This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir by Alan Dershowitz, submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017221). It details Dershowitz's historical defense of a professor named Franklin at Stanford University, his collaboration with research assistant Joel Klein, and his public conflict with Stanford President Lyman regarding First Amendment rights. The text describes the Faculty Committee's decision to fire Franklin for urging students to occupy a computation center and Dershowitz's subsequent lecture criticizing the faculty's stance on civil liberties.
This document appears to be page 133 of a manuscript or memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the context of the Bruce Franklin case) produced to the House Oversight Committee. The text discusses First Amendment principles, specifically the 'violence veto,' and recounts the narrator's legal representation of Stanford Professor Bruce Franklin in 1970. It details Franklin's speeches inciting students to shut down the Stanford Computation Center, the subsequent police intervention, and Franklin's eventual firing by University President Lyman.
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