In April of 1971, several FSU students traveled to Washington, D.C., to partake in the Vietnam War Out Now Rally, a peaceful demonstration against the war.
Despite tensions between students and university administration, President Stanley Marshall took time to speak directly with the students and hear their concerns.
In the spring of 1969, a group of SDS sympathizers performed a humorous guerrilla theater reenactment of the Night of Bayonets. Students pulled the strings of an effigy of President Marshall, mocking him as a puppet of the State Board of Regents.
When students gathered outside the Capitol to protest the arrest of radical SDS member Phil Sanford, police officers lined up on the steps to keep the students from entering and to enforce order if necessary.
A newspaper article describing the circumstances that led 200 black students to hold a "talk-in" in university President Stanley Marshall's office for about 90 minutes. The students gathered to demand amnesty for two black students whom officers had…
This issue of Liberation is about the Black Panther Party. It includes a quotation from and photograph of Huey Newton, founder of the Black Panther Party, an excerpt from Eldridge Cleaver's book "Soul on Ice," and writings directly from Eldridge…