A HISTORY OF HARVARD ACTIVISM
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
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RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
7
Document Creation Date:
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date:
December 30, 2013
Sequence Number:
18
Case Number:
Publication Date:
October 28, 1967
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
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CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9.pdf | 4.26 MB |
Body:
Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
rims on
SATURDAY; OCTOBER;' 28, '196
CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
PAGE S-ONE
By jeffi.ey q. A1othutl6i.
EL 1:1.4ELY: DOES ?ii1letiial Under-
, standing generate'rriass movements; But Presi-
dent Johns,ori,- as ade; fcicto mernber, 'has come
'to the aid of .the movernent.- The unique char-
acter of his War . and,' the neW ;draft policies,
are' bringing 'int ,reacticins; froin
and newly-cynical students. .
The' erfoliniiuSly incre,ased aetivisin on cam-
pus is being bright about by this new group
of Middle-o&the-rod' radicals attenipting to
influence: ,,seriously. Annerican,,SOciety., These
radicals are :Coneentrating,', on loCal college
isslieS, instead ;Of. broader ',national :questions,
for two reasons. First, there are distinct simi-
larities 'between the studerit-admiiiistration re-
lationship-,and the',..Andent's ,connection .,tothe
AN UNFAMILIAR visitor would Say this ,
has . been A Typical New England Auturrin:
At Harvard College except, perhaps, ,for the,.
good. weather. The leaves have turned yellow,
brown, ?and red. The football tearn . has been'
winning without the the aid of aerodynamics. ,
And nobody has studied muCh of 'anything. ,
?
But to a more experienced, observer 'things
would seem different. This is no longer the
Harvard of John Finley; John Kennedy, Or. .
even Barney Frank. It is not just the so many'
pairs of striped pants, or of locks freaky hair, ,
and , round and metal rimmed glasses. ,Most,
striking is the air of restlessness annong the
natiVes. Cries for action are heard from , all
ccirners. The HUC and HPC are chaired, by
impatient activists with alarming
ideas.' As, one surprised administra-
tion official Put it, "students have not
been taking 'no' for an answer."
I.
Although MoSt of the new activism'
has been directed toward particular
.
campus issues, a growing impatience
with the Vietnam War is its rais4
(rare. Strong, student .eomrnitmexit
'against the 'war 'effort 'has spiraled,'.
increasing by, More than one-third,-
in the last year. in-fact, student
. ? I.. crit,
cism, and military' escalatiOrCseem to
be increasing 'inva'dialeetic
; The tinning point7for :the "activis--.`,
ing" of:Mai-1,Y students, arrives when T
they ,begin to feel a ;persOnal :stake'
in halting .the-,War. Fdr, a very
the mere ?existence of the waras
enp ugh to, Make' thein-feei likes Right
beingfriiStrated'bi:Wrong.'
::Fo' moitOf:theanyfl.war
t
-U.S. gov,ernment coneerning the V,H.etnarn War.
? activism
vist :froin traclitiona.1 'campus, politicos, who
wonlct instead petition through the established
student representative body, like Harvard's '
Undergraduate Connell. '
'Both' groups, however, direct their petitions
to the, ?Administtration as requests. The more
stubborn :the University is in it refusal to
chafige;'the more radical each group' becomes. ,
Middle-of-the4oad radicals 'adopt mo're' ex-
treme methods in an attempt to force Univer-
sity compliance, and the traditionalists turn 'to
activist 'politic's. Of course, everybody; could
:just give up' and so back ,to reading for tutorial.
'BLit fOr rnanY ',Students the personal stakes are
too high., _--
.The dynamics of this process can, be seen at
w.cirk student activity at Harvard. Last
spring'the FOC proposed a fourth 'course pass-
The established representative groups and
/he independent activist movement form tWo
sides of the triangle of student politics at Har-
vard. Whether all student politics could Be
decided by the operations of the triangle's
third side, SDS (Students for a Democratic
Society). The future form and content of stu-
dent politics is what's at stake' in the interplay
Of these, three forces. If the Masters make no
concessions at the joint meeting on October 31,
the HUG could disband or fully endorse the
independent activist movement. If SDS- be-
conies involved, the HUG could withdraw
and then student actions' would, be connected
with more radical issues such as university
complicity with the government. As a result;
there would probably never be a mass move-
ment.
POLITICAL debate has not, al-
ways steamed, the windows' and
bored the ascete,s of college dining
halls: In fact, the tab collar set of
the '50's were just 50' un-radical they
were dubbed "The Silent Genera-
tion." Growing up under McCarthy-
ism, they had an instinctive fear of
speaking out against the status ciao.
The newness rof the hydrogen bomb
and the strength of the Comniunist
'monolith validated ' the Cold 'War
with an incredible rationality.
Even the '50's rebels were quiet
. ones. Their "Beat Generation" rep-
resented a personal rather than poli-
tical revolt. Politics became "absurd,"
and .the .Beatniks chose an, ,existen-
tial,,- answer, r_..expresSing discontent
with' the personal ,outrages rd Ameri-
can ?life and increasing
_a n tnrna/ion.;-.4her,..rachcal
Per,
?
etratedi-ny.' the.-centel' of'reconante
,nNY,q;!-?-,kciday,s. rqdic.41s ,cgitc:vantte
on -the
eeir 'enough to inchiCerPerM1
yolvemeat.. '
has 's harninered -vo which '
:may, ?yet:, cr-eat an-?aetivise,-Student '
majority. It s,thdraft.". ,
.This 'IeVer. Werks on; all stiidentS,
hawk, or dove, and,inevitably'raises,-
the war to a personal life and death
matter. In a few months everyenio,r
will have to decide whether or not ,
he is willing to die in Vietnam. Still
the lines are forming for graduate
fellOw-ships and nobody seems to .be
very,much alarmed. In a short time .;
they will - be, and the' resulting shift ?
in perspective will be.,greaer 'at Har-
vard than anywhere, else.
When ii student becomes personal-','
ly involved with the war, he experi-
ences a ,type of frUstration which 'is
unusual for the affluent. To them the -
war is wrong and it seems like noth-
ing ,can' e done ',about; it. The
tinct possibility of being Sent,to,Vjet-
nam to 'die brings borne the feeling
of powerlessness and awarenes-s of
the student's inability to control his
,oWit, 'fate.
? On the issue of the war, ,the criti-
cal :student . sees the decision's Makers as
kited from the-rest of society. They reason, in
this way: in 1964 Johnson thought it politiall
exPedient ,to run' on a peace late, SQ hes-waited
until twb rrionthS into 1965 before bombing the '1?
enemy. Th. critic sees, a distortion of the Ira.- '
ditionalvv view, .. Of' deniocraey in America. .He
wonders about the lack of bottom..,M-top c.orn.
Munication.
, ;In -NpVerriber?, 1960, students" staged
'What- would become knoWn'aSyd "sit-
luneh, counter in Greeiisbbro,
?
North Carolina. They were trying to
' integrate that restaurant through di-
rect action instead of working for
the election of a sympathetic mayor
, .or city councilman. It was an historic
*moment in the evolution of 'Ameri-
can, dissent. This rejection of ,elec-
. toral politics caught ,the imagination
of students around the country.
sNce 'grew out of the Greensboro
lunch counter sit-in.
At about the same time SDS was
born. It evolvved from an extreme
left-wing group which managed to
.survive: the silent '50's, 'the League
'fo'r Inthistrial Democracy. The 'Stu-
' dent Department of the League was
,,,a group ,of about 100 kids 'whose, par-
emits were veterans of the Old Left.
In 1959 they- asserted ? their inde-
pendence amid named themselves Students -for
a Democratic Society. For th'c next three-years
,SDS consisted of. 150 to 300' student, activists
frOni ,traditionally- radical, campuses like
, 'Swarthmore, -Oberlin, and the University of
Michigan. It was a small coterie of personal
friends attempting to create a distinctive grotip
id. entity and gropping around., for effective'
levers for mass popular organizing.
'While SDS was trying to define a ,distinct
home for itself on the far Left, the civitrightS
movement, was capturing .the ;attention of the,.
country. For the next four years, until the end
of 1964, civil rights marches, and non-violent
protests were' the training and recruiting
grounds for the nation's 'activists.
As usual, political actiOisin at Harvard
lagged behind the rest of the country. The first;
popular dissenting group \of -ally kind 'ma's' a
'11911-partisan study group on nuclear problems
called Tocsin (warning bell); which started in
196,1. But Tocsin was also subject to the sweep
Of militancy aiid soon changenrom study to
protest They marched on ,Washington in Feb-
ruary 1962 to protest Americvan flirtdtiOn with
nuclear war. ,
In S,epteinbef 1962, professcit H. Stuart
drew the whole of Tocsin into his independent
campaign for the U.S.'Selia.te. He received only
(Continued on pdoe
iso-
. student both' situations, the feels strong
sense Of :powerlessness in the decision-making
'proCeSs. Ten years, ago students' did not queS-,.
64 the goVerninent's right to coriScriPt'in the
interests of. 'national security., Nor did they
quesfion the-AdminiStration's 'authority to reg-
ulate parietals. Today, more sophisticated stu-
.dents are insisting that their own 'opinions on;
sueh issues have to be ,iecognized. 'The san
,tity of ;authority has been tarnishe'd and ;the
_priniing device has been students' experience
'with the Vietnani War. 'Of course disillusion-
ment with authority doesn't neCessarily 'lead to
activism. But given the .ekamples of' anti-war
:protest in the .nation: at large,- and the 'more
particular ,protest. on -campuses like Berkeley, ,
the critical 'student's great frustration 'has found
vent 'in 'active protest on -campus issues.
The .second reasOns 'for ,focusing. On local
issues is that 'it 'pro' vicleSs'./11,, el best chance for
succes'sfiii ,studerit Success is what
ill prevent ,thenieW actiVist frOrn becorning a',
,p 1.-F ,'f it is effect basic
change in "the University, 'the society can't be
that b d.,S , id:, ,*de.some hope
,and some rationale fpr 'staying within society,
:and working' fOr .change' through the estab7
'fished channels
-
a
Such feelings of frustration and .ineffectiv4-
'
neSs are- usually reserved, it.seems; for the oiCir,
pressed, segment's 'of society. A person born int0
? 'a situation of thick frustration 'id little expeC-
tation for change is immobilized. But when'
somebody WhO haS always' had'it'vp,retty good ?
?who has ',had a relativelY easy tirtie getting ,
Ids wishes ,fulfilled?experienees, inability
to control, what happens'io his .own life, it is
often a radicalizAng eicPerience.
For , years; radicals have-- been trying to., .,
mobilize society ,-arourid the-needs of the dis- ? -
possessed.- At first; there was pure community, ?
organizing and then_ the civil .rights
ment. Now radicals ;in the anti-war xnoVemen,t
have attempted ?to, organiZef the student elite,
around isslies' such as the ideals_ of democracy
and the atrocities of war. At best, they have
'Succeeded in arousing an intellectual under-. ,
standing.
fall option to the University's C.,;ominittee on'
Educational Policy., The CEP tabled the pro-
pOsal.' ft has since asked two .F-IPC members
? to' Present the proposal directly to the ,
nfittee.
,
? 4-IPC' chairman Henry :N,orr' 'td
,
ye o: try, but he and 'Other 'Members .have
reservations about this method_ of administra-
?,. bon-student communication. ,,Asked one, "Are
we jusst going to sit around and keep knock-
ing on the adminiStration's door? I hope not,
'because if we do, they'll just keep listening to
, us and never open it up.": There is talk about
setting up a student group to study educational
'pciliey. independent of the administration. The
.grs'olip would try to build 'student activism
around its proposals.
lAlso last spring, a grass roots -campaign was
-organized around parietals while the HUG
siMply stood by 'and 'watched. -This -year the
HUG hitched up its pants aud made a public
request to the Committee on Houses. Dean
Ford's reply was negative,' stating, in, effect,
L that' the Committee would increase, .parietals
when it was ready to. An independent'Student
Cothmittee on Parietals has begun to 'flex its
rhuscles while the HUG has salvaged a weak
prize, a j'oIut informal dinner meeting with
th'M'asirs and Deans. '
The adoption Of aetivism as the nietliod of
petitioning for-change separates-die nevsi acti- '
h
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PAGE S-TWO
...... -
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
THE HARVARD RIMSON-
Byy James K. Glassman
THERE WAS a look of satisfac-
tion on Jared Israel's face last Monday
as he stood -on the steps of -Memorial
Church listening to normally cool-
liberal Harvard students walk up to
the microphone and tell other normal-
ly cool-liberal Harvard students in
hot-radical tones what it was like
getting your head bashed in at the
Pentagon.
It Was, unmistakably, a triumph.
Israel and other Harvard radicals
were letting the system do its own
thing, which happened to be self-,
destruction. And with 500 people sit-
ting and standing on the grass, most
of them very emotionally into it, it
was obvious that something was hap-
pening. Harvard's cool-liberal political
style was changing.
Harvard liberals, even left-leaning
P. Moynihan calls "the politics of sta-
bility,". a fundamental belief in the.
order. Finally, it means ndfi-invpive-
ment, an aloofness froth -POlitiCs.
As ?a -result, Harvard -liberals take
up afternoon ,causes?like PBH pro-
jects or running art _sales for th
benefit of Mississippi 'Negroes. A few
work for liberal candidites .like John
F. Kennedy , or Kevin White. -,But
primarily, there is a breakfast-table-
argument aura to it all:,No one:bleeds.
Our Careers .and All
This lack of passion keeps you
clean. Student politics is farcical. It is
left to f'ormer Midwestern student
council presidents. There are causes
and causes. Issues come and ,go. You
clucil. your tongue or nod your head.
Eisenhower was dull and Stupid; Ken-
nedy had style, you know; the ,Cuban
invasion was bad;-the Doininican Re-
b be cool, detac
asston is t
liberals, have found themselves in an
excruciatingly painful position lately.
The past year has brought sharp esca-
lation of the war in Vietnam, savage
Negro rioting in urban cities, and in-
creased demands for student power
on campus. As a result, there are
some agonizing choices. to be made,
choices that have been put Off for a
long time,but choices that the rapid
pace of events are forcing Harvard
liberals to make now.
cal (napalm and Saran. Wrap. ) and
the Central Intelligence Agency
(Cuba and NSA). '
And for those who were in Wash-
ington getting their heads bashed in,
it all seemed to fit. That is why Is-
rael was smiling, looking like Oral
Roberts hearing the faithful just come
straight up out of the congregation
to testify.
For- those who - were listening, Es-
tening,to the war get worse and to the
repression of demonstration -get, more
brutal, the time for the choice was
zoo-ming in very fast. Sitting on the
sidelines, being cool-liberal, and clis-
pasSionate was becoming irrelevant.
The theme that the Washington dem-
onstrators harped on was: if you're
not with us you're against , us.
And how frustrating it is to try, to
convince them that you are with them!
Words, apparently,: are, not good
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1961
ed is to be irre
way now
public bit- was ridiculous; join the
Peace, Corps; the Poverty Program -
should at least be given a , chance.
And so on and on. Many of us don't
sign petitions because, well, what of
our political careers and all?
But passion, which 'is a ,dirty word
from the Freshman Mixer to the Class
Marshal Elections; has :reared its
dread -head.? We are being .forced to
be passionate or, we .choose not, to
be anti-intellectual or perhaps im-
Robert Strange McNamara is somewhat the
epitome of the University. cool-liberal. He
went to Berkeley and then to Harvard. He
taught at Ann Arbor. He recites Yeats. He
led a movement to abolish ROTC as a stu-
,
dent: He is well-to-do. He has 'a !Wilt
?
brain. He is cool and Robert'
enough any more. Dave Dellinger
was talking about "laying your body,
on the line" in Washington last week-'
end. You were being forced to get
busted,- to turn in your draft card.
The pressures were coming from the
aCt:; of the system itself. It was almost
squeezing ? you out, ,forcing you to
attack it, like the Pentagon troops
forced the , demonstrators into their
commitment. -
PaSsiOnate Harvard?"-
For -Harvard, ' the implications . are
enormous. BerkeleyTst'Yle...den,lands for
student poWer Will -soon': overWhelm
the- University. The next -step for'.Har:-
vard students, will- be ? sitting in to
protest ?,CIA:.:r9crniting on '
? .Passionatef,,,radiCalism ,on its iway,--';
t ?
'an a's-ra -brntal
Hatyad Will .1ifin?itrl for:, gnOd." ?
McNamara, Lthe ,Secretary of Defense, WaS
looking out of the *window of his Pentagon
TUDENT:: POWer now -is, eon:-
:fined to dernands for rantin More
panet:iLhours, revising some course -
:office; watching the .confrontation below. last ?.- ? -lifts,' and ending class r?aink-
Saturday. 'Maybe 'he was wondering What ing, The war;- nO., doubt, Will become
his liberal brain was thinking. more and-more a focus. And one ,;act
'could 'be -the catalyst for hot opposi-
What the escalation and the riots.
and the demands have done is to .in-
crease, radical. consciousness,. ,, The
word is ifcorurnitment." commitment
has never been part of the _mike-up of '
Harvard liberals, and that is what is
SO hard.
Cool Liberalism
Harvard cool-liberalism means the
good, old baSic beliefs in equali,ty and
civil rights.'It also means what 'Daniel,
.Youcluckyour.tOgite
or 1,04:your head.
enhOwer Was:dull and
_ ,
stupid;Kennedylicid
style, you know; the
, ?
-Cuban invasion was
. .
bad ithe Dominican
, ?
Reimblie,bit-was?ridie
Wows; jOintheTeace
Corps ; the -Poverty
-Program Should at
leastbe:efitentichance.
. ?
Many ofas don't 'sign::
petitions-because,well;
whatotour pAtiCal *
-careers and all.
Moral or , perhaps . wrong.
The war and the riots have been
-an increasing pressure for a long time..
But- the student' 'power, movement. is
bringing things home in such a way
that the issue cannot be avoided. Be-y
sides,' everything is inter-'connected, a's ,
Israel made' -quite clear at the rally_
last Monday: "Make no mistake, the
:University iSnot neutral in this, war.",,
The ',next: -step,:,is SDS leaders ex
, -?-?
plained; waS:.to'go after Dow Chemi;
tion 'to Harvard traditionalism and
paternalism. ?
',,The , potential is: definitely -,there.
Adinissioits policies have changed:-
, ?
FeWer and feWer students are 'coming
-from upper middle class familieS. The
stability 'element is vanishing. As in-
; tellectualiSm plays more of a role in
the opposition' to ,the war and-de
rriands for Negro equality, Hariaird,
students will find a stronger identity
with the Opposition.
Brit even ,more "important is the
oo:sitratok diniii.Wratiog ? 4nti 'Dow
- -
position Of the, cool liber Ha,rVard -
student 'i He. is :,being --left'. in.; the dust
W:he:-Wants,-tO be relevant, he has to:,
join:. the 'MOVeMent, *The': frItstyation.
ss011 gr.oW. and groW. T6.?be .aganiSt
de. people who , satin at: the Pentagon
is to-be,,against,MOOlity arid equality
and jiistice-things ?:the cdot-liberal
--hassappoftedZBtif _worse; 'to
be -.agains:r the people who sat in, at
--the. PeragOn I is- to'-- be ',,fOr , Lyndon
Johnson; , at-best, 'and 'Maybe' Ronald'
--Reagan- at worst.
-Robert: Strange McNan-jaraiS:s,orne-, *
What 'the epitOnire' ,of 'the' .University .1
dn to'Befkeley ? 'arid:
then to Harvard.'- H- taugbt.at 'Ann
Arbor. 'recites,: 'Yeats. a -
movernent-to.a.ijoAis4;0.,.qT:,eas-
den 1-1 isWell-to-do. 1,1e
?. - ,
. .
7 , -
:pater-brain: ''is o). and -aloof.
, RoberLStrafige-McNamara; the Secre-
, .
tary .of -Defense, was lo'oking out of
the window' -of his Pentagon, office,
watching the confrontation below last
Saturday. Maybe he was wondering
what his liberal, brain was thinking.
There are hundredk, of potential
McNamaras at. Harvard, really won-
deringwhat is.going on in their liberal
brainS. They are 2igonizing over the
war and the .riots' and the role of stu-
dents,' Mainly bRause now they are
forced to decide." Standing still is on
the wrong, side, they are learning.
13nt when it, over, when, they do de-
cide, or have the decision made for
them, as it was at the Pentagon, they
will 'feel very. clean and very good.:
t,
That ,.is how Israel and. his friends'
Were describing it.
MICIIAEL _ANSA,I;A
/ The eoolliberalHar
-vardStiidentisbeing
.left in.i6 dust-If he
-kart ts to'be relevant,
-liellas:to join the
movement. The fritstration will grow and
grow. robe aitsainst
the people 'who satin
at the Pentagon is to
be against moralit5r
,anitequality and jus-
tice- things'the
liberalhas always
supported.
? r:s
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
PAGE S-TWO
...... -
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
THE HARVARD RIMSON-
Byy James K. Glassman
THERE WAS a look of satisfac-
tion on Jared Israel's face last Monday
as he stood -on the steps of -Memorial
Church listening to normally cool-
liberal Harvard students walk up to
the microphone and tell other normal-
ly cool-liberal Harvard students in
hot-radical tones what it was like
getting your head bashed in at the
Pentagon.
It Was, unmistakably, a triumph.
Israel and other Harvard radicals
were letting the system do its own
thing, which happened to be self-,
destruction. And with 500 people sit-
ting and standing on the grass, most
of them very emotionally into it, it
was obvious that something was hap-
pening. Harvard's cool-liberal political
style was changing.
Harvard liberals, even left-leaning
P. Moynihan calls "the politics of sta-
bility,". a fundamental belief in the.
order. Finally, it means ndfi-invpive-
ment, an aloofness froth -POlitiCs.
As ?a -result, Harvard -liberals take
up afternoon ,causes?like PBH pro-
jects or running art _sales for th
benefit of Mississippi 'Negroes. A few
work for liberal candidites .like John
F. Kennedy , or Kevin White. -,But
primarily, there is a breakfast-table-
argument aura to it all:,No one:bleeds.
Our Careers .and All
This lack of passion keeps you
clean. Student politics is farcical. It is
left to f'ormer Midwestern student
council presidents. There are causes
and causes. Issues come and ,go. You
clucil. your tongue or nod your head.
Eisenhower was dull and Stupid; Ken-
nedy had style, you know; the ,Cuban
invasion was bad;-the Doininican Re-
b be cool, detac
asston is t
liberals, have found themselves in an
excruciatingly painful position lately.
The past year has brought sharp esca-
lation of the war in Vietnam, savage
Negro rioting in urban cities, and in-
creased demands for student power
on campus. As a result, there are
some agonizing choices. to be made,
choices that have been put Off for a
long time,but choices that the rapid
pace of events are forcing Harvard
liberals to make now.
cal (napalm and Saran. Wrap. ) and
the Central Intelligence Agency
(Cuba and NSA). '
And for those who were in Wash-
ington getting their heads bashed in,
it all seemed to fit. That is why Is-
rael was smiling, looking like Oral
Roberts hearing the faithful just come
straight up out of the congregation
to testify.
For- those who - were listening, Es-
tening,to the war get worse and to the
repression of demonstration -get, more
brutal, the time for the choice was
zoo-ming in very fast. Sitting on the
sidelines, being cool-liberal, and clis-
pasSionate was becoming irrelevant.
The theme that the Washington dem-
onstrators harped on was: if you're
not with us you're against , us.
And how frustrating it is to try, to
convince them that you are with them!
Words, apparently,: are, not good
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1961
ed is to be irre
way now
public bit- was ridiculous; join the
Peace, Corps; the Poverty Program -
should at least be given a , chance.
And so on and on. Many of us don't
sign petitions because, well, what of
our political careers and all?
But passion, which 'is a ,dirty word
from the Freshman Mixer to the Class
Marshal Elections; has :reared its
dread -head.? We are being .forced to
be passionate or, we .choose not, to
be anti-intellectual or perhaps im-
Robert Strange McNamara is somewhat the
epitome of the University. cool-liberal. He
went to Berkeley and then to Harvard. He
taught at Ann Arbor. He recites Yeats. He
led a movement to abolish ROTC as a stu-
,
dent: He is well-to-do. He has 'a !Wilt
?
brain. He is cool and Robert'
enough any more. Dave Dellinger
was talking about "laying your body,
on the line" in Washington last week-'
end. You were being forced to get
busted,- to turn in your draft card.
The pressures were coming from the
aCt:; of the system itself. It was almost
squeezing ? you out, ,forcing you to
attack it, like the Pentagon troops
forced the , demonstrators into their
commitment. -
PaSsiOnate Harvard?"-
For -Harvard, ' the implications . are
enormous. BerkeleyTst'Yle...den,lands for
student poWer Will -soon': overWhelm
the- University. The next -step for'.Har:-
vard students, will- be ? sitting in to
protest ?,CIA:.:r9crniting on '
? .Passionatef,,,radiCalism ,on its iway,--';
t ?
'an a's-ra -brntal
Hatyad Will .1ifin?itrl for:, gnOd." ?
McNamara, Lthe ,Secretary of Defense, WaS
looking out of the *window of his Pentagon
TUDENT:: POWer now -is, eon:-
:fined to dernands for rantin More
panet:iLhours, revising some course -
:office; watching the .confrontation below. last ?.- ? -lifts,' and ending class r?aink-
Saturday. 'Maybe 'he was wondering What ing, The war;- nO., doubt, Will become
his liberal brain was thinking. more and-more a focus. And one ,;act
'could 'be -the catalyst for hot opposi-
What the escalation and the riots.
and the demands have done is to .in-
crease, radical. consciousness,. ,, The
word is ifcorurnitment." commitment
has never been part of the _mike-up of '
Harvard liberals, and that is what is
SO hard.
Cool Liberalism
Harvard cool-liberalism means the
good, old baSic beliefs in equali,ty and
civil rights.'It also means what 'Daniel,
.Youcluckyour.tOgite
or 1,04:your head.
enhOwer Was:dull and
_ ,
stupid;Kennedylicid
style, you know; the
, ?
-Cuban invasion was
. .
bad ithe Dominican
, ?
Reimblie,bit-was?ridie
Wows; jOintheTeace
Corps ; the -Poverty
-Program Should at
leastbe:efitentichance.
. ?
Many ofas don't 'sign::
petitions-because,well;
whatotour pAtiCal *
-careers and all.
Moral or , perhaps . wrong.
The war and the riots have been
-an increasing pressure for a long time..
But- the student' 'power, movement. is
bringing things home in such a way
that the issue cannot be avoided. Be-y
sides,' everything is inter-'connected, a's ,
Israel made' -quite clear at the rally_
last Monday: "Make no mistake, the
:University iSnot neutral in this, war.",,
The ',next: -step,:,is SDS leaders ex
, -?-?
plained; waS:.to'go after Dow Chemi;
tion 'to Harvard traditionalism and
paternalism. ?
',,The , potential is: definitely -,there.
Adinissioits policies have changed:-
, ?
FeWer and feWer students are 'coming
-from upper middle class familieS. The
stability 'element is vanishing. As in-
; tellectualiSm plays more of a role in
the opposition' to ,the war and-de
rriands for Negro equality, Hariaird,
students will find a stronger identity
with the Opposition.
Brit even ,more "important is the
oo:sitratok diniii.Wratiog ? 4nti 'Dow
- -
position Of the, cool liber Ha,rVard -
student 'i He. is :,being --left'. in.; the dust
W:he:-Wants,-tO be relevant, he has to:,
join:. the 'MOVeMent, *The': frItstyation.
ss011 gr.oW. and groW. T6.?be .aganiSt
de. people who , satin at: the Pentagon
is to-be,,against,MOOlity arid equality
and jiistice-things ?:the cdot-liberal
--hassappoftedZBtif _worse; 'to
be -.agains:r the people who sat in, at
--the. PeragOn I is- to'-- be ',,fOr , Lyndon
Johnson; , at-best, 'and 'Maybe' Ronald'
--Reagan- at worst.
-Robert: Strange McNan-jaraiS:s,orne-, *
What 'the epitOnire' ,of 'the' .University .1
dn to'Befkeley ? 'arid:
then to Harvard.'- H- taugbt.at 'Ann
Arbor. 'recites,: 'Yeats. a -
movernent-to.a.ijoAis4;0.,.qT:,eas-
den 1-1 isWell-to-do. 1,1e
?. - ,
. .
7 , -
:pater-brain: ''is o). and -aloof.
, RoberLStrafige-McNamara; the Secre-
, .
tary .of -Defense, was lo'oking out of
the window' -of his Pentagon, office,
watching the confrontation below last
Saturday. Maybe he was wondering
what his liberal, brain was thinking.
There are hundredk, of potential
McNamaras at. Harvard, really won-
deringwhat is.going on in their liberal
brainS. They are 2igonizing over the
war and the .riots' and the role of stu-
dents,' Mainly bRause now they are
forced to decide." Standing still is on
the wrong, side, they are learning.
13nt when it, over, when, they do de-
cide, or have the decision made for
them, as it was at the Pentagon, they
will 'feel very. clean and very good.:
t,
That ,.is how Israel and. his friends'
Were describing it.
MICIIAEL _ANSA,I;A
/ The eoolliberalHar
-vardStiidentisbeing
.left in.i6 dust-If he
-kart ts to'be relevant,
-liellas:to join the
movement. The fritstration will grow and
grow. robe aitsainst
the people 'who satin
at the Pentagon is to
be against moralit5r
,anitequality and jus-
tice- things'the
liberalhas always
supported.
? r:s
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
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Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30:
CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
jighrvarcl takes a giant
Step bo the. Left
tCoirtinued from pa ot s-61e)
t?w(4 pet !evil., Of the Yon.. This set-
c)mbined with t h..: ? tectltin
? oe,ne .itod the Cobaii-missile crisis
ei.fe.ctivenesc of Tocsin,
Finally, pro,: !kilns( the BOrnit
flarxard, ? ??
Tla,n t.lJ.-I?trvard? bezac.,involvcd
itt.tilf: civil right- t-rt,vettliVt. fe0-1.- ?
SNCC .r..?-1 tiv;
g:lit s Coorcl natant t',n4-ruitifret-
F,
ru
cr.cigned to
I! recruitt.ind eiLicate 1?L'rvtrd at.udemc
1:?
ti' seat , n:1(1
"f. in :iv()
. .SR gri members
with .14.)tit ri-tt ti?-*nreen regular actt-
r. thi.... iirgttt. thing at
vart1.--
FTER FOUR vl
increacing activism, pro,- L gronps
; footing for multi i.,stie
pro,..4.1t- to ?Nruerican ifl iw ts"
niatt a,tivis,s that h rirni-
t1I i rovtrr% 45'c-ft not Jutonet.-
;t1 ...if 004, IOC
N.,1. ?t1)(_ AO tic hart sub-
A
4;1 c).`1
-r snigle
jt.. IUd1Q
.ti;
:r.
. at_ant;
I
One old SDS member cle?,crihes the
,
begiQing. ' in those ckirs we werc
not. big.: not iwtpular. SDS had t-
its Own ideac, without the help of the
War. And we did come up with dis-
tinctive icletts all our (Wen." The phil-
_osophy stre,,ted quality .of life, pont-
white ocganicing. mid community
power. w.ithin ?critt.litt +4 corporate
Tbs.!e
antk14rnfrion4n1.17-;, the Otte etternies
In- this ciitnitq are tne elo:?ted-inintied
rrri hatters ?
i;v etc e.,-;ti of 1962, SDS had grown
to a real national organization with
'about 500 membcrs. A year and a half
larer. 'Summer 1964, the strength, of.-
- eotrnm? unity orgattiz;ng . as a tactic:
had Oirted general acceptance among
The ritiort.c activists, rhat, sun-liner
SOS. stAned th .F.,conornie Resicianeet
jinn Aftt011 Proicct Bos-
ton. Newark-, Cleve/and,- lialtimore
and 'Chicago; About. 150: radicals
?.enrd-ftill time to ortranize gi?,(ftiOS
Uri(.rti4i0VSTIVIt. acld trvl fri
k.oncideratie,i),
That was also the .cummer when
.he..great of Northern citalemt
c.,t. I-, ? ?1A (-tan tikhir..
i!ere the'. '.ie'. ed ,-orrinitutitv organ-
I-yang firct hand. Mary! came
itching to cre?atc SNCt . in the
, North. V,11 ..1 f,terid :7,1)S tc
tv,,r t! Ifl . r rh.r (i4
lb
LT.
1-14 It11r4 pAr:thr. it
Joi ih).?
ei:.
?1,1,v .,f .,cti- cess. M Luther 'Knit. tallcdnil
.i 14t/nOMIC (,1.1,161ia- 'he- during the c.firip- tgn.
? ir 4.10/1, 1,4 N or:L;(1A for loinr r
? j the W.t? lessening ot-?,
(IL
-desire totwork through thi.
111Juse radicals ft it. no
*rug: -("ivit vc:.isl
rod:, whch gained through ?
'Itaptitai Appt,:tred that
radical demands were being saticried '
with ir idiiia-tal politics:
:?;1? of 1964.. 11atpilt_lrtj11,,,J.JI:u
t'ila-rkfttitied Sttec ha-d. a _prsident
.?,mmirre'cl to 1 radical. cause.
After -the elec?tion. when 'emphasis
.cluired tit obsti tic:ring-the wir..radical
olicv found no 5vm.patily with ?the
admit non.
' Btu ,t4
. ?ing 'cooperation, !Wien
Kennedy ?liberals to support 1,11
Iieving that ainderne.i.th his asset-tint,
(0.7'snppOrt all the people:. [h&c w?sts
a resolve to start a liberArcvolution;
\N:hilc Harvard SDS worked for John-
son. iho also supported independent
Nocl Day in his campaign to unseat
House Speaker John McCormack.
Then campaign clogati expressed the
radical mood: '`P.irt of ,he Way with
*PC-
ed with
e ?
- 4t-
Ct.!, t! .111 orne,.the ground
(1-k'.'.,:heing korl for a mass move-
would seriously challenge
his tennre Unice In 4\ ngtist, Con.
grecs acluoitd the Gulf of. Trall:111
Rizsolirtioe -,1?1.ipziag the rrernenrionc
t.1 nued States in
?c.4.-tnaini. Not ?-mh.-: ,3%?? ihr
birth of Unis,,,:iy Reform at Iler
keley-. Students s 1%,w n nitig nhout
what they .colda do wild) titcy found
3 CA-lige.
F. ,f 1965 something hap-
pened my....11 rought. students a cause
ta Bd hr.:. the country the lie-
'giitnincls .L1 rna6. protect inOt,t9terti.
It iliNolved people to the p.?Thical ar-rr,
: md-righr,o: the civil rights movem, mit
It rit.rligt? ditiNC ;It oroN an ir.,;(1,1_
grit- ft-s..t'7.atiort 4 t.in J1 ,..ause.-FiC7r-
UnItcd :..q,,tec I an. 't bcnitljigc
NorthsYietnaM.
11.1.4rd's first- peace mar
urrect.in Fehr Lars. of that ve:
mo ultrched from
-
()nice.
hridgrConv'et,n to the
'"\Ve wrre nlintrie `Iir4 th,!
liorge 1?:.1 attn. cYd Ase
huh,. ?ocher:
\\... far-
t .p-d Ind II ti.tv.1 betAnte
-krrar Iral !note t "ihe most
I .
from a Pretzts
the '44,
(conitn,,,pd
, if
.abot (1 ,..tii-
?11 \1(ivt rnent
n pe s-stx)
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30:
CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9 ?
?
, ?
Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30 : CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980019.
?-? .:Irt ?
,
PAGE s-six.
Fro'in tocsin
(Coniinued from age S?t-fve)
group was named for America's first
- anti-Vietnam War .demolistralion.
? .0.
, which it sponsored in ?New at On,
. May 2, 1964.
"M2M put' out magnificent pOSItion
.e ?
oapers when nobody knew anything
or even was thinking about the ? war,*
lt -as all very. slanted but it made
people think," recalls- one
M2K which dissolved by DecentheCT
1965, Was extremely limited-in its (Orr,
ception: 11..purpose was to bring, tilt..
issue; of the war to public aftenpon
10
t.? ?
.1
THE - HA RV A RD' C
NOW this %TM ocre's 'f)e
en a
, .
? ? &LIN shift mune, who c attittu
qrgantzation. .
vs this fall &vitt the el
" lte,ance." Rty ?Mungo, ,? ed (di-
, tor ol the Bo'Iston UniversINF', r,
?
mad.. briefpeech, explainipg the
4 in as controversial -a marotyr as
it did arouse -a.rdor,,b-ut. most ?
would-be activists found the propa-,
ganda itkulogk
In those first le)v months
? the slowly growing dis!ccrit-In the
. ? Unite'rStates lacked leadership_ -The
'Civil Rights -movement as an inno-
vating force was dead: The-Selma:i_it-
in at Boston's Federal Building 'in.
March 1965 marked dm end- of Hat-
vaerl's involvement with Civil Rights.
The march oh \VashintrIn onc.ek.
mi Lat the October' 16 "Re-
ststati,C-'rglIS
,?
mon.
? "Vs 'rit-.,1
the civil t;gits..moverrient. I...tlittught - fiscal poli
._
the Soothe' + --,..hiris, were un'A,-meri- - courses sl -Acct.
1.?
can bec.ivao they- heat Ngto6 with are also -.1*tng -.
/
' rubber hose,,. in 1465 I burned my i, cadres in ' '?tratei:
tii-,tfi c.IT.3 1 have finally'realited rho:- ? and I-list( I-v 164
' sou. ;_ait'-fi.c.1).Ange ,t..t.ount i-v ?t at s ro--- sors and ; -tide-
ttc.'71,1-,.., hi- stayiiig ty,?tith.Tino-dt1.7%..t.,.. abi_ase, I kiere 1..7..
-a.s-11-4-o4i'viiii be a .traitol..
. ,- - . ? studet, ,s rik
.1 :ant" pr_iiVared- to go-710 -jail : t- : Vittrtana
-'?-s Id. Apri: 'o5. 1)v.- mo-s?-%i:F?j- idly-trt.-- - also s
-t.1-u-._-_ exir- --1-6sitititt .itt- the-I-anti...v.- .:.,,,.
?-....--nit'c'm - - 1;11?,L4a-cli -1-1- -rt Iteci . 1
IR: tis, 4 'hich'ftitlieir e sr#cri;fiett"
: ?along bk?lim-Id'tlle.n..),I. "heyileft to- _otheis
" 'the n. An' ilt;dity.-;ot ,solidairilg dL-t
new sit?Ttl.Crt,_ The leaders utls-ed -a vi?Fa.i?-??
thc ;chi; i a 'Inai?ches- -aS l). effe4ve
? t -,
'.. tool Tilxiii.titol change ana 1Cader-
, _
ship torahts protest form vtiassiiined
. o.ii, .nore mocIt'rate. --r tips--
? i - -,-4-?.?-1-
b
. ri 1 'Ili -the wtore than two years'
sin ?-e r first tnarch on Washington
.... ? .
nob; td, in SI)S has . really I Idtolv.n
. f
1 \ hat, 1-1 dia, .1--Iarnpered. by an anti-
,., 4
...lot they. tlite,..,tyylitd it
diflitt..to focus their p-osvver. SUS has
I . " - 1, ?
? ifOrle
on the Bostont COM-
, .
,
.' - t'Vt, . -?-mhert of lird ressive
.,..-1-....? ,i) , ?red Israel a
rtiLj
Kline, .S.1..,?.. ''? ilkiii.
. ? student-bo " i
?-_. A mlanth ewsTi.
- unveiled i .n.f.,i?:-.4
-
ction
abor a
d
dead...t m at' the
. ?
aa freshrrian Ifjoincd. micize a
- later was the last maior ?tationv-Vide
Civil Rights mobilization. The War
Was ...13)6te horrihre and immediate
than discrimination The Left's con....
Welts e johnciin's credil?ilit5' Was
cdpall!, tit ;...td
moved bc".41.1,11,La,teatcli scope of
I et,
, to the t. Negro activistsHhave become black
., ii.
Alwinfiona ies.SINC.,?: hi- , uTonte an'ext:lu-rif!
k.: ,---s--,---, . ----'- '' 1. ;r1 - !ii, ,..
saw 'organization, White felivzsts7nape ,,,t, ,
? ?
come disillusioned. iliaii;'' turn on u\n,d'd p
t "4
OUL . Y;14,1t- those 1111W don:LIT-go hip, there is the
, porsst batty of more radiciiiism and inco re ....iadi-
k
cal radicalism.
_..-., 0
ah
Of-pro-tea
The rneniliej%'
". _41
ive
the
de to
? eou
will. be..
er
ill pole- -
w ,
University
;orS,
-"gilt. Plans
form radhitl
?
es, like Ec .,1 ,
ch Ilenge ptofcs-un .:;
/el": idealogii'l -:
?tik. tut organi-zing
ii el? sses against -the
; ? ? --
priitg SDS
a) to-daY ? activities .
. a (I:petition.--
?t-.hopess7iit iaiSt
- - - .
. . _
ing. 'through a petition. a large scale
student . revolt when the CIA recruit-
ers Come to -Harvard. So far the peti-
tion:drive has been a failure. SDS has
yet to demonstrate an 'ability
nicate with a-
ide? -.Ian
-
-Kers continue ? to isoltite-,7thernse1.kes
from-other ? students, Ihey Will- lose thr.
_best chance they ever -had. -
But -whatever happens-.tri SDS.
-dem activism will grow 7,11)4- prosper
feeding on ite1f gaining. streilgtli
fte..nat fear-uf;dying,in-Viet_-
:?-tri) nd o[niit bei n
,a1_11t.- to ?do hing - bottt.0 Ar..?1 -)
...SIS Clot civy hit-, ton ,-..fatx. 'out fa.
traoract; tlie....F:t.-11)441tmerg ietirt
_ ,
Of Ly ndc.t.tt? I 'Cohnson ? andRth
Ter: Strange. Me.--1\'?14-i""a "may ',vet -
enough tosurn suidents'iktrn-parietal
.
LO foreign ,polly :and make-them tu-ri
n 'thei r petii sTh,r c.f1s1"/
_ 7
STEPPE!) into the vattatin.
It called ,tir?r .? .?eacc ? "-s.'? ...t.h-
ingto44m Alt4.41 Itqui?tt?-t.l.,ou,t,
to be (the most iinpoltant
slt?se- :mule. The mai'. ?
,1
ceinipiete stict,:ss, tit ,.,!rt it
people accordni...g.-Jto SDS reports.
I\ cc tla-tr= pez:?cn_ involved-in the
t!,051(21), "01 galiiftg :the :Prrf.0) was
.1 tc,rific dz uidm-
j'' -
CILingtd
- h-ole f?C':\ 111S:DS" Most rtt,
ineinbers we ?Foi
tcniton ut do con-in-minty. organizing
lirotest..liiit the sivitr..hit everv.
lick"). and it was- ih.t,rtsh strong to
he the mai? for a
? ,
S
he War. War Jn 1965 A;a-.
more liberal 'than `radie-altwo 'go
tattoos ? tihOtV, the moderation of tha
"radicalism" as 'comp*ed to today'. :
From the- Apri/ '65 SN'CC.,.NewSlc..
_ ? --..., -?-?
ter: 'Wilt:0,a. (Taimmunist get's mixt
up with Lts:ii (..-;4trilitl i u. tlit:S and a pc --
.
.
st'tni develops. 'Jib'. subverti
ils'. We-re mbverliiig `s-illern.' .A sc t ,
deseribed radical ,skwite ?irt the" Cat i i
s - -
.s71.s.?.,. it; 'lime. ().-3: "Wet do' 'not h( te i
? .4 .141- ".in'i racks hot (k. llket Id be- a tie t
, -
, to IA or k `Tor stiv 1 o t IiistWvii ? ril.
.., , -11.- '
. . ,,
rik_W lorciErt rxmcy Without feat -elf ,i
ilt1;n1,2, pp i ..-iTri_ 111.11.- .
i
body h5,.,1
? ,
- sit.?..;.,. then evers buoy nass,?!, I it t 1
?
grirur. dp it CAW left. Negro ac..tt Ists I'
Negro 1 .
hays. 1....i:orne... black rCyolution: ries.
S 'Cc( ; Ita- becomLait rN.-rlusive ,i gaii-
I
1 zatiltWhite7.act Iii,-,:t_staee lit! 0610 ,
al.ii 1 I i.itdiek:S:f;'1 V 'Liiiii.Ca.7!1:1 ;Md. ht(4) 1 '
???
ot?Aitt ;t . The y' Ye Just
- t- ?
ihci
lld I vtliiess.t
jle'.b.ftLivotc,rz, of
power. muveme.nt, Har- ?
.vard SPS" is desperately Irving to
,.t
rriarcrmtl fk.,t,e, to sr....3 the MoiT.-
)./.
n-mutrin Sa radi.11.4irectin52For thc,
. ,
List 'two Years we.. VC nti:srt ,-71(t,,rvitia
-
;rtv,,iv-.f.;;11-14t-ttrocicts' issue and
?-ceriirating un urizanizing,iii the 'itt
side. -totrin) uti;? v.- -say s-_SDS f-
r) ti-MaTX-15i-en . there's-'hen ?
a revers01-."-.-wit bait .SPS. toward the
.-
--trilege-eith the !as, -.year; 1 could feel
Thegin .last seat with McNamara.
out. Tor -tho-se;N%lff.; doil 'L.:go 1-;"i p' , t h.e r e
... .
i.., . thc-pitssibility Of 111(21 t"..., r,ical I iNn) I,
and more rarlii.:1 r4tite.alistr.t..
, , --.,
(iiiNent !u .1--1.-,Cian-Tc..1147:cr-c.-1-1 ie. -.tn- -
- -- _
41(Friitical 't h ?-?.-_-14..c I u.--W.as hiti--,-(p -? D_,C.
Ileritattor?-tt,,,,,;7,itr.ali-on -aride its .1.1?11.-
I
ittrit.;yari,ti ftdifird -arc: in?vo i'Liti?-til -. '
ss-ttle - .anti-ttraii.. k)rganizat)Oni caili.-..d .
1
711.0i1r-
? Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30:
Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9
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. ?
'
-SATURDAY, dCTOBER 2R'1967 :-? THE :11NR rA. 0R4 MSON
? ? 1
S-ST.VEN
By Charles F. Sabel
WHEN I knew George during
the summer the rich people had all
left Madrid for the beaches so his
little illegal busine-ss hi land specula-
tion was sucked dry. He was eating
on the chif and-his dhena: was dun-
ning hirn,for the rent, but he would ,
terrorize .her with his deep voice and
dark skin: He had only been in Spain .
two mOuths and, his 'Spanish waSn't
up to -quarrelling.
George-once had a house in? Ethio-
June
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Ef 1 G
,pAigolog fi?:,AlpEs
SALARY$6500.-
plus' PROMOTION,LIBERAL F R I NoapEp oRT BENEFITSN WHILE YOU TRAIN'
UNITIES
T 0
_ OVER $24,900
NO EXPERIENCE-NEEDED -44:\)
Begin your career July 1, 1968.;Write immediately for
application which must be filed by,Noy, 3, 1967.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR. PLACEMENT OFFICE
ON CAMPUS OR FILL IN COUPON BELOW AND MAIL TO
NEW, YORK STATE BANKING,DEPARTMENT
PERSONNEL OFFICE, 100 CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK N. Y., 10007
PLEASE PRINT
Name
Address
eorge an
-.pia and has eaten lobster steaks from
-?: ?
; the Red Sea. He is very black,: though
his features are Caucasian. He 'is quite
fat because he is always* 'eating-, he
says hercan 'never get, enough,, to eat: - ,
As he is in .sonle. measure,i-esigned'to' ?
his .corphlence -he ;Walks' s,tiff-legged ,-, ? f-?
' ? ?
and 'pigeon-,teed,makes. his
, ,
, and :breats
step.
' '? After George left " this', country,
Which was, ..twenty-, ye..irs,-,?' ig-o, ' 'ifter,
being Lilted a Communist ind find- ?- '" '' ' -"- , -'
nig thaCthe ;smart New ' ..York musi-
c al circles ;Might tolerate ;,a ' Jew --b,nc -.. .-;,,,?:..'f,.:;, :,:',.,,,:c, y,,,':,,;.; n.r.?,..:, :,,-
?
,not a ;Negro; he catne? to 'Europe ' to ,:..,-,'27,-;,, :lefrines 'he said he was a citizen
/01 the .world, free, notr'speaking Eng-.
lish. But he was waiting for them all
'the same. Whatever happens George
is over now, for all he wants is to
marry a pretty girl and move to the
South of Spain where he can run a
small hotel and let the CIA conduct
the symphonies of the world.
1'
Art Explorers
50 A BOYLSTON ST.
HARVARD SQUARE
Eskimo and Indian Art
Stone Carvings, Navajo Rugs
Eskimo Xmas Cards Calendars.
Novel Gifts
Think early of the coming holiday
season. The most unusual gifts in
the world. The Hudson Bay Es-
klincip benefit. _
_
r
Declassified and Approved For Release @ 540-Yr 2013/12/30 : CIA-RoP73-60475R000201980018-9 <
,1
'PAGE S-E1:4114.
?
quest the Uniersity to "form a com-
mittee with'tiOn'q.le_nekt ,24 hours",
to, work out ?details .Of the trans-
ter ...of power to he students,
But anotheti'S4dene.Persited, "Ont'
point of win out If
students had the '2209 who
signecl_the apogy,to ,*1\41inara. last -
fall would be,The ones who ruled."
protestexqthen ,Vs.ked that ? 'the ,
deinOnstration1Stick to its ',original
"limited ohje4iye"; 2 When. the,
protesters got tack to:;:the.:;136w-
theY''deCided to raise the 'price - of
LeaviO free"; PrOnn--
ise Only, 0,449,i,erWoulAnOt. return, ?
but also ?thathiscompany would
never recruie+iii
at Harvard Some-
one 'Leavitt' was not
enipoWerecl,k,toittn. ake company policy
on the 'spOt:Jihis bothered the pro-
testers only uhtil ,sOrdeone else Ob-1,.:
stiVed, :"He`.p.. -use/ the' telephone,
01
THE HARVARD - CRIMSON
can't he?.':,ElitVe'hirri call Dow and get
. a deaSiO'
It itidnally:Oceurred to .some demi,
odnsti.rs: that they might , be sit-
ting ii for weeks
waiting for this
final deMand;:tO, be met. And a 'lot r8
; people begaa tO feel guilty .about the
,Way' LeaViti.,had been handled. And
, as on demonstrator put it, "The is-
sites had gotten a' bit confused.".Dean
Glimp pro'rniSed . that ? the 'Facility
Would :consider. "the issue- you have
raised ',here,". i.e., whether some civi
liaii Military groups should be 'ex-.,
cluded from ,the campus.
,cogent arguments 'from
'a couple of tutors provided the 'neces-
? sary nudge:; and .then the , students
. Voted release Leavitt. Leavitt
, walked ,quickly when he got out of
Mallitickrod,t. TWo blocks away,' at
the fand Of William James, Dean
GlitnP felt obliged to pOint out that
they had 'not' been followed.
AIR FORCE
OffiCial -"USAF jackets for sale. Fur
hoods, water epellent,' insulated to
40. Great for that crumby C9nbridtge
winter. $25.00. Phone Mr. Roberts
, 266-7132 evenings.
?
Pak-Time Help Wanted
For Weekly Newspaper
in Harvard Square
- Wanted: LAY70UT
HEADLINER
LIBRARIAN
COPY-EDITOR
' Selectric Composer
., Operators
Evening' 4 ,Week-End Work
,
Pleas d send details of your experience
etc. to A; Taylor, COMPCTERyVORLD,
129 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge,
Mass.
ET-YOUR XMAS GIFTS
CHINA, CRYSTAL, BRASS,
CANDLESTICKS, ? LAMPS
Reasonable Prices
23 LEE ST., CAMBRIDGE, Apt. 2
4??????
SUBSCRIBE!
ould you drink beer
theiht from bottle?
,'If:.you're On 'a ,b..10ket,Party
OriOniething; 'carrying '-aloni a
Us's, IS ,Prett3i:, clumsy But
when it's convenient, we think
:itiA,:aShame.-riot to :u8o,one.
?
ee:ping 13;n4Weisei:.
Side the bottle 'or
?
can is MiSsing'half
organized at *Ole,
f+ your glass 'have a Asit
o do with taste and aroma
4:ISt ;.beers- have Carbonation.
Pumped hi mechanically. Not
Budweiser. We go ',to 'a 'barrel
." of ,trouble':nd 'expense to let
Budweiser .create its own bub-
,, ,bles with the itet,h:cral carbona,
tion of tieechwood Ageing. So
\y-pu realty can't blame usfdr
wanting' you to ,get it at its
est, can yai?-
cX8-t for fun, pO,tif pLu
extifOtif of ;fiV:e,13,0tL
es''
,
.-glass. If yOuilion't
agree that the extra
taSte, claritk'and
aroma make a big difference,
'go back tO the' bOttle.
We won't say another Word.:
tf''
est reason in the world to drink beer
ANHEUSER'-BUSCH, INC, ?:St1OUIS ? NEWARK ? LOS ANGELES ? TAMPA ? HOUSTON :
join-the-
fashion frateti.
char
bra
O If Winter turns ycid off, let the
O Charley Brown turn you on! j. ?
,putsidd, it's a great-looking outerShirt
'in hearty, heavyweight wool with room'
O , 'snap/batch wickets. Inside, it's built
..'-fO( comfort with a color-coordinated
lining of warm pile. All arourid,lt:s got
.? ? ??
all the style a guy couid,want(anci? the
. right price, too!). Make frieridSfwith -
Charley Brown soon, in -? ?
Sizes.
About $20.0O
?-???
Harvard Co-op?Cambridge ?
.,Grovar-Cronin?Waltham
?
' SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1967
IT-HAUL
RENTALS
LOCAL and ONE WAY 300 YARDS FROM
MEMORIAL HALL
BETWEEN HARVARD and KENDALL SQ.
RESERVE EABLY
BROADWAY ESSO 320 BROADWAY, CAMBRIDGE
PHONE 354-9004
'UM
CRONIN'S
1171,Mt. Auburn Street
FAMOUS FOR: STEAKS, CHOPS, SEA FOOD
Complete Dinners, 99c to, $3.25
Try Our Porterhouse Steak, for two
Tenderloin Steak for two on sizzling platter
Full line of Wines, Beers and LiquorsTel. Eliot 4-1366 Dark Beer on, Tap
MEN!
? Get with
the COOL
ONE!
Get with
NEW Am)
The luxurious,
new aftershave
with the
irresistible ,
fragrance of
? -tropical limes.
DON MEREDITH, STAR QUARTERBACK OF
? THE DALLAS COWBOYS SAYS:
New improved Aqua Velva SILICONE
LATHER is great! Lubricating silicones
run interference for my razor...giving me
the cleanest, smoothest stymie ever!
Ove
kers
ere!
The November issue of Cheetah,
the most talked about new maga-
zine of the decade, is now at your
newsstands. It's more colorful;
more audacious, more provocative
and irreverent than the first issue
of Cheetahwas. And that first issue
sold off the newsstands nearly all
over the country.
The November issue of Cheetah
talks about the New Heroes on
Campus, about the Flower Fuzz, the
Communal Living Thing, the To-
ronto Draft Dodgers, about Janis
Ian, the half-pint Baez. It's got some
of the great posters and fashion
art of our day and a spectacular
O "flower fuzz? full color pull-out of
the well, known law`enforcer and
man-about-ladies, Woody Allen.
It's funny! It's exhilarating! It's
- exciting! It's the November iss,ue of
Now at your newsstands.
(P.S. For an annual subscription to
Cheetah, send $5.00 in check or
money order to Cheetah Magazine,
1790 Broadway, N.Y., N.Y. 10019.)
fi
Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/12/30: CIA-RDP73-00475R000201980018-9