Chuo’s move to Tama campus, a turning point for Herald By Masafumi Hayafune

   I entered Chuo University in 1976, well aware that the school was set to move to the new Tama campus at Hachioji in Tokyo’s western suburbs two years later. But I was surprised to find out that there was no consensus on the move among the students, particularly among those engaged in extracurricular club activities. My surprise turned bigger when I joined Hakumon Herald at the suggestion of my friend Shoichi Mikami a year later and knew more about student club activities. The brochure handed out to the newcomers told me Chuo had a number of sports, cultural and academic clubs. But I soon learned that many of them had been either extinct or dormant since the Student Hall was locked out amid the campus dispute in the early 70s. Those that remained active had no rooms. Many of them put tables and chairs in a narrow space near the canteen or at the stair case landing to create a place where their members could meet together.

 

And yet the school authorities held fast to their plan to move to the new campus. They were keen to normalize the functions of the Alumni Association (Gakuyukai) that had beenmarred during the prolonged campus turmoil and reconstruct the activities of various student clubs affiliated with it. They recognized some of the disqualified clubs controlled by what they saw as radical members – a move apparently aimed at winning them over to their side and keeping down the student activity that could be an obstacle to the campus relocation scheme.

 

In April 1977, Hakumon Herald was allowed to use its semi-underground club room at the old Surugadai campus in Ochanomizu. The decision was based on the school authorities’ policy to rehabilitate some of the weakened academic and cultural clubs affiliated with Gakuyukai. A major issue popped up here, however. The school authorities pressed individual clubs to sign what they called a written pledge. I cannot remember specifically what we were supposed to pledge. I vaguely recall that students were required to regret what they had done during their campus dispute. Hakumon Herald signed a pledge and got in return Gakuyukai’s assurances that it would have its own room after the school’s move to Tama.

 

After that, Gakuyukai resumed disbursing its financial subsidies which had been suspended from 1969 through 1977.

 

I assume that Chuo decided to move to the remote campus in accordance with the government’s policy to stem the excessive concentration of universities in the center of the metropolitan capital. In today’s idea, much of the problem would have been resolved by building high-rise or satellite school buildings.

 

The violent student movement calmed down in the latter half of the 70s. But Chuo’s

Surugadai campus turned clamorous again in the fall of 1977 amid the student campaign to oppose the campus relocation and the construction of Narita airport. But I remember that various student campaigns died down shortly after Chuo moved to Tama. Perhaps the new campus was too spacious to keep the students closely united. Anyway it was a good memory for me to have experienced two contrastingly different lives at the Surugadai and Tama campuses.

(The writer graduated in 1980)

 

 

 

校舎の多摩移転で転機迎えたヘラルド

―学生運動も鎮静化へ―

早船 雅文

2年後は多摩校舎に移転すると理解して1976年に中央大学に入学した私にとって、多摩移転へのコンセンサスが、特にサークル活動をする学生の間には得られていない ことに最初は驚きました。翌年、白門ヘラルドに同期の三上(正一)氏に誘われて入部 したとき、それまでの中央大学のサークル活動について知ることになり、さらに驚きまし た。69年の学生会館のロックアウト以降、入学案内に書かれていたサークルの大半は 消滅、あるいは活動を停止していたり、活動しているサークルも部室などの拠点がなく、 食堂や階段の踊り場など空いているスペースに机・椅子を置いて顔を合わせたりして いるところが多かったのです。

 

それでも大学当局は多摩移転をめざし、学友会体制を正常化すべく、学友会内の 各連盟の再建に着手し始めました。これは、多摩移転の障害になる反対運動を鎮静 化させるため、運動の核になっているメンバーがいるサークルを大学当局が認めること によって弱体化させようとした理由もあったでしょう。

 

774月、ヘラルドは当時の大学2号館地下のサークル室を使用することができる ようになりました。学術連盟の再建、そしてヘラルドが属している文化連盟の再建にも 着手したのですが、ここで問題になることがありました。69年以降の大学当局と個別サークルとの取り決めの「確約書・合意書」を交わすことです。内容としては、69年のよう な状態にならないように反省することだったようですが、よく思い出せません。しかし結 局、英字新聞学会はこの合意書にサインし、多摩移転後の部室を確保することになり ました。

 

また、この合意によって69年から77年まで支給停止していた活動費が大学からもらえるようにもなりました。

 

多摩移転は、大学の都心集中の解消という当時の国の政策に乗ったこともあったと 思いますが、今の発想ならば、校舎の高層化とサテライトの充実で対応できたのではと 感じています。70年代後半に鎮静化していた学生運動ですが、77年秋ごろの駿河台 キャンパスでは移転反対闘争や成田闘争などで依然騒々しさが続いていました。それ が多摩校舎移転後はキャンパスが広すぎることもあって、さまざまな学生運動が消えて いったような気がします。いずれにしても、私にとって駿河台と多摩の2つのキャンパス を経験できたことが、良い思い出になっています。(昭和55年卒)