More than six decades after a group of idealistic students drafted one of the most defining manifestos of the 1960s, the words that once called for a “participatory democracy” have come home to where they were first written — the Lake Huron shoreline north of Port Huron.

On Thursday, Oct. 9, a small crowd gathered at Lakeport State Park for the unveiling of a new Michigan Historical Marker commemorating the creation of "The Port Huron Statement." Among those in attendance were two of the document’s original contributors — Alan Haber and Daniel Millstone — along with Jim Soto, the St. Clair County Community College philosophy professor who spent more than a decade working to make the marker a reality.

More than six decades after a group of idealistic students drafted one of the most defin

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