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Tom Hayden on Social Movements
註釋"Tom Hayden (1939-2016) was a central figure in the Vietnam War peace movement of the 1960s and 1970s. He was a founder and president of the Students for a Democratic Society and the principal author of the Port Huron Statement. He was a civil rights worker in the South and a door-to-door organizer in Newark, New Jersey. In 1965 Hayden met with Vietnamese leaders in Hanoi and brought home released American POWs. He was indicted as one of the Chicago Eight for conspiracy to riot at the 1968 Democratic Convention. In 1972 Hayden and Jane Fonda founded the national Indochina Peace Campaign organization. He was elected to the California legislature and wrote twenty-two books."--Back cover. "Paul Ryder has been research assistant to attorney Leonard Weinglass, Pentagon Papers Legal Defense; national staff, Indochina Peace Campaign; policy director for Ohio Governor Richard Celeste; and organizing director for Ohio Citizen Action. During the Vietnam war, Susan Wind Early was the Indochina Peace Campaign's Central and Northern California organizer and subsequently joined the IPC national staff in Santa Monica, California. After the war, she became the owner and president of Dumont Printing, the largest commercial printing company in the San Joaquin Valley."--Google Books.