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- Students for a Democratic Society Headband, 1969 -

- 1969
- Collections - Artifact
Students for a Democratic Society Headband, 1969
- Michigan State Normal College Bachelor of Science Degree Awarded to Lydia Powell Brown, August 8, 1930 - Lydia Powell (1898-1991) graduated from high school in 1917. By the following year, all states had made school attendance compulsory for 8- to 14-year-olds. In 1925, mandatory attendance expanded to include children 16 years and under. After her high school graduation, Powell, a woman of limited means, completed courses and received degrees from several Michigan colleges, making teaching her passion and a lifelong career.

- August 08, 1930
- Collections - Artifact
Michigan State Normal College Bachelor of Science Degree Awarded to Lydia Powell Brown, August 8, 1930
Lydia Powell (1898-1991) graduated from high school in 1917. By the following year, all states had made school attendance compulsory for 8- to 14-year-olds. In 1925, mandatory attendance expanded to include children 16 years and under. After her high school graduation, Powell, a woman of limited means, completed courses and received degrees from several Michigan colleges, making teaching her passion and a lifelong career.
- Newsweek Magazine, "Universities Under the Gun: Militants at Cornell," May 5, 1969 -

- May 05, 1969
- Collections - Artifact
Newsweek Magazine, "Universities Under the Gun: Militants at Cornell," May 5, 1969
- "8 Students Arrested for Peaceful Protest under the Barton Gun," 1969 -

- 1969
- Collections - Artifact
"8 Students Arrested for Peaceful Protest under the Barton Gun," 1969
- Cleary College Bachelor of Commercial Science Degree Awarded to Lydia Powell Brown, October 25, 1930 - Lydia Powell (1898-1991) graduated from high school in 1917. By the following year, all states had made school attendance compulsory for 8- to 14-year-olds. In 1925, mandatory attendance expanded to include children 16 years and under. After her high school graduation, Powell, a woman of limited means, completed courses and received degrees from several Michigan colleges, making teaching her passion and a lifelong career.

- October 25, 1930
- Collections - Artifact
Cleary College Bachelor of Commercial Science Degree Awarded to Lydia Powell Brown, October 25, 1930
Lydia Powell (1898-1991) graduated from high school in 1917. By the following year, all states had made school attendance compulsory for 8- to 14-year-olds. In 1925, mandatory attendance expanded to include children 16 years and under. After her high school graduation, Powell, a woman of limited means, completed courses and received degrees from several Michigan colleges, making teaching her passion and a lifelong career.
- "What About Student Power?," 1969 -

- 1969
- Collections - Artifact
"What About Student Power?," 1969
- The Strawberry Statement: Notes of a College Revolutionary, 1969 -

- 1969
- Collections - Artifact
The Strawberry Statement: Notes of a College Revolutionary, 1969
- Clara Ford and Martha Berry with Students at Berry College, Mount Berry, Georgia, circa 1927 - In 1902, Martha Berry established a school near Rome, Georgia, to educate the local underprivileged children. As the school grew, Berry solicited funds from many wealthy Americans. She invited Clara and Henry Ford to the school in 1921. The Fords were impressed. Clara and Henry returned many times over the years and became lifelong benefactors.

- circa 1927
- Collections - Artifact
Clara Ford and Martha Berry with Students at Berry College, Mount Berry, Georgia, circa 1927
In 1902, Martha Berry established a school near Rome, Georgia, to educate the local underprivileged children. As the school grew, Berry solicited funds from many wealthy Americans. She invited Clara and Henry Ford to the school in 1921. The Fords were impressed. Clara and Henry returned many times over the years and became lifelong benefactors.
- "College of Architecture, Art, and Planning Statement," April 22, 1969 -

- April 22, 1969
- Collections - Artifact
"College of Architecture, Art, and Planning Statement," April 22, 1969