1971–1972: Recruiting
Stanford University Career Planning and Placement Center
A flyer describing the center from the point of view of those opposed to many of the recruiters.
c. October 25, 1971
Career Placement Interviews
List of companies scheduled to conduct interviews November 1–5, and their relationships to the military.
October 27, 1971
ASSU Letter to Texas Instruments
Letter from the ASSU Council of Presidents asking them to respect the student referendum and not to recruit on campus.
October 27, 1971
ASSU Letter to Ralph Keller, Director of Student Placement Services
Letter from the ASSU Council of Presidents to the Director of Student Placement Service, asking his cooperation with the referendum passed by the student body.
October 28, 1971
Placement Center Declared an “Open Violation of Official Student Policy”
Statement from the ASSU Council of Presidents supporting the student referendum on the Placement Center and calling for picketing, rallies, and dorm meetings to enforce the referendum.
Caution: Honeywell May Be Hazardous to Your Health
Flyer about Honeywell Corporation and its products
November 4, 1971
Stanford Press Release
“Two Honeywell recruiters left Stanford early Thursday afternoon, Nov. 4, one-half hour after 100 war protesters streamed into the Career Planning and Placement Center.”
Quiet and Firm
Unsigned, undated flyer with instructions for participants in the demonstration against Navy recruiting to be non-violent.
c. January 5, 1972
Department of Defense Recruiter at the Business School
Association of Young Crows flyer concerning a rally on January 10 when Department of Defense Recruiters come to the Business School; and discussions at dorms that evening concerning the firing of Bruce Franklin.
CJP: A Mighty Tall Tale
Pamphlet produced by Placement Center Defense Collective which begins, “The Campus Judicial Panel (CJP) is a totalitarian, unrepresentative mockery of every basic principle of law.
March 16, 1972
Stanford Press Release
“The Campus Judicial Panel has unanimously recommended three quarter suspensions, starting Spring Quarter, for four students who disrupted interviews at the Career Planning and Placement Center last November.”