And crimes against the soul / the worst crime I ever did was play some 
rock-and-roll

Dr. Froines found himself drawn into the swirl of antiwar activism building up 
to the Democratic convention, to be held in August 1968 at Chicago’s 
International Amphitheater.

Tom Hayden and Rennie Davis, two of the protest organizers, knew Dr. Froines 
through his work in Connecticut with the New Haven chapter of Students for a 
Democratic Society, and they invited him to join their inner circle.

During the convention, tens of thousands of protesters marched in the streets 
and hundreds were arrested during violent clashes with the Chicago Police 
Department. But only eight were indicted under federal charges of crossing 
state lines to incite a riot; they included Mr. Hayden, Mr. Davis and Dr. 
Froines, who was also charged with building an incendiary device, accused of 
having shown three women how to make a stink bomb.

Several of those charged were already famous as radical activists and 
counterculture provocateurs. Bobby Seale had co-founded the Black Panther Party 
in 1966; Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, co-founders of the Youth International 
Party, or the Yippies, were renowned for antics like dropping wads of cash onto 
the floor of the New York Stock Exchange from the visitors gallery.  . . "

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