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Just a
decade after “Leave It to Beaver,” the turbulent 1960s became a
time of rioting and unrest. Protests against the Vietnam War in
America reached a crescendo as the decade came to a close, and
many life-long friendships were forged in the heat of
solidarity.
The
anti-war years bred numerous activist groups across the nation’s
college campuses. San Jose was a California town dominated by
machine politics, bigotry and segregated off-campus housing. The
university saw its share of black activists and white anti-war
protesters.
The Wawona Brotherhood: The San Jose State Campus Revolt
is a remembrance of that
time, giving an account of the civil rights movement in the Bay
Area, when SJSU’s student body crossed the color line to elect
the first black student to lead any campus in State College
history. This was a crowning achievement for Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and for human rights, without which the story of Barack
Obama’s victory would be incomplete.
Author Tim
Fitzgerald, a mountaineer from Yosemite Valley, was one of the
students drawn into the radical cause on campus. Together with
Cognitive Psychology Movement leader Bob Prentky, liberal cause
activist Richard Miner, and Olympic Boycott organizer James
Edwards, a new society united by a cause of racial equality and
hope for the future soon became a rallying point for young
people.
“Tim Fitzgerald’s work reminds all of us that the basic issues
which divided our nation then – a questionable war in a foreign
land and the fight for equality at home – continue to haunt our
society.”
– Jim Beall Jr., California
State Assembly, District 24
About the Author
Timothy
Fitzgerald is an accomplished writer who has also taught social
science in community colleges. He graduated from San Jose State
University with two bachelor’s degrees, in U.S. history and
economics. He is now completing a third master’s degree in
related subjects and is working on his sequel titled,
A Diamond in the Rough.
Please visit Timoth Fitzgerald's
Website.
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