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...picketers, including members of the Radcliffe-Harvard New American Movement and the Democratic-Socialist Organizing Committee, support the UFW and its claims that the Gallo Co. signed unfair labor contracts with the Teamsters' union in 1973. Gallo spokesmen deny the charge and say the company considers the boycott unfair...

Author: By Christopher B. Daly, | Title: 25 Picket Against Harvard Pro Despite Eggs, Football Players | 10/29/1974 | See Source »

...Compared with Roxbury, Southie has a low crime rate. That is another source of pride-and fear. "If I sent my kids on the bus to Roxbury and anything happened to them, I'd shoot myself. It's that simple," says a father of two. Though Southie spokesmen deny that racism plays any part in their resistance, prejudice is evident in the "Nigger go home" graffiti...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOSTON: Why Southie Stands Fast | 10/28/1974 | See Source »

...PIRG report also named Summerfield's Furniture Co., National Radio and Television Co., and Boston Furniture Sales Co. Spokesmen for the three denied Monday any charges of deceiving the consumer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Local Furniture Store Owner Denies PIRG Report Charges | 10/23/1974 | See Source »

...next morning the situation became deadlocked as Dutch negotiators, led by Premier Joop den Uyl, tried desperately to whittle away the resistance of the terrorists. At one point, the talks broke down entirely when the commandos refused to communicate with government spokesmen. The Dutch reopened communications by writing a plea in huge Japanese characters on a 20-ft. roll of paper that was spread out on the street below the embassy windows. The following night, a Boeing 707 and a crew, demanded by the Red Army commandos, was readied for takeoff at nearby Schiphol Airport. Several hours later, two women...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TERRORISM: The Red Army Returns | 9/30/1974 | See Source »

...organized in early 1972 and crystallized during the Mass Hall take-over of that spring. H-R D-SOC formed almost one year ago after its national founding convention. NAM spokespersons claim around 25 diehard members, while D-SOC spokesmen say their group has 15 stalwarts. Barring the growth of either the Revolutionary Student Brigade or the Party for Workers Power, they are the biggest and most coherent leftist organizations at Harvard...

Author: By Philip Weiss, | Title: Left-Liberals and Revolutionists at Harvard | 9/30/1974 | See Source »

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