The Linguistics department will keep its current status as a department and not be reduced to a committee, Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles announced yesterday.
Knowles also reported to the Faculty Council that Potebnja Professor of Ukrainian Philology Michael S. Flier will take over as Linguistics department chair July 1.
"I think it will have a very positive effect, not only at Harvard," Flier said of the decision to maintain the department, "but also for linguistics all over the country."
"There was a lot of concern," Flier said, "because linguistics has a long tradition at Harvard."
The decision came after the April 5 recommendations of an advisory committee which examined how the Knowles established the advisory committee lastfall, setting off a string of complaints bylinguistics concentrators at Harvard and linguistsnationwide. The advisory committee did not address whetherthe department should actually become a committeebut instead discussed how such a move would beimplemented, said committee chair and Professor ofPhilosophy Warren D. Goldfarb '69. "Presumably what happened was that afterreading the report, the dean decided not toconvert the department into a committee," Goldfarbsaid. "It seems to be a good direction." After receiving the report of the advisorycommittee, Knowles also said departmental statusremained the best alternative. "The implication of their findings is that awell-functioning department would better serve ourinstructional needs than any of the alternativesconsidered," Knowles said. Along with the assurance of departmentalstatus, the Linguistics department will alsoreceive two new senior faculty appointments, Fliersaid. "They have committed the University to twosenior appointments," Flier said, "which is a verystrong commitment and a strong signal thatLinguistics is alive and well and moving on." "In these hard times, Harvard decided thatindeed the enterprise is worthwhile," Flier said. Flier said he hopes that a search committee forthe first new position will begin meeting thissummer. The committee will include three membersfrom outside the University and two members fromHarvard, including Flier, who will serve as chair. "We might hope to get someone here by the fallof '95, in the best possible scenario," Flier saidof the search for the first candidate. Linguistics concentrator Sara K. LaRoche '95said Wednesday's decision came as a positive step. Read more in News