Responding to Faculty requests, President Bok may write an open letter to the Harvard community on the protection of free speech.
"That's a very distinct possibility," said Bok, who sat in on last week's meeting of the Faculty Council, the Faculty's elected executive committee, to discuss the issue.
Such a statement--which would probably not be distributed before the fall--would be the first in three years on a substantially new topic.
The Council raised the issue with Bok in the wake of the aggressive heckling which interrupted a speech in November by Secretary of Defense Casper W. Weinberger '38 Some members of the Council were concerned that the protesters' attempts at disruption may have abridged Weinberger's rights to free speech.
Seven Previous Letters
During his 13-year tenure, Bok has written only seven open letters, including one released last spring which was largely a reiteration of a 1979 statement defending the University's position against divesting from companies doing business in South Africa.
The widely circulated letters are reserved for Bok's opinions on issues he considers important to the University.
"This [free speech] is something that really interests him," said Pierce Professor of Psychology Richard J. Herrnstein, himself embroiled in a free speech controversy during the early 1970's.
Bok stressed that he was not reaching to any particular event. "It might be just as wise to look at [free speech] when there isn't a particular event, but to make sure that we are always doing everything we can to protect people's rights," Bok said, mentioning the lag of several months since the Weinburger incident
However, he added, "That incident certainly reminds us of the problems that can arise."
Sit Down at Desk
Bok said he was uncertain what he might write because. "I haven't sat down at the desk yet." Because of his heavy schedule and the lack of a crisis, he said he probably wouldn't complete any statement until the fall.
Council members hope that Bok will determine when demonstrators go beyond the exercise of their freedom of speech and begin to infringe on the rights of others. Bok is less likely to delineate any disciplinary mechanisms that might be taken against protestors who go too far.
The issue is difficult because "you get into the line between registering disapproval and abridging someone's right to speak freely," said Bok.
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