Home History THE SPECIAL CASE OF THE FAYERWEATHER OCCUPATION
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

THE SPECIAL CASE OF THE FAYERWEATHER OCCUPATION

  • William Keylor
View more publications by Columbia University Press
A Time to Stir
This chapter is in the book A Time to Stir
© 2018 Columbia University Press

© 2018 Columbia University Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS ix
  3. FOREWORD xxi
  4. INTRODUCTION xxxi
  5. CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS li
  6. CHILDREN OF THE NEW AGE 1
  7. INSIDE ALIENATION, OUTSIDE AGITATOR 8
  8. RACE AND THE SPECTER OF STRATEGIC BLINDNESS 15
  9. LIBERATION NEWS SERVICE AND THE COLUMBIA STUDENT REVOLT 26
  10. A WORKING CLASS VETERAN’S PERSPECTIVE 32
  11. CONSTRUCTIONS OF POWER 36
  12. YOU GAVE US HOPE 43
  13. A PEOPLE’S PREHISTORY OF COLUMBIA, 1968 47
  14. “POSSIBILISTES” VS. “MAXIMALISTES”: HOW IT WENT DOWN IN FAYERWEATHER 59
  15. ATTEMPTING TO “HOLD THE CENTER” AT COLUMBIA, 1968 63
  16. THE MAN WHO SHOOK MY HAND 70
  17. IN THE SPIRIT OF RECONCILIATION 78
  18. HOW I BECOME A NATIONAL NEWS SOURCE: COLUMBIA’S OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION 83
  19. THE JOLT OF RADICALIZATION 89
  20. DADDY’S GIRL 94
  21. THE COLUMBIA STIR-FRY 99
  22. THE GREAT MORNINGSIDE RISING 107
  23. FROM COLUMBIA 1968 TO FORT LEAVENWORTH 113
  24. THE ESSENCE OF SPIRIT IS FREEDOM 119
  25. THE SMARTEST KIDS I’D EVER MET: MEMORIES OF A COLUMBIA REBEL 126
  26. WHO BE THE DOMINATOR? 142
  27. THE MORAL OBLIGATION TO ACT 147
  28. COLUMBIA IN THE COMMUNITY 155
  29. MUTINY IN THE AIR 159
  30. LIBERATED FAYERWEATHER: AGONY AND ECSTASY WHILE AWAITING THE NYPD 163
  31. THE SPECIAL CASE OF THE FAYERWEATHER OCCUPATION 170
  32. A TIME FOR REVOLT 175
  33. GETTING BACK TO “LIFE AS NORMAL” 179
  34. THE POWER OF POWER STRUCTURE RESEARCH 185
  35. DAYS OF WHINE AND RUSES 192
  36. A TIME TO STIR . . . UP TROUBLE 209
  37. THE PRIMARY SHADES OF OPPOSITION TO THE COLUMBIA OCCUPATION 217
  38. NO MORE ANTIWAR! THE RISE OF THE THERAPEUTIC LEFT 225
  39. ALREADY DEAD: INSIDE LOW LIBRARY COMMUNE 229
  40. A NIGHT TO REMEMBER 238
  41. SILENCE IS COMPLIANCE 241
  42. ON THE AIR: A VIEW FROM WKCR 246
  43. COLUMBIA AND THE DRAFT 254
  44. IMPRESSIONS OF A ROOKIE COP 263
  45. THE SOUND OF BREAKING GLASS 269
  46. HATS AND BATS 274
  47. STOPPING THE MACHINE 277
  48. LIFE ON THE LEDGE 281
  49. HOW I LEARNED I WAS A MENSHEVIK 289
  50. WHAT IT TAKES TO BUILD A MOVEMENT 293
  51. SELF-DETERMINATION AND SELF-RESPECT: HAMILTON HALL, FIFTY YEARS LATER 300
  52. LONG AGO AND NOT AT ALL FAR AWAY 309
  53. COLUMBIA 1968: MY COURSE CORRECTION 316
  54. UNITERS 319
  55. A SENSE OF RIGHTNESS 330
  56. AVERY HALL TO URBAN DEADLINE 333
  57. FORMING COMMUNITY, FORGING COMMITMENT: A HAMILTON HALL STORY 341
  58. FROM COLLEGE WALK TO THE STONEWALL INN 349
  59. FIVE RED FLAGS 355
  60. NEVER AGAIN? 359
  61. COVERING—AND COVERING UP—SPRING ’68 366
  62. HUNDREDS OF PAIRS OF WINGS 373
  63. POLITICAL EDUCATION AND THE BIRTH OF STUDENTS FOR A RESTRUCTURED UNIVERSITY 381
  64. IT’S BETTER TO BUILD UP: POST-’68 GOVERNANCE AT COLUMBIA 388
  65. A FOOT SOLDIER’S STORY OF THE SIT-INS 393
  66. FROM COMMUNITY SERVICE TO POLITICAL ACTION: THE EVOLUTION OF THE CITIZENSHIP COUNCIL 398
  67. AFTERWORD 407
  68. INDEX 413
Downloaded on 23.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/cron18274-029/html
Scroll to top button