Actor and political activist Danny Glover shows his support for the students on #hunger #strike at SF State. pic.twitter.com/Egbz3G3W9B — Lyanne Melendez (@LyanneMelendez) May 9, 2016

SF State University students came to support 4 on a hunger strike. They want more money for Ethnic Studies College. pic.twitter.com/N0asqvxCms — Lyanne Melendez (@LyanneMelendez) May 9, 2016

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Four students at San Francisco State University are also on hunger strike demanding more resources for the college of ethnic studies.On Monday, a few politicians and actor and political activist Danny Glover came to show his support for the four SFSU students who have been on a hunger strike since May 2nd.Glover was a student protester in 1968 during a five-month long strike, which eventually led to the establishment of the College of Ethnic Studies - the first in the nation."Business will not be done as usual, Business will not be done as usual. We will shut the campus down, get our demands. That's what we have to do," said GloverThe students have a number of demands, but the one that stands out is their request for more funding. They have the faculty's support."Wanting more and not having the money as well as underfunded. We are the smallest college at S.F. State University," said Grace Yoo, the Chair of the Asian-American Studies.Ethnic studies has an annual operational budget of $3.6 million, but in the past, it has received additional funding from different sources to add more classes and professors. The students want the university to increase its budget to $8 million."We expect these negotiations to begin May 9 at 8 a.m. and conclude by Wednesday, May 11 at 11 a.m. or our tactics will escalate," said student protester Ahkeel Mestayer.S.F. State president says he will meet with the students to discuss the funding issue but hinted that raising the college's budget is nearly impossible."I would hope Daddy Warbucks would fall out of the sky and offer us a huge gift, but life in the CSU system in California, I think is a series of intelligent compromises," said Leslie Wong, SFSU President.It's not clear when both sides will sit down to begin the difficult task of compromising.