(Continued from Simon Fraser) At a distance, San Francisco in late ‘68 still glowed from the “Summer of Love” festival the previous year. But that glow was like the light that continues to travel in space after its source burns out. My friend in San Francisco — the noted Marxist economist James O’Connor — then …
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German Resistance Links
- Bekennende Kirche (English article) This article could be improved by adding material from the German article
- Bekennende Kirche (German article) The German article is in many respects superior to the English Wikipedia article
- German Resistance (Holocaust Museum) Brief article on the website of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum
- German Resistance – Wikipedia Worth reading
- German Resistance Memorial Center Tries to be a comprehensive exhibit of the full range of repression and resistance
- Martin Niemöller House Historical documentation on the BK (in German)
- Memorial Center at Plötzensee Thousands of political prisoners were executed at Plötzensee Prison just outside Berlin.
- Silent Heroes Memorial Center A memorial to people who helped people under almost impossible conditions
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Tag Archive: Simon Fraser University
San Francisco 1968-1973
Tags: 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, armed insurrection, Berkeley, Berlin, Bernal Heights, Black Panther Party, Bob Avakian, Brad Wiley, Capital, Castro district, Chairman Mao, Chevron Refinery strike, Çhinatown, Church Street, Claudia von Aleman, Columbus Avenue, economic crisis, Elsa Knight Thompson, Ernest Mandel, Frank Bardacke, Frankfurt, Friends of SNCC, G.W. Hegel, gay men, German SDS, Germany, Grundrisse, Haight Street, Harvey Milk, Hegel, Hotel Bell, Hotel Stella, I-Hotel, ILWU (International Longshore Workers Union), Isaac Deutscher, James O'Connor, Janis Joplin, Jerry Kamstra, Jews, Joe Blum, John Rowntree, Karl Marx, Kiel, KPFA radio, LeBoeuf Restaurant, Leon Trotsky, Leviathan, London, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., Marvin Garson, Marxism, Marxism-Leninism-MaoTseTung-Thought, Mayor Moscone, Mickey Ellinger, Mission District, Monthly Review, New Left Review, Noe Valley, North Beach, Palestinians, Paris, Pelican Marx Library, Penguin Books, People's Park, Poverty of Philosophy, Rev Jim Jones, Revolutionary Union, Richard Hongisto, Robin Blackburn, S.I. Hayakawa, San Francisco, San Francisco Express-Times, San Francisco Newsreel, San Francisco State strike, San Francisco State University, Shrader Street, Simon Fraser University, SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee), SRO (Single Room Occupancy), Stanford University, Summer of Love, Sydney Square, Terence Cannon, The Movement newspaper, Third World Liberation Front, Todd Gitlin, Transamerica Pyramid, USSR, Vietnam, Vintage books, Washington Street, Wilma Chan, Zim's Restaurant
Simon Fraser 1966-1968
Continued from Hell No I Won’t Go) My first impression of Vancouver was of a beautiful vacation land. I had found temporary lodging in a tiny furnished apartment in the city with a window facing north onto the harbor , and on the first clear morning, the panorama of snowy peaks across the water, almost within …
Tags: ASA (American Sociological Association), Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers, Black Panther Party, BMW, Boston, Brandeis University, British Columbia, Burnaby, Canada, Canadian Association of University Teachers, Cesar Chavez, CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), Durkheim, Gordon Shrum, Grundrisse, John Leggett, Kansas, Karl Marx, Kathleen Gough, Louis Feldhammer, LSD, marijuana, Mark Rudd, Martin Loney, Michigan State University, Mordecai Briemberg, Nathan Popkin, Patrick McTaggart-Cowan, PLP (Progressive Labor Party), PSA Department, Rick Ayers, RYM (Revolutionary Youth Movement), SDS (Students for a Democratic Society), Selective Service System, sex, Sharon Yandle, Shawnee-Mission High School, Simmel, Simon Fraser University, sociology, Sociology Liberation Movement, Switzerland, The Communist Manifesto, Toennies, Tom Bottomore, Tom Brose, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Viet-Report, Weber, Wesleyan University, Wilbur Cohen, Wisconsin
Hell No I Won’t Go (1965-1969)
(Continued from Viet-Report) At Brandeis that fall (1966) a student dive-bombed and crashed a light airplane into the center of campus, killing himself and his female passenger. Rumors swirled that it was a love pact, a Romeo-and-Juliet affair, but in the background there was the Vietnam draft. With the massive escalation of the ground war, …
Tags: Barrie Thorne, bombing, Boston, Brandeis University, British Columbia, Canada, Chuck Nathanson, Conscientious Objector, Cuba, draft, Gaye Tuchman, Germany, James Colaianni, Juan Corradi, Judy Adler, Kansas, Kansas City, Leonard Boudin, Margot Nicolaus, Mississippi, Nancy Stoller, napalm, Olathe KS, Ramparts Magazine, religion, Roger Pritchard, rubble, Selective Service System, Simon Fraser University, St Pierre et Miquelon, Steve Rosenthal, Tom Bottomore, Tonia Aminoff, Vancouver, Vietnam, Viki Ortiz, Volker Meja
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