Senior Seeks ?s I State Position Mrs. Hubbard To Speak Students Seek More Books, to sari jaw State, made a trip nomination as: sacrament to seek California state poet , ast ,adiciate for Midnight Hours for Library
Tuesday. On :; uzeite Africans' Self-View by Jan' jalaiston, accompained By \ FARMER two days in Sacramento, present- kinds of books are needed has sophomore from Coed Man- i By MANUEL ROBLES expected to A I elean layman's opitu, or , A broach.' ,,tection of booksl ing their requests to legislators been wrong." astioat clow, os backed by Walter Dahl, Mrs. Margaret Carson Hubbard, former the future of the country. and midnight hours are needed! and Glenn Anderson, lieutenant The seven started visiting offi- .h the city Oakland, who i U.S. vice consul lomblyman from to the Union of South Africa Mrs. Hubbard's first contact with African for San Jose State's library. governor, a member of the college cials in Sacramento while viewing ; ear or and a resolution nominating! an authority on African domestic affairs, problems same in 1922, when she journeyed This is the view of seven SJS system's board of trustees. state government in action, a part rturnIsri osored a all talk on "As Africans See Africa" today to that country and lived for three years. students, who of a political science project. [ist 1.tr- yesterday asked for HIGHER all W.', has been tas.i, at 12:30 p.m. in Monis Dailey auditorium. SOURCE e The position studying wildlife, in the bush country of North- a letter-waiting campaign to back SEE ASSEMBLYMAN fleNif Poet Laureate Gor- Her hour-long "We know we are, in a sense, once former lecture, sponsored by the ern Rhodesia and Portuguese West Africa. up a weekend of visiting among Besides the lieutenant governor, IC dePartiro,., traf- going over the head of the SJS William Norris died in a college lecture committee, will lye free tat stu- ENVOYOF U.S. Sacrtunentu officials and state the seven saw Assemblyman iormally dan administration, Fred Branstetter, in December. The dents, faculty and the public. That trip aroused the giant legislators. s. fic accident her interest in one of the seven, said yesterday. Thomas M. Reese a-J-1,os Angeles) is tot expected to make A student of African affairs since 1922, continent and caused more Olatinv her to return many The seven are also asking SJS "But we feel a word froni Sac- who sits on a subcommittee now it is until next year. Mrs. Hubbard is expected to discuss the chal- times, once a ielection as an envoy of the United States. student organizations to pass reso- ramento would aid the considera- studying college budgets. An item receive his abut to Sacramen,o lenge of development needs of Africa and its the r- During From 1943 to 1945, Mrs. Hubbard worked lotions requesting the new hours tion of our ideas." pending in the state's budget is ile" 21, left a sampling of political, economic, and social diversities, with the US. empl4a, jubmon. Military intelligence in Wash- and book suggestions. The seven students are asking $153.000 for SJS library books. with Gov. Pat Brown and which pose monumental problems to the Unit- ington, !assort( dealing with African affairs. In 1945. that the reserve bookroom remain Reese contacted the chancellor's embers of the legislature. He ed Nations as well as to this country. she EXTEND HOURS was transferred to the State department open from 7:30 a.m, until mid- office concerning the student com- he is compiling a folder of LIVED IN AFRICA and Tau Delta Pi, SJS honor fra- sent to the Union of South Africa as vice night daily except Saturday. plaints, Branstetter said. rock to be given all assembly Mrs. Hubbard, who has lived and traveled consul. ternity, today passed a resolution his work Branstetter also charged that Leading the student forey into :RANCE extensively in the African hinterlands, 1 calling for "proper utilization of members, has Mrs. Hubbard's writings on Africa have the SJS library "lacked the Sacramento was Tom Bruneau, de. Johnston ! the school facilities ... prop-