First published in book form in 1965.
Downloaded with thanks from the Free Speech Movement Archive Website. [1]
© Center for Socialist History. Used with kind permission of the copyright holders.
Marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for the Marxists’ Internet Archive.
Introduction by Mario Savio
Foreword
1. “A New Generation of Students”
2. The Liberal Bureaucrat
3. Behind the Myth of Liberalization
4. The Myth: Two Showpieces
5. The Power Structure Triggers the Conflict
6. The Administration Clamps Off the Safety Valve
7. “What’s Intellectual About Collecting Money?”
8. The Clubs Fight Back
9. The First Sit-in and the Eight Suspensions
10. A Couple of Rebels
11. The Police-car Blockade Begins
12. Second Sit-in and the Greeks
13. Whose Law and Order?
14. “You Can’t Win!”
15. The Pact of October 2
16. Enter Red-baiting
17. The FSM Is Formed
We hope to finish the remaining chapters soon and would welcome volunteers to assist on this or with other documents from the archives. |
18. Some Lessons in Good Faith
19. Standoff on “Free Speech”
20. Hidden Battle over Civil Rights
21. Return to Direct Action
22. The Regents Throw a Time Bomb
23. The Abortive Sit-in
24. Back to the Wars
25. The Big Sit-in
26. The Governor Calls the Cops
27. The Occupation by the Police
28. The Student Strike Starts
29. The Faculty and the Strike
30. The Administration Plans a Coup
31. Classic Drama in the Greek Theater
32. The FSM at the Peak
33. The Story of a Rumor
34. The Victory at the Academic Senate
35. End of the Beginning
36. Before the Second Round
37. The “Restoration” Coup
38. The FSM in Crisis
39. Regents versus the University
40. Why?
41. The Non-Radicals
42. “New Left” Balance Sheet
43. The “New Radicals” and the “Old Radicals”
1. We are grateful to the Center for Socialist History for allowing us to share this out-of-print book with visitors to the FSM-A site. This material is copyrighted by the Center for Socialist History. It can reproduced and distributed in any format provided that: the source and copyright are acknowledged; the distribution is free; and, the material is not reproduced in book, pamphlet or magazine article format without the permission of the Center for Socialist History. To learn more about Hal Draper, see visit the Hal Draper Internet Archive.
We have digitized the text for the Foreword, Mario Savio’s Introduction, and the first 17 chapters of Hal Draper’s book.
Last updated on 27.8.2006