Bart Brown was the student leader of the spring 1967 protests. During the protests he was detained by police, but students wouldn't let President Harden speak (even though he had finally agreed to meet with them), until Bart was released. He and other student leaders subsequently met with members of the administration to discuss campus issues and were able to craft a historic agreement.
Bart, who had taken temporary work at Cliffs Dow to learn about and show fellow students what daily life was like for their North Marquette neighbors, withdrew from NMU early in the 67-68 academic year and went into factories to persuade workers to join with students to end the war, and in May '68 he was charged with Refusal to Submit to Induction. Bart was consequently 'underground' until he traveled to Sweden, where he was granted political asylum in '71. In Stockholm, Bart edited an American exile community periodical and worked narrating history films, thanks in part to a letter of recommendation from Dr. Allan Niemi. Bart's return was negotiated in '72, and by '74 the U.S. Attorney General had been compelled to withdraw the charge against Bart - because evidence showed he has been drafted explicitly to stop his anti-war organizing efforts. Just a year later, the United States completed its withdrawal from Vietnam.