Jan 8, 1969 Pg. 4- Jan 9, 1969 Pg. 1 |
Previous | 5 of 9 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN i, January 8, 1969 Tarkonian-led 49ers host Bulldogs Friday li) Stale Kuaril ltol> Stephen* h. Stephens will he in the (al SUte Look Iteach I'ri- da\ nichl as Ihe llulldocs attempt to derail II potent 49er basketball machine. Stephens is It second leading season scorer for thc Itulldog.s th Long Beach tops CCAA The Cal Stale Long 11 each 49ers, rising Intonjtlona] recog¬ nition with (heir new coach.Ierry ' Tarkanlan, will entertain Fresno State's Bulldog baskethallers Friday night In California Colle¬ giate Athletic Association action. The 49ers are currently riding high .wilh a 12-1 season mark and are ranked sixth nationally In the college division of the NCAA. Ing Cal Polv of Pomona 11I)-7G. The Bulldocs were meanwhile seeing Ihelr conference hopes get s from Pasadena Cllv College, where he led PCC to Ihe finals of the slate junior college cham¬ pionship two years In a row. lie brought with him his star. JC All-American Sam Robinson. Slnv, . Dick Tolllver and Ray Grlllou. He added these to Dick Nelson, last year's runner-up in the CCAA scoring race, to create a real powerhouse of a team. Robinson Is averaging 18 points by Ihe San Fernando Valley Slate Matadors 09-93 Saturday night after an easy win over Cal" State Los Angeles Friday. Lone Beach and Valley State are currently tied for the CCAA lead Willi two wins apieceafralnsl no losses. The llulldogs are 1-1. FSC mentor Ed Gregory at¬ tributed the loss to Valley to the Matadors' hoi hands from the floor and to his squad's defense. Saturday nlchl the ItulldogS will be In San Diego to lake on the San Dleuo Slate A/.tecs, no longer In the CCAA after winning the basketball title the last two years. The Aztecs are led by returnees Vaughn Jacobsen and Eric Mar- tenson. Jacobsen has been aver¬ aging over 18 points a game and Marlenson Is grabbing 10 re- bounds'per contest. Then Monday night Fresno will meet the University ofSanDlego. The Inexperienced Toreros have only two letlermen returning. Following the weekend In Southern California, the Bulldog cagers will take a rest for the finals then return to January clearance SALE hit i • 13 a i 10. Grll games last weekend and added 12 CCAA Player of Ihe Week. The only loss on the Long Beach schedule this year was to htgh-scoilng University of Tul- CCAA standings Long Beach Valley FRESNO Poly (SLO) Fullerton Friday night's 2 0 199 175 1 1 189 186 Fresno at Long Beach Poly SLO at San Diego State, non Poly Pomona at Valley Fullerton at Los Angeles Saturday night's action Fresno at San Diego, non league Poly SLO at Long Beach Valley at Fullerton Los Angeles at Poly Pomona WANT ADS FRI., JAN. 10-8:10 P.M. FRESNO ACES vs. DENVER Reserved — $3.00 General Admission - $2.00 SEMAND ARENA Fresno Convention Center Regularly 69.50 MEN'S SUITS NOW $54 Hard-wearing worsteds in natural shoulder & 2-button styles! Hurry! Regularly $35 PLAID SPORTCOATS NOW $28 Regularly 49.50 HERRINGBONE SPORTCOATS now 39.6O Regularly 19.95 NON-WRINKLE IVY-STYLE SLACKS now 15.85 Regularly $14 to $16 MEN'S SWEATERS now 9.90 Regularly $5 IVY-STYLE SPORTSHIRTS now 2.99 ROOS/ATKINS FULTON MAIL AT FRESNO MANCHESTER Judge orders end to SFS strike SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A superior court Judge ordered un¬ ion teachers Wednesday to end their three-day strike against San Francisco State College, scene of renewed clashes between club- swinging police and rock-throw¬ ing student militants. Judge Edward O'Day Issued a temporary Injunction at the re¬ quest of the State Attorney Gen¬ eral's office, acting for the State College Board of Trustees. The order forbids picketing and any other strike activity at the 18,000-student college. It also gans 'hindering, delaying or in¬ terfering with, ln any manner* ' the activities on the campus. A spokesman for the striking American Federation of Teach¬ ers, which represents about 300 of the school's 1,300 faculty id a membership meeting would be held today lo determine the union's next move. At San Jose SUte, 60 miles away, AFT members represent¬ ing 300 of the school's 1,200 faculty members went on strike ln support of the San Francisco State group. One picketing pro¬ fessor was burned slightly by a cherry bomb thrown from a stu- dent dormitory. Acting San FranclscoStatecol¬ lege president S. I. Hayakawa again charged that 'non-union student anarchists' took over the AFT picket Unes. He estimated 50 to 55 per cent of the students went to classes. The Injunction was Issued shortly after a force of 200 rtot- equlpped police wedged through a picket line of screaming student strikera, who pelted the advanc¬ ing officers, with rocks, bottles and sticks. Ten persona were arrested and two Injured ln another flareup of the violence which has resulted ln more than 160 arrests, scores of injuries and thousands of dol¬ lars worth of damage since mili¬ tant student groups called a strike Nov. 8. Local union plans information picket tomorrow Fresno State College American Federation of Teachers Is plan¬ ning an Informational picket line ln the free speech area on Friday between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. It is ln no way planned to be a strike to close down the school. It is merely to show support for the AFT chapters who are on strike at San Francisco SUte, Sacramento SUte and San Jose State Colleges. There are 70 members of the local AFT.Robert Allison, presi¬ dent of the group, said he hopes that each member will take a turn on the picket line. He said they would work ln hour shifts. Students, teachers, and union members can cross the picket line with no reprisal. Shortly before midnight Wed¬ nesday, two ' Incendiary devices' were thrown at the home of Edwin Duerr, coordinator of student af¬ fairs on the campus. Fifty belmeted police with Wily club* routed an unruly crowd of about 1,000 studenU at San Fer¬ nando Valley SUte College Wed¬ nesday and arrested 14 persona. The clash erupted after a two- hour noontime rally sponsored by��the Black StudenU Union to dls- The demonstrators marched to the administration building after the meeting and demanded thai Dr. D. T. Oviaft, the academic dean, come outside to meet with the crowd. He refused. The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 69 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 9,1969 Activity assistantship positions available Applications are now being ac¬ cepted for two graduate asslst- antshlps In the Student Activities Office. Dr. Kenneth Kerr, director of activities, said the two newly- created positions will replace the Job of activities adviser, former¬ ly held by Robert Lu'ndal. Lundal was recently Inducted Into the armed forces, vacating the position. Kerr said the graduate assist¬ antship program Is a new con¬ cept In hiring personnel. He said the program wouldhave two grad¬ uate assistants (a male and a female) this spring but would probably be expanded next fall to Include four positions. The asslstantshlps carry a salary of $1,100 pen a 20-hour work week. Appli¬ cants must have a bachelor's de¬ gree, have graduate standing at FSC, and have had some ex¬ perience in working with college students ln student government and group activities. The duties of the two positions, Kerr said, will vary somewhat but both will involve advising and counseling student organizations, coordinating student activities and assisting with the fraternity and sorority systems at Fresno Kerr said anyone Interested ln an application or more Informa¬ tion about the asslstantshlps should contact the Student Ac¬ tivities office ln the Administra¬ tion Building. Deadline for filing applications is Jan. 24. HELP A CHILD Foor f50 «*?ent8 «"'» over plans to help raise $50,000 tor the San Joaquin Children's Center. Holding a poster featuring liie slogan "Help a Child Have a Chance" Is John Maderious. To the right U Jerry Barton. Chris Toppenberg and Karen Thomas. See photos and story on page four. The black movement - Part 3 Dehumanization of the remaining tenth OR'S NOTE: Thte U the last In a series of quarter earn less than $60 a week — even less, that ts, The report continues that 3,500 are counted by the La- dealing with the black movement. Collegian than Is required for each member of a family of four to bor Department as unemployed by traditional measures. EDITOR'S NOTE: Thte Is the articles dealing with the bUck movement. Collegian stall writer Gerald P. Merrell spent three months on a fact-finding mission that put emphasis on black mili¬ tancy. His last article discusses black alienation and frustration. By Gerald P. Merrell OAKLAND - The black man In America is angry. His sense of alienation, his frustration, and indeed, his re¬ sentment havqjiever been so intense ln our history. But none oi this Is new. For the black of today Is rea¬ lizing only that which his ancestors Uced decades ago. Only the black's reaction Is new. Never has he struck back at what he Interprets to be his oppressor with such force and resolution as today. To some, at least the more vehement, within the black community there Is a conception that the system has been unresponsive to his needs and now Is unable to re¬ spond with significant direction to alter his lot. There¬ fore, they resolve, the system must be destroyed and His cries of frustration and protests of his role as a nonpartlclpant are certainly not without basts. For It Is too evident that the lot of the black today Is no better than It was yesterday. In short, the black man has never benefitted from (he fruits of society but has known only the tomorrows. The black is faced still with continued tu.omployroent. Official statistics show poverty ln the ghettos today Is over three times the national rate and unemployment Is far worse today than the rest of the nation knew during the depth of the Depression. Lsw sages Of the men In the ghetto who do have Jobs, over a quarter earn less than $60 a week — e than Is required for each member of a family ol eat 70 cents of food per day. , Moreover, the Department of Labor reports that "economic and social conditions are getting worse, not better, ln slum areas.' A Labor Department spokesman said that blacks 'Just don't have the connecUojal." After four years of the federal war on poverty, the workings of community action organizations, and numer¬ ous local efforts to curtail Indigence, the fact remains that they have done too little and progress Is difficult to find. This void between the races has created a dual so¬ ciety — one white, one black. It has led the United SUtes to possibly 1U greatest domestic crisis ln a century- and that crisis, ln large part, Is taking place ln the cities. The census bureau shows that four-fifths of all Ameri¬ cans soon will Uve ln cities. The late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy once described the dues as the centers of cul¬ ture, fashion, finance and industry. But they too are the center of the problems of American life; poverty, race hatred, scanty education, and stunted Uvea. In 1U 1967 Manpower Report, the Labor Department noted that In a "typical" ghetto of 200,000 people a quar¬ ter (or 50,000) of the population are adult men. Of this, one-fifth to one-third are uncounted by the census. Therefore, of the 50,000 adult men, approximately ,13,000 are simply drifting. Another 4,000 can be found who have stopped looking for work, and for whom no work rxiaU. Hence, 17,000 - over a third of the adult men In the ghetto - are outside the labor force. The report continues that 3,500 are counted by the La¬ bor Department as unemployed by traditional m Thus, 20,500, or 41 percent, have no work at all. TVo thousand more have only part-time work and nearly 6,000 adult men earn less than $60 a week, less than sub¬ sistence. Closed to everyone On this Robert Kennedy said, "Either we must find a way to open our society to all, or the growing violence and fear may unleash political and social forces which which will close It to everyone.* Some of these 'forces" have already been unleashed resulting ln a hunt by politicians and social scientists •for a new conceptual framework within which to under¬ stand black-white relations ln America." Society is now witnessing new demands for political and economic self-determination, along with growing pride and in some cases 'reverse racism* by the blacks. But all this has been generated ln the ghettos. And until' new concepts are found, members of both races will probably continue to view solutions ln terms of violence — "black revolution and the reinforcement of urban po¬ lice .forces to crush these uprisings.' Arthur M. Schleslnger, Jr., has written that historians of the' twenty-first century will struggle to explain how nine-tenths of the Americas people, priding themselves on their kindliness, their generosity, their historic con¬���secration to the rights of man, could so long hare eon* nlved In the systematic dehumanization of the remaining no longer willing to wait for n
Object Description
Title | 1969_01 The Daily Collegian January 1969 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | Jan 8, 1969 Pg. 4- Jan 9, 1969 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | THE DAILY COLLEGIAN i, January 8, 1969 Tarkonian-led 49ers host Bulldogs Friday li) Stale Kuaril ltol> Stephen* h. Stephens will he in the (al SUte Look Iteach I'ri- da\ nichl as Ihe llulldocs attempt to derail II potent 49er basketball machine. Stephens is It second leading season scorer for thc Itulldog.s th Long Beach tops CCAA The Cal Stale Long 11 each 49ers, rising Intonjtlona] recog¬ nition with (heir new coach.Ierry ' Tarkanlan, will entertain Fresno State's Bulldog baskethallers Friday night In California Colle¬ giate Athletic Association action. The 49ers are currently riding high .wilh a 12-1 season mark and are ranked sixth nationally In the college division of the NCAA. Ing Cal Polv of Pomona 11I)-7G. The Bulldocs were meanwhile seeing Ihelr conference hopes get s from Pasadena Cllv College, where he led PCC to Ihe finals of the slate junior college cham¬ pionship two years In a row. lie brought with him his star. JC All-American Sam Robinson. Slnv, . Dick Tolllver and Ray Grlllou. He added these to Dick Nelson, last year's runner-up in the CCAA scoring race, to create a real powerhouse of a team. Robinson Is averaging 18 points by Ihe San Fernando Valley Slate Matadors 09-93 Saturday night after an easy win over Cal" State Los Angeles Friday. Lone Beach and Valley State are currently tied for the CCAA lead Willi two wins apieceafralnsl no losses. The llulldogs are 1-1. FSC mentor Ed Gregory at¬ tributed the loss to Valley to the Matadors' hoi hands from the floor and to his squad's defense. Saturday nlchl the ItulldogS will be In San Diego to lake on the San Dleuo Slate A/.tecs, no longer In the CCAA after winning the basketball title the last two years. The Aztecs are led by returnees Vaughn Jacobsen and Eric Mar- tenson. Jacobsen has been aver¬ aging over 18 points a game and Marlenson Is grabbing 10 re- bounds'per contest. Then Monday night Fresno will meet the University ofSanDlego. The Inexperienced Toreros have only two letlermen returning. Following the weekend In Southern California, the Bulldog cagers will take a rest for the finals then return to January clearance SALE hit i • 13 a i 10. Grll games last weekend and added 12 CCAA Player of Ihe Week. The only loss on the Long Beach schedule this year was to htgh-scoilng University of Tul- CCAA standings Long Beach Valley FRESNO Poly (SLO) Fullerton Friday night's 2 0 199 175 1 1 189 186 Fresno at Long Beach Poly SLO at San Diego State, non Poly Pomona at Valley Fullerton at Los Angeles Saturday night's action Fresno at San Diego, non league Poly SLO at Long Beach Valley at Fullerton Los Angeles at Poly Pomona WANT ADS FRI., JAN. 10-8:10 P.M. FRESNO ACES vs. DENVER Reserved — $3.00 General Admission - $2.00 SEMAND ARENA Fresno Convention Center Regularly 69.50 MEN'S SUITS NOW $54 Hard-wearing worsteds in natural shoulder & 2-button styles! Hurry! Regularly $35 PLAID SPORTCOATS NOW $28 Regularly 49.50 HERRINGBONE SPORTCOATS now 39.6O Regularly 19.95 NON-WRINKLE IVY-STYLE SLACKS now 15.85 Regularly $14 to $16 MEN'S SWEATERS now 9.90 Regularly $5 IVY-STYLE SPORTSHIRTS now 2.99 ROOS/ATKINS FULTON MAIL AT FRESNO MANCHESTER Judge orders end to SFS strike SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A superior court Judge ordered un¬ ion teachers Wednesday to end their three-day strike against San Francisco State College, scene of renewed clashes between club- swinging police and rock-throw¬ ing student militants. Judge Edward O'Day Issued a temporary Injunction at the re¬ quest of the State Attorney Gen¬ eral's office, acting for the State College Board of Trustees. The order forbids picketing and any other strike activity at the 18,000-student college. It also gans 'hindering, delaying or in¬ terfering with, ln any manner* ' the activities on the campus. A spokesman for the striking American Federation of Teach¬ ers, which represents about 300 of the school's 1,300 faculty id a membership meeting would be held today lo determine the union's next move. At San Jose SUte, 60 miles away, AFT members represent¬ ing 300 of the school's 1,200 faculty members went on strike ln support of the San Francisco State group. One picketing pro¬ fessor was burned slightly by a cherry bomb thrown from a stu- dent dormitory. Acting San FranclscoStatecol¬ lege president S. I. Hayakawa again charged that 'non-union student anarchists' took over the AFT picket Unes. He estimated 50 to 55 per cent of the students went to classes. The Injunction was Issued shortly after a force of 200 rtot- equlpped police wedged through a picket line of screaming student strikera, who pelted the advanc¬ ing officers, with rocks, bottles and sticks. Ten persona were arrested and two Injured ln another flareup of the violence which has resulted ln more than 160 arrests, scores of injuries and thousands of dol¬ lars worth of damage since mili¬ tant student groups called a strike Nov. 8. Local union plans information picket tomorrow Fresno State College American Federation of Teachers Is plan¬ ning an Informational picket line ln the free speech area on Friday between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. It is ln no way planned to be a strike to close down the school. It is merely to show support for the AFT chapters who are on strike at San Francisco SUte, Sacramento SUte and San Jose State Colleges. There are 70 members of the local AFT.Robert Allison, presi¬ dent of the group, said he hopes that each member will take a turn on the picket line. He said they would work ln hour shifts. Students, teachers, and union members can cross the picket line with no reprisal. Shortly before midnight Wed¬ nesday, two ' Incendiary devices' were thrown at the home of Edwin Duerr, coordinator of student af¬ fairs on the campus. Fifty belmeted police with Wily club* routed an unruly crowd of about 1,000 studenU at San Fer¬ nando Valley SUte College Wed¬ nesday and arrested 14 persona. The clash erupted after a two- hour noontime rally sponsored by��the Black StudenU Union to dls- The demonstrators marched to the administration building after the meeting and demanded thai Dr. D. T. Oviaft, the academic dean, come outside to meet with the crowd. He refused. The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 69 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 9,1969 Activity assistantship positions available Applications are now being ac¬ cepted for two graduate asslst- antshlps In the Student Activities Office. Dr. Kenneth Kerr, director of activities, said the two newly- created positions will replace the Job of activities adviser, former¬ ly held by Robert Lu'ndal. Lundal was recently Inducted Into the armed forces, vacating the position. Kerr said the graduate assist¬ antship program Is a new con¬ cept In hiring personnel. He said the program wouldhave two grad¬ uate assistants (a male and a female) this spring but would probably be expanded next fall to Include four positions. The asslstantshlps carry a salary of $1,100 pen a 20-hour work week. Appli¬ cants must have a bachelor's de¬ gree, have graduate standing at FSC, and have had some ex¬ perience in working with college students ln student government and group activities. The duties of the two positions, Kerr said, will vary somewhat but both will involve advising and counseling student organizations, coordinating student activities and assisting with the fraternity and sorority systems at Fresno Kerr said anyone Interested ln an application or more Informa¬ tion about the asslstantshlps should contact the Student Ac¬ tivities office ln the Administra¬ tion Building. Deadline for filing applications is Jan. 24. HELP A CHILD Foor f50 «*?ent8 «"'» over plans to help raise $50,000 tor the San Joaquin Children's Center. Holding a poster featuring liie slogan "Help a Child Have a Chance" Is John Maderious. To the right U Jerry Barton. Chris Toppenberg and Karen Thomas. See photos and story on page four. The black movement - Part 3 Dehumanization of the remaining tenth OR'S NOTE: Thte U the last In a series of quarter earn less than $60 a week — even less, that ts, The report continues that 3,500 are counted by the La- dealing with the black movement. Collegian than Is required for each member of a family of four to bor Department as unemployed by traditional measures. EDITOR'S NOTE: Thte Is the articles dealing with the bUck movement. Collegian stall writer Gerald P. Merrell spent three months on a fact-finding mission that put emphasis on black mili¬ tancy. His last article discusses black alienation and frustration. By Gerald P. Merrell OAKLAND - The black man In America is angry. His sense of alienation, his frustration, and indeed, his re¬ sentment havqjiever been so intense ln our history. But none oi this Is new. For the black of today Is rea¬ lizing only that which his ancestors Uced decades ago. Only the black's reaction Is new. Never has he struck back at what he Interprets to be his oppressor with such force and resolution as today. To some, at least the more vehement, within the black community there Is a conception that the system has been unresponsive to his needs and now Is unable to re¬ spond with significant direction to alter his lot. There¬ fore, they resolve, the system must be destroyed and His cries of frustration and protests of his role as a nonpartlclpant are certainly not without basts. For It Is too evident that the lot of the black today Is no better than It was yesterday. In short, the black man has never benefitted from (he fruits of society but has known only the tomorrows. The black is faced still with continued tu.omployroent. Official statistics show poverty ln the ghettos today Is over three times the national rate and unemployment Is far worse today than the rest of the nation knew during the depth of the Depression. Lsw sages Of the men In the ghetto who do have Jobs, over a quarter earn less than $60 a week — e than Is required for each member of a family ol eat 70 cents of food per day. , Moreover, the Department of Labor reports that "economic and social conditions are getting worse, not better, ln slum areas.' A Labor Department spokesman said that blacks 'Just don't have the connecUojal." After four years of the federal war on poverty, the workings of community action organizations, and numer¬ ous local efforts to curtail Indigence, the fact remains that they have done too little and progress Is difficult to find. This void between the races has created a dual so¬ ciety — one white, one black. It has led the United SUtes to possibly 1U greatest domestic crisis ln a century- and that crisis, ln large part, Is taking place ln the cities. The census bureau shows that four-fifths of all Ameri¬ cans soon will Uve ln cities. The late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy once described the dues as the centers of cul¬ ture, fashion, finance and industry. But they too are the center of the problems of American life; poverty, race hatred, scanty education, and stunted Uvea. In 1U 1967 Manpower Report, the Labor Department noted that In a "typical" ghetto of 200,000 people a quar¬ ter (or 50,000) of the population are adult men. Of this, one-fifth to one-third are uncounted by the census. Therefore, of the 50,000 adult men, approximately ,13,000 are simply drifting. Another 4,000 can be found who have stopped looking for work, and for whom no work rxiaU. Hence, 17,000 - over a third of the adult men In the ghetto - are outside the labor force. The report continues that 3,500 are counted by the La¬ bor Department as unemployed by traditional m Thus, 20,500, or 41 percent, have no work at all. TVo thousand more have only part-time work and nearly 6,000 adult men earn less than $60 a week, less than sub¬ sistence. Closed to everyone On this Robert Kennedy said, "Either we must find a way to open our society to all, or the growing violence and fear may unleash political and social forces which which will close It to everyone.* Some of these 'forces" have already been unleashed resulting ln a hunt by politicians and social scientists •for a new conceptual framework within which to under¬ stand black-white relations ln America." Society is now witnessing new demands for political and economic self-determination, along with growing pride and in some cases 'reverse racism* by the blacks. But all this has been generated ln the ghettos. And until' new concepts are found, members of both races will probably continue to view solutions ln terms of violence — "black revolution and the reinforcement of urban po¬ lice .forces to crush these uprisings.' Arthur M. Schleslnger, Jr., has written that historians of the' twenty-first century will struggle to explain how nine-tenths of the Americas people, priding themselves on their kindliness, their generosity, their historic con¬���secration to the rights of man, could so long hare eon* nlved In the systematic dehumanization of the remaining no longer willing to wait for n |