Glossary

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This page isn't finished yet. The terms need to be defined (about one sentence), and probably some recategorization and new terminology will be needed as we continue. The "students" list looks a little weak to me right now, for example. Define terms used in your papers

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Contents

[edit] Faculty

[edit] Nathan Pusey

See also: President Pusey

Image:Nmp.jpg President of the University and member of the corporation at the time of the strike, Pusey was influential in many decisions made at that time, including the one to call the cops.

[edit] Franklin R. Ford

Dean of the Faculty. Ford was one of the major decision-makers behind the police Bust, and was criticized for not consulting the Faculty before making his decision.

[edit] Fred Glimp

Dean of Harvard Admissions and Financial Aid in 1969. Glimp was one of the major decision-makers behind the Bust and was thus sometimes thought to share part of the blame for the Strike.

[edit] Theodore R. Sizer

Dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Sizer objected to the use of police to end the occupation of University Hall, and was involved in efforts to increase African-American enrollment at HGSE.

[edit] Skiddy Von Stade

[edit] Mary Bunting

[edit] Henry Rosovsky

[edit] Roger Rosenblatt

[edit] Archibald Cox

[edit] Hugh Calkins

[edit] Rebert Higgins Ebert

Dean of the Medical School. Ebert issued a medical report that detailed the injuries resulting from the Bust. He was also one of the four deans who objected to the use of police.

[edit] Everett Mendelsohn

[edit] Archie Epps

[edit] Skiddy Von Stade

[edit] Outsiders

[edit] King Collins

Former Columbia University graduate student who lead many classroom disruptions and humorous protests including running naked through Eliot House.

[edit] Robert McNamara

Robert McNamara

United States Secretary of Defense in 1966, he visited Cambridge and was mobbed by about 800 anti-war protesters, led by SDS.

[edit] Mr. Velucci

Mayor of Cambridge in 1969. He was a major opponent of Harvard University.

[edit] Robert Tonis

Chief of the University Police

[edit] Fred Leavitt

A recruiter for Dow Chemical who was held within a lecture hall at Harvard in the fall of 1967. During the 2-1/2 hours that he was held there by protesters, he admitted to being against the war.

[edit] Che Guevara

Che Guevara

[edit] Bobby Seale

[edit] Groups

[edit] Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)

[edit] Progressive Labor (PL)

A branch of SDS, the Progressive Labor Party was even more radical. They believed that Vietnam betrayed the principles of revolution by negotiating with the United States.

[edit] Worker Student Alliance (WSA)

A section of the SDS led by the Progressive Labor Party

[edit] New Left Caucus

[edit] Memorial Church Group

The name that the group meeting in Memorial Church after the Bust gave themselves.

[edit] Harvard Radcliffe Policy Committee (HRPC)

[edit] Student Faculty Advisory Committee (SFAC)

[edit] Committee of Fifteen

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[edit] Corporation

The Harvard Corporation

[edit] Afro (AAAAS)

[edit] Dow Chemical

The company responsible for the creation of several dangerous 'tools' (most noteworthy among them Napalm), Dow Chemical attempted to recruit Harvard students in the fall of 1967. This resuted in SDS demonstrators peacefully retaining the recruiter inside a lecture hall for 2-1/2 hours, not letting him leave.

[edit] Harvard Divinity

[edit] Harvard New College

[edit] Harvard Graduate School of Education

[edit] Harvard Law School

[edit] Harvard Business School

[edit] Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC)

[edit] Harvard - Radcliffe Tunafish Society

A fictional, parody society, that was actually an anonymous flier with a list of demands parodying the 8 demands made by the SDS and other groups. The document demands include the following;

  • "BRING PEACE TO THE WORLD IMMEDIATELY."
  • "ROLL BACK THE PRICE OF ROAST BEEF SPECIALS TO 50c."
  • "DRAINING THE CHARLES RIVER, THEN FILLING IT UP WITH CHAMPAGNE, BEER, OR, AT LEAST, CLEAN WATER."

[edit] Ad-Hoc Committee to Keep Harvard Open

[edit] Harvard Undergraduate Committee (HUC)

[edit] Media

[edit] Harvard Crimson

A newspaper written by students at Harvard University that covered a wide variety of events on campus relating to the Harvard Strike of 1969. It was one of the few news representatives to be allowed to stay inside University/Che Guevera Hall during the Occupation.

[edit] The Old Mole

A newspaper written by the SDS.

[edit] Rap Up

[edit] WHRB Radio

Radio station run by students at Harvard University that broadcasted from inside University Hall during the Occupation

[edit] Life Magazine

[edit] Boston Globe

[edit] Strike Lingo

[edit] The 8 Demands

[edit] Expansion

[edit] Black Studies

[edit] Restructuring

[edit] Sit-In

[edit] Teach-In

[edit] Mill-In

[edit] Classroom Disruption

A type of protest started by King Collins as a way of protesting university policies.

[edit] The Bust

The police raid that happened early on Thursday April 10th. This was the catalyst for the strike because the extreme violence the police used upset many Harvard students. Estimates of how many students were hurt enought to seek medical care are between 41 and 75, while about 11 police were injured.

[edit] The Occupation

[edit] Rosovsky Report

[edit] Wilson Report

[edit] Places

[edit] Soldier's Field Stadium

[edit] Sanders Theater

[edit] Memorial Church

The church that students gathered in after the Bust to decide what to do. This meeting, which more than 2000 people attended, was the formation of the Memorial Church Group.

[edit] University Hall (Che Guevara Hall)

[edit] Harvard Yard

[edit] Widener Library

[edit] Nathan Pusey Library

[edit] Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

[edit] Paine Hall

The location where faculty planned to discuss the issue of ROTC on campus in December, 1968. SDS demonstrators entered the hall before the meeting began, and waited for it to start, so they could share their views. The meeting was cancelled, and some students lost their scholarships, were placed on probation, or even suspended.

[edit] Other

[edit] Martin Luther King

[edit] Vietnam War

[edit] The Draft

[edit] Class Rank

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