Elvita Dominique, "Negotiating Integration: Black Women at Barnard, 1968–1974" (page 6 of
8)
Barnard Reacts to the Counter Offer
Concessions
President Peterson did respond to the BOSS demands during her
convocation speech on March 3. This willingness even to address the
issues and engage in a discourse on race on campus shows that Barnard
began to move slowly toward a recognition, and even toward an
acceptance, of the fact that it could not expect black students alone to
change and accommodate to better fit in at Barnard—that Barnard
needed to change and make accommodations as well. This of course is not
to say that Barnard was one big happy family after President Peterson
gave her address. The address was one representation of Barnard as a
community in transition—a community engaged in a discussion and a
negotiation about the meaning of integration.
Although President Peterson's address cannot be taken to represent
the views of the entire Barnard community, it can be said to provide
insight into the thinking of the Barnard administration led by President
Peterson, as well as many white students who attended convocation, who,
according to Abecassis, seemed to overwhelmingly support the sentiments
expressed in President Peterson's address.[47] It is clear from President
Peterson's speech that Barnard was in effect approaching the bargaining
table and at least considering some of the issues and ideas raised by
the black students at Barnard, Columbia, and at other selective
institutions throughout the nation. In her speech President Peterson
conveyed the message that Barnard was actively attempting to react to
the times and was changing. BOSS ultimately rejected the speech as
insensitive and irrelevant.
President Peterson began her speech by explaining why she felt
compelled to respond to the BOSS demands at convocation. She stated that
the issues brought by BOSS were of significance and deserved to be
addressed because of the social climate of 1969 and also because the
black women who raised the issues were part of the Barnard community.
President Peterson explained, "They are questions which black students
must ask now about their relationship to their college . . . . Because
these questions are important to a part of our student body they should
be considered thoughtfully by all of us, white or black, student or
faculty, young or old."[48] This, again, (although it may seem as though
the issues being brought up by the black students were really only of
relevance or importance to black students) indicated that the college
recognized that these were issues that should be engaged.
President Peterson then moved into discussing the limitations of
change at an institution like Barnard, which, judging by their rejection
of her speech, really frustrated the BOSS members in attendance. She
explained that decision making at Barnard was a structured process that
required the following of certain procedures. This was a prelude to
explaining to the BOSS members that they would not be "given the
assurance that proposals they work out in the specific areas be
accepted: that they be in charge of their own lives and be able to make
the changes they desire."[49]President Peterson did assert, however,
that the college would accomplish all recommendations that were "sound
educationally" and "practically feasible" which again illustrated that,
at some level, Barnard recognized the need to accommodate black
students.[50]
After she explained the limitations of the possibility of change,
President Peterson went on to discuss the steps being taken to address
some of the issues brought up by BOSS, which again shows that Barnard
was at the very least adopting the discourse of accepting change.
Peterson indicated that she thought the request for an Afro-American
Studies major was particularly reasonable and should be implemented as
quickly as possible. She stated that all chairmen of affected
departments had agreed to develop such a major, and a committee of
faculty and students, led by Professor Peter H. Juviler, would meet to
begin the process. President Peterson declared that she did not have
"one iota of doubt" that an Afro-American Studies major would be
established at Barnard, but it had to first be approved by the faculty
(such a major was established at Barnard, but not for another 20 years).
Further, President Peterson encouraged students interested in increased
black recruitment, improved financial aid, having more books on black
culture in the library, or a revised Special Students Program to speak
to the admissions director, the financial-aid director, the head
librarian, and/or the director of the Special Students Program
respectively.
Significantly, President Peterson accepted, without much
qualification, black students' request for selective living areas for
black students, a black orientation program, and to make available a
meeting space for BOSS. This showed an understanding of the fact that
minorities at Barnard might have had needs that were not being met by
the services and spaces designed for majority students. Peterson stated,
in support of black selective living: "The black students who have
requested such separation describe eloquently their unhappiness in the
present situation and their need for unity in order to be at home in the
College."[51] Here again President Peterson acknowledged that black
students' experience Barnard differently than white students. President
Peterson also realized that that particular request was particularly
controversial and in her address she asked members of BOSS to hold
forums explaining to the general college community why they want
selective living space because "so many disagree with you
philosophically on separatism."[52] President Peterson did not have a
direct response for the question concerning harassment of black students
by campus security. She said procedures would be developed to ensure a
safe environment without demeaning students.
As was previously stated, President Peterson's speech was well
received by white students in the audience. However, according to
Andrée Abecassis in an article written for the Barnard Alumnae
Magazine, following President Peterson's speech, one BOSS leader,
Carmen Martinez, stood up and rejected the speech as insensitive.
Martinez's comments upset many of the white students in the audience. As
a result, in the following weeks BOSS issued statements and held
meetings and rallies on campus to explain their rejection of the
president's speech to the other members of the Barnard community and to
ask for their support. Again, this campus-wide discourse on race
indicated that Barnard was a campus in transition. One Barnard
Bulletin article describing a BOSS rally showed that BOSS was
engaged in discussion with white students and received support from both
white and black students' organizations at Barnard and Columbia.
A rally held by the Barnard Organization of Soul Sisters
on Friday, March 6th called for support from the rest of the student
body to continue the discussion of the organization's demand for sole
power to institute the changes they seek. The rally was addressed by
BOSS members and invited speakers from the Student Afro-American
Society, Students for a Democratic Society and The Barnard Young
Socialist Alliance . . . SDS support for BOSS was expressed by Nancy
Biberman. She said that the fight against the military and against
Columbia expansion is part of the same fight of the black students.[53]
Despite its campaign and the support from other student
organizations, BOSS was never granted the opportunity to decide who
would be allowed to implement its programs, or the power to implement
changes. However, Barnard did begin to change as a result of this
process, as President Peterson's speech indicated that it might. The
changes that Barnard decided to implement represented at some level a
qualified acceptance or at least a recognition of the new terms for
integration being presented by black students at Barnard specifically,
but also more generally around the country. They began recruiting more
black students (there was a particularly large increase in accepted
black students, from 33 in 1968 to 81 in 1969, with a similar increase
in black enrollment, from 20 in 1969 to 40 in 1970),[54] made changes to
the Special Students Program, allowed BOSS to have a black orientation
program, began investigating possibilities for studies in black culture
and history (this would not begin to fully take shape at Barnard until
the late 1980s and early 1990s), and created a black residential floor.
The changes that Barnard made indicated a newfound willingness on the
part of Barnard to recognize that black students would not necessarily
fit into the mold it had created for the majority of its students, that
black students may have different needs and wants than those of the
white students, and, more importantly, that the college should take
measures to accommodate those differences and not attempt to ignore
them. One of the more significant examples of Barnard's shift can be
found in its creation of a black floor.
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