"California Senator" S. I. Hayakawa Hand Written Letter on a 4X6 Card

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Seller: historicsellsmemorabilia ✉️ (6,946) 99.4%, Location: Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US, Ships to: US & many other countries, Item: 154720871369 "California Senator" S. I. Hayakawa Hand Written Letter on a 4X6 Card. Up for auction  "California Senator" S. I. Hayakawa Hand Written Letter on a 4X6 Card. Included is a second signature card with the families crest stamped.  ES-6676

Samuel Ichiye Hayakawa  (Japanese :  早川 一衛 , July 18, 1906 – February 27, 1992) was a Canadian-born American academic and politician of Japanese ancestry. A professor of English , he served as president of San Francisco State University  and then as U.S. Senator  from California  from 1977 to 1983. Born in Vancouver , British Columbia , Hayakawa was educated in the public schools of Calgary , Alberta , and Winnipeg , Manitoba , and graduated from the University of Manitoba  in 1927. He received his M.A.  in English from McGill University  in 1928 and his Ph.D.  in the discipline from the University of Wisconsin–Madison  in 1935. Professionally, Hayakawa was a linguist , psychologist, semanticist , teacher, and writer. He served as an instructor at the University of Wisconsin  from 1936 to 1939 and at the Armour Institute of Technology (Illinois Institute of Technology  as of 1940) from 1939 to 1948.[ His first book on semantics, Language in Thought and Action , expanded its forerunner (and Book-of-the-Month Club  selection) Language in Action , written from 1938–1941. With five editions from 1949–1991, Language in Thought and Action  helped to popularize Alfred Korzybski 's general semantics  and semantics in general, while semantics or theory of meaning was overwhelmed by mysticism , propagandism  and even scientism .[ Hayakawa lectured at the University of Chicago  from 1950 to 1955. He presented a talk at the 1954 Conference of Activity Vector Analysts[4]  at Lake George , New York , in which he discussed a theory of personality from the semantic point of view. It was later published as The Semantic Barrier . The definitive lecture discussed the Darwinism  of the "survival of self" as contrasted with the "survival of self-concept ." His ideas on general semantics influenced A. E. van Vogt 's Null-A novels, The World of Null-A  and The Pawns of Null-A . Van Vogt in The World of Null-A  (i.e., non-Aristotelian) makes Hayakawa a character, introducing him as: "Professor Hayakawa is today's Mr. Null-A himself, the elected head of the International Society for General Semantics." Hayakawa was an English professor at San Francisco State College  (now San Francisco State University) from 1955 to 1968. In the early 1960s, he helped organize the Anti Digit Dialing League , a San Francisco group that opposed the introduction of all-digit telephone exchange names . Among the students he trained were commune leader Stephen Gaskin  and author Gerald Haslam . He was named acting president of San Francisco State College on November 26, 1968 during a student strike, when Ronald Reagan  was governor of California  and Joseph Alioto  was mayor of San Francisco .[6]  On July 9, 1969, the California State Colleges  Board of Trustees appointed Hayakawa the ninth president of San Francisco State. Hayakawa retired on July 10, 1973. Hayakawa wrote a column for the Register and Tribune Syndicate  from 1970 to 1976. In 1973, Hayakawa changed his political affiliation from the Democratic Party  to the Republican Party  and became president emeritus at what became San Francisco State University. From November 1968–March 1969, there was a student strike  at San Francisco State College in order to establish an ethnic studies  program. It was a major news event at the time and chapter in the radical history of the United States  and the Bay Area. The strike was led by the Third World Liberation Front  supported by Students for a Democratic Society , the Black Panthers  and the countercultural community.[The students presented fifteen "non-negotiable demands," including a Black Studies  department chaired by sociologist Nathan Hare  independent of the university administration, open admission for all black students to "put an end to racism," and the unconditional, immediate end to the War in Vietnam  and the university's involvement. It was threatened that if these demands were not immediately and completely satisfied the entire campus was to be forcibly shut down Hayakawa became popular with conservative voters during this period after he pulled out the wires from the loudspeakers on a protesters' van at an outdoor rally. Hayakawa relented on December 6, 1968, and announced the creation of a Black Studies program at the University. Hayakawa won an unexpected victory in the 1976 Republican Senate primary over three better-known career politicians: former HEW Secretary  Robert Finch , long-time U.S. Representative  Alphonzo Bell  and former California Lieutenant Governor  John L. Harmer . Much like  Jimmy Carter , Hayakawa touted himself as a political outsider. On the Democratic side, incumbent Senator John Tunney  faced a surprisingly strong challenge from another political outsider, Tom Hayden . Hayden's extremely liberal candidacy forced Tunney to run more to the left in the primary, which hurt him in the general election. Nevertheless, Tunney was favored[ t o easily win re-election. Comfortably ahead in the polls, Tunney did not aggressively campaign until the final weeks before the election. But Hayakawa's position as a political outsider was popular in the wake of the Watergate scandal . In addition, Tunney had a high absenteeism rate while serving in the Senate and missed numerous votes. Hayakawa exploited this with a television ad that showed an empty chair in the U.S. Senate chamber. Hayakawa gradually closed the gap with Tunney, and ultimately defeated him by just over three percentage points .[ During his Senate campaign, Hayakawa spoke about the proposal to transfer possession of the Panama Canal  and Canal Zone  from the United States to Panama . He said, "We should keep the Panama Canal. After all, we stole it fair and square." However, in 1978 he helped win Senate approval of the Torrijos–Carter Treaties , which transferred control of the zone and canal to Panama.[16]  He also supported a bill that led to the creation of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians , which examined the causes and effects of the incarceration of Japanese Americans  during World War II . During his time in the Senate, Hayakawa was one of three Japanese Americans  in the chamber, the other two being Daniel Inouye  and Spark Matsunaga , both of Hawaii .[ Hayakawa planned to run for re-election in 1982 but trailed other Republican candidates badly in early polls and was short on money. He dropped out of the race early in the year and was ultimately succeeded by Republican San Diego  Mayor  Pete Wilson . To date, he is the only Japanese American Republican to have served in the U.S. Senate. Hayakawa founded the political lobbying organization U.S. English , which is dedicated to making English  the official language  of the United States. Despite his support for creating the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, Hayakawa, who lived in Chicago  as a Canadian citizen during World War II and thus was not subject to confinement,[2]  argued that the internment of Japanese Americans  was beneficial and that Japanese Americans should not be paid for "fulfilling their obligations" to submit to Executive Order 9066

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