Advertisement

Harvard Headmaster Woos Foes of School Merger

November 11, 1989|NANCY HILL-HOLTZMAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

The headmaster of a prestigious boys school Friday pleaded the case for a proposed merger with the sometimes hostile students of an equally regarded girls' school, arguing that uniting would be like opening the Berlin Wall.

Thomas C. Hudnut, headmaster of Harvard School in Studio City, spoke to an assembly at the Westlake School for girls, some of whom sported yellow "break the engagement " buttons.


Advertisement

The girls of the Holmby Hills high school, divided between supporters and opponents of the merger, cheered and jeered Hudnut's appeal.

Taking an oratorical cue from the major headline of the day, Hudnut quoted West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl on the opening of the Berlin Wall: "We are ready to build a new nation, and we belong together."

"This is an unparalleled opportunity for people to collaborate," Hudnut said.

Many Westlake parents reacted with alarm to the announcement in October that the schools would merge, with Harvard taking two-thirds of the seats on the new school's Board of Trustees.

Westlake parents who oppose the merger succeeded in getting a final vote on the merger by the school's trustees postponed until late November, while the parents lobby to prevent it.

Parents have embarked on a fund-raising campaign to show the Westlake trustees that the school would be economically viable even if Harvard went coeducational without it--a chief fear of the Westlake trustees who favor the merger.

A group of unidentified donors has pledged $1 million to keep the school afloat, said Rod Berle, one of the Westlake trustees, and parents have raised $280,000 in the last two weeks. The money is being held in a trust account and will be made available only if Westlake remains a girls' school, said parent David Higgins.

Not all of Westlake's financial supporters oppose the merger. The school's biggest contributor, philanthropist Helen Bing, supports it.

Objections to the merger range from the argument that girls do better academically and more readily develop leadership potential in a single-sex school, to an aversion to having Westlake folded into a school that comes under the jurisdiction of the Episcopal Diocese.

Opponents of the merger contend that the Episcopal link would be unacceptable to Westlake's many Jewish students. Supporters respond that Harvard has many Jewish students, and the combined school would not have the character of a specific church and could add chaplains from non-Episcopal religions.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|