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AADL Talks To: Bill Ayers, Former U-M Student Activist and Member of the SDS and Weather Underground

Bill Ayers
Bill Ayers, director of the Children's Community School in Ann Arbor, May 1968

Bill Ayers is a retired Distinguished Professor of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. During his time in Ann Arbor during the 1960s, he served as director of Ann Arbor's experimental Children's Community School; Education Secretary for the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS); and co-founder of the militant Weather Underground organization, which originated in Ann Arbor in 1969 as a far left-wing revolutionary party. 

Ayers traces the path of his political awakening from wide-eyed college freshman to seasoned student organizer and educator. He reflects on the tumultuous moral dilemma he and many activists faced as the Vietnam War raged on in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He discusses the factionalism within the SDS leadership that resulted in the formation of the Weather Underground; how the strands of student activism during this turbulent time were rooted in the moral agenda outlined by Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.; and his lifelong pedagogic commitment to education.

Bill Ayers, 1993
Bill Ayers at a Borders book signing, 1993

Akito Asano (left) & Koji Ando, Survivors Of Hiroshima, At A Speaking Engagement In Ann Arbor, July 28, 1985 Photographer: Cecil Lockard

Akito Asano (left) & Koji Ando, Survivors Of Hiroshima, At A Speaking Engagement In Ann Arbor, July 28, 1985 image
Year:
1985
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, July 28, 1985
Caption:
Akito Asano, left, and Koji Ando, survivors of the Hiroshima blast, are touring Midwest cities to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the bombing.