No More Miss America was the title of a brochure distributed in support of the Miss America protest that took place outside of the Miss America competition in Atlantic City, NJ in 1968.[1] The brochure listed ten points that the organizers of the protest believed that the Miss America Pageant did to degrade women.[1] It was also at this protest that the myth of bra-burning originated.[2]
The protesters gathered up items they felt represented the oppression of women in America — high heels, curlers, girdles and bras — and placed them in a trash can.[2] They talked about setting it on fire, but were stopped by local police, who said that it posed a hazard to the wooden boardwalk they were standing on.[2] Later, some of the protesters got tickets to the event and unfurled a banner during the crowning ceremony that read, "WOMEN'S LIBERATION." They were removed after setting off smoke bombs.[2]
The protest was led by the New York Radical Women.[2] Because of the protest, the women's liberation movement was brought to the forefront of national attention.[2]
The ten points in the brochure were:[1]
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