"Every other House has one representative for every 75 undergraduates," Cohen said. "Dudley has one for every 20."
"The tyranny of Dudley is not really a threat to the council," argued Shai M. Sachs '01, who said that allowing Dudley the extra votes would not skew representation.
A roll call vote will be taken on the amendments over the next week.
In other business, Seton reminded members that voting on the council's term bill referendum begins today.
Students can use the ucvote program to vote for or against a $20 increase in their optional term bill fee, which goes directly to the council.
"Put up posters," Seton said. "Knock on doors. We want students to vote for this."
Also, Alex A. Boni-Saenz '01 announced that he will make a motion next Sunday to rescind the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) bill, which passed at last week's meeting.
The bill, which met with controversy within the council and the student body, originally called for a return of ROTC to campus.
The council amended it to support Harvard students in the program and not the program itself, but some students still challenged it, saying it supported the military's discriminatory "don't ask, don't tell" policy toward homosexuals.