Yes, 360 will be around for a long time, but I don't know how much rock WBRU is these days. Going back to "Royals", it's described in Wikipedia as being in 3 kinds of pop & the only rock reference was a year-end countdown for Billboard where it placed 3rd. I think that speaks volume about rock itself these days: it's following jazz into oblivion, sadly. Maybe 'BRU can't be anything but a rockish Hot A.C. because the music isn't there anymore. Even 10-15 years ago, you had solid rock from Weezer, The Killers, Franz Ferdinand, Jet, et al. This decade hasn't been good for rock. Even 2009's "The Reeling" by Passion Pit was a borderline rock/pop tune, but a good one. If Lorde's "Royals" was a song of the year, a song that has been played on Hot A.C. stations as well as stations like Fun 107, that says a lot about a "modern rock" station that is playing it.
I agree that the format will remain along with the 360 programming on Sunday, which I do enjoy. But, my sadness come from the fact that I hear the same songs played on WBRU as I do on Hot A.C. stations. I expect WBRU to be different & less poppy.
One final thing: in the summer of 1995, when I was about to get my driver's license, I interned at WBRU-AMcc/600, the student station. I rewired the board from mono to stereo as they were going on to F.M. 96.5. That was my first real assignment in radio. So, it's not like this is an ad-hominem attack on WBRU or something to just ruffle feathers. It hurts to see my alma mater sound like Pro-FM.