Advertisement

College Cracks Down on Noisy Protests in Yard

Living wage campaigners say they will defy ban on amplification

Citing "intolerable" noise levels around occupied Mass. Hall as reading period begins, Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis `68 has banned amplification in Harvard Yard for the remainder of the academic year.

But members of the Progressive Student Labor Movement, who have held repeated amplified rallies in the Yard over the past weeks, say they have no intention of complying with the University's directive.

PSLM member Amy C. Offner `01 said the university's focus on the noise issue is a smoke screen designed to deflect attention from the protest and the living wage, and the protesters have no plans to silence their speakers.

Advertisement

Over 100 noise complaints were submitted after the PSLM's 8:00 p.m. vigil on May 2, according to Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) chief Francis D. "Bud" Riley. In Lewis' statement, he said the action is being taken "out of respect for many students living in the Yard who have complained with increasing intensity about their inability to study and to sleep" due to noise.

Offner, however, termed the administration's actions "patronizing and disingenuous," saying that the administration was acting in its own interests rather than those of the students.

"If they want the sound to end, they can end it by implementing a living wage," Offner said.

The PSLM's equipment had been powered by an extension cord into a Matthews suite, and occupants were told yesterday that they would need to unplug the system.

Myuran S. Kulathungam `04, a resident of the room said the noise of PSLM's rallies was "a mild annoyance once or twice," but that it was a sacrifice he was willing to make.

Recommended Articles

Advertisement