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Eleven defendants drew up the petition yesterday afternoon at a closed meeting called by SDS in Emerson 310. "To answer these charges we request the opportunity for a public hearing. The issues of these cases concern the entire community. The entire community should be given an opportunity to hear them," the petition states...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Defendants Request Open CRR Hearings | 5/5/1971 | See Source »

Follwing the disruption of the March 26 "Counter Teach-in," Pasztor sent a petition to Dean Epps requesting that members of SDS, Radcliffe-Harvard Liberation Alliance (RHLA), University Action Group (UAG), and Progressive Labor Party (PLP) have their University privileges taken away...

Author: By Katharine L. Day, | Title: Cancelled Teach-In Lacked Speakers, Not Protection | 5/4/1971 | See Source »

ESCHEWING the egocentric New Journalism of the sixties. Lukas himself maintains a scrupulously low profile throughout. In a sense his book is a journalistic analogue to SDS's founding Ann Arbor statement for the people are allowed to speak for themselves, their speech and memory becoming the source of the book's authority and success. Its not always terribly exciting-the chapter on Jim, a Haight-Ashbury hippie, is made tedious by its subject's now fairly conventional opinions-but when the reporting breaks forth it does so with an energy that approximates the frenzy of good, crazy fiction. "Groovy...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: Fathers and Sons Children of the American Dream | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

Rosen said "it was clear that SDS had plans for some sort of disruption," and SJP did not want to subject the speakers to harassment. He added that SJP did not aim to cause SDS reaction by scheduling a pro-administration teach...

Author: By Katharine L. Day, | Title: Students for a Just Peace Drop Plans for Teach-In | 5/1/1971 | See Source »

...afternoon of Thursday, April 22, was an emotional one at Harvard. A group of SDS members, leaving University Hall after Dean Dunlop refused to talk into their tape recorder, marched to the CFIA, to confront Samuel P. Huntington, Thompson Professor of Government. When they reached the CFIA, Harvard police, alerted by walkie-talkie, had locked the building, and were guarding all the doors. The marchers separated, covering both front and back entrances. As they milled around, discussing strategy, they became aware of a towering presence in their midst. John Kenneth Galbraith, Warburg Professor of Economics and chronicler of the Affluent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Galbraith: An Ambassador's Journal | 4/30/1971 | See Source »

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