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Neighboring community protests Ayers' campus visit

by Shana D. Lebowitz
Associate Editor

News | 5/19/09
Posted online at 12:58 AM EST on 5/19/09

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A Waltham resident gathered on South Street with a sign protesting Bill Ayers' visit.
Media Credit: Max Breitstein Matza
A Waltham resident gathered on South Street with a sign protesting Bill Ayers' visit.

Students from Brandeis University and Babson and Bentley Colleges, as well as Waltham residents, protested against the controversial visit of Bill Ayers, co-founder of the Weather Underground and professor in the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago April 30.

Protesters who were not Brandeis students were banned from entering campus, but college students from neighboring institutions still protested inside the Shapiro Campus Center. However, Director of Public Safety Ed Callahan told the Justice that non-Brandeis students should not have been allowed on campus. Callahan added that he did not know why Babson and Bentley students had been allowed on University premises.

Waltham residents gathered with protest signs on South Street near the Main Gate early in the morning, but Brandeis police told them that they could not enter University premises. Waltham residents tried again later in the evening to enter campus, but police said they could not enter the premises without a Brandeis student escort. Brandeis students protested against the visit outside the campus center and then outside the Carl J. Shapiro Theater.

In the late 1960s, Ayers co-founded the Weather Underground, a radical group that opposed the Vietnam War. The group was notorious for rioting and for bombing several government buildings including the Pentagon and the New York City Police Department.

The country's attention shifted toward Ayers again last year, when rumors of Barack Obama's ties to Ayers surfaced during Obama's presidential campaign. Although Ayers and Obama served on two nonprofit boards together, investigations by major news organizations concluded that Obama had little connection to Ayers.

Many protesters were outraged with the University's decision to allow a former terrorist on campus.

"I believe what [Ayers] did in 1970 was appalling," said Mark Maclay, a junior at Babson College. "I don't believe he should be here speaking and perpetuating his message of hate," he added.

"The worst part [of Ayers' visit] is, he's unrepentant about [his past]," said Allie Smith, a junior at Babson. "He doesn't care and he's proud of it-that's what kills me. He's extremely proud of what he's done."
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