The ordinance passed Monday instructs Healy and four top-ranking police brass--Police Commissioner Perry L. Anderson Jr. Superintendent Walter L. Boyle and the department's two domestic-violence liaisons--to meet with University administrators "to insure that a similar situation does not occur again."
Several Harvard officials declined to comment on Sullivan's ordinance or the incident yesterday.
"This is a criminal case still pending," said Elizabeth C. Hewitt, director of the secondary school students' summer program. "We're not allowed to talk about it."
Both Margaret H. Marshall, general counsel to the University, and Allan A. Ryan Jr., the University attorney assigned to the stalking case, did not return telephone calls yesterday.
James H. Rowe '73, vice president for government, community and public affairs, was in Washington, D.C. yesterday but instructed the news office to draft last night's statement, an administrative assistant in the office said.
Harvard "has a very strong and exemplary record in matters of campus safety and protection against harassment," Wrinn said in the statement.
"We have always acted firmly and fairly to assure a safe campus," he added, "and continue to consider the safety of our students to be our highest priority."
Sarah E. Gallop, assistant for government relations at MIT, said MIT would welcome a discussion with Healy.
Police officers said yesterday that they had not heard of the ordinance. When told of its contents, however, they gave varying interpretations of the format that the Harvard-city discussion will take.
"We can advise them what should happen if there's a question of a stalking case or a potential stalking case," said Boyle, a 27-year veteran of the Cambridge police.
Cambridge police spokesperson Det. Frank T. Pasquarello said the department might provide Harvard officials with a police instructor familiar with proper procedure.
"The administrators of the colleges should know the laws, but if they request additional training, then we will offer any assistance we can," Pasquarello said.
"It's basically about educating Harvard," Sullivan said. "That's kind of a mixed term, isn't it?