03372nam 22004813u 450 991080913950332120240410082627.0(CKB)1000000000030343(EBL)238191(OCoLC)475947585(MiAaPQ)EBC238191(EXLCZ)99100000000003034320130418d2005|||| uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAt Berkeley in the '60s the education of an activist, 1961-1965 /Jo Freeman1st ed.Bloomington :Indiana University Press,2005.1 online resource (385 pages)Description based upon print version of record.0-253-21622-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.List of Illustrations; A Note on Nomenclature; List of Acronyms and Abbreviations; Preface and Acknowledgments; 1 The Train to Berkeley; 2 Cal; 3 Politics and the University; 4 SLATE; 5 Exploring the Political Bazaar; 6 The Young Democrats; 7 Student; 8 Protest; 9 Summer Vacation in Washington, D.C.; 10 Crossing the Line; 11 The Speaker Ban; 12 The SLATE Supplement; 13 Fair Housing; 14 Mexico and Central America; 15 The House on Parker Street; 16 The Assassination of JFK; 17 The Bay Area Civil Rights Movement; 18 On Civil Disobedience; 19 The Sheraton-Palace; 20 Auto Row21 Clogging the Courts 22 On Trial; 23 Freedom Summer; 24 Summer Session; 25 Hitchhiking; 26 The Democratic Convention; 27 New York City; 28 First Week of the Fall Semester; 29 Eviction!; 30 Who Done It?; 31 Capturing the Car; 32 Strongwalled; 33 The October 2nd Pact; 34 The FSM Is Born; 35 Sparring; 36 Energy; 37 Escalation; 38 The "Right Wing" Revolt; 39 The Secret Negotiations; 40 Changes; 41 Mutual Misconceptions; 42 The Heyman Committee Report; 43 The Regents Meet; 44 The Abortive Sit-In; 45 Resurrection; 46 The Real Sit-In; 47 Strike!; 48 Victory; 49 Intermission; 50 FUCK; 51 The Trial52 On Regents and Rules 53 The State Legislature; 54 Graduation; 55 The FBI Files; 56 Aftermath, Afterword, and Afterthoughts; Notes; References and Sources; Index; About the AuthorIn At Berkeley in the '60s, Jo Freeman argues that the stage for campus radicalism of the sixties was set by the repressive climate of McCarthyism that permeated American society in the 1950s. Skillfully laying the historical foundation, she argues that Berkeley in the sixties began in the 1930s when rules were laid down prohibiting political activity in order to protect the university against charges of Communist influence. These rules were later used to justify the suppression of all political activity and advocacy inside the campus boundaries.At Berkeley in the sixtiesCollege studentsCaliforniaBerkeleyPolitical activityHistoryStudent movementsCaliforniaBerkeleyHistoryCollege studentsPolitical activityHistory.Student movementsHistory.378.79467Freeman Jo1670152AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910809139503321At Berkeley in the '60s4031836UNINA