Dr. Dusel, Students Clash in Hansen Case
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Polls Show Voting Up PA RTAN DA I LY II"' SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE In Run-Off -k+sTte SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA 95114, THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1968 No. 121 Voting is higher in this week's run-off election for ASH president and treasurer than it was in last week's general elections. The total vote was 2,893 for yesterday, according to Noreen Futter, Election Board chairman. Today is the last day for voting Dr. Dusel, Students at the three poll positions on campus. Last week, on the first day of voting more than 1,800 students cast their ballots. In last year's record breaking turnout of Clash in Hansen Case Photo by Dennis Dougherty over 5,700, some 2,000 students had voted by 2 p.m. of the first day. By GINA TRAEGER The Judiciary's decisions were the Judiciary sets its own policy QUEEN FINALISTS of the International Queen Anne Jehle, senior French major representing Polls on Seventh Street and in Spartan Daily Staff Writer the result of investigating Han- within the limits of the Constitu- contest are, left to right, Mimi Rodes, sopho- France. Not pictured is Margaret Penniman, front of Morris Dailey Auditorium sen's claim that Flick violated tion. more Spanish major representing Colombia; sophomore French major representing Switzer- Dr. William Dusel, executive his will close at 7:30 tonight. The poll rights as outlined in the newly The associate justices,were con- Virginia Moy, senior business education major land. One of these young ladies will be crowned vice president, went around in cir- by the bookstore will close at 4:30. adopted President's Interim State- cerned with Hansen's rights. The representing the U.S.; Sri Hartono, freshman International Queen at the International Ball cles yesterday morning with repre- Noreen Futter, Election Board ment on Student's Rights and Re- .Tudiciary had decided Flick vio- chemistry major representing Indonesia; and Friday night. See story of Ball on page three. sentatives of the ASB Judiciary. chairman, said yesterday, "I am spansibilities. lated the Rights document in the very pleased with the turnout to- He informed Lewis Solitske, Ju- Dusel claimed the recommenda- method he used to oust Hansen. day. Checking student body cards, diciary chief justice and Grady tions were unenforceable because we notice that about one of three Robertson, associate justice, that STUDENT RIGHTS the rights of Flick as a faculty students who voted today did not the Judiciary's recommendations Han- member were in jeopardy. "Dr. "It's beyond question that Open-End Gripe Session Aim: vote in last week's elections." concerning the reinstatement of sons' student rights were violated. Flick hasn't been given his rights A Spartan Daily check of some Earl Hansen, senior speech major, that these of defense of his professional It is most important of the students who voted indi- to KSJS-FM could not be enforced. judgment through the Academic rights be recognized," said Robert- cated students were spurred on to Instead, he asked the Judiciary Council," he said. son. vote this week because they had to accept the responsibility to Dusel said his nu,ggestion for the 'More a chance to hear the candidates bring together Hansen, and Dr. individuals to meet and talk Responsive Education' two FACT-FINDING in an ASB sponsored debate Tues- Clarence Flick, general manager- things over between themselves "Education has become so mas- "This system has de-humanized Gripe Session" which will take day afternoon, and a radio debate advisor for KSJS, who suspended Dusel said the Judiciary should was better than having matters education how can sive that the student all too often we beat it?" place in faculty cafeteria A and B the same night on KSJS-FM. Hansen from the station, earlier only have acted at a fact-finding tied up in hearings. he asks. at 2:30 senses, quite realistically, that he p.m. The presidential candidate s, this semester. board concerned with reporting "The Judiciary may use all The goal of this seminar, Lewis disagreements and conflicts, not is little more than digits on an One way to beat it or to at John Graham and Dick Miner, The two student justices reluc- means of persuasion. This is a new least face up to the dilemma is to says, is "to stimpuate thought and and t h e treasurer candidates, tantly agreed to follow Dusel's with making judgments, even if it function of the Judiciary to ex- IBM card," said Dr. Harold Hodges, discussion talk about it, according to Jim from faculty, students Steve DeLucchi and Jeff Mullins, suggestion and ask the two parties Is the judiciary's "tradition" to plain the decision to those involved head of the department of so- Lewis, graduate student, who will and administrators toward achiev- were forced into a run-off election to accept the recommendations. render opinions. and see if they accept. It would ciology and anthropology at SJS. moderate today's "Open and ing a more responsive education." this week as they were not able He went on to claim that Flick save the feelings of everyone and Dr. Hodges, who sponsored last to muster a majority vote in last HANSEN REINSTATED has certain rights allowing him due avoid a hard administrative de- year's "Gripe Session," explains week's elections. But Robertson said that he process of law through the Aca- cision," Dusel said. that in order to make education This marks the first time that thought Hansen should be rein- demic Council, The vice president "We're trying to find a way to more human, students must be in- candidates for an executive office stated before he talks the matter cited a letter from Scott Lefaver, redress the rights and it may in- cluded in the planning of their must receive a majority vote to over with Flick "so that both par- attorney general, assuring Flick volve compromise," he declared. If curriculum. "The school has played be elected into office. ties are equal before they sit down that no judgment would be made. a decision is not reached between Pete4 Spiei4 the big brother too long, and we Results may be heard tonight on to settle differences. Hansen's Robertson said Lefaver had no Hansen and Flick, the matter goes the school, students and adminis- KSJS (90.7). rights must be reinstated." right to make such a limit; that back to the Administration. trators must become partners for a common enterprise." 'Bureaucracy Talk Invitations have been sent to Dr, Franz Schurnian, recently returned from a fact-finding mission President Robert D. Clark and Dr. in North Vietnam, will :peak on "The Military Corporate Bureaucracy" Hobert Burns, academic vice- today at 4 p.m. in LN630. His talk is part of the continuing series on president, and all students, faculty Education by Professors Offer One' economy of U.S. Imperialism sponsored Students 'One to the political and administrators are urged to Against the War. attend. Fall Applications Friday at 5 p.m. is the deadline for applications for the 1968 fall Commuters Lose In 'Operation Share' Tutor Program semester for first time freshmen and undergraduate transfers to SJS. -The /rend is tamd individual- actly what the local elementary tutors for enrichment, not reme- "There was no mother in the home Parking Spaces ized education, and the relation- schools have been crying for. The dial work. and the tutor took Mary to mu- Psychology Meet Approximately 40 parking spaces ship is one to one one student teacher just didn't have enough She said that "music majors seums and on Saturday picnics." A two-day Spartan Psychological Association Meeting will be held will be lost to commuting SJS stu- to one tutor, that is. hours in the day to give the stu- were matched with children inter- ONE DRAWBACK today, 2-5 p.m. and tomorrow, 9:3042 and 2-5 p.m. in CH234. Student dents for about a month as the In February, 1967, Operation dents all the individual help they ested in music, science enthusiasts Phyllis Ebersole, third grade papers on psychology will be presented. "mud flats" between Seventh and Share, then a struggling organiza- needed. And it's unbelievable how with science majors and so on. teacher at Olinder, complained Ninth Streets on San Fernando tion of 35 student tutors, guided Isolated some of these Mexican- "Although individualized educa- that the system had one draw- are finally scheduled to be incor- by a graduate of the University American and Black kids really tion is relatively new in California, back. "In order to be successful Counseling porated into a four-lane road. of Southern California, Gil Solano, are. other parts of the country have the tutor must work in close con- Academic counseling for recreations minors will begin Monday, According to Paul Meier, head began working with culturally de- "Teachers tell me of cases when been working in this field for many tact with the teacher. The tutor May 20. Sign-ups for interviews can be made in PER 113 until May 20, of the Construction Division of the prived children. Their big prob- the child is told to read a certain years. Detroit schools have been one of my students had last se- San Jose Department of Public lem was "no money." library book. He will begin at the using individualized reading pro- inester only came to see me twice." Works, Wattis & Co. is tentatively Today, a little more than a year top left-hand corner shelf and grams for the past 20 years." Gail Law, a young Black teacher Biology Pre-Reg scheduled to resume the $25,000 later, Share has 1,500 tutors with work his way down until he finds Mrs.