Difference between revisions of "Protests"

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==1960s==
 
==1960s==
  
[[Image:68math.jpg|[[Mathematics Hall]] is "liberated" during the [[1968 protests]]]]
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[[Image:68math.jpg|thumb|[[Mathematics Hall]] is "liberated" during the [[1968 protests]]]]
  
 
*[[April 20]], [[1967]]: anti-Vietnam recruitment protest by [[SDS]] in [[John Jay Hall]] turns into a violent melee with rightwing students
 
*[[April 20]], [[1967]]: anti-Vietnam recruitment protest by [[SDS]] in [[John Jay Hall]] turns into a violent melee with rightwing students

Revision as of 19:05, 19 February 2008

Protester David Shapiro sits in President Grayson Kirk's chair during the 1968 protests

So many protests to choose from...

Pre-1960s

The Bonus Army marches down Broadway
  • 1930s: Bonus Army marches
  • Late 1930s: Anti-war rallies preceding World War II

1960s

Mathematics Hall is "liberated" during the 1968 protests
  • April 23 - 30, 1968: The protest to end all protests. Not really. The 1968 protests surrounded the construction of the Morningside Park Gymnasium, Government funded science research, and CIA recruitment on campus. It ends with the bloody removal of students from five occupied buildings and a deeply damaged, divided campus.

1970-2000

Hamilton Hall during the 1996 Ethnic Studies hunger strike
  • 1972: Latino students protest for Latino Studies.
  • 1960s-1985: Students protest for divestment from South Africa, culminating in a 1985 takeover of Hamilton. Administration agrees to divest, although they didn't do so fully until 1991.
  • 1992: Students again take over Hamilton Hall, protesting Columbia's plans to turn the Audubon Ballroom, the site of Malcolm X's assassination, into a biomedical research facility
  • 1996: Students go on a hunger strike, and occupy Hamilton for the establishment of an Ethnic Studies Department. Three years later they get a center with no hiring power

Since 2000

Faculty protests

Strikes

Ongoing community protests

  • Since 1940s: Lots of tenant protests over Columbia evictions. Today, these are primarily related to the Manhattanville expansion controversy.