Tradition Shattered by Scott Brown
They made headlines in 1961. âTradition Shattered,â the student paper claimed. The coeds had arrived: female invaders of a campus that had been all-male for 110 years.
Front page of The Smith Era newspaper with the headline TRADITION SHATTERED.
The first women students were a hardy band. They had to be. Gracie (Byrnes) Mulcrevy â65 remembers being driven for her first look at the campusâonly to find a bunch of football players sitÂting on the dorm steps chanting, âCoeds, go home!â
They endured the taunting and the teasing that first year. And by June they realized how very close they had become as a group.
In the 25 years since then, the women have gone through marÂriage, child bearing, career changes, and celebrated their 40th birthdays together. (They met for â40sâ luncheons when they reached that milestone.) They have shared their successes and their failures.
And they are an impressive group: bank presidents, homemakers, corporate executives, social workers, educators, volunteers, real estate agents, department heads, artists, actresses, lawyers, entrepreneurs, ranchers, contractors, and flight attendants, to name a few.
Most still call themselves âcoedsâ when they speak of Santa Clara. But there have been many dramatic changes in their lives since they donned coordinated sweaters and pleated skirts, teased their hair into the latest 1960s styles, and braved the all-male campus in September 1961.
Some of those changes were evident when 60 of them gathered for their twenty-fifth reunion October 25 in Benson Center. Also attending were two mainstays from that first year: Helen Reedy, who had been pressed into service as acting dean of women, and Jean Williman, who with her husband became houseparents for the first women at Villa Maria.
Memories of Santa Clara came pouring out that sunny SaturÂday afternoon: about the Villa (where many of them lived) and classmate Joe Tinney, the âprince of coed haters,â (who got what he deserved, the women agreed: three daughters).
No memory was more poignant, or as universal, than the time they were âcampusedâ for a solid month after attending an âinÂnocent by todayâs standardsâ motel party some of the fellows threw one Saturday night. âUnforgettable,â they recalled, was the letter the University sent to their homes. It began, âOur campus is in the shadow of disgrace...â
During their confinement, âwe threw darts at pictures of people we taped to a dart board,â said Margaret Taylor, who sat with former roommates Mary Kay Graves Fry and Juanita Pavelka OâConnor at the reÂunion. âIt was the only thing we could do!â
Many cringed at memories of walking inÂto the Bronco Corralâthen a Quonset hut near the Missionâand enduring hoots and catcalls.
Between bites of turkey and avocado croissant sandwiches, with a backdrop of oversized yearbook photos and table decorations of red and white carnations, the women conjured up myriad images of camÂpus life. âRemember the gym was so hot during dances,â recalled Lelia (Ganey) Lanctot â65. âOr was that just our nerves?âanother answered with a chuckle.
Wearing raincoats over Bermuda shorts to classâa definite violation of the âno shorts, no jeansâ campus dress codeâwas a secret rebellion for many. That was only one of many strict rules for women, especially for those who lived in the Villa, the off-campus apartment complex the University purchased for themâbecause âthey didnât know what to do with us,â one woman joked.
There were other rules: studying in their rooms from 7 to 10 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and no phone calls during those days from 7 to 9 p.m. or after 10 p.m. If they left campus for a weekend, they had to fill out a postcard with the address and phone number of their destination. The postcard was filled out Thursday and sent to their parents. As Pat (Pepin) Dougherty â65 commented: âI guess you prayed for a slow mailman if you were going somewhere other than home.â
The reunion also sparked at least one confession. Jan (Dunn) Rhodes â65 said that it was her brotherâs Stanford fraternity that stole the âMariaâ sign from the Villa Maria. Why didnât she admit it before? âAre you kidding? I would have been kicked out of school,â she replied. There were even discussions of the word coed. Le Anne (Karnes) Cooley â65, now a teacher in the San Jose Unified School District, said one of her student asked her, âWhatâs a coed?ââ Cooleyâs classmates gasped in disbelief.
At times the luncheon conversation grew serious. Laughter stopped and the tone grew hushed when Carol (Kraemer) Ordemann â65 recalled the November day John F. Kennedy was shot. She even remembered when the announcement was made in her religion class. âWe had been studying leaders as Godâs representatives on Earth.â It was a pivotal event for her, she said, âmy first turn toward adulthood.â
âI still feel personally attached to Jackie,â said another, in agreement. A third chime in, âAnd John, Jr. Isnât he a doll?â
Just as quickly, the conversation turned to aging. âDo you feel old? I donât feel old,â one said when the question was posed. âWell, now I know I canât run a marathon or climb Mt. Everest,ââ Lelia Lanctot replied, with a sigh.
But most have conquered some equal challenge in the quarter of a century since they left the mission campus. A list of their career paths reads like a Whoâs Who. A few examples: Mary Somers Edmunds â62, a psycholÂogy major, transferred to SCU in 1961 as a senior and was the first woman to graduate from Santa Clara. It was a distincÂtion that put her in the eye of the media quite frequently, but she handled the attenÂtion with aplombâeven when her mate classmates offered her $1 each (an enticing sum of $250) if she would not walk through graduation ceremonies with them. âI said âI worked too hard for this,âââ she recalled. âI didnât realize the significance of being the first woman graduate until later.â After college, she taught elementary school in Greece and in Mann County, and then married, had a daughter, and moved to Los Gatos. Several years ago, she went to work in the loan funding department of a mortÂgage banking firm. Today she works as processing officer for The Money Store Investment Corporation in San Jose.
Margaret Taylor â65 liked Santa Clara so much, she kept coming back. After her B.A. in history, she received a masterâs degree in counseling psychology in 1976, and an MBA in 1986. There were several firsts in her life: she was in the first class at her grammar school and at Holy Cross High School in Mountain View, the first SCU coed class; and now is the first woman to head the health services departmentâ make that any departmentâin San Mateo County. As health services director, she supervises the largest county office, with a $100 million annual budget and 1,100 employees. The department oversees the county hospital, public health clinics, long-term care facilities, locked facilities for mentally ill patients, and convalescent hospitals. She lives in Atherton with her husband, Floyd Gonella. She said she plans to add more firsts to her list âbut I donât know what yet. Right now, Iâm conÂtemplating a degree for the 1990s,â she said with a chuckle.
Diane Raddatz â65 started working part-time in a savings and loan bank while teaching English in Chicago. Eventually she became a full-time teller. The promoÂtions continued over the years and today she is the first woman president, chief executive officer, and chairman of the board of East-side Savings & Loan in Chicago. She also is the only woman on the board of the Illinois League of Savings Institutions. She received an MBA from the University of Chicago. She grew up in a family with no boys and parents who were both profesÂsionals. âIâve always had to fight a little harder,â she said.
Brenna Bolger â64, a history graduate, was one of the first women in the UniverÂsityâs Honors Program. She worked part-time during college at G. Coakley and Co., an advertising agency. She planned to join the Peace Corps after graduation, but inÂstead took a full-time job at the agency to pay some college debts. A decade later, she left the firm and branched out on her own, founding PRX, Inc., a Cupertino public relations agency, which started out serving mostly hospitals, but expanded to include financial, sports, and high-tech business clients. Her agency, which now has 25 employees, won the 1986 Silver Anvil
âBeing one of the first coeds made me very comfortable with competition.â
âBrenna Bolger
Award, the Public Relations Society of Americaâs highest award for marketing communication. She is also on the SCUâs Board of Fellows, and boards of de Saisset Museum, Hope Rehabilitation Services, and Opera San Jose. âOne thing being one of the first coeds did for me was to make me very comfortable with competition,â she said. âI thrive on being busy.â
Susan (Daly) Commins â65 received a degree in English and then went on to earn a J.D. degree from Hastings law school in San Francisco. She started in private law practice and joined the San Francisco city attorneyâs office in 1980, where she is a deputy city attorney in charge of workersâ compensation. Her English degree, she said, helped her career because âhaving read literature from A to Z gave me more of an analytical approach.â
Marilou (Figone) Cristina â64 married Barry Cristina â62 and raised four daughters. During that time, she did volunteer workâexperience that eventually led to a paid position as director of the InÂdependent Aging Program of Catholic Social Services of Santa Clara County. Her first experience with senior citizens was a part-time job with the San Jose Recreation Department working with senior citizensâ clubs while she was attending Santa Clara. In 1977, she helped organize the IndepenÂdent Aging Programâs volunteer component and started as an unpaid director of volunteers. Today she supervises a volunteer staff of 220, working with about 400 active clients. She helped develop the programs intergenerational project for high school students that now involves 120 students in ten local high schools. The project was showcased at a March conference of the American Society on Aging. This year she introduced the project at the university level, starting with Santa Clara students. She also is active on the stateâs Aging Committee for Catholic Charities.
Kathleen âMuffyâ (Regan) Bui â65 left after two years at Santa Clara to marry Doug Bui â62. She found time while raising four children to volunteer in her parish and in her childrenâs schools and now is contemplating âgetting a real jobâ to help put them through college. She is well known among Santa Clara alumni for her active role in the Alumni Associationâ serving as national president from 1979 to 1980, and in the alumni-student recruitment program, and the undergraduate AdmisÂsions Officeâs new âTen City Plan.â She also is active in St. Raymondâs Parish in Menlo Park, where she organized a thirÂteen-member folk group (she plays guitar), and has taught Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) classes. She started the churchâs Sunday School program and, when her children attended grammar, school, was president of the Mothersâ Club. When her children progressed to St. FranÂcis High School in Mountain View, she was active as president of the Womenâs Club. She also does some behind-the-scenes politicsâwalking precincts and making phone calls.
âI cancelled riding in the Grand Nationals to be here today.â
âCarolyn Casey
Teresa (Chaparro) Sol â65 put her Spanish degree to work during the twelve years she and her husband owned a 750-acre cotton plantation and dairy in El Salvador. She and her husband lost their farm to the government during the countryâs agrarian reform and they returned to the Bay Area in 1980. â1 looked at myself and tried to decide what I could do,â she said, and decided on real estate. Today she is an associate Realtor for Century 21 in Daly City. Something immediately evident on her return to the United States, she said, was âeven though I have been out of the country for a long time, I still had good friends (from Santa Clara).â
Ann (Mahoney) Pullman â65 bought a gourmet food shop and delicatessen in 1985 and is learning how to run a business. She and her husband were self-sufficient for two years on their two-acre organic farm in Ojai. They planted fruit trees and grew vegetables, and raised rabbits, goats for cheese, and chickens for eggs. But the gourmet shop has taken time away from home and has meant having to sell some of the animals. She still uses homegrown proÂduce in her Southern California shop, Good Taste. The greatest lessons she learned at Santa Clara, she said, were in business ethics and morality.
Toni (Doyle) Jepson â64 taught kindergarten before taking an opportunity to work at the Stanford Court Hotel, a five-star hotel in San Francisco. She remained in sales and marketing for hotels for eleven years. In March 1986, she put that knowledge to work in her own enterprise, Resort II Me, a Monterey firm that matches clients to hotels for meetings, conventions, or pleasure trips. She and her partner work with 130 hotels, motels, and inns in the Monterey and Carmel area. Although she said she didnât find it difficult to launch her own business, âI think you have to be ready for it.â
Carolyn (Corwin) Casey â64 taught for twelve years and then âârealized there are other things women can do besides teaching.â She bought two Diet Center franÂchises and also started raising Arabian horses. âI canceled riding in the Grand Nationals to be here today,â she told her classmates at the reunion.
Yes, it is an impressive list. But many of the women said they would expect no lessâ because there was something unique about the coeds who forged the way at Santa Clara.
âWe all had the willingness to stand out and be different,â Brenna Bolger said. âI think a lot of it was that we were going through a very unusual experience.â
Even though life has pulled them in difÂferent directions, the women said they have a bond that will never be broken.
âWe all just sort of landed here (at 51łÔšĎ) like stars,â said Gracie Mulcrevy, as the reunion came to an end. âIt was something really special.â