Intelligent and coolly analytical, Thomas Hayden
was
widely viewed as the chief ideologue of the Movement. In 1962, Hayden
had drafted the famous Port Huron Statement expressing the idealism of
the New Left. He was co-founder of the Students for a Democratic Society.
In the early sixties, Hayden participated in civil rights work in the South
and in the black ghettoes of Newark. He later shifted his focus to
efforts to end the Vietnam War, twice making trips to North Vietnam.
After the Chicago Seven trial, Hayden married (and later divorced) activist actress Jane Fonda.
Hayden now serves as a state senator in California. He attended the 1996 Democratic National Convention in chicago as a delegate.