President Neil L. Rudenstine has launched a series of almost daily discussions with campus Blacks and Jews in an attempt to develop "concrete steps" to improve Harvard's tense race relations.
"There have been serious tensions between people of different ethnic or racial groups that have obviously not involved violence or direct physical action of any sort but that have involved a good deal of very bruised feelings. And it's a problem," Rudenstine said of recent campus events.
In an interview yesterday, Rudenstine said he is acting to fix the problem. "We are definitely doing things," he said. "There have been daily meetings, more or less, and there will continue to be meetings."
Those meetings have included members of the Black Students Association, representatives of Hillel, other Jewish students and representatives from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the central administration, Rudenstine said. Rudenstine has attended some of the meetings in person and has sent representatives to others.
"There will be an effort to sort through the issues, and, I hope, out of that will come some sense of what concrete steps make most sense," Rudenstine said.
Any further steps to alleviate tensions will be decided on after the round of talks, the president said.
"We'll keep at it until it seems that there's the right kind of a sensible step to take," he said.
Rudenstine said he aimed to have "a fair number" of the meetings done by the end of the coming week.
The president also acknowledged concerns recently raised by Black students about their status at the University.
"There clearly have been some incidents where Blacks have been, I believe, insensitively treated. And there are other incidents where they certainly perceive they have been, and where it's clear that there is a clash of perceptions," Rudenstine said. "The total of both means that their concerns are real, and their sense of relationship to the life of the University is just very exacerbated at this point."
Rudenstine also said there are some students who do not have these feelings or do not hold the feelings as strongly as others do.
Still, he said, "Enough students Rudenstine said the University should act onthe student concerns. "It troubles me deeply, andI think that we, as an institution, have to thinkabout ways to mitigate and heal much of that." BSA, Police to Meet Members of the Black Students Association willalso be meeting with University Police Chief PaulE. Johnson late next week to discuss concerns theorganization raised in a flyer earlier this week. The flyer, titled "On the Harvard Plantation,"charged the police with racial injustices, listingfour cases of alleged police insensitivity. Read more in News