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Hayakawa gains student support By Donald B. Thackrey SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, (he 5-fool-6 act¬ ing president of San Francisco State College, stood about lOfeet tall today with his blue-ribboned 18,000-siudent campus virtually Idled for three weeks, promised another attempt would be made The famed semantlclst began inn," and "fascist." As .rmed about him, Haya- rned sternly, "Don't you Before the day was over, he suspended five student activist leaders, notified one professor he would not be given tenure on the campus, and said police had ar¬ rested four persons and issuec warrants for eight others. George Murray, whose original urging minorities m campus touched Murray ;old a not struggle will seize tl •Like Chairman It pigs cannot defeat th people," Murray sh bullhorn. "All powe pie." members, some wi ribbons to indicate tl of Hayakawa's actio will of the their scheduled classes. bons on their arms, made efforts to disrupt the classes after the noon rally but found columns of police stationed outside the doors lUlldlngs. clods. Hawakawa assigns Murray non-teaching job to prepare English course for disadvantaged RANC1SCO (UPI ing president S. I. Hayakawa yesterday assigned George Ma¬ son Murray to a new nonteach- San Murray Is the part-time Eng¬ lish teacher, graduate student and Black Panther whose fiery speeches led lo his and touched off the c dMur new job Is to prepare a course of instruction for teaching English to disadvantaged students. The acting president has also told Murray that findings and recommendations from the fac¬ ulty Academic Discipline Com¬ mittee on unprofessional con- tiarges he violat campus regulations. Murray was suspended fro "No praised police handling of lobe.' Among the suspended students were Roger Alvaradoof theThlrd World Liberation Front, John Le¬ vin of the Students for a Demo¬ cratic Society, and Jerry Varnar- ;o of tl' | Black Studen The professor who » : reinstatement Is one of 10 nands served by the Black dents Union. protesting li pus matters by the state college board of trustees. "1 can promise the public, the bances continue," said Hayakawa. Gov. Ronald Reagan, an out- at state-supported colleges, said the reopening by Hayakawa. "I think we've found the man," Reagan said. The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 54 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1968 Foreign study, travel la Raza'chair plan offered by sis Senate airs 12 Chicano categories: facl struction, farm selling, child demands; most are OKd d presented again I gram. Miss Bonnlng, ateacherat Edison High School, spent the summer as a cook and chamber¬ maid at a Danish guest farm. The goal of [SIS Is to promote international relationships by having people work and live to¬ gether. Last year over 1,000 young Americans participated in Any student from tl Iclpate In the progr: i foreign language. She said that In most of the places she vlslt- sd the natives spoke English. A distinct advantage of the Jobs Abroad Program is that a job is guaranteed to those who are ac¬ cepted and salaries are the same as those paid to the local cit¬ izens.. But the best thing about it, according to Miss Bonnlng, is the opportunity to see Europe In your Practically every Item on the list of 12 has either been insti¬ tuted or is under consideration. bers of Mexican-American de¬ scent, expanding the Educational Opportunities Program, and set¬ ting aside the week of May 5 as Ball Saturday Queen's coronation set night. [he identity of the 1 10:30 Saturday mad. x finalists will appear before a team of judges at the annual Queen's Tea tomorrow after¬ noon from 3-5 at the home of FSC President Frederic W. Ness. The flnalsts Include Patricia Boone, MarieCam- popiano,- pattl Flrpo, Linda palmer, Marcl Seher and Jan Yanehlro. They were selected as finalists The co-planners said dress will be either long or short formals for coeds and suits for men. The coronation will take place at 10:30 with 1967-68 Campus Queen Linda Hermann crowning e progress students, outlined I He said the LaRa/.a chair would be implemented as soon as a qualified person can he found to conduct the program. He added e professor s of c s willbi offered plan. The program would be slm to the Black Studies Chair^wt began this year. Albright said the college Is recruiting for a positlor to the dean of students h will t led by one of Me: dltlon, he said, three more Chicano faculty members have been hired this year and attempts are being made to hire more. ■ Funds permitting, Albright said, the EOP plan at FSC will accept 150 new students this fall. The program Is federally funded. Other demands which ha\e been approved Include a special room in the Colleg- Union for Chicano students and establishing the May '5 as "La Raza Week." rttnez, a spokes from a field of 11 during last week's campus-wide voting. Everything will culminate Saturday night at the . Ball. Co-chairmen Rita Shattuck and Georgia Lund tlvitles would Include five gener¬ al assemblies, concerts, poetry reading, an exhibits and dances. The plans are still In the for¬ mative stage, he emphasized, and could be staged with little or no expense to FSC.Several senators apparently mistook Martinez' ap¬ pearance as a plea for funds but the MASA spokesman said funding was still something that had not been finalized and reminded the is they w n to appear. le said once a budget is worked . the planners for the cele- itlnn willthendeterminelfthey Senator John Walke ol It passed with one abstention, discussed oth- Th< Ich inc quest for complimentary tickets to campus functions for under¬ privileged segments of the entire community; formatlonof a soccer team at FSC to encourage Chi¬ cano participation (this Item was referred to the Board on Athletics for further consideration); and creation of a library position to establish a special collection of books on LaRaza (a committee was formed to confer with Li¬ brarian Henry Madden on the feasibility of adding a shelf in the books on LaRaza). ' The only demand that was com¬ pletely rejected was the one for a Student Senate position for Chi¬ cano representation. This re¬ quest was shot down by a student body vote earlier this semester. More than 100 students sat In the gallery at the meeting but many left before the session was an hour and a half old.
Object Description
Title | 1968_12 The Daily Collegian December 1968 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Dec 3, 1968 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | Hayakawa gains student support By Donald B. Thackrey SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, (he 5-fool-6 act¬ ing president of San Francisco State College, stood about lOfeet tall today with his blue-ribboned 18,000-siudent campus virtually Idled for three weeks, promised another attempt would be made The famed semantlclst began inn," and "fascist." As .rmed about him, Haya- rned sternly, "Don't you Before the day was over, he suspended five student activist leaders, notified one professor he would not be given tenure on the campus, and said police had ar¬ rested four persons and issuec warrants for eight others. George Murray, whose original urging minorities m campus touched Murray ;old a not struggle will seize tl •Like Chairman It pigs cannot defeat th people," Murray sh bullhorn. "All powe pie." members, some wi ribbons to indicate tl of Hayakawa's actio will of the their scheduled classes. bons on their arms, made efforts to disrupt the classes after the noon rally but found columns of police stationed outside the doors lUlldlngs. clods. Hawakawa assigns Murray non-teaching job to prepare English course for disadvantaged RANC1SCO (UPI ing president S. I. Hayakawa yesterday assigned George Ma¬ son Murray to a new nonteach- San Murray Is the part-time Eng¬ lish teacher, graduate student and Black Panther whose fiery speeches led lo his and touched off the c dMur new job Is to prepare a course of instruction for teaching English to disadvantaged students. The acting president has also told Murray that findings and recommendations from the fac¬ ulty Academic Discipline Com¬ mittee on unprofessional con- tiarges he violat campus regulations. Murray was suspended fro "No praised police handling of lobe.' Among the suspended students were Roger Alvaradoof theThlrd World Liberation Front, John Le¬ vin of the Students for a Demo¬ cratic Society, and Jerry Varnar- ;o of tl' | Black Studen The professor who » : reinstatement Is one of 10 nands served by the Black dents Union. protesting li pus matters by the state college board of trustees. "1 can promise the public, the bances continue," said Hayakawa. Gov. Ronald Reagan, an out- at state-supported colleges, said the reopening by Hayakawa. "I think we've found the man," Reagan said. The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 54 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1968 Foreign study, travel la Raza'chair plan offered by sis Senate airs 12 Chicano categories: facl struction, farm selling, child demands; most are OKd d presented again I gram. Miss Bonnlng, ateacherat Edison High School, spent the summer as a cook and chamber¬ maid at a Danish guest farm. The goal of [SIS Is to promote international relationships by having people work and live to¬ gether. Last year over 1,000 young Americans participated in Any student from tl Iclpate In the progr: i foreign language. She said that In most of the places she vlslt- sd the natives spoke English. A distinct advantage of the Jobs Abroad Program is that a job is guaranteed to those who are ac¬ cepted and salaries are the same as those paid to the local cit¬ izens.. But the best thing about it, according to Miss Bonnlng, is the opportunity to see Europe In your Practically every Item on the list of 12 has either been insti¬ tuted or is under consideration. bers of Mexican-American de¬ scent, expanding the Educational Opportunities Program, and set¬ ting aside the week of May 5 as Ball Saturday Queen's coronation set night. [he identity of the 1 10:30 Saturday mad. x finalists will appear before a team of judges at the annual Queen's Tea tomorrow after¬ noon from 3-5 at the home of FSC President Frederic W. Ness. The flnalsts Include Patricia Boone, MarieCam- popiano,- pattl Flrpo, Linda palmer, Marcl Seher and Jan Yanehlro. They were selected as finalists The co-planners said dress will be either long or short formals for coeds and suits for men. The coronation will take place at 10:30 with 1967-68 Campus Queen Linda Hermann crowning e progress students, outlined I He said the LaRa/.a chair would be implemented as soon as a qualified person can he found to conduct the program. He added e professor s of c s willbi offered plan. The program would be slm to the Black Studies Chair^wt began this year. Albright said the college Is recruiting for a positlor to the dean of students h will t led by one of Me: dltlon, he said, three more Chicano faculty members have been hired this year and attempts are being made to hire more. ■ Funds permitting, Albright said, the EOP plan at FSC will accept 150 new students this fall. The program Is federally funded. Other demands which ha\e been approved Include a special room in the Colleg- Union for Chicano students and establishing the May '5 as "La Raza Week." rttnez, a spokes from a field of 11 during last week's campus-wide voting. Everything will culminate Saturday night at the . Ball. Co-chairmen Rita Shattuck and Georgia Lund tlvitles would Include five gener¬ al assemblies, concerts, poetry reading, an exhibits and dances. The plans are still In the for¬ mative stage, he emphasized, and could be staged with little or no expense to FSC.Several senators apparently mistook Martinez' ap¬ pearance as a plea for funds but the MASA spokesman said funding was still something that had not been finalized and reminded the is they w n to appear. le said once a budget is worked . the planners for the cele- itlnn willthendeterminelfthey Senator John Walke ol It passed with one abstention, discussed oth- Th< Ich inc quest for complimentary tickets to campus functions for under¬ privileged segments of the entire community; formatlonof a soccer team at FSC to encourage Chi¬ cano participation (this Item was referred to the Board on Athletics for further consideration); and creation of a library position to establish a special collection of books on LaRaza (a committee was formed to confer with Li¬ brarian Henry Madden on the feasibility of adding a shelf in the books on LaRaza). ' The only demand that was com¬ pletely rejected was the one for a Student Senate position for Chi¬ cano representation. This re¬ quest was shot down by a student body vote earlier this semester. More than 100 students sat In the gallery at the meeting but many left before the session was an hour and a half old. |