Several items down, in the “Harvard: Men Not Allowed” post, Harry Lewis just wrote the italized comment below.

Since some of you asked that comments which continue a meaningful discussion be highlighted (as opposed to lost under the weight of new posts), and since Harry puts this better than I did, I’m going to post it here:

Richard is right. The analogy with Jewish students reserving a room breaks down because student organizations can’t exclude any Harvard student on the basis of race, gender, or religion. (Only recognized organizations can reserve rooms, and to get recognition your organization must have “a constitution and by-laws whose membership clause shall not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or physical disability.”) So the Jewish students group couldn’t reserve a room and exclude non-Jews from the meeting. Nor could the Black Students Assn hang a “blacks only” sign on the door when they hold their meetings. In this situation the opposite is happening. At the behest of certain students, Harvard is hanging a “women only” sign on the door of the gym during certain hours, and that seems to me a departure from Harvard’s practice since 1977, when it assumed responsibility for the nonacademic side of women’s lives and forced desegregation of all officially recognized activities [with two exceptions only: athletic teams and choral singing groups]. This exclusion has arisen through a curious alliance of religiously conservative students with the “All Genders Welcome” Women’s Center, but the same principle would be at stake here however it came about. I do understand the feelings of those who think this is a trivial compromise and no one should worry about it, but it’s a violation nonetheless of a principle that has been sustained honorably for a long time (and, at times, only with some pain, but I’ll skip those details!).