you’re incompetent representaof the Rules Committee, presented
Senate Bill 37 read “the Senate tives.” Senator Pat Tondreau said the proposed changes for the Elecshall not spend, pledge, reserve or that the bill would be ineffective tion
Code. Changes in the code
In any other way commit for any because we didn’t have a 50% vote essentially
curbed the power of the
campus organization, club or sun- earlier this year on the Student
ASUSC President in election prodry contingency, more than 10% Board of Conduct bill. With this
of the ASUSC’s total allocution for past expression of student apathy, cedures, allowed write-in candiany (following) year without the the vote for a budget issue would dates and established procedures
consent of the student body ex- most likely be insufficient. In Sen- for invalidating an election. The
pressed in a general election with ate voting the bill was defeated.
bill was passed with several cora simple majority of at least one
In an effort to get the dorm
rections and additions.
half of the student body approving councils operating as an intrinsic
the allocution.” Senator Lilly compart of the University and to liven
posed this bill because some stu- Spring quarter social life, Mcdents feel that allocations to clubs Laughlin Hall representative Paul
have been cut due to the $20,000 Cosley asked the Senate for $2OO
given to Task Force. These stu- to fund a street dance. The $2OO
dents feel they should have more would be for the band only, Mcsay in the distribution of the stuLaughlin would provide refreshdent body funds.
ments. Senator Paul Schmidt then
A debate of an hour followed asked whether there was at presLilly’s presentation of the bill; ent a special fund for dorm counpros and cons being weighed. Lilly cils in the ASUSC budget, and if
Does being biologically a woman
said the bill offered students “a not, suggested that machinery be
set in motion to handle alloca- necessarily make a good mother
means of expression." Bob Owens
questioned the.Senate on its right tions for dorm councils through is it really instinct or is it a
response? This is one of
“to allocate money for the next the Finance Committee of the learned
the questions that were raised
when this year’s Senate will Senate.
year
With this idea In mind, the Sen- Wednesday at a special conference
not bo in office.”Senator Ed Gibbs
ate voted to let the Finance Com- challenging the traditional role of
added “The student should have a
"woman." The conference, entitled
say in where his tuition money mittee decide how much money
could be' allocated to McLaughlin "Break thru—the now emergence
goes.”
and for future allocations the Fi- of women," probed the choices,
Senator -Jane-Wiegenstein counbarriers and myths existing for
tered Bob Owens’ argument with nance Committee would set up the
and about women and their
the future In mind, also “We are machinery' during the coming
careers.
week.
setting a precedent against ourITEM OF INTEREST
JUDICIARY OK’D
selves as Senators if we pass the

NO. 24

&lt;&amp;£&amp;&gt;

1 I

$5.00 Per Year

‘

4b

In Adultery?

;

Vol.

Have

'

Infancy

...

The Santa Clara

As Adults

|

Do Infants
Have As Much
Fun In

asked, “What should a Christian
be doing right now in these revo-

lutionary times?”

To try to throw some light on
this question, the rest of the talk
was spent in examining revolution
in relation to four areas: politics,
theology, violence, and Christian
witness.
Dr,

Henriot defined revolution
as “sharp, significant

politically

and rapid change from the current
order of basic political, social and
economic systems.” Latin America
has always been the area most
closely associated with this type of
change, but there is no need to
look outside the U.S. for instances
of revolution. Action hnd reaction
have brought the U.S. today to a
pre-revolutionary stage. Many political systems are calling for
change. Thus there is no theology
of revolution but tether a politics
of revolution.

•NOT TO BAPTIZE’
But there are Biblical aspects to
be considered when looking for a
theological perspective of revolution. Since only- God Is all good,
only He can demand full service

and loyalty. Because the Bible

EVERY CATHOLIC who it not a revolutionary is living in mortal
sin, according to Dr. Peter Henriot, a visiting professor at the
Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Henriot spoke in Nobili
lilt night on "The Theology of Revolution."
—Deck Photo

�</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="4643">
                  <text>University of Santa Clara, Santa Clara, California, Friday, April 10, 1970

GLOBE

Trustees Approve of
Coed Dorm Proposal

Election Code Changed

10% Allocation Voting Measure

Nixed; Judiciary Established

Initial approval for a coed dorm greater sense of responsibility for
system for Santa Clara next year their own actions and a great concern for the welfare of others. If
was given Wednesday with the rethis program is achieved, the prolease of a statement from Univer- gram
o
can be enlarged.”
sity President Fr. Thomas Terry,
Trustees at their recent meeting.

i

j

re-1

MRS. GARLAND WHITE of the Placement Office chats at
Wednesday's BREAK THRU: The Now Emergence of Women. The
woman's career day program features Mrs. Alieen Hernandez,
national president of National Organization for Women (NOW).
—Battaglia Photo

Yet

amendment.

INSURE HUMAN RIGHTS

Election Campaigning,
Procedural Insights

KEEPING ’EM DOWN ON FARM
Again, the polling will be arranged In a graduated point system, designed to keep the Indians
down on the reservation, the patriarchs in power, and the old folks
dabbling in the Alumni fund. Freshman votes count one point, sophomore votes count two points, Junior
votes count three,points, and senior votes count Iwo points.

son 228.

BUSY SCHEDULES

|

I
|

|

Lecture Airs Views on
Thelogy of Revolution

NOBELI EXPERIMENT
'

i

Assistant Dean of Students Miss
,

Pat McCarthy also commented on

the “definitely strong” possibility
of coed dorms next year. One plan

now being discussed, she said, is

to designate Nobill a special kind

By

TERRY PFEIFFER

Dr, Peter Henriot

lectured last

looks to the future in hope, all institutions must be viewed as provisional since "we are not yet
where we are headed." The poor
and poorest must be respected and
helped, and sinful institutions must
be changed. But "we must not
seek to baptize revolution as revalation."

She stressed that women must night in Nobili 7 to an audience of
lows: 9 a.m. to 12—obscene slan- realize that along with liberation
about 60 people on “The Theology
dering and mud-slinging; 12 to S—- and equal rights come responsibilof Revolution?" Dr. Henriot is on
backroom power games and in- ity. Women must leam to be ecofrom Seattle University Poleave
trigue; and S to 6—political assas- nomically independent of the male.
litical Science department and is
sinations, preferably over the seccurrently teaching at the Graduate
NOT ANTI-MALE
onds table in Benson cafeteria.
Theological
Union in Berkeley.
NOW is not an anti-male moveAny student who will be away
Dr. Henriot stated violence
to
Mrs.
HernanMORTAL
SIN?
should only be used when all poduring the 23rd and 24th is urged ment, according
joint concert
Dr. Henriot began with a con- litical measures have failed and
to file an absentee ballot. This can dez, but works in
with
men.
There
are
several
troversial
line by Camilio Torrens, then extremely carefully, or it will
from
be done on April 20, 21 or 22
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the ASUSC husband-wife teams in NOW and “Ever) Catholic who is not a revo- spread out of control. A Christian
indicates
that lutionary lives in mortal sin.” Statpast experience
office.
must avoid violence whenever posequality “expands the relationship ing that although he did not fully sible, and when its use is unrather than contracts it."
agree with this, it brought up some avoidable, use it with caution.
Mrs. Hernandez stated that interesting questions Dr. Henriot

! of

coed dorm, with one class each
quarter being offered for the “girls
and guys” who live there. This
would be “more than just a coed

,

thing; it’s a living-learning situa-

tion.” She said she would probably

i

meet next week with the students
who proposed the living-learning

dorm idea. The students’ original

i

potential candidates still thinking
about it or still saying they're not
going to run are reminded that all
petitions must .be returned to the
ASUSC office by the 15th.
Carolyn Wilde (Sanfilippo 734),
Election Committee chairwoman,
has called a meeting for aR candidates on April 16 at 7 p.m. (H Ben-

Mrs. Whalen stated that she
finds homemaking a satisfying and
challenging career. She said she
did not wish to compete with her
husband, but chose to “complement did
! ing to help the students develop a
him.”

■

April 23 and 24 will be the selected dates when the mystical
body of Santa Clara files en masse
through the voting parlors in Benson Mall. Booths will be open from
9 to 5 each day, and voters must
present their student body cards.

men.

McGrath said he thinks it will
be a “big mistake for anyone to
ond floor of Nobili. Here the recre- construe” the Trustees’ acceptance
ation rooms would be available to of coed dorms as “a throwing oat
both men and women, but the men of all rules.” “It’s not so much a
would be excluded from the womquestion of rules,” he said, “as it is
en’s area except during the par- of developing positive goals.”
ietal hours, and the women would
What kind of goals? “Everysimilarly be excluded from the
body talks about this being a
men’s area. The Trustees also apChristian value-oriented school...
proved making one wing of Camand any kind of program we empisi a men’s residence and the
bark on in the housing area ought
other wing a women’s residence,
have as one of its essences” the
with recreation rooms the only- to
development of those values.
shared space.
McGrath said he was concerned
“While the Trustees left to the
that students don’t get the idea
administration the evaluation of that they have won a big battle
the effects of these changes, they one that doesn't have to be folemphasize that they were try- lowed up with “lots of hard work.”

proposal picked

Nobili.

:

By BILL SIGNET

Alicen Hernandez pointed out
that the amendment “liberates"
men as well as women. It reads
“Congress shall make no law
abridging the rights of human beings on the basis of sex.” Alimony
laws were cited as an example of
“legalized” discrimination against

commitment.

“They also approved the possibility of housing men on the sec-

j

explained that
is attemptin'.!: to shatter
some of the legislative and psychological barriers that exist for
women. She referred to an Equal
Rights Amendment that has been
The Student Judiciary bill was
Alleen Hernandez, national pres- introducd to the Senate every
finally passed. It establishes a ident of the National Organization year since 1919 and still has not
left committee. She stated that
this year the Senate has finally
decided to hold hearings on the

Mrs. Hernandez

NOW

Dr. Foster praised the medical
field for being; the only professional
field in which women have the
same pay scale iis men. She was
encouraged by the fact that although there is some discrimination in getting into medical school,
“once you get in it disappears.”
Mrs. Modi Vitale criticized those
women Who “dabble” in the arts at
home and call themselves artists.
She referred to them as “happy
hands at home” and stated that
art needs total involvement and

j

No Kissing Babies

for Women (NOW) and keynote
speaker at the conference, remarked that women liave suddenly been “discovered as an item
of Interest.” She suggested that
women “re-orient their own thinking” and “redefine what a male
society has decided is feminine.”

-

Noon, April IK, to S p.m. the
22nd, will be that anxious period
of time when campaign bluster
hits the S.C. campus. Miss Wilde
will try to steer the campaigning
so that more direct personal contact between candidates and voter
will be Involved, and less widespread advertising. This reporter
Pattie Beattie’s announcement
Petitions for candidacy are cur- has learned as well that each cam- yesterday afternoon that she is a
rently being signed and filed. All paign day will be broken up as fol- candidate for- president brings to
five the number of students running for that office. Other presidential hopeful* are Paul Hogan,
Mike McGreevy, Lee Van Chilton,
and Barbara Cecil.
This marks the first time that a
Ricard Observatory will be open this weeknd for the following hours: girl has been a candidate for presSaturday from 1-5 p.m. and from 8-11 p.m.; Sunday from 1-5 p.m. The ident.
telescopes will be in operation Saturday evening given proper attroFour persons have taken out pescopic conditions.
titions for executive vice-president:
�
�
�
John Garvey, Roy Fugimoto, John
Coors Brewing Company is paying the San Francisco Symphony Fennell, and Bill Orme.
Unopposed are Pat Kelly, social
$2OO per ton for all aluminum cans deposited in Crown-Zellerback
Plaza in San Francisco by April 16. The Ecology Action Program re- vice-president; Craig Borba, treasquests your help in this drive. Please deposit all aluminum cans in the urer; Jeanne Labozetta, recording
secretary; Cheryl Samarzich, corboxes found in the dorms.
secretary.
responding
�
�
�

Five Vie for

Presidency

Campus Kiosk

Head cheerleader candidates are
Oscar Winners Joan Crawford and Rod Steiger and director Robert
Bosco, Chip Kurzeka. and
Peter
Group
on
Gist are the guests
"The Best of David Frost,” the
W special
Mazzei.
Bruce
to be telecast on KPIX April 20, from 9-10 p.m.
Completed petitions must be
�
�
�
fUed in the ASUSC office by 3
Anyone wishing to help Task Force with its secretarial work should p.m. Wednesday. This list can still
contact either Fred All in the Task Force Office in Dunne Basement be expanded with candidates drawing petitions today.
or Patti Beattie in 406 Graham (241-6957).

myth that men must be strong and
women weak. She asked if It were
possible for men to “cry more
about the things that count” and
women to “cry less about the
things that don’t count.”

PANEL DISCUSSION
The second part of the conference included a panel of speakers

that represented the divergent roles
of women. Betty Concannon, chairman of/ the California Advisory
Committee on the status of Women,
led this panel. Other panel participants included E&gt;r. Tiah Ann Fos-

ter, a psychiatric resident physiAgnews State Hospital;
Lydia Modi Vitale, director of the
cian at

de Saisset Art Gallery; and Elea-

nor Riordan Whalen, Saratoga
homemaker and wife of Dr. John
Whalen, economics professor at
Santa Clara.
Mrs. Concannon, a candidate for
State Assembly and mother of
seven, emphasized that a woman
can have both a family and a career without major conflicts. She
said she had an understanding
husband Who encouraged her to
“get out into the mainstream and
contribute what I have.”

Graham 100, not

If the idea goes through there
will be sign-ups, then interviews,
to pick those who live in Nobili
next year.

!

bill. If the student Insfy wishes a
change next year in the Tusk

THE SANTA CLARA, April the body of University Vice Presidents in conjunction with Fr. Ter3, 1970.)
ry approve of the measure. So,
The Trustees’ decision on the
although the initial permission for
coed dorm proposal was not
coed dorms has been given, the
leased following the March 25 final decision now rests with the
meeting to give Fr. Terry more administration. Fr. Terry said he
time to work out the final form considered it "very likely” that
Santa Clara would have coed
which was “not identical with any
dorms in the fall.
of the proposals submitted.”
Dean of Students Gerald McGrath
said he considered the
EXCERPTS
MEMORANDUM
Trustees’ decision “really a major
Excerpts from Fr. Terry’s Wedstep in the whole idea qf providnesday memorandum of the Trusting' a variety of living situations
ees' meeting concerning the coed
for students.”
dorm proposal read: “In general,
the Trustees left it up to the ExecSTUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
utive Vice President and the Dean
“Implicit in this is the realizaof Students to work out the detion of a strong dorm council setup
tails of the program. However, the
where students really do take on
Trustees did approve the possibilthe responsibility for governing
ity of making Walsh Hall a womtheir own lives in partnership with
en's residence and Mae Swig a the
faculty and administration,” he
men's residence.
said.
(See

Career Day Asks Women
To 'Re-Orient Thinking'
—

ADMINISTRATION DECISION
The gist of the Trustees’ decision on coed dorms permits the establishment of coed dorms should

S.J. Ft. Terry’s statement synthesized the feelings of the Board of

|

The three hour Senate meeting Force allocation, let them raise Board of Constitutional Review
of April 5 saw the Senate's power the cry to the Senate, and the and will consist of five students
from there.”
appointed by the ASUSC Presiof allocating funds challenged, the Senate will act
dent and ratified by the Senate.
‘SLAP
FACE’
IN
ASUSC Election Code revised, and
This Board will hear and make dethe establishment of the ASUSC
Fred Ali, Task Force co-chair- cisions concerning cases which do
man,
told the Senate "you might not
judiciary,
come under the jurisdiction of
as well go home, and leave all the
other student boards and
the
ALLOCATIONS MOTION
allocations to the vote of the stuThe most controversial bill watt dent body. This bill is a slap in the courts of appeals.
Senator Mike Moore, chairman
Senator Ogden Lilly’s resolution face to you as Senators-—it’s sayconcerning ASUSC allocations. ing you’re incompetent representaof the Rules Committee, presented
Senate Bill 37 read “the Senate tives.” Senator Pat Tondreau said the proposed changes for the Elecshall not spend, pledge, reserve or that the bill would be ineffective tion
Code. Changes in the code
In any other way commit for any because we didn’t have a 50% vote essentially
curbed the power of the
campus organization, club or sun- earlier this year on the Student
President
in election proASUSC
dry contingency, more than 10% Board of Conduct bill. With this
of the ASUSC’s total allocution for past expression of student apathy, cedures, allowed write-in candiany (following) year without the the vote for a budget issue would dates and established procedures
consent of the student body ex- most likely be insufficient. In Sen- for invalidating an election. The
pressed in a general election with ate voting the bill was defeated.
bill was passed with several cora simple majority of at least one
In an effort to get the dorm
rections
and additions.
half of the student body approving councils operating as an intrinsic
the allocution.” Senator Lilly compart of the University and to liven
posed this bill because some stu- Spring quarter social life, Mcdents feel that allocations to clubs Laughlin Hall representative Paul
have been cut due to the $20,000 Cosley asked the Senate for $2OO
given to Task Force. These stu- to fund a street dance. The $2OO
dents feel they should have more would be for the band only, Mcsay in the distribution of the stuLaughlin would provide refreshdent body funds.
ments. Senator Paul Schmidt then
A debate of an hour followed asked whether there was at presLilly’s presentation of the bill; ent a special fund for dorm counpros and cons being weighed. Lilly cils in the ASUSC budget, and if
Does being biologically a woman
said the bill offered students “a not, suggested that machinery be
necessarily
make a good mother
set
to
handle
allocain
motion
means of expression." Bob Owens
it
instinct or is it a
really
is
questioned the.Senate on its right tions for dorm councils through
response? This is one of
learned
of
the
Finance
Committee
the
“to allocate money for the next
the questions that were raised
year when this year’s Senate will Senate.
Wednesday
at a special conference
With
the
Senthis idea In mind,
not bo in office.”Senator Ed Gibbs
challenging the traditional role of
ate
to
let
the
Finance
Comvoted
added “The student should have a
"woman." The conference, entitled
say in where his tuition money mittee decide how much money
"Break thru—the now emergence
McLaughlin
could
be'
allocated
to
goes.”
and for future allocations the Fi- of women," probed the choices,
Senator -Jane-Wiegenstein counbarriers and myths existing for
tered Bob Owens’ argument with nance Committee would set up the
and about women and their
the future In mind, also “We are machinery' during the coming
careers.
week.
setting a precedent against ourOK’D
ITEM OF INTEREST
JUDICIARY
selves as Senators if we pass the

NO. 24

&lt;&amp;£&amp;&gt;

1 I

$5.00 Per Year

‘

4b

In Adultery?

;

Vol.

Have

'

Infancy

...

The Santa Clara

As Adults

|

Do Infants
Have As Much
Fun In

asked, “What should a Christian
be doing right now in these revo-

lutionary times?”

To try to throw some light on
this question, the rest of the talk
was spent in examining revolution
in relation to four areas: politics,
theology, violence, and Christian
witness.
Dr,

Henriot defined revolution
as “sharp, significant

politically

and rapid change from the current
order of basic political, social and
economic systems.” Latin America
has always been the area most
closely associated with this type of
change, but there is no need to
look outside the U.S. for instances
of revolution. Action hnd reaction
have brought the U.S. today to a
pre-revolutionary stage. Many political systems are calling for
change. Thus there is no theology
of revolution but tether a politics
of revolution.

•NOT TO BAPTIZE’
But there are Biblical aspects to
be considered when looking for a
theological perspective of revolution. Since only- God Is all good,
only He can demand full service

and loyalty. Because the Bible

EVERY CATHOLIC who it not a revolutionary is living in mortal
sin, according to Dr. Peter Henriot, a visiting professor at the
Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Henriot spoke in Nobili
lilt night on "The Theology of Revolution."
—Deck Photo

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