A minstrel stick puppet. Minstrel shows were a type of entertainment popular from the 1840s to as late as the 1960s that featured performers in blackface. Figure has movable parts connected by pins. The stick that is used to operate the puppet is broken off.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Motion Picture Project progress report and program outline, providing information on the project, including "training and and equipping of SNCC personnel as cameramen," "production of motion pictures for SNCC," "production of motion pictures by SNCC personnel," and "organizing the showing of films."
One page poster printed by Allied Printing that reads "We Are ONE UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA AFL CIO CLC ESTABLISHED MAY 22, 1942 SOLIDARITY DAY SEPTEMBER 19TH, 1981 WASHINGTON, D.C. Illustration includes image of a steelworking in overalls and a hard hat with his hands on his hips
Anti-Vietnam War flyer entitled, "Uncle Sam Wants You," containing sarcastic phrases arguing the injustices regarding young African American men enlisted in the United States military. The poster reads, "Uncle Sam wants you nigger. Become a member of the world's highest paid black mercenary army! Fight for Freedom . . . (in Viet Nam). (Die Nigger Die–you can't die fast enough in the ghettos.) So run to your nearest recruiting chamber! Support White Power–travel to Viet Nam, you might even get a medal! Receive valuable training in the skills of killing off other oppressed people!"
Set of iron wrist shackles with two D-shaped cuffs, one containing a pin lock and the other with overlapping links. Relatively small cuffs indicate that they may have been designed for a child.
Anti-war comic entitled, "Vietnam," providing arguments against the Vietnam War with an emphasis on the injustices with regard to African American enlisted soldiers.