The years of 1968-1970 were characterized by great turmoil on the Â鶹Çø campus.
In increasingly emphatic ways, university students and employees alike showed their dissatisfaction with the administration, protesting the conservative attitudes perceived to be governing Â鶹Çø at the time. For ten days in 1968, the offices of Political Science and Economics were occupied by students concerned about their level of involvement in the management of their department
Alarmed by the growing influence of campus organizations such as the Students for a Democratic University, Â鶹Çø's administration formed a Tripartite Commission to report on ways to quell the unrest. In the winter and spring of 1969, the "disturbance and discontent" described by the Commission's interim report came to a head in a series of campus demonstrations and disruptions. In February, after breaking up several administrative meetings in support of the Â鶹Çø français movement, Stanley Gray, a radical Political Science teacher, was fired. He returned to campus in March as part of a massive Â鶹Çø français demonstration, comprising about 6,000 protesters and another 2,000-3,000 onlookers as it wound its way to the Roddick Gates.Later in the fall, the Â鶹Çø Reporter published the administration's five-year plan to achieve a better balance between French and English, including goals of a 20% Francophone registration and a fully bilingual administration. By 1971, the year of Â鶹Çø's Sesqucentennial anniversary celebration, much of the upheaval at Â鶹Çø had stilled.
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