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- 1968: Columbia in Crisis
The occupation of five buildings in April 1968 marked a sea change in the relationships among Columbia University administration, its faculty, its student body, and its neighbors. Featuring documents, photographs, and audio from the University Archives, 1968: Columbia in Crisis examines the the causes, actions, and aftermath of a protest that captivated the campus, the nation, and the world. This online exhibition is based upon a physical exhibition of the same name which was on display in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library from March 17 to August 1, 2008.
- Columbia Archives Set to Mark 50th Anniversary of 1968 Protests
Columbia Archives Set to Mark 50th Anniversary of 1968 Protests Abigail Forget, March 17, 2016
- Columbia Magazine - Stir It Up
Filmmaker Paul Cronin rouses debate and emotions in his new documentary on the Columbia crisis of 1968. Paul Hond, Columbia Magazine, Spring 2008
- Columbia University Senate Panel discussion: Reflections on the Origins of the Columbia University Senate.
- Confessions of a Reluctant Revolutionary
Phillip Lopate '64CC, Columbia Magazine, Winter 2017-18 During the campus protests of 1968, writer Phillip Lopate ’64CC, today a professor in the School of the Arts, joined an alumni group supporting the student radicals. Now, almost fifty years later, he’s still trying to make sense of his place in that time.
Adapted from A Time to Stir: Columbia '68, Edited by Paul Cronin '14JRN. © 2017 Columbia University Press.
- IMDb - A Time to Stir
Synopsis of this 4 hr, 40 min documentary
- NPR - 1968 Columbia Protests Still Stir Passion
1968 Columbia Protests Still Stir Passion (8 min), Margot Adler, April 23, 2008 Chaos at Columbia University Epitomized 1968 (3 min), Robert Siegel
- Village Voice - Toronto Rounds Out Film Festival with Four-Plus Hours of Its Best Material in A Time To Stir
Scott Foundas, Village Voice, September 17, 2008