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In Chicago, Ex-radical Better Known as a Scholar

CHICAGO

These days, Bill Ayers doesn’t want to talk about the Weathermen, the Vietnam-era radical group he helped found that carried out bombings at the Pentagon and the Capitol.

That doesn’t mean the man who has become a political headache for Barack Obama

is hiding his past. In fact, all you need to do is stand outside Ayers’ office at the University of Illinois in Chicago to be confronted with it.

Ayers’ connection to the Weather Underground is plastered on his door. A postcard for a documentary on the group shows an old mugshot of Ayers. Nearby is cover art from Ayers’ 2001 memoir, “Fugitive Days.”

But also affixed to the door is the title that reflects how Ayers, now 63, has become known in the past two decades in Chicago: distinguished professor.

“He gives of himself greatly to his students. He gives of his time, his energies, his commitment,” said Pamela Quiroz, an associate professor who works in the college of education with Ayers. “He is just a superb individual.”

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