THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 2, 1,36" THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Sunday, February 2. I ,. If _Ir . ___._. __._...__ .._..__T__. _._ ', ?i 1~ SW students granted equal representation (Continued from page 1) alternative programs the school Students were not allowed on offers. These are roughly equiva- the two other committees because lent to departments in other the faculty felt it did not have schools and colleges. complete jurisdiction over them. "The doctoral program commit- The committees in charge are tee," Fauri said, "is strictly a grad- similar to the executive commit- uate school group which deals tees in other colleges, although with the social sciences as well as faculty hiring is not included. social work. The human subjects Although student union chair- committee is administered by the man Paul Fettig said he feels University administration." the "structural hang-up has been The major committee on which solved," possible trouble over the students will now serve include faculty decision may not have been the curriculum, curiculum renew- averted. al, field instruction and five pro- Leaders of the student union gram committees. met with Dean Fauri after the The program committees of the faculty meeting, "but we avoided social work school direct the five i it f y TUESDAY, FEB. 4 7:30 AU D. F PHYSICS and ASTRONOMY S (I Black studies get approval at Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CPS) - Harvard University has officially established a Black studies depart- ment without violence or pro- longed confrontation. The school's adminispration gave official status to a plan approved earlier by a faculty committee to set up a degree program in Afro- American Studies. uscussion o! tie merits and simply explained details of the decision," Fauri said. In a position paper last week, the union declared it would not accept anything less than their '50-50' proposal. At their meeting yesterday, the possibility of a si- in or student strike was empha- sized. "I have not contemplated nego- tiation, and will not make any decision regarding it until after the meeting of the union," Dean Fauri said. Fettig inndicated that students might possibly be disturbed be- cause there is no representation of the faculty search committee and because there are no student committee chairmen. Asociated Press Free Quebec! Clenched fists and yells of "We are all Quebeckers" filled the air yesterday as a group of French students burst through a crowd listening to a speech in Brittany by French President Charles de Gaulle. They referred to De Gaulle's call for a free Quebec. STUDENTS ARE INCIDENTAL: ony roos pla-ns oster solution to student unrest' f/ ' t - :I MAO Nl EY The recommendation came af- ter nine months of study and dis- cussion with black, student leaders o at the prestigious Ivy L e a g u e G ro p Se I school. Phanges in Harvard's invest-# ments, recruitment, social life, tudei'iI i on and cultural affairs aimed at im-' 1 proving the status of blacks were also urged. (Continued from page 1) The committee report no doubt Bleich tends to favor the simpler gives moral support and legiti- co-ordinating aspect. He says the macy to blacks on other campuses committee ought to serve an in- who for the past two weeks have formational function between the taken overt actions to dramatize eight or more departmental for- their demands. ums in the college. Among the Harvard recom- Daniel Feld, '69, a representa-j mendations are more black pro- tive to the committee from the fessors, administrators, and re- steering committee of the History search personnel; a social and Student Association, envisions a cultural center for the blacks; much wider role for the new or-' vigorous recruitment of black ganizations. He sees the organ- graduate students; greater em- izations as a political voice with phasis on the experience of blacks which to deal with the faculty.h in all courses; and more researchw in Afro-American Studies. "The faculty must come to un- The committee noted that derstand that the students' stake "black students feel alienated in the University is a vital one, from, even neglected within, Har- We will no longer tolerate delay vard." It called the absence of on issues which are of a pressing courses in black culture "the sin- nature." gle most potent source of black He cites a week reading period students' discontent" there. before exams, elimination of the Harvard has been spared the language requirement, an easing kind of rebellion such alienation of the course load and liberaliza- has caused on other campuses- tion of the distribution require- most recently Brandeis, Swarth- 'ments as urgent matters that the more, San Francisco State and faculty should deal with immed-I others. iately. I, - By ROGER RAPOPORT Editor 1967-68 STONY BROOK, N.Y. (CPS) - Somewhere in this vast land is an enterprising young man who will figure out the answer to the problem of student un- rest that is paralyzing univer- sities nationwide: He will come out with a way to build a mo- dern university without stu- dents. To be sure, the vast number of suspensions currently sweeping campuses across the country is a step in that direction. But until a way can be found to start a campus without students -and to keep it that way-the disruption will continue. Still, in the interim, it is impossible to see what this new studentless campus will l o o k like. For a visit to Stony Brook - a two-hour Long Island rail- road ride out from New York -shows what a school not plan- ned for students looks like. Founded as one of the four University Centers in the vast State University of New York (SUNY) in 1957, the neo-penal buildings now handle about 5,000 students with a project- ed enrollment of 10,000. Students are incidental to the SUNY system - indeed, Time magazine ran a lengthy c o v e r story on the burgeoning educa- tional empire without a picture of or quote from a single stu- dent. We learn about the vast SUNY television network, the Edward Durrel Stone campus at Albany which Governor Rocke- feller kindly inserts in the land- ing approach for distinguished' visitors to the capital. And there is Stony Brook President John S. Toll posed with his foot stuck in a bulldozer chewing up yet another expanse of Long Is- land real estate. For three days last fall, class- es were, called off for a convo- cation to talk about a host of problems confronting the cam- pus. The keynote addres was of- fered by Dr. T. Alexander Pond, the Executive Vice-President (in charge of Stony Brook mon- ey): "In the early post-war years (certainly no later than 1950 when virtually every mem- ber of our student body was already an existing, palpable' birth statistic . .. I thought Dr. Pond was kidding in deference to his kind of McNamara image around the campus. But when I visited him in his library office (books have been in storage to make room for temporary administrative offices until a suitable admin- istration building can be erect- ed) it was nearly impossible to move amidst the clutter of com- Muter print-outs. On his desk was a small computer unit. It was hooked up with similar; consoles used by associates to figure out anything from log- rithm to square root. "Its k e y feature is a memory unit," ex- plained Dr. Pond while show- ing me the $6,000 machine. But all this careful statistical' planning for the future does little for present-day S t o n y Brook students who are justifi- ably upset over everything. All the classic problems of ar es- tablished university are afflict- ing young Stony Brook. There is tripling in the dormitories, horrendous architecture (o v e r $900,000 was invested this year to beautify six-year-old build- ings), and inadequate library facilities. But exactly what is the fu- ture Stony Brook? Dr. Pond is quite clear: "Boston is welcome to the engineering industry, Berkeley is welcome to the ni~c- lear industry, we'd like the edu- cation industry. We are sitting on the crest of a large educa- tion boom. People are spend- ing zillions to educate the young. Big corporations are in- vesting in the field. We've got top consultants here. who are already getting into it." They will preoccupy them- selves with statistics, not stu- dents; put administrators first and library books; second; and see research for big business as a way to gain stature in the academic 'world. Time, with its vested interest in the "edu- cation business", will come up with reprintable cover paens. There will be no students pictured amidst the shots of glittering architecture. For the students have become only an, appendix to the educational system,. When they kick up, ad- ministrators can easily cut them out of this brave new world. 001 If you are interested in working with money on the Business Staff, come in and see either JANE or SUE any afternoon at The Michigan Daily, second floor, Student Publications Oldg,, 420 Maynard St. f ,,, i S X t 5 .T.:. . > D ANN ARBOR LANDLOItDS' FALL EXPLOITATION reservations are now being accepted for opts. with these features: *12 month luxury slum occupancy 0 millionaires' rent * do-it-yourself fun maintenance plus other benefits which make Ann Arbor landlords the nation's fattest SUBLET FROM STRIKERS ONLY Central Student Judiciarype 3seats open for GRADUATE Students Sign up for interviews at SGC Offices, first floor SAB by Tues., Feb. 4th a 49 49 They Have One More Chance But will they use it? COME TO A MASS MEETING TO DISCUSS FACULTY ACTION AT THEIR MONDAY MEETING. } : 1