Word: war
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...spokesman for John Sloan Dickey, pres-ident of Dartmouth. said that Dickey thinks he can be "more effective if he doesn't take public stands in foreign affairs. Dickey, who was a State Department official before going to Dartmouth, has in the past expressed his opposition to the war...
...majority of the Harvard-Radcliffe support the Oct. 15th Moratorium against the war in Vietnam. The student Mobilization Committee (SMC) calls upon President Pusey and the University administration to respect the will of the majority by declaring Oct. 15th a day of protest and discussion. The SMC calls for the cancellation of classes and the suspension of the ordinary activities of the University for the entire day. The SMC feels that the University must recognize the right of its employees to participate in the Oct. 15th anti-war actions. We call upon the University to permit all Harvard-Radcliffe workers...
Certain pro-Moratorium opponents of the SMC point to a YSA 1965 discussion bulletin, intended not to go outside YSA, concerning "infiltration of anti-war movements...
...bulletin was obtained by Gordon Hall, a professional opponent of extremist groups quoted in the Boston Globe as saying of Camejo, "It is one thing to oppose the war. It's another thing to march with Viet Cong Flags...
...section of the bulletin reads: YSAers began to learn through their experiences in the march [1965 march on Washington] how to become the best builders of a principled anti-war protest while at the same time being the best propagandists for socialism. This was demonstrated by the hard work we put into organizing buses, selling buttons, passing out leaflets, and so on for the march and then at the march openly selling far more socialist literature than all of our opponents put together could sell or give away...