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Page 17 text:
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With no national crisis to stir the campus, and the football team fresh off a stirring tie with Nebraska, the attack focused on the trustees. A day after the opening of school, an elab- orate exhibit was set up in front of Tommy Trojan detailing the inter- locking web of trustee financial and political activity. The thoroughly re- searched exhibit brought some protest from the consolidating right-wing groups on campus, led by the Young Americans for Freedom, but the mood of new classes and fresh stimulation kept the voices down and the crowds small.
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Page 18 text:
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I Then it was October 7. Gamal Abdel Nasser was dead, and in Egypt young men were cry- ing in the streets. Vice-President Agnew was developing his alliterative pitch against Re- publican Senator Charles Goodell of New York and others of the radic-lib set. The Scranton Commission on Campus Violence had just appeared, labeling both students and National Guardsmen on the Kent State campus as trag- ically responsible for the four student deaths the spring before. Fire had swept the hills of Los Angeles. At use the semester was wearing into a routine. The football team was winning again, and bomb threats had become a common- place distrubance. Fear stalked the campus briefly after a girl was stabbed superficially in Doheny Library. But on the seventh, the trustees were on campus for their regular meeting and politics superseded fear. Shortly after noon, a group of students, who had been rallying by Tommy Trojan in an effort to get the trustees to meet with them, stormed the Commons Dining Room. In a tiny hallway packed with bodies and noise, Justin Dart, chairman of the board, debated heatedly with Stan DiOrio, the artic- ulate head of the Caucus of Concerned Stu- dents, and Don Pine, a nonaligned student who gets involved only when I ' m really mad, he said. The confrontation, the only one of significance during the fall semester, resulted in the Trustees Convocation, held October 21. VOL. LXIi NO 13 ] 1 DAti Wildd By RIVIAN .Associate Cii Yesterday morning the a events was anything goes, a There were many give c ignored, but the way in v I created probably one of I ( recent campus hi.story Yesterday was the day iv Concerned .Students had sefiJSo Justin Dart, chairman oftt! had said Tuesday that tie participate in that convod i mat had been arranged had invited the trustees i % student group. ■ Both the caucus and tije last week to .support IheK cided Tuesday evening t
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