These radicals included anti-psychiatrists R. D. Laing and David Cooper; veterans of the Free University of New York, Allen Krebs and Joe Berke; the feminist psychoanalyst Juliet Mitchell; and the cultural theorist Stuart Hall.
Lecturers and speakers included Cornelius Cardew, C. L. R. James, Robin Blackburn, Bob Cobbing, Yoko Ono, Jeff Nuttall, John Latham and Alex Trocchi.
[1][4] Other notable participants include sociologist Calvin C. Hernton and Obi Egbuna, founder of the Universal Coloured People's Association and member of the British Black Panthers.
[5] Under the pressure of mounting bills and squatters, the Antiuniversity was forced out of its campus building on Rivington Street by August 1968 when it was taken back by its owner, the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation.
Among the lecturers at the Antiuniversity was psychoanalyst and feminist Juliet Mitchell, who persuaded one of her students - Diana Gravill - to use money that she had inherited to set up a bookshop with her partner on Camden High Street in 1968.