The University Record, February 14, 2000 Editor’s Note: The information in this article was current as of the Record’s press deadline Feb. 11.
By Jane R. Elgass

A poster proclaiming “The Shadows Now Emerge, Now Is the Time to Fight,” displayed at a Feb. 10 rally was reflective of rally and protest events last week that included an around-the-clock sit-in in a tower room at the Michigan Union.
Representatives of the Students of Color Coalition began occupying space used by three groups collectively called the Tower Societies—Michigamua Senior Society, Phoenix and the Vulcans—on Feb. 6. The students have indicated they will stay in the tower until the University addresses their concerns.
Their move into the tower followed the presentation to University officials on Feb. 4 of a detailed petition that outlined a wide range of concerns, from increased space and funding for minority programs to a request to drop the use of the term “African American” in all University communications.
The petition asks the University “to sever all affiliation with and subsidy of the secret society Michigamua, which continues its offensive and culturally destructive appropriation of Native American culture through the use of its name.”
Michigamua, formed in 1902, has been meeting in the tower space since 1919, the year the Union was completed.
Five top administrators met with some students Feb. 10—President Lee C. Bollinger, Provost Nancy Cantor, Interim Vice President for Student Affairs Royster Harper, Associate Provost Lester Monts and John Matlock, assistant provost and director of the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives.
Bollinger and Cantor hope to arrange a meeting sometime this week with representatives of the coalition that will provide an opportunity for an in-depth discussion of the issues the students have raised.
“We want to meet with representatives of the coalition as soon as we can for a thoughtful and thorough discussion,” Cantor said.
While the focus of several rallies was the University’s relationship with Michigamua, the coalition identified other concerns in the petition.
Items the coalition is asking for include:
“An immediate and substantial increase in the number of faculty of color who are tenured at this institution, as well as the development of a program intended to accelerate the tenuring process of faculty of color.”
“An immediate and substantial increase in the number of tenured CAAS faculty.”
“Formal recognition of the Arab-American community on campus, particularly through the inclusion of “Arab-American” as a classification within applications to the University of Michigan.”
“An immediate increase in the number of courses offered within each Ethnic Studies program.”
“The immediate implementation of Native American Studies, Asian Pacific American Studies and Latino Studies as degree-granting programs within the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts.”
“The inclusion of all Ethnic Studies/CAAS courses to fill this requirement.”
“The provision of records of racial profiling within the Department of Public Safety, with regards to traffic violations, citations of misconduct, et cetera.”