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Seattle Liberation Front
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==Aftermath and recent activities== Due to the publicity of the trial, the Seattle Liberation Front faced ideological dissension, personality conflicts, and charges of "male chauvinism." In the fall of 1970 SLF sponsored a short-lived weekly underground newspaper, ''[[Sabot (newspaper)|Sabot]]'', which folded in December after a three-month run amid political infighting among the staff.<ref name="Walt Crowley 1995" /> In late 1971, the SLF was disbanded. Many of the individual SLF members continued to promote diverse social movements, such as Capitol Hill's Country Doctor Clinic.<ref name="Walt Crowley 1995" /> Lerner, the founder of SLF, eventually became the editor of ''[[Tikkun (magazine)|Tikkun]]'' and an advisor to President [[Bill Clinton]] and [[Hillary Clinton]]. [[Jeff Dowd]] went to Hollywood to become a screenwriter and producer. [[Chip Marshall]] remained active in Washington politics, running for [[Seattle City Council]] in 1975 and working as a neighborhood activist in [[Issaquah]].
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