Notes of Revolt


Hunter Students SEEK Justice

by Christopher Day

The crowd of several hundred students stood silently, with their backs turned, as the provost of New York City's Hunter College, Laura F. Strumingher, tried to convince them that her plan to gut the SEEK program was in their interests. Unconvinced, a chant of "Hands off SEEK!" rose up from the students. Blanc began to storm off, restrained only by her advisers, who had a better understanding of what this protest meant. One by one, organizers of the protest took the microphone and spelled out the implications of the plan, as Blanc sputtered "You're being manipulated" to the students.

What was most exciting about the protest and the ensuing organizing activity is that it was all initiated by SEEK students themselves, and not by the student government bureaucrats who dominate the political life of Hunter. The main organizers were tutors, SEEK students who had succeeded in college and were now assisting other students. Only a handful of non-SEEK students came around for the organizing work.

Another exciting thing about this protest is how it has laid the groundwork for a mass, militant response to the latest round of cuts in financial aid, class closings, teacher layoffs, and tuition increases under the budget proposed by New York governor George Pataki. Previous budget cuts and tuition increases have resulted in city-wide student strikes. In 1989 these strikes defeated a proposed tuition increase. In 1991 the strike movement did not succeed (see "Student Strike Rocks New York," Love and Rage Vol. 2 No. 5, May 1991).

The SEEK program is the main mechanism used by the City University of New York (CUNY), of which Hunter College is a part, to guarantee open admission to New York City high school graduates who do not meet the ordinary entrance requirements. SEEK provides special remedial and developmental courses through an independent Department of Academic Skills, which allows SEEK students to receive financial aid without taking a full credit load. SEEK also guarantees financial aid for five years, provides tutoring, and generally assists students in surviving in an often hostile environment. The vast majority of SEEK students are students of color, often the first members of their families to go to college.

The plan to gut SEEK is the result of a demand by CUNY that each college "restructure" its SEEK program. Most CUNY schools have already done so, but the director of the SEEK program at Hunter refused to go along with these demands; he was replaced by a more compliant director, who promptly produced the demanded "restructuring proposal." The essence of the proposal was to transfer all the faculty out of the Department of Academic Skills into the English and Math Departments, and to force SEEK students to take regular remedial courses. A regular remedial course load does not qualify a student for financial aid, so SEEK students would be effectively forced to take non-remedial courses, which they are not prepared for, at the same time as their remedial courses. The proposal is a one-two punch to the SEEK program that would make its elimination during future budget cuts a virtual certainty. The proposal simultaneously sets SEEK students up for failure and breaks up the institutional weight of the SEEK faculty, also largely people of color, by forcing them into overwhelmingly white departments.

The college administration has attempted to sell the plan as one motivated by a desire to "desegregate" the two distinct remedial programs and to diversify the English and Math Departments. But the plan was developed in consultation with the English and Math faculty behind the backs of the SEEK faculty. The administration argues that the separate SEEK courses attach a stigma to the students who take them, and that this (not the crappy educations they got in high school) accounts for their high attrition rate. But the SEEK students themselves are fiercely loyal to the program because they know that, for all of its deficiencies, it is their best chance to escape lives of grinding poverty.

The proposal was sprung on the SEEK students just two weeks before the end of the fall semester, as students were preparing for finals. In spite of this, there was a flurry of organizing activity, including the protest and a later mass meeting in the middle of finals. It appears that much of the implementation took place during winter break, and it is unclear at this writing, in the first week of the spring semester, if there will be any more resistance.

The fight to defend SEEK at Hunter may be over. If so, it is an important preface to the coming battle against the budget cuts. In a few short weeks, SEEK students demonstrated their capacity to organize a defiant, democratic mass movement on campus. That experience will prove to be of great value in building the sort of movement it will take to defeat this next round of budget cuts in NY and everywhere else.


IWW to Open Ben Fletcher Center in Philadelphia

The Philadelphia IWW is proud to announce its newest acquisition, the Ben Fletcher Center, a 4500-square-foot union hall and community center. Located at 1652 Ridge Ave., it is located on the northern edge of Center City Philadelphia, in a community called Francisville. The neighborhood is primarily African-American and Latino, and is accessible to Temple University and other area schools, as well as convenient to public transportation.

Since early December Philadelphia wobblies and friends have been hard at work on the renovation of the building, and it is expected that the center will officially open its doors in early April. Plans for the center include: (a) a 1260-sq.-foot reading room with a broad selection of IWW and progressive literature; (b) a public-access internet site with multiple terminals, and part of the local freenet system that is being put together by local wobblies; (c) a homeless/squatter support center with showers, washer/dryer, toilet facilities, and mail and phone services; (d) a kitchen for use by the three local Food Not Bombs groups (West Philadelphia, Francisville, and Kensington); (e) a small printing plant with presses, copiers, and desktop-publishing facilities; (f) a 950-sq.-ft. hall for use as a meeting hall, dance and music hall, and practice space, also available for use by outside groups; (g) transitional housing for up to six IWW members and traveling organizers, including kitchen and common space.

Repairs have been proceeding ahead of schedule, and support from the IWW and the Philadelphia community have been instrumental in making the center a reality. In conjunction with the repairs and renovations of the hall, we have started distributing shoes left on site to workers and unemployed in Philadelphia, and expect to continue distributing the nearly 5000 pairs through the Spring and Summer. Approximately 100 pairs of sneakers have also been sent to Grenada for use by the many survivors of US imperialism on the island.


Smashing Capitalism in New York

We received the following in the mail:

Communique

Dear Compas,

In response to the Mexican government choosing to employ military action against the Zapatistas, we found it necessary on Sunday, Feb. 12, 1995, to carry out acts of sabotage against the New York branches of Bancomer and Banco Mexicano. In addition, numerous branches of Chase Manhattan Bank were hit. Chase has taken a particularly aggressive role in pushing the Mexican government to take military action against the people of Chiapas and the EZLN.

The New York Police Department offered no resistance. We take these actions in solidarity with the people of Chiapas.

¡La Lucha Continúa!
Chase Out Of Chiapas!


Calendar

April 9, Sun.
National Pro-Choice Mobilization
in Washington, DC
Call (718) 834-9077
for Anarchist Contingent Information

April 19-23, Wed.-Sun.
Disrupt Human Life International's
anti-choice conference in Montréal!
Fascists from around the world beware!
Info: (514) 848-7431
(514) 596-7094

May 19-21
Arrowbear Anarchist Conference
A gathering in a small mountain
community two hours east of LA.
Info: (310) 490-7284

June 2-4, New York City
Social Ecology and the Urban Alternative
The Annual Conference of
the Institute for Social Ecology
Info: (718) 963-4839
(718) 832-3609


Other Anti-Authoritarian/Anti-Imperialist Periodicals

Free Society
PO Box 35
Stuyvesant Station
New York, NY 10009
The new 46 page issue of this anarchist
journal of radical theory is out now.
Now produced in New York City.
$2 by mail.

Black Autonomy
323 Broadway Ave. E
Box #914
Seattle, WA 98102
14 page newspaper of the
Federation of Black Community Partisans.
Black history, direct action
and prisoner support.
Issue #2 is available now.
$1 by mail.

Colonial War Review
Box 25, 197
Hunter St. W.
Peterborough, Ontario K9H 2L1
Publication of the Anti-Colonial Action
Alliance, lots of information on
Native resistance and other issues.
Currently on issue #3.
$2.50 by mail
free to prisoners.