Word: seidman
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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WHEN Gay W. Seidman '78 won election to the 30-member Board of Overseers last spring, she prevailed over a recalcitrant administration and initiated gradual but perceptible reforms in the governing body...
...rest of the University community enjoys peaceful somnolence in this its 351st year, Alumni Against Apartheid, which sponsored Seidman's candidacy, has mounted another offensive. With continued alumni support, some of this year's six unofficial divestment candidates may continue to spark reforms in Harvard's bureacratic mudpuddle. May they lift a few heads from the sand...
Second, the election of the divestment candidates would help cement the advances made last year by Seidman, who won election despite considerable and unethical opposition from the University itself. If outside candidates prove successful this year as well, a precedent for dissent and minority representation will be set. Harvard should discontinue the practice of nominating "official" candidates for the board, allowing any interested alumni to collect the necessary signatures and face the scrutiny of the electorate rather than the administration. A vote for the outside candidates equals a vote against the Corporate practice of in-house nomination...
...imagine you'll be like Seidman," Bok said to The Crimson's 1986 Halloween expedition to his house, adding with ghostly afterthought, "And run against the establishment...
...Seidman must have been displeased with the candy Bok put in her goodie bag because the campus divestment activist responded with a trick of her own. She became, in Bok's words, "an insurgent candidate" in the 1986 Board of Overseers election, running on a pro-divestment platform...