W. C. Burriss Young, assistant dean of Freshmen; Dwight D. Miller, senior adviser to Freshmen; and Lawrence F. Stevens, assistant to Dean Dunlop, all said they saw Bagot shouting and chanting at the "Counter Teach-In."
Miller and Stevens were Bagot's advisers during his freshman year last year.
Bagot told the panel he was protesting against people he considered to be "criminals contributing to genocide."
Three Harvard students have acted at different times as prosecutors for the SJP charges. John W. Moscow, a second-year law student, has handled most of the cases; Donald D. Nash, a third-year Law student, and Douglas W. Cooper, a second-year GSAS student, have helped out.
Sanford Kreisberg, a fourth-year GSAS student, has acted as defense counsel in seven different hearings, including the Parravano case and the marshmallow case. David L. Kirp, director of the Center for Law and Education, defended one student.
Nine of the ten present members of the CRR-including seven Faculty members and two grad students-have served on the three-or four-man hearing panels.
Seeing the UPI film of the "Counter Teach-In" for the first time, one Faculty member of the CRR who was not in Sanders on March 26 asked a colleague whether Teodoru was a scheduled speaker or "some madman who had come out of the crowd."