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- Member of: Course Catalogs, General, Arizona State University, 1887-Present
- Member of: Hidden Meanings of Love and Death in Chinese Painting; Selections from the Marilyn and Roy Papp Collection
- Member of: Tom Wright Audio Recordings
The documents that comprise the ASU Academic Catalog as well as specific regulations and policies for students attending the ASU at Los Angles location.
A record of the academic programs and classes offered during the 1946-1947 academic year at Arizona State College. This document also includes a directory of faculty and university officials, financial assistance information, a list of student group activities, admission and graduation requirements, graduates and honor students from the 1944-1945 academic year, and other information.
A record of the academic programs and classes offered during the 1947-1948 academic year at Arizona State College. This document also includes a directory of faculty and university officials, financial assistance information, a list of student group activities, admission and graduation requirements, graduates and honor students from the 1945-1946 academic year, and other information.
In this interview, Compton and Starsky discuss Starsky's prediction that movements for social change will produce new leaders and his belief that massive social change is underway in the United States; Starsky's faith that the American people will act justly and rise up to oppose unethical actions taken by their leaders, including repudiating the Vietnam War and curbing authoritarian measures; the American government's use of lies and obfuscation to facilitate prosecuting the Vietnam War despite overwhelming opposition, including American exploitation of foreign countries; the "brainwashing" of the American people, the need for them to question what they are encouraged to believe, and the need for mass mobilization to fight repression and injustice; media condemnation of Starsky and its perceived accuracy and motivation.
They also address Starsky's interpretation of the myths necessary to maintain American society and the use of force to subdue those who question them, which he summarizes as "if they can't con you, they'll try to buy you; if they can't buy you, they'll hit you over the head" and the use of police forces as tools of oppression and/or repression. Starsky criticizes the use of the Arizona Board of Regents to maintain existing power structures in Arizona's universities and silence the people who work and study at them, including the actions taken against Starsky and their consequences; student activism on university campuses; the need for people to seize the government's "death machinery" and rebuild it as "life machinery"; and Starsky's belief that his is a "trivial kind of victimization" and that the "private victimization" inflicted on those without access to such resources as the press and social status, including poor and Black people, is substantially more serious. Compton closes the interview by reading the statement Starsky composed for release to the press.