University of California Berkeley - Blue and Gold Yearbook (Berkeley, CA)

 - Class of 2005

Page 29 of 264

 

University of California Berkeley - Blue and Gold Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 2005 Edition, Page 29 of 264
Page 29 of 264



University of California Berkeley - Blue and Gold Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 2005 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

Thursday ' s panel of Free Speech Movement veterans who discussed how they organized the movement. Wednesday ' s Mario Savio Memorial lecture by columnist Molly Ivins packed Zellerbach Hall, but mostly with move- ment veterans. People are unlikely to miss class to go to another class, said Leybovich, who helped organize the events. On the other hand, attendance at the noon rally on Friday, which featured Dean, was roughly 3,000 people, which far exceeded the organizers ' expectations. It went well beyond what we had hoped it would be, said Leybovich, regarding the noon rally. We had high hopes for it, but it ' s always a nagging worry of ' Do students care? ' But the people that were here were engaged. When Dean began his speech on Sproui, the rally took on an anti-Bush tone. I want a president of the United States that ' s going to welcome every single American into the American family, Dean said. Dean cited his own quick rise to the top of the presidential primaries as a result of grass- roots organization and campaign contribu- tions from the Internet and urged students to use their power to bring a new era of democ- racy to America. There was another lesson that arose from this place 40 years ago. And that is ordinary people can make an enormous difference - the only thing that holds you back is you believe you can ' t, Dean said to the enthusiastic crowd. But the enthusiasm quickly waned. After Dean ' s speech, the crowed cleared out. with most students not hearing the speeches by Bob Kearney and Tony Serra from the ACLU. A plausible reason for this may be that many of the students who attended the rally did not do so to celebrate Mario Savio ' s historical speech and rally but to hear Dean speak. THE FREE SPEi JAMES K. MOFFIT UNDERGRAODATE LIBRARY • «; ; . Some students felt the speakers at the event were too partisan. I did find it disappointing that so much of it was Bush bashing and Patriot Act bashing. said Amaury Gallais. president of Berkeley Col- lege Republicans. It didn ' t have to be politi- cally oriented. It could have been about free speech and the importance of voting. Becca Cramer, co-president of the Berkeley ACLU agreed. I was surprised. As a represen- tative of a nonpartisan group that co-spon- sored it. I was a little upset, she said. The patrol car in Sproui Plaza was adorned on Friday with a life-size photograph Jack Weinberg, who was arrested in 1 964 for ta- bling in front of Sproui Hall. I think some people probably went into it thinking we were going to rekindle student activism just like the way it was. said Lee Felsenstein. a movement veteran. But that is silly because the world isn ' t like it was. •A M I ' IF Jr. ,kk. W ' T ;r i Most students at the Free Speech Movement Caf6 are just looking (or a quick bite to eat or a place to study But the caf« IS filled with memorabilia from the Free Speech Movement On the walls hang photographs of mass protests and newspaper articles from 1964 cover the tables The cal6 honors the movement that shook the campus and estab- lished Its liberal reputation At the grand opening of the ca(« in 2000. linking it to the Free Speech Movement was criticized Staff, students, and alumni, including veterans of the movement, criticized the cat as selling out the Free Speech Movement They claimed It was commercialized free speech and argued the Univer- sity was inconsiderate of the values the activists of the time stood for Then-Chancellor Robert Berdahl received many angry letters from staff and alumni, condemning the com- mercialization of the Free Speech Movement ■The cat , to be operated to serve as a commercial enter prise rather than a social, political enterprise, seems to n e unfair and not proper, said Michael Rossman. a veteran of the rrxwement and member of the caf planning committee The srmd openmg ol the caf« was nterrupted with outbursts from student protesters Three students m gas masks, who were protesting the lack of organic foods w campus cafes, took the n crophone and sprayed mock pesttcides into the crowd However. Stephen Silberstein, who donated $1 .3 millton to build the caf6. said he wanted students to have a connec- tion to the Free Speech Movement ' I thought It was a good idea to have a memorial to Mario Savio and the Free Speech Movement m ttw center of campus. ' satd Siltwrstein. Plans were being made this year for additional seatmg on the terrace of the cafA. In a decision reached in late Sep- temtwr. offtcials chose to add seating under the overhangs of the terrace and to add bar-style seats along the west er d of the terrace In order to accommodate the large mid-day crowd of students

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r- PTil Not Bf • by Tiffany Thornton This year marked the fortieth an- niversary of a turbulent period from which UC Berkeley acquired its liberal legacy. The Free Speech Movement erupted on campus at the end of the Civil Rights Movement in 1964. During this time, students rebelled against the administration and initiated pub- lic discourse through large protests, sit-ins, and demonstrations to defend free speech. The University prepared a week-long celebra- tion to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Free Speech Movement The administration, no longer the adversary that it once was, had an integral role in planning the eight days of events hononng the movement it once tried to quell Karen Kenney, the Dean of Students, said, We ' re excited and proud of the history of the FSM. What it accomplished was very important (or the campus and the country it clarified that students and individuals have the right to express themselves However, although the administration has made attempts to incorporate the Free Speech To those who frequent the Free Speech Movement Caf4 In MamtfuDrinnne efforts of Mano Savio are memorialized on the walls of the entrance However, dedicating a campus commercial space to the move- ment was met with controversy at first Movement into its history, some veterans and students believe that the turn-around by the University and the police may only be su- perficial. However, this might run contrary to Chancellor Robert Birgeneau ' s statement on October 8th at a Friday noon rally, We have to be vigilant from the left and the right and allow people to hold opinions that are highly controversial. It doesn ' t seem that the administration has changed since the 60s, said Michael Ross- man, President of the Free Speech Movement Archives, who actively participated in the movement as a graduate student ' The admin- istration is happy to rhetorically approve the FSM, but is not happy to approve any but the most innocuous kinds of student activism. The police patrol car that then-sophomore Bettina Aptheker once stood on and a symbol of police authority to the 2.000 students who gathered around it was on loan from the UC Po- lice Department (or the noon rally on Friday Former presidential candidate Howard Dean, Associated Students o( the University o( California (ASUC) President Misha Leybov- ich, veterans o( the Free Speech Movement, including Aptheker and Assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg (D, Los Angeles), stood atop a platform erected behind the vehicle. When Leybovich spoke, he had Converse sneakers in his hand, mimicking the actions of Mario Savio and other movement leaders from four decades ago. The fact that the administration has part- nered with the FSM Archives to celebrate the past and bring awareness important issues o( today demonstrates that they really learned (orm the administrations mistakes in the 60s and is committed to help foster student activ- ism, Leybovich said. Planning the week-long celebration was a difficult task, as administrators, students, and movement veterans were trying to determine how to best honor the spirit of student activism 40 years ago. For example, several student lead- ers objected to using a police car in the rally. It represents police brutality and is offensive to many communities, especially communities of color, said CalSERVE Senator Dena Takrun. But despite weeks o( planning by the ASUC. movement veterans, and the adminis- tration, the events geared toward students did not draw the crowds that had been antici- pated. In (act, only one student showed up to



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One Nation (In)divisible? fAinzim»ydtLii»itit itz wtiiti iit ' iti creates division in the nation by Stephanie Pace The 2004 presidential election between republican President George W. Bush and his democratic rival Senator John Kerry came out with a republican win. Bush was inaugurated to a second four-year term on Thursday, January 20, 2005 Bush became the first candidate since his father — George W. Bush, who won the election in 1988 — to receive over 50% of the popular vote. This year ' s election also marked the seventh consecutive election in which the Democratic Committee failed to reach that threshold. At least 12 million more votes were cast than in the 2000 election, which both parties and their allies attributed to the intensity of the division between he candidates and partly to extensive voter registration and publicity. The large turnout enabled each major- party candidate to set a record Bush received the largest number of votes of any Presidential candidate in U.S. history. Kerry also received more votes than any candidate in the previous U.S. election, but still was not enough for a win; Bush won with the smallest margin of victory of a sitting president in U.S. history in terms of the percentage of the popular vote Specifically Bush received 2.5% more than Kerry; the closest previous margin won by a sitting President was 3.2% for Woodrow Wilson in 1916 In terms of absolute number of popular votes, his victory margin was approximately 3 million votes, which was the smallest of any sitting President since Harry S Truman in 1 948. Furthermore, more votes were cast for candidates other than the winner than In any previous us presidential elections As in 2000, electoral votes split along sharp geographical lines: the west coast, northeast, and most of the Great Lakes region for Kerry, and the southeast, Great Plains, and the IVIountain states for Bush. Minor- party candidates received many fewer votes, dropping from a total of 3.5 percent in 2000 to approximately 1 percent. The election marked the first time an incumbent president was re- elected while his political party Increased its numbers in both houses of Congress since Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1936 election. The Republican Party increased its majorities In both houses of Congress. The members of the Electoral College formally voted on December 13, 2004. On January 6, 2005, when Congress met for the official counting of the electoral votes, democratic congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones and senator Barbara Boxer made an official objection of the counting of Ohio ' s electoral votes. As a result, the House and Senate separately debated the inclusion of Ohio ' s votes. Within four hours of the objection, however, the last effective challenge to the election results ended, when the Senate voted 74-1 and the House voted 267-31 to reject the challenge to Ohio ' s votes. In the final accepted count. Bush received 286 electoral votes, and Kerry received 251 For Vice President, 286 votes went to Bush ' s running mate, Dick Cheney and 252 to Edwards. Even if Congress had voted to reject Ohio ' s 20 electoral votes, the outcome would have been the same. The 518 valid votes cast instead of 538, the majority necessary for election by the Electoral College under the Twelfth Amendment would have been 260 votes, which Bush and Cheney, each with 266. would have reached. While the Bush-Cheney and Kerry-Edwards tickets ran in every state and the District of Columbia, Ralph Nader, although Initially running as an independent, was listed in several states as the Reform Party candidate, the Populist Party candidate, the Better Life Party candidate, or the PEC candidate In other states he was no a candidate because he did not meet the requirements in those states for ballot access. The Reform Party endorsed him; however, he did not meet the requirements in those states for ballot parties, and in many states wtiat used to be the Reform Party is now the America First Party. which did not endorse Nader On September 18, 2004, the Florida Supreme Court ordered that Nader be included on the ballot in Florida for the election. Florida is a swing state that was the subject of much controversy in the previous election. As a result, some states sent a different number of electors to the U.S. Electoral College, since the number of electors allotted to a state is equal to the sum of the number of Senators and Representatives from that state. Before the outcome of the election, some supporters of democratic presidential candidate John Kerry were concerned that the I independent candidacy of Ralph Nader would split the vote against the incumbent, thus allowing Republican presidential candidate George W Bush to win the 2004 election. Many democrats blame Ralph Nader for splitting the vote in the 2000 presidential election when he ran as the candidate of the Green Party. Such splits are of particular concern because most states assign the presidential electors they send to the Electoral College, to the candidate with the most votes, even if those votes are less than 50 percent of the total votes cast — in such a situation, a relatively small number of votes can make a very big difference While Ralph Nader and the Green Party ultimately supported replacing the Electoral College with direct popular elections, both have also assigned that states instead use instant-runoff voting to select their presidential electors, which would partially address the issue of vote splitting Opponents of Ralph Nader ' s candidacy often referred to vote splitting as the spoiler effect Some voters who preferred Ralph 26

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