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ROOM OF ONE’S OWN: Students
push to expand the BCSC.
Andrea Cox/Stanford Daily
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as of june, the
Fleet Street Singers were homeless. They had to move out
of the dorm basement room where they’d held meetings, bumped
their heads on low-hanging pipes and listened to the sounds
of flushing toilets for the past five years.
“I operated under the assumption that somewhere on this
humongous campus there was a closet that someone wasn’t
using,” says business manager Matan Shacham, ’05. “I’m
not sure that’s true anymore.”
At
the Black Community Services Center, the 10 student
staff have to work rotating schedules because the computer
cluster is cramped. Meetings of more than 15 students
have to be scheduled at El Centro Chicano or Ujamaa,
the African-American
theme house. A student-led proposal to expand the center
to 2,500 square feet has been approved by the University,
but
$1 million will have to be raised from donors before
construction can begin.
All across campus, many of Stanford’s 600-plus student
groups are having similar problems finding space. Performing
arts troupes rehearse in a one-room trailer on the
Knoll that leaks and has little heat. Windsurfing and
kayaking groups
are storing gear in student cars. Many organizations
make do by reserving whatever meeting room is available
on any given
day. “If you’re an a cappella group, it’s
not that problematic,” says Nanci Howe, assistant
dean of students and director of student activities. “But
if you’re a drama group needing to block out scenes,
having to move from space to space isn’t particularly
helpful.”
Vice provost for student affairs Gene Awakuni
says he was “really
appalled” at the space situation when he arrived
on campus in January 2002. He has since convened a
student activity space
task force, which has developed a master plan. First
up: reclaim Old Union for use by student organizations
(the Office of Undergraduate
Admission and the Financial Aid Office will move to
the Bakewell building on Galvez Street). Next, turn
White Plaza into a dynamic
town square that serves as the hub of student activity,
and revamp Tresidder Union (including new food vendors).
The
University has approved the task force’s recommendations,
which will require raising $20 million to $30 million
and could take 10 years to complete. “But there’s
never been a master plan that looked at the central
campus space,” Awakuni
says. Or one that held out the possibility of warm
Krispy Kreme doughnuts in the student union.
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