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U-M students protest arrest of student newspaper editor, Stephen H. Wildstrom, Wednesday, September 4, 1968

U-M students protest arrest of student newspaper editor, Stephen H. Wildstrom, Wednesday, September 4, 1968 image
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 5, 1968
Caption:
U-M Students Demonstrate: A crowd of University students, protesting the arrest of a student newspaper editor, listen to a speaker urge them to assemble in force in the County Building parking lot today. The crowd shown here marched around the County jail last night but dispested without disorder. The young editor was arrested by sheriff's deputies.

Ypsilanti women from Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti picket U-M men in front of Angell Hall, May 1940 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Ypsilanti women from Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti picket U-M men in front of Angell Hall, May 1940 image
Year:
1940
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, May 11, 1940
Caption:
'SITDOWN STRIKE': These Ypsilanti coeds are part of the group of 20 which swept into Ann Arbor yesterday afternoon to picket Michigan men students. Their invasion was found out today to have been part of a commercial stunt.

Ypsilanti women from Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti picket U-M men in front of Angell Hall, May 1940 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Ypsilanti women from Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti picket U-M men in front of Angell Hall, May 1940 image
Year:
1940
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, February 11, 1973
Caption:
From Our Pictorial Archives, Ann Arbor 1940: "Oh, Ypsi girls are very fine girls, With codfish balls they comb their curls." Those lines from the song, "Michigan Men," were never meant to "turn on" coeds from Michigan State Normal College in Ypsilanti (now Eastern Michigan University), but it was not the song but an article in the Michigan Daily, U-M student newspaper, that aroused the ire of these Ypsilanti coeds back in May 1940. They came in a busload to picket U-M men in front of Angell Hall. Their protest signs were a forerunner of the demonstrations in the '60s. Many of the girls were wearing ankle socks, and some had the seamed silk stockings that preceded nylon--they didn't come onto the scene until later. A year or two later many of these young men would be in uniform.