Editore: FSM, Berkeley, CA, 1964
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Single 8.5x11 inch sheet, printed both sides, mimeographed, very good. The reverse contains a statement by the Association of California State College Professors supporting the Berkeley activists. This is a dublicate from an archive collected at the time by Michael Rossman, one of the participants in the Free Speech Movement.
Editore: Michael Rossman, [Berkeley, CA], 1984
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Album. Record, 45 rpm format, very good condition, in a creased sleeve with pasted on cover design by Stevie Lipney, the pasted on cover is edge worn and wrinkled else good condition, lacks the lyric sheet. Song listing: Oski dolls by Joe La Penta, We three deans, by Barry Jablon, UC Administration by Ken Sanderson, Hail to IBM by Sanderson, It belongs to the University by Joe La Penta, Silent Night by Barry Jablon, Call out the deans by Barry Jablon, Master of Sproul Hall by Dustin Miller, God rest ye free speech by Ken Sanderson, Come all ye mindless by Barry Jablon and Joy to UC by Dustin Miller.
Editore: Studen Union for Peace Action
Manoscritto / Collezionismo cartaceo Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Staple-bound mimeographed manuscript. 7pp. "This article, originally a pamphlet by the FSM, was reprinted in Hal Draper's 'Berkeley: The New Student Revolt'. Rare.
Editore: Studen Union for Peace Action
Manoscritto / Collezionismo cartaceo Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Staple-bound mimeographed manuscript. 7pp. "This article, originally a pamphlet by the FSM, was reprinted in Hal Draper's 'Berkeley: The New Student Revolt'. Rare.
Editore: Dustin Mark Miller, Berkeley, CA, 1964
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Audio 45rpm. Record, 45 rpm format, very good condition, in original sleeve with tipped-in cover design by Stevie Lipney, the pasted on cover is edge worn and wrinkled due to distracted volunteers pasting it on, a pen note on the rear cover "Packed by Jewish-Bolsheviks," paper slightly toned else good condition, mimeographed lyric sheet folded & laid in. Very good. Song listing: Oski dolls by Joe La Penta, We three deans, by Barry Jablon, UC Administration by Ken Sanderson, Hail to IBM by Sanderson, It belongs to the University by Joe La Penta, Silent Night by Barry Jablon, Call out the deans by Barry Jablon, Master of Sproul Hall by Dustin Miller, God rest ye free speech by Ken Sanderson, Come all ye mindless by Barry Jablon and Joy to UC by Dustin Miller.
Editore: W.E.B. DuBois Clubs of America (1965), San Francisco, 1965
Da: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
First Edition. First printing. Staple-bound, pictorial paper wrappers (softcover); 52,(2)pp; photo illus. Clean, tight, Very Good or better copy. A day-by-day record of the 1964 Free Speech strike on the UC Berkeley campus, with critical commentary by Kaufman and Folsom.
Editore: Dustin Mark Miller, Berkeley, CA, 1964
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Record, 45 rpm format, very good condition, in original sleeve with two sides of cover designed by Stevie Lipney laid inside instead of being pasted over the sleeve. Mimeographed lyric sheet folded and laid in. The sleeve has a rubberstamp in the corner soliciting donations for the Free Speech Defense Fund: "Your help in the defense of the 800 Berkeley student free speech defendants is urgently needed." Sold as a fundraiser for the activists arrested for occupying Sproul Hall on Decemver 2nd, 1964. Song listing: Oski dolls by Joe La Penta, We three deans, by Barry Jablon, UC Administration by Ken Sanderson, Hail to IBM by Sanderson, It belongs to the University by Joe La Penta, Silent Night by Barry Jablon, Call out the deans by Barry Jablon, Master of Sproul Hall by Dustin Miller, God rest ye free speech by Ken Sanderson, Come all ye mindless by Barry Jablon and Joy to UC by Dustin Miller.
Editore: N.p., N.p., 1960
Da: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Fotografia
Archive of 14 vintage large-format press photographs of the infamous protest against the House on Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) at San Francisco City Hall on May 13, 1960. Reference Library stamps on the versos, along with brief mimeo snipes, and several with newspaper clippings adhered to the versos. By 1960 HUAC had been widely denounced by everyone from figures of the American counterculture to former President Harry Truman, but the committee nevertheless continued to hold hearings around the country to investigate alleged local subversive activities. Arriving in San Francisco for the first of three days of hearings (from May 12-14), the committee were met by a group of protesters organized by civil liberties activist Frank Wilkenson. The protesters found themselves barred from entering City Hall, however, as HUAC had already filled the hearing chamber with supporters. Demonstrators began to chant outside the building, demanding entrance. The publicity generated by the first day's demonstration brought even larger numbers the following day, with an estimated gathering of 3500 protesters, including many Berkeley students. Without warning, San Francisco police turned fire hoses on the protesters, and began to drag them down the stairs. The resultant melee marked the first significant public confrontation between HUAC and its detractors, and reflected a major shift in national opinion about the purpose of the committee. The photographs on offer document the protest itself as well as the aftermath, with images of protesters marching with signs and surrounding the inside and outside of City Hall. Many vivid photographs show policemen in the heat of the conflict, spraying protesters with fire hoses and dragging individuals by the limbs and by clothing down the building steps. Several images show protesters under arrest afterwards, as well as one particularly striking image of a pile of abandoned protest signs on the ground in front of City Hall. An important collection of images from a key turning point not only in the history of HUAC, but also in the dialogue around free speech in the United States, and, more broadly, in the forms of protest and organization that would shape New Left social and political movements over the course of the following decades. 11 x 14 inches. Very Good plus, lightly toned at the margins, and some with touch-ups and annotations in manuscript pencil on the rectos.