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The project , to be called " Girl 's Tow n," would be presided over by film actress Raquel We lch and Mary Bunting, president of Radcliffe. Durin g the Cor poration 's Oc tobe r meeting the trust- ees dire cted that detail ed cost studi es and a coedu ca- tion plan for abo ut 1,500 wo men be prepared. The cost estimate, released many weeks later, totalled a hefty $55 million and cove red several new co lleges, addi- tional scho larships and cooperative hou sing faciliti es, amo~g ot her items. "Gi rl's Town " never materialized , but Coed ucation Week was a dose approximation. Hatched by a small group of Trumbull seniors, at the end of September , arrangem ents for the unpre cedented extravaganza proceeded at a furiou s pace in the final weeks of Oc tober. Fears that Yale wo uld be conve rted into a school for scandal proved unwarrant ed, as Coeduca- tion Wee k turn ed into a gentle, but glorio us, apoca- lypse. Rapes and other personal fouls we re consistent- ly avoided while this remarkabl e state of affairs trans- formed Yale into an innoce nt hotbed of rampant enthu siasm fo r the intell ectual and social advantages of complete coeducati on. Coeducate now, pay later President Brewster, who had previou sly insisted on the necessity of coeducation wi th a bang - ful l fund - ing, construction of housing and completion of other arrangements prior to the arrival of wo men, did not remain unmoved by the events. How co uld he? Two spontan eous demon stratio ns by hundr eds of students in front of Brewster's house bro ught und ergraduate op inion home to the President. Three days after the return to nor malcy, Brewster announ ced that about 250 freshman wo men and 250 wome n transfer stu- dents wo uld ente r Yale next fall. In a near comp lete reversal, he now argued that the University wo uld be foolish to box itself in by buildi ng facili ties before female und ergrad uates had had a chance to experi - ence and react to Yale. To avoid the bui lt-in obsoles- cence of which Radcliff e students had been com plain- ing that autumn , permanent facilities should fo llow rathe r than precede the recomme ndations of under- graduate women . Coedu cate now, pay later was the King's essential message. Alth ough the President's ba- sic shift in thought was hearti ly received, his proposa l to hou se freshman wo men in one residential co llege met a vitup erative reaction during the stormy Trum- bull College dining hall debate. Howe ver, w ith subse- quent modific ations to suit student tastes, ill feelings quickly subsided and a comm itt ee of five faculty mem- bers, two wome n graduate student s, two undergrad- uates, and two admini strato rs set to wo rk to implement the basic Brewster scheme. W hat does it all mean? What will the girls do to Yale; and w hat will Yale do to the girls? In w hat parts of the university will they be felt the most? The private, the public, or bot h? And w hat new dim ensions w ill they add to the campu s scene? No one really knows the answers, but the situation is pregnant w ith possibilities. For one thin g, Yale will be educating men, as well as women, in a way it never has before. It may take several month s, for in- stance, for the Yale male to learn that a wo man- po s- sessing intelli gence~ sensitivity and curiosity-is noth- ing mor e than what a date is during the week. But once compr ehended , surely the fact is never to be forgott en. Women may also teach Yalies some lessons in intel- lect ual humility. Chosen from 2,700 app licants, the 240 women in the Class of 1974 represent the cream of the crop and are sure to come out on top, academ- ically. But the brain strain for men may not be all that intense. The presence of pulchritude at Yale wil l attract the ablest male high schoo l seniors to New Haven. Getting into Yale w ill be a stiff er process than ever before ; even for the Class of 1974, applications were up 12 percent. Howeve r, the greatest effec t of coed- ucation , admi ssions officers say, will be on the number of top-rate acceptances who decide to come to Yale. Adm issions people expect the acceptance "y ield" to