Difference between revisions of "Seattle Liberation Front"
m (Text replace - '<ref>“The Seattle Liberation Front,” Information Digest, May 2, 1970, 1, 3, 4-5. speccoll.library.kent.edu/4may70/box107/107f9p8.html.</ref>' to '.<ref>[http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/4may70/box107/107f9p8.html ''The Seattle Liberati) |
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'''Seattle Liberation Front''' was formed in the period after the formation of the [[Weather Underground Organization]] at Flint Fichigan. [[Michael Lerner]] and Weathermen [[Chip Marshall]], [[Jeff Alan Dowd]] and [[Joseph H. Kelly]] moved to Seattle to form the [[Seattle Liberation Front]] to "bring the revolution to Seattle.” It was a radical anti-Vietnam War organization. | '''Seattle Liberation Front''' was formed in the period after the formation of the [[Weather Underground Organization]] at Flint Fichigan. [[Michael Lerner]] and Weathermen [[Chip Marshall]], [[Jeff Alan Dowd]] and [[Joseph H. Kelly]] moved to Seattle to form the [[Seattle Liberation Front]] to "bring the revolution to Seattle.” It was a radical anti-Vietnam War organization. | ||
[[Image:SeattleLiberationFront.jpg|right|thumb|The "Chicago Seven," tryptichally photographed by Richard Avedon, Sept. 25, 1969. L-R: [[Lee Weiner]], [[John Froines]], [[Abbie Hoffman]], [[Rennie Davis]], [[Jerry Rubin]], [[Tom Hayden]], and [[David Dellinger]] ]] | [[Image:SeattleLiberationFront.jpg|right|thumb|The "Chicago Seven," tryptichally photographed by Richard Avedon, Sept. 25, 1969. L-R: [[Lee Weiner]], [[John Froines]], [[Abbie Hoffman]], [[Rennie Davis]], [[Jerry Rubin]], [[Tom Hayden]], and [[David Dellinger]] ]] | ||
− | There they recruited [[Susan Ellen Stern]],[[ Roger H. Lippman]], [[Michael Victor Ables]], [[Christopher L. Bakke]], [[Margaret G. Bennett]], [[Bruce E. Crowley]], [[Karen M. Daenzer]], [[Gerald J. Ganley]], [[Kathleen Ann Korvell]], [[Constance J. Misich]], [[Mark Curtis Perry]], [[Suzanne E. Smith]], [[Arthur K. Sata]], and [[John Vanveenendale]]. A federal grand jury would indict Dowd, Kelly and Stern along with Michael Victor Ables for a February 17, 1970 attack on a federal building.<ref>[http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/4may70/box107/107f9p8.html ''The Seattle Liberation Front'', Information Digest, May 2, 1970, 1, 3, 4-5]</ref> | + | There they recruited [[Susan Ellen Stern]], [[ Roger H. Lippman]], [[Michael Victor Ables]], [[Christopher L. Bakke]], [[Margaret G. Bennett]], [[Bruce E. Crowley]], [[Karen M. Daenzer]], [[Gerald J. Ganley]], [[Kathleen Ann Korvell]], [[Constance J. Misich]], [[Mark Curtis Perry]], [[Suzanne E. Smith]], [[Arthur K. Sata]], and [[John Vanveenendale]]. A federal grand jury would indict Dowd, Kelly and Stern along with Michael Victor Ables for a February 17, 1970 attack on a federal building.<ref>[http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/4may70/box107/107f9p8.html ''The Seattle Liberation Front'', Information Digest, May 2, 1970, 1, 3, 4-5]</ref> |
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 22:26, 25 April 2010
Seattle Liberation Front was formed in the period after the formation of the Weather Underground Organization at Flint Fichigan. Michael Lerner and Weathermen Chip Marshall, Jeff Alan Dowd and Joseph H. Kelly moved to Seattle to form the Seattle Liberation Front to "bring the revolution to Seattle.” It was a radical anti-Vietnam War organization.

There they recruited Susan Ellen Stern, Roger H. Lippman, Michael Victor Ables, Christopher L. Bakke, Margaret G. Bennett, Bruce E. Crowley, Karen M. Daenzer, Gerald J. Ganley, Kathleen Ann Korvell, Constance J. Misich, Mark Curtis Perry, Suzanne E. Smith, Arthur K. Sata, and John Vanveenendale. A federal grand jury would indict Dowd, Kelly and Stern along with Michael Victor Ables for a February 17, 1970 attack on a federal building.[1]
External links
- Seattle Liberation Front 1970 Installment 1
- "January 17, 1970: Jerry Rubin Brings the Chicago Noise to Seattle"