The group made no definite plans for the money. But Clancy vowed that RUS would fight any attempts by administrators to regulate the use of the fund.
"This money is ours," she said. "They can't just take it."
The prevailing mood at the meeting was one of discontent. Students said they feared that popular Radcliffe programs would disappear and that undergraduates would have little say in the distribution of the Radcliffe Trust's grant money.
One student even lamented that most all-female undergraduate groups could no longer exist.
Wendy A. Seider '00 said RUS should push for exemptions to the College's no-single-sex rule, even though the group voted to follow the policy itself.
"It wouldn't be unreasonable for us to say, 'Now that Radcliffe is changing, everything's changing,'" she said.