ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, November 7, 1996             TAG: 9611070076
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-3  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: SAN FRANCISCO
                                             TYPE: NEWS OBIT


ACTIVIST FOR FREE SPEECH IN '60S DIES

Mario Savio, a free speech protest leader who ushered in a decade of student protest in the 1960s, died Wednesday. He was 53.

Savio had a history of heart problems and collapsed Saturday night. He died at Palm Drive Hospital in Sebastopol, 60 miles north of San Francisco, where he had been hospitalized in a coma.

Savio rose to fame as the voice of the free speech movement at the University of California at Berkeley in 1964 when he stood up on a campus police car after a student was arrested for political activity.

``In the '60s he was a powerful symbol of how an ordinary person could stand up and make history,'' said one-time fellow radical Tom Hayden, now a California state senator. ``He symbolized the possibilities in all of us, to resist becoming cogs in somebody's machine.''

After many years out of the limelight, Savio had recently re-entered public life, leading a drive against higher student fees at Sonoma State University where he taught math, logic and philosophy.


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