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                  <text>Building Come!Unity</text>
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                  <text>An exhibition of materials from the Come!Unity Press, a print shop that operated as a collective and a "free space" supporting myriad organizations within the 1960s–1970s social movements, including New Left groups, feminist organizations, gay rights organizations, and more. This group is a fantastic case study for movement print culture and how it is used to produce an alternative public sphere. </text>
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                  <text>Curator: Jack McKernan</text>
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                <text>Heads Survive By Sharing: Informational Pamphlet</text>
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                <text>Print workshops</text>
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                <text>This is a pamphlet entitled "Heads Survive by Sharing" which primarily serves to enumerate the resource needs of the Come!Unity Press.  It has black text and rainbow graphical devices under the text: a fist holding a fountain pen, a camera, the united farm workers logo, and a marijuana leaf. It is particularly useful to us in telling us what materials and techniques were being used. It is split into four headings: layout, printmaking and platemaking aids, miscellaneous matter, and building supplies. Under layout, we can see materials such as scissors, magic markers, tape, glue, paint, and lettering to create a sort of collage, which is then photographically transferred to a lithographic plate, the materials for which we see in the next heading. The plates themselves are not listed, as it was not assumed potential donors had extra lithographic plates laying around, but q-tips, cotton rags, paper towels, and cotton balls are asked for. Under miscellaneous matter are materials more to do with the running of the space and social sphere, but just as relevant to the success of the press. Everything from coffee stirrers to wheatpaste in order to flypost posters is requested. The final category lists hardware needed for repairs. The flyer ends with a plea for (vegetarian) food and a request to set up a monthly pledge to the organization. </text>
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                <text>NYU Fales Library</text>
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                <text>ca. 1975</text>
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                  <text>An exhibition of materials from the Come!Unity Press, a print shop that operated as a collective and a "free space" supporting myriad organizations within the 1960s–1970s social movements, including New Left groups, feminist organizations, gay rights organizations, and more. This group is a fantastic case study for movement print culture and how it is used to produce an alternative public sphere. </text>
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                  <text>Curator: Jack McKernan</text>
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                <text>May Day Rally Poster</text>
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                <text>Taxi Rank and File Coalition</text>
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                <text>A poster relaying history of the May Day labor holiday and calling demonstrators to join the Taxi Rank and File Coalition in Marching for a series of seven demands, printed in English and Spanish.  </text>
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                <text>The first MAYDAY was celebrated in the United States in 1886, as part of the fight for the 8-hour workday. Since then workers all around the world have traditionally come together on May Ist to demonstrate their unity and to gain strength to carry on their struggles for a better life. The Taxi Rank and File Coalition is participating in a demonstration on the Lower East Side on Thursday, May 1; and in a celebration/festival on Sunday May 4 in Prospect Park, Brooklyn. The demonstration will demand that the bosses and politicians stop their attacks on the rights, and living standards of working women and men here and around the world.&#13;
&#13;
The specific demands are:&#13;
&#13;
1) The Right to work for All;&#13;
2) Raise Workers' Wages / Lower Prices;&#13;
3) Stop Attacks on the so-called "Illegal Aliens;" &#13;
4)End Imperialism's Attacks on the Third World;&#13;
5) Support the full democratic and national rights of Third World People in the U.S.&#13;
&#13;
In addition, Taxi Rank and File is going to demonstrate&#13;
for two additional demands of our own:&#13;
1) End all sales to Mini's;&#13;
2) Take the taxi industry out of the bosses' hands: it should be owned by&#13;
the people.&#13;
and run by the workers!&#13;
&#13;
The eight-hour day was won by workers who organized&#13;
themselves and fought for it.&#13;
The demands we raise this&#13;
MAYDAY can be won in the same way.</text>
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                <text>La celebración del Primero de Mayo originó en los Esta-&#13;
dos Unidos Unidos en el año 1886, en la lucha para ganar el&#13;
día de trabajo de ocho horas.&#13;
&#13;
Desde luego, por tradición, en todo el mundo los obreros se han concentrado en el Prime-ra de Mayo para manifestar su unidad y para demostrar sus fuerzas en las luchas para una vida mejor.&#13;
&#13;
La Coalición Taxi Rank y Pile está participando en una Demostración en el barrio baja este, jueves 1 de Mayo; y en una Celebración/Fiesta el domingo 4 de Mayo en Prospect Park, Brooklyn. La demostración demandará que los jefes y los políticos dejan de sus ataques contra el nivel de vida y los derechos de los&#13;
hombres y mujeres trabajandos por todo el mundo.&#13;
Demandamos en particular:&#13;
1) El derecho de todos de trabajar;&#13;
2) Aumento de sueldos, bajamiento de precios;&#13;
3) Dejar de ataques contra los dichos 'extranjeros des-ligales';&#13;
4) Terminar los ataques del imperialismo contra el Mundo Tercero;&#13;
5) Amplios derechos democráticos y nacionales de los pueblos del Tercer Mundo adentro de los EE. UU. &#13;
&#13;
Ademas, presentaremos el Taxi Rank y File sus propios&#13;
demandas:&#13;
1) Acabar de todas ventas a los Mini's;&#13;
2) Cogerlo la industria taxi de los manos de los jefes: debe poseerlo el pueblo, debe operarlo los obreros.&#13;
&#13;
El día de ocho horas fué ganado por obreros que les or-ganizaron sus mismos y lucharon por ello. Las demandas que presentamos este Primero de Mayo podemos ganarlas así en la misma manera!</text>
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                <text>Poster for Benefit for St. Marx Medical Clinics and Come!Unity Press</text>
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                <text>A poster advertising two events put on by the organization Lesbian Feminist Liberation. First, a lecture "Women and Electoral Politics" by Florynce Kennedy, and second, a picnic and softball game.  The events are listed as "for women only" and includes a reference to Lesbian Feminist Liberation, Inc. as well as Come!Unity Press. </text>
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