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  1. It was only with the issuance of the first official Weather Underground Organization (WUO) communiqué, weeks after the explosion, that Terry Robbins was identified as the last victim. [1] Shortly after the explosion, Weathermen leaders placed John Jacobs on indefinite leave from the WUO because he was the main advocate of Robbins' aggressive ...

    • Student activism
  2. Weather Underground members Diana Oughton, Ted Gold, Terry Robbins, Cathy Wilkerson, and Kathy Boudin were making bombs in a Greenwich Village townhouse on March 6, 1970, when one of the bombs detonated. Oughton, Gold, and Robbins were killed; Wilkerson and Boudin escaped unharmed.

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  4. May 2, 2022 · That first attempt did not reach its intended target. Instead, the pipe bomb exploded in the basement and detonated cases of dynamite. The blast leveled the townhouse and killed three of the Weathermen — Terry Robbins, Diane Oughton, and Ted Gold — the only deaths connected to the Weather Underground bombings.

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  5. Nov 2, 2016 · Leaders of the radical American student group the Weathermen, (left to right) Jim Mellen, Peter Clapp, John Jacobs, Bill Ayers, and Terry Robbins, march in 1969 at the van of a group of...

  6. Three people — Terry Robbins, 22, Ted Gold, 22, and Diana Oughton, 28, all close friends of mine — were obliterated when bombs they were making exploded prematurely. Two others, Kathy Boudin ...

  7. Feb 26, 2018 · — From the Weather Undergrounds 1974 manifesto, “Prairie Fire”. In March of 1970, a bomb went off in the basement of a Greenwich Village, New York townhouse. Three people died — but completely innocent people they were not. Diana Oughton and Terry Robbins had accidentally detonated the nail bomb they were constructing.

  8. Jul 18, 2019 · Prairie Fire (1974), the political statement of the Weather Underground, reverberated with ideology, endorsed revolutionary violence, and embodied a muffled desperation that underlay the...

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