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...Stauder now has an identity. The instructor with the radical course. The Faculty member who was sort of fired. But what was he like before last spring? Before he split both the Soc Rel Department and the University community over Soc Rel 149? Before his arrest in April...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Profile Jack Stauder | 11/15/1969 | See Source »

...controversey over Soc Rel 149. "Radical Perspectives in Social Change." Stauder split the Soc Rel Department over the issues of student sectionmen and course curriculum. With more than 700 students enrolled, his course was one of the most popular last spring. When he felt the course would be compromised this year (by not allowing student sectionmen, for instance). Stauder withdrew his course from the catalog. The same idealism typified his behavior in the bust of University Hall and its aftermath...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Profile Jack Stauder | 11/15/1969 | See Source »

Born in Colorado and raised in New Mexico. Stauder grew up as the son of a rancher. At high school he participated in the drama and the speech clubs. Stander was editor of the school newspaper and in his junior year, he represented his class on a rinky-dink Student Council. Good marks and extra-curricular activities landed him in Harvard despite the disadvantage of coming from a public high school in the Southwest, and having no family history at the College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Profile Jack Stauder | 11/15/1969 | See Source »

...returned to Harvard as an American History and Literature major and found himself in Eliot House. On rare occasions Alan Heimert will confide that Stauder was in his sophomore tutorial. Stauder remembers the tutorial but is as anxious as Heimert not to talk about...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Profile Jack Stauder | 11/15/1969 | See Source »

Michael Janeway '62 of the Atlantic Monthly was in Eliot House with Stauder. Janeway recalled that Stauder was "terribly serious, very quiet. All talks were serious talks. He had a kind of quiet power which came from seeming to know his mind and his work." "I felt a great deal of respect for him. He kept very much to himself and seemed to get the very kind of satisfaction out of his work that other people get out of football games." Janeway added. Lately. Janeway and Stauder have gotten together at parties...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Profile Jack Stauder | 11/15/1969 | See Source »

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