Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
start [2016/03/21 12:43]
bsak [Timeline]
start [2016/08/21 08:54] (current)
bsak [The 1970s]
Line 19: Line 19:
 October 1970 saw [[The Who October 1970|The Who]] play at the Old Refectory. ​ Student activism had not gone away and a UGM decided to make donations from Union funds to charity War on Want and a local campaign against Education Secretary Margaret Thatcher'​s threat to remove school milk.  These payments were challenged in court by law student Tony Baldry (later a political aide to Thatcher as Tory leader and now a Conservative MP). October 1970 saw [[The Who October 1970|The Who]] play at the Old Refectory. ​ Student activism had not gone away and a UGM decided to make donations from Union funds to charity War on Want and a local campaign against Education Secretary Margaret Thatcher'​s threat to remove school milk.  These payments were challenged in court by law student Tony Baldry (later a political aide to Thatcher as Tory leader and now a Conservative MP).
  
-As more students, including those with families, came live on campus there was a need for more social facilities on campus than the University was prepared to provide. ​ So it was that the [[USTA|University of Sussex Tenants'​ Association]] (USTA) came into being.+As more students, including those with families, came to live on campus there was a need for more social facilities on campus than the University was prepared to provide. ​ So it was that the [[USTA|University of Sussex Tenants'​ Association]] (USTA) came into being.
  
-In 1973 a serious accommodation shortage arose: students rejected the outdated idea of lodging in seafront guest houses, and called for a new type of campus accommodation rather than more Park Houses (the fifth, Kent House, was built to a lower standard than the earlier two pairs of houses. ​ A student campaign led by USTA, including an occupation of Sussex House to provide sleeping accommodation,​ resulted in the scrapping of plans to build a twin house for Kent, and an agreement to end the guest house scheme and involve students in planning the next phase of accommodation. ​ This, of course, resulted in the building of East Slope Residences.+In 1973 a serious accommodation shortage arose: students rejected the outdated idea of lodging in seafront guest houses, and called for a new type of campus accommodation rather than more Park Houses (the fifth, Kent House, was built to a lower standard than the earlier two pairs of houses).  A student campaign led by USTA, including an occupation of Sussex House to provide sleeping accommodation,​ resulted in the scrapping of plans to build a twin house for Kent, and an agreement to end the guest house scheme and involve students in planning the next phase of accommodation. ​ This, of course, resulted in the building of East Slope Residences.
  
 [[wiki:​University Radio Falmer|University Radio Falmer]] started broadcasting on 945kHz medium wave in 1976, and a year or two later East Slope Bar opened, the third student-run bar after Park Village (1971) and York House (1975). ​ [[wiki:​University Radio Falmer|University Radio Falmer]] started broadcasting on 945kHz medium wave in 1976, and a year or two later East Slope Bar opened, the third student-run bar after Park Village (1971) and York House (1975). ​