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AHHHESAH THESHT HULEE’EHL HCTEHET‘E EH
THE EE‘HEHTEHS HHS' SEHEESESS; HH HHSHHHESES
OH WAR HHGTEST AT HAHHEAHH AHH HEESHtGHSEH
THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF MA.
WAN STATE UNIVESTTY
BARBARA SWMKI
1971
IHEEHHHEHHEHEEEEEL31293 00848 6577
ABSTRACT
AMERICAN STUDENT POLITICAL
ACTIVITY IN THE THIRTIES AND SIXTIES:
AN ANALYSIS OF WAR PROTEST AT HARVARD AND WISCONSIN
By
Barbara Swirski
This study contributes to the study of social movements in general,
and student movements in particular, by clarifying the difference between
independent, class conscious movements of students, and other types of
student political activity. The study examines the political activity
of students in connection with anti-war issues during the 1930's and
1960's at two.American universities--Harvard and.Wisconsin. Data for
the study were gathered through a content anaLysis of the student
newspapers of the two schools.
The main purpose of the study is to distinguish between student
political activity during the two decades, by focusing on the following
variables: the initiators of conflicts between students and other
groups, the allies of students, the formal demands of student organi-
zations and the demands of individual students during those conflicts,
the dissatisfactions expressed by students, and the number of partici-
pants in the conflicts.
The study claims that the activity of the sixties constituted a
student movement, that the activists of that decade were aware of
themselves as a distinct group and that they desired increased power
to make decisions affecting them. It claims that the activity of the
thirties did not constitute a student movement, but rather was part
of a wider social movement; no evidence of class consciousness or
desire for increased decision making power on the part of students of
the thirties was found. Finally, the study did not find any signifi-
cant differences between activity at the two schools during either
decade.
AMERICAN STUDENT POLITICAL
ACTIVITY IN THE THIRTIES AND SIXTIES:
AN ANALYSIS OF WAR PROTEST AT HARVARD AND WISCONSIN
By
Barbara Swirski
A THESIS
Submitted to
Michigan State University
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
MASTER OF ARTS
Department of Sociology
1971
Theoretical.Framework . . . . . . . . . . .
Purpose of the Study
DeSign Of the Study. 0 I O C O O O O O O O O
Source of Data and Sampling Procedure
unitOfAnalySisooooooooooo
Procedure of Content Analysis
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Student Anti—War Activity During the Thirties
Student AntiAWar Activity in the Thirties
and Sixties
Student Anti-War.Activity in the Sixties . . . . . .
Differences Between Student
Decades
Initiators . . .
Allies
Demands . . . .
Dissatisfactions
Number of Participant
0
C
C
S
Cmmhmnms.. ... ...
Bibliography
Appendices
Appendix.A:
Appendix B:
Anti-War.Activity in the Two
Coding Sheets
Intercoder Reliability
ii
Page
10
l2
13
1h
1h
11+
18
21
21
25
28
33
39
1+1
uu
l+9
LIST OF TABLES
Table Page
1. Numbers and Types of War—Related Issues Over
Which Conflicts Arose at Wisconsin and Harvard
During the Thirties and Sixties . . . . . . . . . . 15
2. Initiators of'War-Related Conflicts at Wisconsin
and.Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties . . . . 22
3. Number of Conflicts in Which Non-Student Groups
Were Allied.With Students at Wisconsin and
Harvard in War-Related Conflicts During the
Thirties and SiXties o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 25
A. Formal Demands of Students Involved in War-Related
Conflicts at Harvard and Wisconsin During the
Thirties and SiXtieS o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 29
5. Number of War-Related Conflicts in Which Demands
Were Expressed by Individual Students at
Wisconsin and.Harvard During the Thirties and
SiXties o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 30
6. Number of Demands Expressed by Individual Students
in War-Related Conflicts at Wisconsin and
Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties . . . . . . 30
7. Number of War-Related Conflicts in Which Dissatis-
factions Were Expressed.by Individual Students
Concerning Their Role as Students at Wisconsin
and Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties . . . . 3h
8. Number of Dissatisfactions Expressed by Individual
Students Concerning Their Role as Students in
War-Related Conflicts at Wisconsin and Harvard
During the Thirties and Sixties . . . . . . . . . . . 35
9. Intercoder Reliability for Attitudes Recorded and
Coded at Wisconsin and Harvard . . . . . . . . . . . 50
iii
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure Page
1. 8mm COding Sheet 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 1+7
2 O Attitude Sheet 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 1+8
iv
AMERICAN STUDENT POLITICAL
ACTIVITY IN THE THIRTIES AND SIXTIES:
AN ANALYSIS OF WAR PROTEST AT HARVARD AND WISCONSIN
The wave of student political activity throughout the world in
the sixties has called the attention of the academic community to the
study of student movements. Yet, student political activity is not
a new phenomenon; in the United States, for example, there was a
"student movement" during the thirties, while in South.America students
have been politically active during most of this century. One of the
main problems of the recent literature, from a theoretical point of
view, is that it calls all forms of student political activity by the
same name, i.e., "student movements." Since students are a relatively
large group of individuals, of varied personalities, interests, socio-
economic backgrounds, and intellectual pursuits, such a statement is
equivalent to calling all political activities of white collar workers
"white collar movements," and all political activities of blacks "black
movements." For this reason, a cursory review of the literature reveals
a plethora of hypotheses and prOpositions about student movements,
which include just about all reasons for political activity of any
social group or conglomeration of individuals.
By far the greatest number of studies of student political ac-
tivity, especially those of American students, have focused on bio-
graphical variables. Political activism of students has been found
to be associated with politically liberal parents, permissive child-
rearing, high socio-economic status (and in some cases low status
or high mobility), and intelligence. (Flacks, 19675 Keniston, 1968;
Soloman and Fishman, 1961+; Paulus, 1967; Lyonns, 1965; Watts and
Whittaker, 1966; Westby and Braungart, 1966; Heist, 1965; Trent and
Craise, 1967; Somers, 1965; Emmerson, 1968.) Other findings have
pointed out the association between student political activity and
personality characteristics such as flexibility, individualism, es-
thetic and artistic sensitivity (Watts, 1966; Flacks, 1967; Heist,
1965; Lyonns, 1965; Paulus, 1956; Trent, 1967); or attitudes such as
religious liberalism and idealism (Keniston, 1968; Flacks, 1967;
Trent, 1967; Lyonns, 1965; Heist, 1965; Paulus, 1967; Soloman, 1961+;
Larkin, 1968). There is no reason to believe that such qualities
differentiate between students and non-students; they may character-
ize the participants in any political activity or any movement for
change, though they were found in studies of student activists.
Social scientists attempting to explain the presence of student
movements in the so-called developing nations have pointed to the
national or international scene for explanations; they have hypothe-
sized that "the more tenacious the colonial regime, the greater its
politicizing and radicalizing effects," (Emmerson, l968:h07) or the
greater the propensity of political authorities to impose sanctions
upon student political activity and the more vulnerable the student
perceives himself to such sanctions, the less likelihood of a student
movement developing (Finlay gt al, 1968). Other studies have related
student political activity to a country's stage in the modernization
process (Emmerson, 1968: hlZ-hlh), or to foreign invasions and.weak
national governments (Larkin, 1968). Again, these variables do not
apply specifically to student political activity; for example, the
role of sanctions in preventing any attempts at social or political
change has been pointed out by Talcott Parsons in his analysis of
deviance and social change, and by Neil Smelser in his discussion of
social movements (Parsons, 1951; Smelser, 1962). Similarly, the pres-
ence of a colonial regime, a foreign invader, or a weak government
may help to explain dissatisfactions on the part of many individuals,
but it does not tell us why students as a separate group in society
should mdbilize for change.
A third type of hypothesis offered in the literature is more
relevant to the subject of student movements; this type looks to
university variables. Several studies have sought explanations in
the character of the university; American student activism has been
associated with the "multiversity" (Scott and El-Assal, 1969); and
with institutions having large numbers of students, high quality, the
presence of large out-of-state student bodies, and faculty and insti-
tutional insecurities (Lipset and Altbach, 1967). Studies of Latin
American student activism have found it highest in secular state in-
stitutions where students have an important voice in university af-
fairs (Myhr, 1968), and African student political activity has been
associated with large universities in capital cities rather than with
universities in isolated rural areas (Willame, 1968). The isolation
of the latter is said to facilitate a political elitism among many
students (Ottoway, 1968). Studies of student activism in the United
States as well as in other countries have hypothesized that it is re-
lated to higher student population ratios and to non-elitist systems
of higher education (Sampson, 1967; Roszak, 1969; Douglas, 1970; Em-
merson, 1968: #01). Another relevant university variable is said to
be the area of study: student activism has been found higher in de-
partments of humanities, law and social sciences, and lower in
departments of natural or applied sciences. Such findings have been
explained by the fact that in the former the curricular challenge is
lower (Glazer, 1968), or that students of the former experience frus-
trations over uncertain or unacceptable vocational prospects after
graduation (Emmerson, 1968: #09; Pinner, 1968). Some of the above
institutional variables will be discussed further below.
One reason for the great variety of hypotheses offered above is
that they relate to different phenomena; they do not differentiate
between cases of strictly student movements and those where the politi-
cal phenomenon involved is not a "movement," or at least not a strictly
"student movement." Looking at student political activity from a
cross-cultural point of view, we can distinguish three categories of
student political activity.
The first consists of activity in the frame work of student or-
ganizations which are affiliates of adult political organizations.
Such a description fits the political activity of students in Chile
during the sixties, where the various student organizations through
which students acted were miniatures of national parties (Glazer,
1968). Another example of the same phenomenon wOuld be student politi-
cal activity in Venezuela between 1936 and 1958, especially during
the dictatorship of’Marcos Perez Jimenez (19h8-58), when the adult
parties were illegal, and the primary role of students was to keep
these political structures alive (Hamilton, 1968: 366-367). In the
above examples, student activity was not directed towards specific
student interests (curriculum, tuition, housing, etc.) but toward a
larger political struggle.
The second type of activity occurs in the framework of political
organizations or movements in which students constitute a significant
part of the membership and leadership. Such was the case of the
Algerian and Congolese student activists before independence was
achieved, of the Guban students before Castro overthrew Batista, of
the Venezuelan students who Opposed the dictatorship of Juan Vicente
Gomez between 1928 and his overthrow in 1936, and of the Columbian
students who became active in the 1920's (Willame, 1968; Suchlicki,
1968; Hamilton, 1968; Walker, 1967). In these cases, students pro-
vided a good manpower source for larger political movements against
dictators and colonial regimes. Even though they often had their own
separate organizations, the students acted as members of the larger
movement rather than as students per se. They Opposed the regime
rather than the university; they worked for the interests of a larger
social group than students.
The third type of student political activity occurs in the frame-
work of a student movement, that is, a group of students (individuals
occupying the same social role), who, as a group are outside the de-
cision making structure within their role set or occupy a low position
in it, who try to influence the making of one or several decisions,
or try to become a prominent or exclusive part of the decision making
structure themselves (Swirski, 1971). An example of such a movement
would be the University Reform.Movement in Argentina in 1918, when
students succeeded in bringing about many changes in their universi-
ties, including considerable decision making power for themselves
(Walker, 1968). The difference between this type of activity and the
other two is that there students acted as students and attempted to
bring about changes that would.benefit them as students, rather than
as members of the middle class, as members of the Social Democratic
Party, or as Algerian nationals.
However, students participating in a student movement do not
necessarily act ggly in their own interests, or only on university-
connected issues. They may also participate in broader political
conflicts; indeed, there may be more conflicts centered around national
issues than around strictly university ones. These national issues
may also be connected with university issues.
Theoretical Framework
The above definition of a student movement is derived from a
general theory of the development of movements for social change which
was developed in connection with a study of student political activity
at Harvard and Wisconsin between 1930 and 1969 (Swirski, 1971). The
theory focuses on groups of individuals occupying the same role,
termed "role groups." In a university, students, faculty, and admin-
istrators would each constitute a role group. The theory views society
as a conglomeration of role groups interrelated in "role sets." Stu-
dents, faculty and administrators, then, would be viewed as interact-
ing with one another not as individuals, but as members of their re-
spective role groups. Together, these role groups would form the
university role set. The theory further states that within each role
set there is a certain distribution of decision making power, and
that each role group has certain expectations with regard to its po-
sition within the decision making structure of the role set. In the
university role set, most of the decision making power is in the hands
of the administration and faculty. Until the 1960's, students viewed
this distribution as just and preper.
A political movement is said to arise when there is a discrepancy
between the expectations of members of a role group and its objective
share of decision making power. The formation of a political movement
is seen as a four stage process:
1. On a societal level, broad and widespread changes take place,
such as industrialization, commercialization, demographic changes,
natural disasters, and migrations. These changes are not dealt
with in the present study.
The preceding societal changes bring about structural changes
within the role set. These changes are of two main types:
(a) changes in the relative strength or importance of a given
role group vis-a-vis the other groups in the role set,such
as changes in the finer of a role group, which can reinforce
its claims to a share in the decision making structure; and
changes in the composition of a role group, which may bring
new skills, new tactics, or more intense expectations regard-
ing its position within the role set.
In the case of the student role group, its potential
power has increased because of the great increase in the
percentage of young people enrolled in colleges and univer-
sities, as well as the great increase in absolute numbers of
students attending college in the past decade (Swirski, 1971:
Chapter 3; Douglas, 1970: 13-16). While only a small per-
centage of students in a given university may participate
in some political activity, that small percentage may amount
to hundreds or even thousands of students.
Another change in the student role group has been the
increasing heterogeneity of students. Greater numbers and
proportions of students now come from.working class and min-
ority group backgrounds (Swirski, 1971: Chapter 3). This
increased representation among students of different back-
(b)
8
grounds has broadened the social and political concerns of
students.
The second type of structural change consists of changes in
the circumstance of performance of the given role, such as
an increase in the duration of the role, measured by hours
of the day or number of years an individual spends in it;
and changes in the degree to which occupation of the role in
question affects the success or satisfaction a person has in
his other roles. Each of these two changes may increase the
"centrality" or importance of the role to its occupants and
thus increase their concern with the position of their role
group.
This type of change is especially relevant to the pres-
ent study. The role of student is now more central to its
occupants than it was in previous decades. College-bound
youth begin to identify as students before graduation from
high school through various college preparatory programs such
as advanced placement. Large numbers of students take more
than the traditional four years to complete their first de-
gree, taking a year off to work or travel. Mereover, more
students now plan on and.pursue graduate studies. Instead
of four years, the role for students who continue their
studies beyond the first degree lasts for 6-8 years, or even
longer. This increase in the total time Spent in the role
has affected students' perceptions of the student role group,
contributing to a group or"clas§'consciousness among stu-
dents. As Douglas points out:
This . . . has meant that not only is there
more time for membership in the college community
to become the basis for one's identity, but
there is also more time for common interests
and problems to develop, to be defined as
common by individuals . . . (Douglas, 1970:
68)
Not only is the role of student occupied for a longer period
of time than previously, but it is also perceived as more
important for success in life. In earlier years college was
"more of a finishing school, a rite of passage into upper
class life, even for the males." (Douglas, 1970:63). Future
success did not depend upon one's attendance at college or
on one's performance there; students came largely from upper
or upper-middle class backgrounds, and their future depended
on their social ties and their fathers' occupational positions.
In contrast, college has now become the most important avenue
to financial and occupational success in life. Academic per-
formance is perceived as important for acceptance into grade
uate school and/or for Obtaining good jdbs.
The increase in the numbers of students and the increased
importance of the role to its occupants have brought about
a group or "class" consciousness on the part of students.
The fact that they form one of the largest groups in society
has made students aware of their potential power as a group.
The increase in the time spent in the student role has allowed
a student identity to deve10p, as students have become aware
of the interests and problems they share as individuals oc-
cupying the same role. Moreover, decisions which affect
students as students now affect them for a longer time;
therefore such decisions have taken on increased importance.
10
The fact that students have a greater stake in their student
role, that higher education is now perceived as essential
for success in life, has also affected the way students view
their own group, as well as the way they view other groups
in the role set.
3. When some or all of the structural changes within the role set
take place, they may lead to higher expectations by members of
the role group in question with respect to the position of their
group within the decision making structure of the role set. In
the case of the student movement, students have come to reject
the traditional authority of faculty and administration, to de-
mand a voice in university decisions which affect them, and to
reject the image of students as immature citizens on the way
(Swirski, 1971: Chapter A).
h. Finally, the new, higher expectations may lead to the formation
of a political movement. The probability of such a development
is influenced in turn by (1) the degree to which members of the
dissatisfied group have a group, or "class" consciousness; (2)
by the clarity of identifiability of the opposing group or groups;
(3) by the existence of alternative channels for decision making;
and (h) by the existence of alternative rewards.
Purpose of the Study
This study will attempt to show the difference between a strictly
student movement and other types of student political activity by
looking at.American students' involvement in war-related issues during
two periods, the thirties and the sixties, in two schools -- the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin and.Harvard University. These decades saw the
11
highest levels of student political activity in the history of Amer-
ican higher education: analysts of student activism in the sixties
have compared it to that of the thirties, and both periods have been
referred to as "student movements" (Feuer, 1969; Lipset and.Altbach,
1967) .
The major claim of this study will be that While student politi-
cal activity in the sixties -- at both universities -- constituted a
genuine student movement, the student activities of the thirties did
not. Hopefully, it will be shown that the student activism of the
thirties occurred in the framework of student organizations which
were affiliates of adult political organizations, and that students
of that period did not act to promote or defend student interests per
se. An attempt will be made to show that they did not have much aware-
ness of themselves as a separate group within the university or in
society, and that they did not expect more decision making power as
a distinct grogp than they had.
Conversely, the study will present evidence to support the con-
tention that the students of the sixties did perceive themselves as
belonging to a separate group with common interests and common prob-
lems and that, furthermore, one of the purposes of their activities
was to gain more decision making power within the university as well
as outside it.
Design of the Study
The student political activity of the thirties and sixties will
be compared by analyzing the following aSpects of this activity in
connection with war-related issues:
1. The student organizations that were most active politically.
2. The types of allies that cooperated with students in their
12
political activities.
3. The types of demands that students -- both organizations and
individual students -- made in particular conflicts.
h. The dissatisfactions expressed by students with regard to
their position as a group.
5. The numbers of students that participated in political activi-
ties.
The study focuses on war-related issues because these were the
most prominent issues for students in the two decades: in the thirties
this meant attempts to prevent the United States from entering a fu-
ture European war by demonstrating in advance that students would not
support the government in such a venture, while in the sixties it
meant efforts to end a war already being waged in Vietnam. While war
was the biggest issue in both decades, it is still small enough to
allow for an in-depth study of student political activity which cen-
tered around it. Since the issues are similar, the differences be-
tween them will emphasize the differences between the phenomena in
both decades even more than would be the case were the type of issue
not held constant.
The choice of Harvard and‘Wisconsin was made in order to test
some of the hypotheses concerning the relation between university
structure and student activism. In addition, both schools had active
student bodies and excellent, independent student newspapers, which
assured rich data.
Source of Data and Sampling Procedure
Data for this study were gathered in connection with a larger
study which attempted to measure, among other things, changes in Ameri-
can students' perceptions of their role in society between 1930 and
13
1969. Such information was obtained through a content analysis of
student newspapers at the University of Wisconsin (The Daily Cardinal)
and Harvard University (The Crimson).
The sample for the content analysis included all the issues of
the paper, from the registration issues to the Christmas break, and
from.March lst to the end of the school year for every other year, be-
ginning in 1930. Time limitations dictated the choice of every other
year rather than every year, as well as the elimination of the two
winter months. Though a content analysis was not done for the January
and.February issues, these papers were skimmed in order to make cer-
tain that important activities were not missed. It was found that
student activity was low during those months, and that when there was
activity, it consisted either of a continuation of activity begun in
the fall or of the beginning of activity which continued in the spring,
so that very little information was lost because of the sampling pro-
cedure. In each issue of the newspaper included in the sample, all
the news items, feature articles, editorials and letters to the editor
were read.
Unit of Analysis
The unit of analysis was a conflict between students and other
groups. A "conflict" was defined as any situation in which an organ-
ized group of students -- student government, dormitory council, fra-
ternal organizations, ad hoc group organized around a specific issue,
political organization -- engages in activities (strikes, demonstra-
tions, oral or written statements, etc.) designed to affect existing
or projected policies in areas of concern to them either on or off
campus. .An "organized group" was considered one in which a recogniz-
able leadership exists. Focusing on conflicts allowed for the
1A
collection of other information relevant to the subject of student
political activity: number of conflicts in a given year, issues around
which conflicts arose, patterns of alliances of students, means em-
ployed by them to achieve their goals, numbers of participants in
conflicts, and declared goals or demands of students during conflicts.
Procedure of Content Analysis
Once a conflict was identified, all the information about it --
from the first reported activity to the last -- was recorded on two
different types of coding sheets: attitude sheets and summary sheets
(see Appendix.A). One attitude sheet was used for every unit of re-
cording (a unit of recording is the smallest section of a text in
which a reference is recorded). The unit of recording was a letter
to the editor, an editorial, or a speech reported in a news story; in
other words, a piece of writing containing the opinions of one person.*
The summary sheet was used to summarize background information
about the conflict, such as the nature of the issue, when the conflict
started and ended, who initiated it, how many students participated
in activities related to the conflict, what means were used.by the
students during the conflicts, what groups supported or opposed the
students, and what formal demands were made by the students.
Student.AntiAWar Activitpruringgthe Thirties and Sixties
In the following analysis of student anti-war activity in the
thirties and the sixties, a short history of the conflicts during
* Although some letters to the editor contained more than one
signature, only one attitude sheet was used for each letter. A de-
tailed explanation of the content analysis procedure can be found
in the Codebook, which is not included here because of its length.
15
both periods at the two universities studied will be presented. It
should be borne in mind that this review is based on a reading of two
student newspapers for every other year; it is not a complete histor-
ical assessment of student activity. Following the historical sketches,
the initiators of anti-war conflicts in both periods, their allies,
the formal demands of student groups and of individual students, the
dissatisfactions expressed.by students with regard to their role as
students and the numbers of participants in both decades will be com-
pared.
Student Anti-War Activity in the Thirties
Two events provided the backdrop for student political activities
in the thirties: Hitler's rise to power and the prospect of another
world war, and the Depression. In 1933 English students at Oxford
University resolved that under no circumstances would they "fight for
King and country," and this "Oxford Pledge" was echoed on American
campuses. The Depression affected students' ability to find jobs
while at school and greatly reduced their prospects of finding employ-
ment after graduation; at some universities students agitated for
lower fees, more federal help for students, and better salaries and
working conditions for students who had to pay their own way through
college.
Table 1: Numbers and Types of'War-Related Issues Over Which Conflicts
Arose at Wisconsin and.Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties
, Thirties Sixties
Issue * Wis. Har. Total Wis. Har. Total
Anti-war ll 8 19 15 10 25
Anti-ROTC h 0 h 2 l 3
Total 15 8 23 17 ll 28
* Anti-war refers to World.War II in the thirties, Vietnam in the sixties.
16
By far the biggest issue for student activists in the thirties
was the war issue. The chief organizers of anti-war conflicts* were
national organizations, the National Student League (NSL), which was
tied to the Communist Party, and the Student League for Industrial
Democracy (SLID), which was tied to the Socialist League for Industrial
Democracy. These two organizations called for the first "Student
Strike Against the War" on April 13, 1931+, to commemoratethe entrance
of the United States into World.War I and to stage a dress rehearsal
of what students would do if called upon to fight another imperialistic
war. The anti-war strike became an annual event on American campuses
until the United States entered.World.War II. The most successful
strike was held in 1935; at Harvard 7 per cent of the student body par-
ticipated in the strike, and at Wisconsin, 10 per cent took part. At
both schools the national platform was supplemented by local issues;
at Harvard it was a teacher oath bill in the Massachusetts legislature,
and.at‘Wisconsin it was a compulsory ROTC bill to be brought before
the state senate. In the 1936 school year there was less anti-war
agitation in both schools, and the anti-war strikes were attended'by
much less controversy than they had previously. .At Wisconsin the dem-
onstration was termed a "peace assembly" rather than an "anti-war
strike," and it was backed by 30 campus organizations. At Harvard,
the strike was supported by members of both administration and faculty.
The 1939 strikes were also similar in both schools, where two separate
* The term "anti-war conflicts" will be used only in reference to
conflicts concerning United States participation in a future war --
World'War II. Conflicts focusing on the status of ROTC at the uni-
versity will be referred to as "anti-ROTC conflicts." Similarly, the
conflicts which occurred during the sixties will be referred to as
"anti4Vietnam conflicts" and "anti-ROTC conflicts." See Table 1 for
a breakdown of war-related conflicts in both decades.
l7
' at-activities were held: a university-sponsored "peace convocation,'
tended by 20 per cent of the student body at Wisconsin and 12 per cent
at Harvard, and a rival "anti-war strike" held by more militant peace
groups at both schools and attended by less than 1 per cent of the
student bodies. The l9h0-hl school year saw very little anti-war ac-
tivity at Wisconsin, prdbably due to the fact that its president had
been appointed director of the draft, and the university administration
did what it could to discourage peace organizations. The anti-war
strike became a debate that year, and the groups which were still a-
gainst intervention held two rival meetings because they were not able
to agree on a platform. At Harvard, protest activity in l9hO-hl was
much greater; it was precipitated by a radio speech in which President
Conant called for direct military assistance for Great Britain. Rival
interventionalist and anti-interventionalist activities were carried
out throughout the year, with frequent confrontations between the groups
and the involvement of many different campus and outside organizations.
At several universities, including the University of Wisconsin,
the anti-war issue was connected with another issue -- compulsory mil-
itary training at land-grant colleges. At Wisconsin.ROTC had been
voluntary since 1923, but during the thirties annual attempts were
made by conservative legislators to reinstate a compulsory program.at
the university. In 193A, opposition to ROTC was part of the platform
of groups organizing anti-war activities, and 1% per cent of the stu-
dent body signed an anti-ROTC petition circulated in conjunction with
the anti-war strike. .At both the 1935 and 1937 strikes, Wisconsin
students passed resolutions against ROTC. In addition, students joined
with faculty, administration and local organizations on several occa-
sions to oppose the ROTC bills once they were introduced into the State
legislature. These conflicts, however, were not led by student left-
ist or peace groups, and they did not succeed in mobilizing many stu-
dents or student organizations to their cause. Only when the ROTC
question was tied in with anti-war efforts under the leadership of
leftist organizations did it arouse much interest in the student body.
Though the patterns of anti-war activity at the two schools were
quite similar, a few differences should be pointed out. The general
level of activity was much greater at Wisconsin than at Harvard. Anti-
war activity also came later to Harvard; just as it took.Harvard stu-
dents a long time to discover the Depression, it took several years
before they appeared to notice that a war was brewing in Europe; nei-
ther subject was extensively discussed in the pages of the Crimson,
until the late thirties. During the l9h0-hl school year, however,
Harvard students opposing the war were more active than their Wiscon-
sin counterparts.
Student Anti-War Activity in the Sixties
Student political activity in the sixties was fueled by the
youthful and idealistic image of President Kennedy, by the investiga-
tions of the House Committee of Unamerican Activities, disarmament
talks between Russia and the United States, the Cuban blockade, the
civil rights struggle of young blacks in the South, and by the Vietnam
war.
The most prominent issue for student activists in the sixties
was the Vietnam war. Anti4Vietnam activity started in the winter of
1965, after the United States began daily bombing raids on North Viet-
nam. Like the anti-war conflicts of the 1930's, the antiAVietnam
protests attracted large numbers of student organizations and large
numbers of students. As in the thirties, the leftist and peace groups
19
were the major initiators of such conflicts; the major organizing
force in the sixties was the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS),
an independent student organization. At Harvard, SDS was the most ac-
tive student organization in anti-war activities, while at Wisconsin
it shared the spotlight with a local anti-war organization, the Commit-
tee to End the War in Vietnam (CEWVN). In April of 1965. SDS organized
a Washington march, attended.by over 15,000 students. At both Harvard
and Wisconsin, demonstrations and teach-ins were held during the same
period, with the c00peration of well-known faculty members. In the
spring of 1966, sit-ins were held at Wisconsin and.Harvard, as well
as at other universities across the country, to protest the decision
of the Selective Service to give special standardized exams to college
students to determine their eligibility for the draft and to protest
the cooperation of university administrations with the draft. The
1966-67 school year was characterized.by draft resistance and demon-
strations against military, CIA, and Dow Chemical Company recruiters
on campus. In the spring, SDS and other anti-war and civil rights
groups organized the Spring Mobilization.Against the War in Vietnam,
two nationwide demonstrations held simultaneously in New'York and.San
Francisco, and attended.by a tOtal of about 275,000 students. Stu-
dents from.both.WisconSin and.Harvard joined the New'York march, and
at both campuses local protest activities were organized in conjunc-
tion with it. That same year Harvard SDS organized protests against
Hubert Humphrey and.John.McNamara when they visited Cambridge. The
same themes of draft resistance and confrontation with military and
industrial recruiters persisted the following year. In 1968, the fo-
cus of student anti-war protest at the two schools shifted to the
national elections and to ROTC. The elections were accompanied by
2O
nationally-coordinated demonstrations to protest both the war and the
absence of meaningful choice between candidates.
There were two ROTC-centered conflicts at Wisconsin during the
1968-69 school year and one at Harvard. In the fall an ad-hoc group
of Wisconsin students organized petitions, walk-outs, rallies and boy-
cotts of ROTC orientation classes, which were compulsory for new stu-
dents. The student government proposed to the faculty and regents
that ROTC orientation be made voluntary, and agitation continued until
the regents finally abolished the compulsory sessions in February.
The second Wisconsin conflict occurred the following Spring, when stu-
dent leaders from the newspaper and the student government joined with
leaders from other midwestern campuses to demand that ROTC become a
non-credit program, The ROTC conflict at Harvard was the biggest
conflict in Harvard's history. It attracted the support of many stu-
dent organizations, and some 5,000 students participated in protest
activities connected with the conflict, the greatest number of students
to participate in any protest activity at Harvard. The conflict lasted
throughout the school year; it began with demands by the student gov-
ernment that ROTC be given the status of an extra-curricular activity
and.by SDS that it be abolished from the campus in any form, but it
later broadened to include the questions of tactics, viOlence, and the
structure of decision making at the university (for accounts of the
strike, see Eichel 93,.gl., 1970; and Kelman, 1970).
As was the case during the thirties, the patterns of student anti-
war activity at Wisconsin and.Harvard were similar. The only notable
difference is that activities at Harvard got off to a slower start;
they did not attract large proportions of the student population until
1967.
21
Differences Between Student Anti-War Activity
In The Two Decades
Initiators
In the content analysis, up to five initiators, organizations
which started the student activities, were recorded for each conflict.
As can be seen from Table 2, the student leftist and peace groups were
the major initiators of anti-war conflicts in both periods. During
the thirties, at Wisconsin, they were among the initiators of 12 of
the 15 war-related conflicts, and at Harvard they initiated all war-
related activities. In 87% of the war-related conflicts of the thir-
ties, these groups initiated student anti-war activities. In the six-
ties, they were among the initiators of 12 of the 17 war-related con-
flicts at Wisconsin and 8 of the 11 war-related conflicts at Harvard,
or 70% of the war-related conflicts of that decade.
While in the thirties leftist groups were joined in the sponsor-
ship of war-related activities by other campus organizations, notably
the campus religious groups, the impetus for most political activity
came from the former. In the sixties, on the other hand, independent
efforts were made by other groups which did not want to be associated
with the New Left, but which nevertheless opposed the war through se-
parate activities. This was the case at Harvard, where during the
1966-67 school year moderate students, led by the National Association
of Student Body Presidents and Editors, engaged in a series of activi-
ties designed to influence governmental policy, including a letter to
President Johnson, a meeting with Dean Rusk, a giant teach-in dubbed
' and the circulation of athe "National Day of Inquiry on Vietnam,'
petition calling on the government to offer an alternative form of
service to those who could not in good conscience fight in Vietnam.
22
Table 2: Initiators of War-Related Conflicts at Wisconsin and Har-
vard During the Thirties and Sixties
Thirties Sixties
Organization Wis. Har. Total Perc. Wis. Har. Total Perc.
Left and Peacea’ 12 8 20 87% 12 8 2o 70%
Religious 3 1 h 17 O 0 O 0
Student Newspaper 3 0 3 l3 1 1 2 7
Student Gov't. 2 O 2 9 O 2 2 7
Dorm., Class, &
Dept. Assoc. l 1 2 9 l l 2 7
Partisan Organi-
zationsb o o o o l l 2 7
Black 86 Civil
Rights 0 O 0 O l l 2 7
Ad Hoc Organiza-
tion 0 l l h 2 l 3 10
Total Conflicts 15 8 23 17 ll 28
a In the thirties, for both schools, includes the Student League
for Industrial Democracy, National Student League, American Student
Union. .At Wisconsin, includes also Young Communist League, Progressive
Club, University League for Liberal Action, Youth Committee Against
the'War,.AntiAWar Committee, and Peace Federation. At Harvard, in-
cludes also Harvard Peace Society, Harvard Liberal Club, Harvard So-
cialist League, and Committee.Against Military Intervention. In the
sixties, for both schools, includes Young Socialist Alliance, Students
for a Democratic Society, Student Mobilization Committee, Student
Peace Center. At Wisconsin also includes Socialist Club, W.E.B. Du
Bois Club, Committee for Direct Action, Wisconsin Draft Resistance
Union, Madison Resistance, Committee to End the War in'Vietnamt At
Harvard includes also Young People's Socialist League and.May Second
Movement.
b Includes the Young Republicans, Young Democrats, and Students
for Democratic Action. ‘
23
Divinity students, students in the Department of East Asian Studies,
and the Young Democrats at Harvard also made independent efforts to
stop the war, as did the Science Students Union at the University of
Wisconsin. While there were also ideological differences between the
student organizations which initiated anti-war conflicts during the
thirties, the differences were within the leftist and peace groups
themselves, and these reflected the positions of their parent organi-
zations.
There is an important difference between the leftist organizations
of the thirties and those of the sixties: the various organizations
which organized the campus anti-war activities of the thirties were
affiliated ideologically and/or financially with adult organizations.
The militancy of their activities corresponded to the positions of
their parent organizations on the war issue. During 193h-35, the "pop-
ular front" period when socialists and.communists were closest in
ideology and tactics, their student organizations (SLID and NSL, re-
spectively) cooperated fully and organized the most successful anti-
war activities of the decade. In 1935, the NSL and the SLID merged
to form a new national organization, the American Student union (ASU).
However, by 1935 the international communist movement, including the
American Communist Party, had abandoned its anti-war policy in favor
of an anti-German alliance. The student communists followed suit, and
in 1936 they demanded that the radical approach to campus issues be
dropped in order to secure maximum.unity against Germany. The student
socialists (whose anti-war position, like that of their elders, had
not changed) became a minority in the ASU. In 1936, many ASU-affiliated
groups accepted the offers of university administrators to sponsor
"peace convocations" for peace rather than against war or the govern-
2h
ment. Anti-war strikes were held only on campuses where left-wing
socialists dominated the local ASU chapter. By 1938, the socialist
wing of the ASU was completely overcome by the communists, and the
"student movement" had.become pro-administration and.very respectable.
This was reflected in the peace convocations held at both Harvard and
Wisconsin. Socialist organizations holding rival strikes attracted
very few followers. After the Hitler-Stalin Pact in 1939, the ASU
again took a position against United States involvement in a future
war, which it maintained until Germany attacked.Russia in.June of 19H1
(for the history of SLID, NSL, and ASU, see Draper, 1967).
In contrast with those of the thirties, the leftist and peace
organizations which led antiJVietnam.activities of the sixties were
independent student groups. The most prominent organization of the
sixties, SDS, rejected.both Old.Left ideology and adult leadership,
as did SNCC, the leading student force in the civil rights struggle
(Newfield, 1966; Zinn, 1967). Other groups organized at Wisconsin to
Oppose the war, the Committee for Direct.Action and the Wisconsin
Draft Resistance Union, were also independent from adult groups.
The fact that the major student organizations which initiated
conflicts in the thirties followed the line of adult groups lends sup-
port to the contention that in that decade students did not act as a
separate group. The political activity on campus was an extension of
that outside the university, rather than an expression of student in-
terests or discontent. While the Vietnam war was, of course, a na-
tional issue in the sixties, the student organizations which initiated
the‘Vietnam.conflicts on college campuses did not take their cue from
adult groups, and as will be seen below, they perceived the war as
affecting specifically student interests. The initiation of conflicts
25
by non-leftist groups in the sixties is further evidence of the exis-
tence of a movement among students; it Shows that their activity can-
not be explained by reference to any leftist ideology, but that it in-
volved students with a wide spectrum of political.views. In other
words, what united students was not any particular political preference,
but interests that they shared as students occupying the same role in
the university and in society.
Allies
All groups which expressed support for the student organizations
initiating the conflicts or which joined them in their activities were
recorded as allies. In both decades student proponents of peace formed
alliances with the same types of non-student groups -- with faculty,
adult leftist and peace organizations, labor organizations, and relig-
ious groups.
Table 3: Number of Conflicts in Which Non-Student Groups Were.Allied
With Students at Wisconsin and.Harvard in'War-Related Con-
flicts During the Thirties and Sixties
Thirties Sixties
Organizations Wis. Har. Total Wis. Har. Total
university"Administration 7 1 8 0 0 0
Faculty h 6 10 3 5 8
Left & Peace Organizations 7 2 9 5 3 8
Civil Rights Groups 0 0 0 1 l 2
Labor Organizations 2 1 3 O 1 1
Religious Groups 3 1 h 2 l 3
Total Conflicts 15 8 23 17 ll 28
The only group whose relationship to the student activists changed
over the decades was the university administration. (In the thirties
the administrations were allied with students in 8 out of the 23 con-
flicts (35%). The administration supported the students in three of
the anti-war conflicts at Wisconsin and one at Harvard, though it tried
to take the "radicalism" out of them by offering sponsorship and a change
26
of name. In all of the anti-ROTC conflicts at Wisconsin, the admin-
istration and students were on the same side -- against reinstatement
of compulsory ROTC. The administration also joined the students in
other conflicts, such as rallies against anti-Semitism in Germany, op-
position to legislative investigations of "radicalism" at the univer-
sity, and proposed budget cuts. Students perceived the university as
their ally: in the discussions which preceded the 1935 anti-war strike,
some argued against holding the demonstration as a "strike" because
of connotations that they would be attacking the university.
.At Harvard the administration generally kept aloof from student
anti-war activities. In 1935, however, they denied the strikers the
use of the steps of Widener Library, traditional meeting place for
students with a cause. There was no apparent opposition to this de-
cision on the part of students. That same year the administration
also ordered campus police to prevent opponents of the strike from
breaking it up as they had the previous year.
In the sixties the university administrations did not ally them-
selves with the students in a single anti-war conflict; in fact, in
several conflicts students Saw the administration as their enemy or
as an accomplice to the enemy -- the government -- through its allow-
ance of DOW, CIA, and armed forces recruitment on.campus, through
government-sponsored defense research, and through its ROTC program.
Further evidence for the changed relationship between anti-war
activists and their university administration can be found in the ar-
guments of students against ROTC in both decades. At both Wisconsin
and.Harvard,* students of the thirties argued (1) that ROTC training
* Although there were no ROTC conflicts at Harvard in the thirties
sample, the program was occasionally criticized by editors of the Crimson
and other students.
27
was reactionary, that it promoted militarism in American universities,
(2) that the kind of thinking that ROTC courses promoted -- acceptance
of certain statements without proof -- was contrary to the principles
of higher education, and that this had a "malicious effect on the mind
of the student when it is in its formative stage," and (3) that ROTC
harmed the prestige of the university, referring either to its liberal
tradition (Wisconsin) or the high standard of its courses (Harvard).
During the ROTC conflicts of the sixties, the arguments of students re-
peated the first two themes. But students also argued that
"the quiet presence of ROTC on the Harvard
campus appears as a recent and insidious
intrusion of the warmakers, an ill-conceived
alliance between the university and the war
"in'Vietnam," (Crimson, 2/3/69)
or
"ROTC is a symbol of the entire web of con-
trol on this university exerted by govern-
ment and industry" (Cardinal, 10/8/68).
In other words, in the sixties students accused their universities of
collaborating with the military and of promoting the very war which
they were trying to stop.
The fact that the students and the administration were on the
same side in 35 per cent of the conflicts in the thirties shows that
the relevant group for students of that period was the university as
a whOle. Students identified their interests with those of the faculty
and administration. The common enemy was outside the university,
whether it was the state legislature or the federal government. During
the thirties students did not identify as a separate role group.
By the 1960's, however, students did see themselves as comprising
a separate group whose interests and prdblems were different from those
of the administration. In the case of ROTC, the administration was
28
perceived as profiting from its connection with the federal government,
while students suffered from it. The same was perceived with regard
to the Vietnam war; the university administration received federal
grants for research defense in connection with the war, while students
received draft notices. In war-related conflicts of the sixties, the
administration did not declare support for a single student activity.
Students, for their part, considered the administration, in many cases,
as part of the enemy.
Demands
Two types of demands were recorded. The first consisted of de-
mands expressed by individual students in letters to the editor,
speeches, or interviews. These were expressions either of individual
students who did not represent any organization, or of organizations
which became allies of the student groups which initiated the conflict
but which did not claim to represent all students in the conflict.
The second type of demand recorded will be referred to as "formal de-
mands." These demands were those which were officially made by the
student groups which initiated the action or which were passed by
students participating in some mass activity connected with the con-
flict.
The demands of individual students were recorded word-for-word
on separate attitude sheets. Later they were coded according to the
authorities to which they were directed: (l) the university, (2) the
state, county, or city government, and (3) the national government or
a national figure representing the government. Formal demands were
also coded in this way. When more than one formal demand was made,
only the first or major demand was recorded.
29
Table A: Formal Demands of Students Involved in War-Related Conflicts
at Wisconsin and.Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties
Thirties Sixties
Demands Wis. Har. Total Per. Wis. Har. Total Per.
Directed at Uni-
versity O 1 l h h 2 6 21
State,County,City h 0 A 17 3 O 3 10
National Government 11 7 18 78 10 9 19 68
Total Conflicts 15 8 23 99 17 ll 28 99
One of the most significant differences between the thirties and
the sixties, from the point of view of this study, is that while during
the thirties almost all formal demands made during war-related conflicts
‘were directed at the national or state governments, during the sixties
students also made demands of their own universities (see table A above).
At Wisconsin, no major demands were directed at the university in the
thirties. At Harvard, there was one such demandt* In the sixties,
in 21 per cent (6) of the war related conflicts at both schools, the
major demands were directed at the university administration.
In all of the ROTC conflicts of the thirties, the formal demand
was that ROTC not be made compulsory at the university of Wisconsin,
and this demand was directed at the state legislature. The university
administration was in every case on the side of the students. The
formal demands of the ROTC conflicts of the sixties, however, were
directed at the university administration.
* This followed a radio broadcast by President Conant in which he
urged, United States intervention to help England. undergraduate
leaders began circulating a petition repudiating Conant's "declaration
of war" and "this drive to war" by"leading faculty members who were
the first to call for the draft, the first to call for the transfer
of destroyers."
30
Table 5: Number of War-Related Conflicts in Which Demands Were Ex-
pressed by Individual Students at Wisconsin and Harvard
During the Thirties and Sixties
Demands Thirties Sixties
Wis. Har. Total Per. Wis. Har. Total Per.
Directed at University 0 l 1 *MWI 6’ 2 8 29%
Directed at State, County,
City Government A 0 A 17 2 O 2 7
Directed at National Gov't.
or Nat'l. Figure 3 h 7 30 A h 8 29
Total Conflicts 15 8 23 17 ll 28
Turning to the demands of individual students whose expressed at~
titudes were reported in the neWSpapers of the two schools (see Tables
5 and 6), one finds only one conflict during the thirties in which a
student directed a demand at the university. This was made at Harvard,
following Conant's radio speech. The demand.was: "Harvard should not
become a war machine" (Crimson, l2/6/h0).
Table 6: Number of Demands Expressed by Individual Students in War-
Related Conflicts at Wisconsin and.Harvard During the Thirties
and Sixties
Demands Thirties Sixties
Wis. Har. Total Wis. Har. Total
Directed at University 0 l 1 20 73 93
Directed at State, City
Government , County 10 0 10 2 0 2
Directed at National Govtt.
or National Figure 8 8 l6 9 2o 29
For the sixties, the story is different. Even in conflicts in
which the formal demand was directed at the federal government, indi-
vidual students made related demands on their university. In 29 per
cent (8) of the war-related conflicts at the two schools students di-
rected some of their demands at the university. Moreover, the frequency
31
of these individual demands was much greater in the sixties. While
only one individual demand was made against the university in the
thirties, 93 such demands were expressed in the sixties. Even though
the issue involved was a national one rather than a university issue,
individual students whose opinions reached newsprint made more demands
on the university (93) than on the federal government (29).
'What kind of demands did the students direct at their universities?
Students demanded, first of all, that the university sever its connections
with the military and the Vietnam war; secondly, that it not interfere
with student protests; and finally, that it give students decision
making power. In connection with a 1967 demonstration against CIA on-
campus recruitment, a student demanded,
"If the University is to retain any kind of independ-
ence from outside sources of support and influence --
if the university is to stand for more than a corpor-
ate arm of the State Department and monied America,
it must . . . tell the CIA to go elsewhere" (Cardinal,
1711/67) .
.At an anti-Dow demonstration the next year, a student declared,
"The university should stand for the freedom of dis-
cussion, and not for the employment of an unnecessary
and futile war. Students who are members of this
university are being compelled to indirectly sanction
the war effort" (Carding, 11/8/68).
Students also argued that the university should make a positive contri-
bution to the cause of peace:
"American universities (should) refuse to supply the
military with officers . . . Universities, by their
refusal to train military officers, can have a genu-
ine effect on the determination of the future character
of America" (Cardinal, h/30/69).
Another individual demand directed at the university during the
sixties was that students be permitted to challenge or disrupt speakers
or visiting dignitaries who refused to address themselves to the'Viet-
32
nam issue. Such demands were made at Wisconsin in 1965 in connection
with a visit by Edward Kennedy, and at Harvard in 1966 in connection
with a scheduled event involving Secretary of Defense John Mc Namara:
"There is definite incongruity in insisting on
proper decorum when the underlying question is
of attitudes toward a vicious war or of being
concerned with not embarrassing a guest when
the questions he raises concern the fundamental
nature of our society" (Crimson, 11/16/66).
The "student power" conflicts between students and university
administrations during the sixties are well known. This idea, that
in general people have the right to determine the decisions which affect
their own lives, and that students, as a group, have the :right to make
decisions which affect them directly, or "participatory democracy,"
was the contribution of SDS. This idea was expressed by students in
anti-Vietnam and anti-ROTC conflicts as well as in conflicts concerning
campus life. For example, when Wisconsin students protested the re-
cruitment by Marines in the Memorial Union, the demand was also made
that the administration
". . . be made to represent the people of the
University both financially and spiritually.
We need to be governed by a joint administra-
tive group--and it should be more heavily
students" (Cardinal, 12/7/66).
That same year, a Dow demonstration developed into a student power
conflict over who had. jurisdiction over student organizations, the
faculty Student Life and Interests Committee, or the student govern-
ment. Similarly, when the Harvard administration made it clear that
it was not prepared to change the status of ROTC, the focus of the
conflict shifted from ROTC to the university administration, and stu-
dents demanded a change in the decision making structure of Harvard:
"The university (must) be restructured so that its
policies will be determined by the people that they
significantly affect. The Corporation, as it is
33
presently constituted, must be abolished"
(Crimson, u/lh/69).
To summarize, the data on formal demands and demands of individual
students lend support to the propositions that students of the sixties,
unlike those of the thirties, identified and acted as students in their
conflicts with other groups and that their expectations with regard
to the decision making power of their role group had increased by the
latter decade. The fact that they made demands (both formal and in-
dividual) against their university administrations in the sixties,
while only one such demand was made during the thirties, shows that
by the sixties they differentiated between the student and administra-
tion role groups. Their increased expectations with regard to decision
making are shown in their rejection of the right of the university to
cooperate with the military and with industries involved in the war
and to curb their anti-war activities, as well as in their explicit
demands for increased decision making power with regard to policies
affecting them as students. -
Dissatisfactions
The dissatisfactions expressed by students as regards their
role as students were c0pied verbatim. Later, all the dissatisfac-
tions recorded were placed in one of the following categories: (1)
Others do not take student interests into account; (2) Students
are not consulted, or are not listened to; (3) Students are not
represented; (h) Others intrude into solely student areas of
concern; (5) Others abuse their powers, exploit harass or suppress
students; (6) Others have all the power; (7) Civil or constitutional
rights of students are violated; (8) Complaint about in loco parentis
regulations, or with the image of students as immature, irresponsible,
3b.
and unable to make their own decisions; and (9) Concern with the in—
dependence, character, and prestige of the university, the quality of .
education, and the academic freedom of the faculty. These categories
were derived from the theoretical frameworkkpresented above. They
correspond with other attitudinal expressions which were coded in the
content analysis but not utilized in the present study.
If more than one dissatisfaction was mentioned in a single attitude
sheet, only the first was coded. If the same two were mentioned in
subsequent attitude sheets connected with the same conflict, the dis-
satisfaction not coded in the first case was coded, regardless of
whether it appeared first or not. Such a procedure was followed on
the assumption that what was important was the presence or absence of
a particular attitude in a conflict, rather than the number of times
which it appeared in any given conflict.
Table 7: Number of War-Related Conflicts in Which Dissatisfactions
Were Expressed by Individual Students Concerning Their Role
as Students at Wisconsin and Harvard During the Thirties
and Sixties
Dissatisfaction Thirties Sixties
Wis. Har. Total Wis. Har. Total
Others Don't Take Student
Interests Into Account 0 0 O O 2 2
Students.Aren't Consulted 0 O O l 3 A
Students.Aren't Represented 0 0 O 0 l 1
Others Abuse Their Powers;
Oppress Students 0 0 0 3 2 5
Others Have.A11 the Power 0 l 1 0 1 l
Constitutional Rights of Stu-
dents are Violated 1 O 1 2 l 3
Concern with Prestige of
University 3 0 3 1 l 2
35
The findings concerning the demands of students are supported by
the findings on dissatisfactions of students. (see Tables 7 and 8).
During the thirties there were fewer conflicts in which dissatisfactions
were expressed, the frequency of expression of role dissatisfactions
was lower, and only three types of dissatisfactions were mentioned.
This corrdborates the findings with regard to allies and demands. It
can be inferred from all three that in the thirties students saw their
own well being as closely tied with that of the university as a whole,
and that the relevant group for students of that period included the
university administration.
Table 8: Number of Dissatisfactions Expressed by Individual Students
Concerning Their Role as Students in War-Related Conflicts
at Wisconsin and.Harvard During the Thirties and Sixties
Dissatisfactions Thirties Sixties
Wis. Har. Total Wis. Har. Total
Others Don't Take Student
Interests Into Account 0 O O O h h
Students.Aren't Consulted O O O 2 6 8
Students Aren't Represented O O O O l 1
Others Abuse Their Powers 0 O 0 3 6 9
Others Have.All the Power 0 l l O 3 3
Constitutional Rights of
Students are Violated l O 1 2 1 3
Concern with Prestige of
University 3 O 3 l 1 2
This was not the case in the sixties. A larger number of dis-
satisfactions were expressed. The dissatisfactions which occurred
in the greatest number of conflicts were: (1) that the university
administration and the government abused their power, exploited, har-
assed and suppressed students, (2) that students were not consulted
or listened to on issues vital to their interests, and (3) that the
civil or constitutional rights of students were violated. In all
three of these categories, the perceived causes of the dissatisfaction
36
were both government and university authorities.
The first type of dissatisfaction was expressed in relation to
the government when, for example, several students burned their draft
cards:
"Students are an oppressed and exploited class,
traditionally seen as outcasts from the mainstream
of society and.denied power over the most crucial
decisions affecting their lives. . . ." (Cardinal,
12/13/68).
It was expressed in relation. to the university in anti-ROTC conflicts:
and
"The University has attempted to control us above
and beyond educational requirements by implement-
ing compulsory ROTC (orientation). We strenuously
object to being forced into an indoctrination that
has no relevance to us and serves only to perpetuate
a military system.we cannot condone" (Cardinal,
9/17/68).
"The University is a superstructure of exploitation"
(Crimson, h/25/69).
In another example, a.Harvard student complained of being victimized
by both the university and liberal political leaders:
"We are sick of the whole series of shoddy plays
aimed at discrediting the anti-war movement and
avoiding public debate, at Harvard and in the
country at large. We're tired of being manipu-
1ated.by so-called liberals" (Crimson, 11/16/66).
Like the first type of dissatisfaction, the second was expressed
in relation to both the federal government (and its representatives)
and the university. In 1965 Wisconsin students accused State Depart-
ment officials of ". ...1ack of respect for the intelligence and moral
position (of students)" (Cardinal, 5/12/65); the next year they ex-
pressed the same idea in connection with a visit by Edward Kennedy:
"It is the right and obligation of the people
to publicly debate and discuss with the govern-
ment the honesty of its motives and the wisdom
of its positions. When the people fulfill
that Obligation and do not receive direct answers
it is an indication that democratic rights have
been seriously restricted. The essence of
37
democracy lies in the right of the people
to discuss and decide upon the issues which
determine their destiny" (Cardinal, 11/2/66).
The same attitude was expressed at Harvard:
"Never during the course of this war has
the administration sought a dialogue with
members of the anti-war movement, and, in
fact, has done its best to ignore them"
(Crimson, ll/7/66).
Students expressed dissatisfaction with their universities for not
consulting them in connection with, for example, the visit of John
McNamara,
"How ridiculous that students have a say in the learning
experience! Is this the kind of student-teacher part-
nership in free inquiry that Professor Neustadt seeks
to experiment with at the Kennedy Institute? If so,
it is no new experiment but rather a retrogression
into an old and not very creditable educational form"
(Crimson, ll/l6/66) .
Harvard students also complained that they were not being heard when
the administration refused to grant SDS permission to be present at a
faculty meeting at which the future status of ROTC was to be discussed:
"...it is an absurdity that the question of ROTC's
retention may be considered at a meeting from
which 'virtually all those who have voiced op-
position to ROTC are excluded" (Crimson, 11/27/69).
The third type of dissatisfaction was expressed in connection
with attempts on the part of the universities to prevent students
from demonstrating against the war or against representatives of the
government or war industries. Wisconsin students accused the univer-
sity of "flagrantly violating the individual's right" by trying to
prevent a Dow protest (Cardinal, 11/8/68) and the city police of
"...a flagrant violation of the right to peaceably
demonstrate and the right to free speech,"
when they broke up an election demonstration and arrested several stu-
dents (Cardinal, ll/ll/66). Similarly, at Harvard a student complained
38
about the
"...Administration's regrettable policy
of Opposing free speech and assembly under
the guise of 'good taste'" (Crimson, ll/7/66).
Three other dissatisfactions which were expressed in conflicts
during the sixties but not in the earlier decade were (1) that others
don't take student interests into account, (2) that others have all
the power, and (3) that students aren't represented. In the first
case, the "others" refer to the national government in one conflict
and the university administration in another, and in the second example
they refer to the university administration. The complaint voiced in
the third dissatisfaction is again directed against the university
administration for not giving student representatives a vote in their
decisions.
To summarize, the absence of a student group consciousness in the
thirties is shown by the presence of expressions in which students
identify with the university as a whole and by the absence of expres-
sions implying any kind of group consciousness. That such a conscious-
ness was present in the sixties is evidenced by expressions of dissatis-
faction that (1) others don't take student interests into account, and
(2) others abuse their power and Oppress and harass students.
The fact that no dissatisfactions were found concerning the de-
cision making power of students (students aren't consulted, students
aren't represented, others have all the power) in the thirties sup-
ports the contention that the student activity of that period did not
constitute a student movement, that students did not desire increased
decision making power for their role group. The fact that such ex-
pressions were found in the sixties in connection with similar kinds
of conflicts provides support for the proposition that such a movement
39
did exist in the sixties.
Number of Participants
The anti-war demonstrations of the thirties and the anti-Vietnam
activities of the sixties both attracted large numbers of students.
However, there are two differences between the decades. First of all,
during the sixties there were several anti-war activities at both
schools in which a larger percentage of students participated than had
ever taken part in such activities during the thirties. At Wisconsin,
a CEWVN-sponsored teach-in in 1965 was attended by an estimated 5,000
students, about 20 per cent of the student population of the university
for the 196h-65 school year. In 1968, 9 per cent of the student popu-
lation participated in a demonstration to support GI's in California
who were opposed to the war.* Anti4Vietnam activity did not gain wide-
spread support at Harvard until the spring of 1967. In that year not
more than 5 per cent of the student body participated in any one anti-
war effort; however, many separate efforts were made by different
groups, some of which, as mentioned above, did not want to be allied
with "radical " activities, so that the actual prOportion of the student
body actively opposed to the war was much greater. The Crimson re-
ported at the end of the year that more than 25 per cent of the student
body had signed "I Won't Go" declarations or petitioned the government
to provide an alternative to the draft. The biggest conflict that
Harvard had ever seen came in 1968-69, and it was connected with the
*, The biggest issue of that year at Wisconsin, however, was not
the Vietnam war, but the demands of black students, whose activities
attracted as many as 7,000 sympathizers, about 20 per cent of the
student population.
no
war. This was the conflict over the status of ROTC at Harvard, in
which one-third of the student body participated.
During the thirties, the anti-war activities which got the most
support from the student bodies of both universities were the peace
strikes of 1939, attended.by 20 per cent of Wisconsin's students and
12 per cent of Harvard's. The difference between these activities and
the best attended ones of the sixties was that the former were held
with the blessings and/or sponsorship of the university administration;
they were the most establishment-oriented activities of the decade,
and the least controversial. Their attendance was encouraged by the
university administrations, who cancelled classes for the occasion.
The teach-ins, marches, petitions and strikes which mdbilized the
greatest numbers of students in the sixties were directly opposed to
government policies. Furthermore, they were neither sponsored nor
approved by the university administrations. The 1968-69 Harvard strike
was in fact directed against the university itself.
The role of the university in mobilizing students for anti-war
activities in the two decades should be emphasized because it provides
further evidence of the increased group consciousness of students and
their increased expectations during the sixties. In the thirties
university cooperation or sponsorship meant greater numbers of parti-
cipants in anti-war activities. In the sixties, university opposition
to anti-war activities brought the greatest numbers of students into
the anti-war camp. Thus, a pattern evolved, in which students demon-
strated against the war, the university took steps to curb their ac-
tivities, the university was perceived as part of the war apparatus,
and/or as suppressing student freedom, and more students joined the
conflict. The administration was no longer perceived as belonging to
Al
the same community of interests as students, but as part of the enemy.
It was a more tangible enemy than the federal government and more
closely connected with student interests. What united a third of the
student body in the Harvard strike was not their Opposition to ROTC or
the war, but their anger at the arbitrary actions of the university.
Conclusions
The data reported here support the proposition that the political
activity of students at Harvard and Wisconsin during the sixties, in
contrast to that of the thirties, constituted a student movement --
a group of students who, as a group, were outside the decision making
structure of the university role set (students, faculty, administration),
and.who tried to influence the making of several decisions and to be-
come a part of the decision making structure. The presence of class
or group consciousness among students is evidenced by the fact that
the conflicts analyzed here were initiated by independent student or-
ganizations. The initiation of conflicts by avowedly non-leftist stu-
dent groups in the sixties is further evidence that the students' poli-
tical actions were taken to promote the interests of the whole student
role group rather than the interests of one ideological faction.
The students' awareness of themselves as a separate group with
common interests is also shown by the fact that in the sixties students
at the two universities perceived the administration as having inter-
ests counter to their own. They directed many of their demands at the
administration, insisting that it not interfere with their activities,
and that it give them increased decision making power within the uni-
versity. Likewise, the dissatisfactions expressed by students showed
that they perceived themselves as a group exploited by the university
#2
as well as by outside authorities; they complained that the former
did not consult them on policy matters, that it explOited them, and
that it denied them constitutional rights. When the administration
opposed the students, it unwittingly helped their cause by increasing
their awareness of common interests and problems and increasing their
dissatisfaction with their position within the university.
What made the political activity of students during the sixties
a student movement was not only their awareness of themselves as a
distinct group with common interests, but also their desire for in-
creased decision making power within the university. Evidence that
students did expect a bigger voice in the university role set can be
found in the fact that they demanded that the university change cer-
tain policies (e.g., on-campus recruitment by the military and by war-
connected industries and the status of ROTC), as well as by explicit
demands for increased involvement in the decision making process. It
can also be found in the dissatisfactions expressed by students: that
they were not consulted on decisions affecting them, that they had no
representation on decision making bodies, and that other members of
the role set had all the power.
In other words, even in the context of political activity con-
cerning national rather than university issues, students acted as stu-
dents, as a group with special interests to promote or defend. This
was not the case in the thirties, when the initiators of all anti-war
conflicts were affiliates of adult groups, when neither organized
groups nor individual students involved in such conflicts made demands
of their university, and when the dissatisfactions expressed with the
student role concerned the prestige and character of the university
as a whole.
1+3
No evidence was found in this study to support certain hypotheses
concerning the relationship between university variables and student
political activity. In both the thirties and the sixties, but most
notably in the later decade, the patterns of activity at Harvard and
Wisconsin, two structurally dissimilar universities, were basically
similar. This is not to say that university variables are without
importance: the student movement of the sixties began in large, public,
high-quality universities -- Berkeley, Michigan, Wisconsin -- univer-
sities which attract what Keniston and Lerner call "protest prone" in-
dividuals. (Keniston and.Lerner, 1971: 51-52). Moreover, it is clear
that some schools have seen more student political activity than
others. The point is that whatever variables may be related to the
development of a student movement, they are not variables which differ-
entiate between Harvard and the University of Wisconsin.
In more general terms, the study specified some of the variables
that can be used to differentiate between various types of student
political activity, Using these variables, it showed the difference
between independent, class conscious movements of students acting on
their own behalf and groups of students who participate in a wider
social movement. It is hoped that such distinctionswill help in making
clearer explanations of student political activity.
BIBLIWRAPHY
141+
Bibliography
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Institute of Mental Health, 1970.
Draper, Hal, "The Student Movement in the Thirties: A Political History"
As We Saw the Thirties. Edited by Rita Simon, Urbana, Illinois:
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Eichel, Lawrence E. gt. 3.1., The Harvard Strike. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1970.
Emmerson, Donald K. (ed). Students and Politics in DevelcminLNations.
New York: Praeger, 196T.
Feuer, Lewis S. The Conflict of Generations. New York: Basic Books,
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Finlay, David J. 31;. 9:13, "Ghana." Students and Politics in Developing
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Flacks, Richard. "The Liberated Generation: An Exploration of the
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Glazer, Myron. "Chile." Students and Politics in Develgping Nations.
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Hamilton, William L., "Venezuela" Students and Politics in Develgping
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Heist, Paul, "Intellect and Commitment: The Faces of Discontent" Order
and Freedom on the Campus: The Rights and Regponsibilities of
Faculty and Students. Edited by O.W. Knorr and W. J. Minster,
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Kelman, Steven, Push Comes to Shove: The Escalation of Student Protest.
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Keniston, Kenneth and Lerner, Michael, "Campus Characteristics and
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Lipset, S.Mt, &.Altbach, Philip, "Student Politics and Higher Education
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New York: Basic Books, 1967.
Lyonns, Glen, "The Police Car Demonstration: A Survey of Participants."
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Myhr, Robert 0., "Brazil." Students and Politics in Developing Nations.
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Newfield, Jack, A Prgphetic Minority. New York: New American Library,
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Ottoway, David B., "Algeria." Students and Politics in Developing
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Swirski, Shlomo, Changes in the Structure of Relations Between Groupg
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APPENDICES
APPENDIX A: CODING SHEETS
#7
\ “N01
6 lnltiotlu’
4'“
a.Confllct MW
‘- emu
S. s».‘1
6‘ VII?
2
utter: to utterCari. “other
“Hot-l 3‘3
‘C30' 0’ '0"! SM
Later 0. 0: .
>- Out.
at} l
.to ‘u n.6'."
an .0". amt
'Ovation
Ton! Ito-c
Tau! up . Mtl tugs
Polar 8mm
Stimuli for Action
Conn c. 94.5195 ‘
1)". of Ian
Wither PMlclphts
-———-—-——(
ht
tum-Am,
2M.
O roofs
3rd.
veg/bog£45th
gvs‘lé‘aslkletzw
haw:marge/ow
5/0/8121
”0116}:
L9s
hs
tI
Figure 1: Summary coding sheet
Ivmr- Fa-QI‘ML whom
slur 0mm: or comm (Mr. core-on!)
REQMQ
gentralttz
No Reference |
1 Indirect
2 Direct E
IPienrrerzz:
Attitude Sheet
No Reference
Train Minde
Prep.f.Career
Prep.f.Clt.
For.Dfa.ldeae
Fur.Dle.SocProb
Opp.Peraon.Dev.
Ave.Hobfllty
H.Peoplex.ldeas
Innovations
Make US Powerf-
Scrve Conlnunity
Train Leaders
EraeeClaeleff
Relevant to Soc
OTHER
4243 VILLA—IRE 0038”...” ‘
No Reference
Individual
Camp.0rgnnfzat.
Faculty
Administration
Trueteee
University
Pol Party
$1.Gov.Agency
Fed.cov.Agency
Pollcc
Military
Indue.Compeny
Hfl-lndus-Compl.
Older Generation
Establishment
Capitalism
Racism
OTHER
DUTY! ’ ‘ ”‘
Nn Reference
S1.onCampun
St.on0th.Camp.
St.0rg.onCamp.
St.0rg.Olh.Camp
Fac.on Campus
Fn(.on0th.Cnmp.
0ff.nn Campus
Pub.Uff.orAgen
Non-U. Organ.
Soclal Group
lnd.Grp.Oth.Soc
OTHER
Col. Col. Col. 'Col.
1 £9199; 21 osc,Rrs,sruotwrs 31 MLS 40-a1 OOROLEINVOKED 00-15
1 Hieconaln O No Reference 0 No Reference
2 Harvard 1 No Rights 1 Acceptable 01
t==: 2 Conaulted 2 Some Changee 7 02
2-5 CONP. f GOO-999 3 Repreaented 3 Not Accept. , 03
A Make Selvee ' 04
'32 Centralltx E 05
E22 Eggszglisz’ 0 No Reference E 06
3-6 A? R . O No Reference 1 Indirect - 07
E 1 Indirect 2 Direct 08
2 Direct bm_"."”____ w___ .. 09
4 __~ 33 CONSTITUTIONAL.RTH 10
7-lO DATE 0000-9990 12 DEC. RTS STUDENTS O No Reference 11
0 No Reference 1 No Righte 12
_E 1 No Righte 2 Limited Rights 13
2 Consulted 3 Pull Rights 1a
“13m‘1 3 Repre-ented 1"E a Make Selvee 34 Efifllllllll 1
. 0 No Reference
-..--- __E 21. Centralitx 1 Indirect .
[I 3775ITEM 0 No Reference 2 ulrert
Letter l Indirect .-- -...J 00
1; Editorial 2 Direct E35 comm mourns o1
Newt Item _._ruun.___“__ _. 0 Nu Reference 02
a Column "25 RESPONSIBILITY 1 No Com.Prob ! 03
5 Blcksround O No Reference 2 Spec.Com.Prob 0b
6 Other 1 Not Reap. 3 Common Probe 05
_________.______________J 2 Reep..Trueted _- l...... .u*_____ 06
15 SOURCE IF NEWS 1 36 POWER POTENTIAL 07
0 NO! "CHI .25 Centralitx O No Reference E 08
1 SPOCCD O No Reference 1 Small, Powerle ' O9
2 Interview ‘ 1 Indirect 2 Fairly Large E 10
3 Hrlt.Declar. E 2 Direct 3 large; Solve ll
4 Interpret. . _______ PTODICOMAll. E 12
.__ ..______._- .-. ...___,‘ 27mmnnr-muvmoon7 E 13
16 roan-Ion ; o No Reference E37”“51-Res Roi‘rnfi 1:.
0 Unknown 3 1 Not Mature-Adult O No Reference E 15
I Support 5 2 Mature-Adult E 1 Paaelve 1 16
2 Oppoee 1 l 2 Active 17
3 Q- SuPPm 28 9222231 '_ -_ .- . . 18a Q- 0PP03¢ E 0 No Reference 38 EEEELEL§E E
-l_._____.l_li.u___l___J 1 Indirect O No Raferencc E
17 D!C.RTS.OTHERS 2 Direct 1 ApathDontCere
0 No Reference L_- -.. WV. -UH__"W*"~ 2 Too Active E‘lL-&S~RERGES
1 Have Right . 9 A31L.R1:As.mxs,osc, 00
2 Do Not Have E o No Reference 39 Stir-RRHR‘RNCE ‘E 01
; 1 No Ability 0 No Reference 7 02
18 9°Q§I‘llfix ? 2 Ability ' l Youth ' 03
0 N0 Reference E i 7 Intellectual E Ch
1 I"41Y¢Ct 530 Centralitz I 3 Educ.Par.Pop E 05
2 Direct ‘ O No Reference 1 A Citlzene E 06
______..... l 1 Indirect 5 Adults . O7
19 DECJTS.01'“GEN. ' 2 Direct E 6 Americana 1 08
0 No Reference E i 7 Future Leader! 09
1 Have Rights a ' 8 (mum ': 10
2 Do Not Have E . l 11
' l2
20
DEMANDS
oisSAIISEAcTIQRS
PERCEPTION 0F IMPORTANCE
APPENDIX B: INTERCODER RELIABILITY
#9
APPENDIX B: INTERCODER RELIABILITY
The content analysis was done by two coders. Each coded about
half of the 20 years studied in each of the two universities. A pre-
test of the coding procedure was run on theiMichigan State News and
on the Daily Cardinal.
The reliability checks focused on attitudes. Two methods were
used to measure the reliability of attitudes. Under the first proce-
dure, after one reader had coded an entire conflict, the second was in-
structed to read all issues during the time period in which that con-
flict occurred.and to code the conflict. Since agreement on summary
sheet items was very high (over 90%) and the procedure proved very
expensive and time-consuming, a second.method was devised. .After a
given conflict had been coded, the reader prepared a second set of
attitude sheets for the second reader. The identification items were
coded (school conflict, number, item number, date, and type of item).
.All the second reader had to do was to locate the appropriate units
of recording and code or record the attitudes. For attitudes that
were recorded verbatim and coded later, a sample was reread by the
second reader in order to check for reliability.
Intercoder reliability was calculated according to the following
formula:
2:2.
T , where
T represents the total number of coding decisions checked for
reliability, and
D represents the total number of coding disagreements.
The measures of intercoder reliability are presented in Table
9 below.
50
Table 9: Intercoder Reliability for.Attitudes Recorded and Coded
at‘Wisconsin and Harvard
Total Decisions Disagreements Reliability
Wisconsin lh88 21 98.6%
Harvard 10011 0 100. %
As can be seen, disagreements were feW'and intercoder reliability
was extremely high.
Recommended