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Cruzing the Streets of Boston

REMIGIO CRUZ

Vice-President and General Counsel Daniel Steiner '54, who oversees the University police, dealt with Cruz's complaints. Several months later he established a student-administrator committee to consider problems of police harassment. Cruz has served on the committee. "I feel very positively and very warmly about Remy. When we first met we had a somewhat antagonistic relationship, but over a few meetings, I came to like him," Steiner says of Cruz.

Of the student whom several police officers stopped for reportedly not looking like a Harvard student, Steiner says, "I have respect for his energy, imagination, and commitment--he's a credit to Harvard and to his family."

Cruz graduated from Trenton, New Jersey's public high school, where about two-thirds of the student body drops out before graduation. The son of poor immigrants from Puerto Rico and Costa Rica, he never thought of applying to agood college, much less Harvard.

"I hadn't the faintest idea of coming toHarvard," Cruz recalls. "A Harvard alumnus calledto ask me to apply, so I did. If the alumnirecruiter hadn't come along, I probably would havegone to a local state college or to a communitycollege," he adds.

Cruz's work study earnings at Harvardcontributed not only to his school expenses, butalso to his family. His freshman year, he held twojobs so that he could help his family financially."My mother needed $150 to see the eye doctor and Ionce sent my 17-year-old sister money so she wouldnot be evicted from her apartment," explains Cruz.

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Cruz's work hours often left him little timefor studying. According to him, this and his poorpreparation for Harvard gave him countlessacademic headaches. Before coming to Harvard hehad dreamt of being a chemical engineer, but hechanged his plans after freshman year. He says hewas competing with students who had already takenadvanced placement math and science courses inhigh school--opportunities his school had notoffered.

Influenced by working on a project on PuertoRican immigration with Coles, Cruz decided onsociology instead.

"I never had any study skills," admits Cruz. "Iwas used to getting A's without studying in highschool. It took me about a year and a half tofinally start getting good grades."

Cruz says his greatest experience atHarvard--and probably the one which has mosthelped him survive here without assimilating--hasbeen his work with the PBH Keylatch program. Cruzhas worked with the youth program in Boston sinceits inception in the fall of 1982.

Keylatch is named for the label applied tochildren whose parents both work, leaving them towear their house keys around their necks and spendseveral hours alone each day. They are called"latch key kids." The $12,000 program that Cruzhas directed for the past two years operatesduring the school year and summers in VillaVictoria, a Puerto Rican housing development inthe South End.

Keylatch "put me in touch with a Puerto Ricancommunity similar to my own in Trenton," saysCruz. The neighborhood has also been a trainingground for Cruz, who has become a leader there andat PBH.

Carmen A. Pola, a former advisor to BostonMayor Ray Flynn, says, "Remigio is the type ofperson that society needs, in particular theSpanish community. He has a clear understanding ofproblems in out society, especially poverty." Shecredits Cruz with "making young people,particularly poor Hispanic youngsters, feel thatanything is possible."

According to PBH Graduate Secretary Gregory A.Johnson '72, Cruz will be "a community leader,though the community remains to be seen. He'simmensely strong, yet affable.... He's charismaticin Villa Victoria."

Fourteen year-old Jorge Palmerin, one of Cruz'stutees in the Key Latch program says, "Remy hastaught me many things. He has brought me closertogether with other boys my age. He taught us howimportant school is, how the future would dependon us, and we learned about other places and whatother places do for us."

Jorge's mother has also grown to depend onCruz's influence in her son's life. "Remy wouldcome and sit down with Jorge and tell him how boysgrow up and change. He'd call and ask Jorge if hewanted to go for a walk, and Jorge would call himup if he had any school trouble," says Ada N.Palmerin.

After graduation, Cruz will return to TrentonCentral to teach. "I want to go back to help thekids I identify with--to help build theirself-esteem," says Cruz.

He will try to pass on the self-esteem he builtat Harvard for himself. He says he "knows thatwhen I first came to Harvard I didn't realize Iknew so little.... I've gotten an all-aroundeducation at Harvard. I've learned so much aboutmyself and others--I'm glad I stuck around.

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