More than 50 Harvard students gathered outside the Charles Hotel  Friday afternoon to demand the University create a formalized ethnic  studies program.
The Harvard Ethnic Studies Coalition, which  comprises affiliates across the University, organized the event, dubbed  “The 47-Year Fight: Student Rally for Ethnic Studies.” Students  specifically chose to congregate at noon to attract the attention of  alumni and administrators — including University President Lawrence S.  Bacow — attending the Alumni Leadership Conference luncheon which took  place in the Charles Hotel at the same time.
Jeannie Park ’83, a  Coalition member and president of the Harvard Asian American Alumni  Alliance, said she hoped that holding the event at the same time as the  alumni conference would encourage alumni to help publicize the need for a  formalized ethnic studies program.
“When I tell other alumni who  aren’t paying as close attention, people are honestly stunned. ‘Really?  There’s no ethnic studies at Harvard?’ It kind of blows their mind,”  Park said. “It’s so important for the administration to hear from all  constituencies, not just students, not just alumni, not just faculty.”
                                                                             Prior to his speech at the conference and the start of  the rally, Bacow paused outside the Charles Hotel to converse with  students.
James L. Walkingstick ’21 opened the rally with a prayer in his traditional language of Cherokee to bless the cause.
Several  students read passages from University and Crimson archives, including  letters penned by activists dating back to 1985. They also read past  Crimson articles about historical developments in the fight for a formalized ethnic studies program.
