Students speaking for workers' rights intensively questioned President Neil L. Rudenstine last night when he came to Lowell House dining hall to eat with faculty and students.
Rudenstine, who was accompanied by his wife, Angelica Zander Rudenstine, talked with the Lowell House Masters and members of the House Committee and Senior Common Room over salmon before taking the podium for brief remarks and a question-and-answer session.
House Master Diana L. Eck introduced Rudenstine.
"Who would have thought that this great humanist would raise $2.6 billion?" she asked, referring to Rudenstine's six years of work on the University-wide Capital Campaign.
Rudenstine spoke about trekking the globe on behalf of the Capital Campaign. He also discussed information technology and its effect on higher education.
But during the question-and-answer session, the topic shifted to labor issues.
Eugenie A. Lang '00, a Lowell House resident, asked Rudenstine to respond to concerns about the treatment of guards employed by SSI, a private security firm that patrols many Harvard buildings.
Lang said she had spoken to guards who told her their wages from SSI are just over the minimum, and that they were not paid for training time.
"Why does the University do business with such a firm?" she asked.
Read more in News
Students Protest Treatment of Alleged SpyRecommended Articles
-
Ivy League Discusses, Fails To Agree on Labor CodeRepresentatives from the Ivy League schools failed to reach a formal agreement on a sweatshop code of conduct at their
-
33 ElmwoodSoon after assuming office, University President Lawrence H. Summers moved from Washington, D.C. to his new digs—Elmwood, Harvard’s presidential mansion
-
PSLM Members Rally Against SweatshopsMembers of the Progressive Student Labor Movement (PSLM) noisily marched across the Yard yesterday to protest the University's role in
-
Rudenstine Denies Hostility to LaborPresident Neil L. Rudenstine yesterday passionately defended Harvard against charges that it is hostile to labor unions. An open letter
-
A Plan for the ProvostAs the first provost with extensive administrative experience at another university, Garber promises to set a new tone for this young office.
-
Rudenstine Made NY Library ChairFormer Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine was elected chairman of the board of the New York Public Library on Wednesday, effective immediately.