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Page 24 text:
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Students Shake City Violence on a Spring Day EDITOR'S NOTE: Cries of antiwar protests were heard and the bruises of police riot sticks were fell in Minneapolis after U.S. actions in mining North Vietnamese ports touched off a week of violent dissent on May 9, 1972, and the four days thereafter. This story is intended to remind you. the reader, of that disrupted week, and it is hoped that you will profit through con- sidering the causes and effects of protesting. by Nancy Holland Tuesday, May 9, 1972, was the first really nice day of the 1972 spring season. Dedication ceremonies of Cedar- Riverside Associates “New Town-in-Town housing de- velopment were scheduled to begin at 2:00 P.M. with George Romney, secretary of HUD. one of the honored guests. Opposition began as a peaceful demonstration. Leaflets were handed out staling Secretary Romney is coming to dedicate Cedar-Riverside Stage One. He is not meeting with the people but only with the private investors. We must make ourselves heard. We must have more to say about what happens to our community. A meeting was planned for that afternoon, followed by a march to the construction site. At the meeting a list of four demands was drawn up. in- cluding the recommendations by the West Bank Project Area Committee to developers for the establishment of a peo- ple's corporation to assist in the development of the area, and also an end to imperialism here and abroad, self de- termination for Vietnam and self determination for Cedar- Riverside. It was decided that trashing of properly and police would only be a last resort, and marchers agreed to help control one another. Blocking traffic was suggested as a viable alternative. Meanwhile at the University, students gathered in front of Northrup Memorial Auditorium for a rally protesting President Nixon's escalation of the Vietnam war. and more specifically the mining of North Vietnamese ports, a U.S. action that sparked a wave of nation-wide dissent. About 5(X) protestors marched to the Cedar-Riverside construction site, being joined along the way by those meeting to plan a protest of the development.
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Page 23 text:
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TOP LEFT: Lynne Anderson reads away in a dorm room. BOTTOM LEFT: Annette Bonder- son tries the steps at Old Main, TOP CEN- TER: Dan Peterson prefers the library. RIGHT CENTER: John Arhclgcr combines biking and booking BOTTOM CENTER: Joel Raacn gets lost in literature in the Center lounge. ABOVE: Sue lovcid studies while tending the campus switchboard. 19
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Page 25 text:
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BOTTOM LEFT: A Minneapolis Police officer meets protestors face-to- face as tempers flared at Cedar-Riverside. CENTER: Billows of tear gas rise above the University's Mall as choking students try to flee the fumes. TOP RIGHT: A demonstrator raises a clenched fist high above a mass march to the State Capitol in St. Paul BELOW: A column of police march- es down Cedar Avenue from Riverside on a warm spring day in May. At the site, the group was ordered by police to leave the parking area, and conflict erupted when the protestors un- ceasingly attempted to get within the fenced-in construc- tion site itself. Mace and riot sticks were used to keep the pro- testors out. to which some of them responded with rock throwing. Kggs and marshmallows replaced rocks amid cries by fellow protestors of No rocks! No rocks! It was announced then that dedication ceremonies had been canceled and the crowd turned to blocking traffic in order to be heard. In this spirit began the barrage of demonstrations which were to disrupt the peaceful lives of Twin Cities and United States residents in general for the next few days. President Nixon’s announcement Monday night that harbors in North Vietnam were being mined as part of a program to cut off the weapons and supplies it needs to continue its aggres- sion, along with the renewal of bombing attacks on North Vietnam in April spelled h-S-C-A-L-A-T-I-O-N and T-R-A-l-T-O-R to students and many others and set off their reactions. It appeared to them as if President Nixon did not want to end the war. The movement, always meant to be peaceful, ended in confrontation the first day. But Wednesday was by far the most disheartening day. Police and students clashed phys- ically with clubs meeting flesh, flying rocks meeting anything in their path, and tear gas meeting the lungs of those gathered on the street. More than 125 persons were injured. A rally
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