Flier promoting the April 27, 1974 National Campaign to Impeach Nixon demonstration in Washington, D.C. This flier was created by the Attica Brigade, an anti-imperialist student organization, who hoped to created a Throw the Bum Out Contingent to participate in the demonstration.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
Flier promoting the April 27, 1974 National Campaign to Impeach Nixon demonstration in Washington, D.C. This flier was created by the Attica Brigade, an anti-imperialist student organization, and includes the Attica Brigade's perspective on United States systematic imperialism and calls for the end of police repression in black communities, attacks on standards of living, and cuts to health care, welfare, child care, and education.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
Poster featuring a figure at a broken window riddled with bullet holes. The poster publicizes a moratorium held by the Student Mobilization Committee To End The War In Southeast Asia to commemorate shootings at Kent State, Jackson State and Augusta, GA in May of 1970.
Poster outlining the People's Peace Treaty; a strategy to provide both a "concrete, programmatic, step-by-step way to end the war" and to demonstrate the social cost at home. The poster publicizes a series of events across the US March 13-May 28, with a focus on events in Washington D.C. May 1-5, including marches, rallies, and non-violent disruption.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.
The New American University, also called New AU, was a radical student organization advocating for changes at the American University campus, including changes to the administration and decision making, student life, curriculum reform, community involvement and policing, governance, and race relations. The group formed out of the controversy of whether or not to allow students to hold a inaugural ball for Dick Gregory after his defeat in the 1968 election. These photographs depict a meeting for which New AU members sought student parity on faculty committees on April 24, 1969.