Swarthmore in the 60's: Not as Radical as You Thought

http://daily.swarthmore.edu/2009/11/20/swarthmore-in-the-60s/

by WILL TREECE
November 20, 2009

Given current discussions about student activism at Swarthmore, it's 
fitting to look back to the era of student protest and arrest: the 1960s.

As you can imagine, Swarthmore student activists embraced issues from 
the Civil Rights movement to Vietnam. Swarthmore even had its own 
celebrities in the counterculture. "Refugees from Amerika: A Gay 
Manifesto" by Carl Wittman '66 made waves in the Gay Liberation 
movement, and Nick Egleson '66 later became president of Students for 
a Democratic Society (SDS). Incidentally, Egleson's father painted 
the murals in Hicks.

One of our most dramatic moments in the Civil Rights movement was in 
1963, when 12 students were arrested for civil disobedience in 
segregated Cambridge, MD. I sent out a request for stories about the 
arrests to several alumni (because, let's face it, it's an empirical 
fact that baby boomers love talking about the 60s), and received 
responses from Daniel Pope and Carl Stieren, both class of '66.

The students went picketing downtown with local protesters organized 
by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and 
several­the leaders­were arrested for refusing to follow police 
orders. The rest, Pope reports, "marched to the jail and more or less 
made them arrest us." Stieren recalls that time­marching on the jail 
at night, anticipating arrest and singing freedom songs­as the 
scariest experience of his life.

They were bailed out the next morning, and the case was closed a 
month later when the judge found them guilty of disorderly conduct. 
Their fine, which was later suspended, was one cent each. Both of 
them cite how clueless and scared they were; "I was 17 at the time 
and mostly just doing what people told me to do," Pope wrote.

The Phoenix articles about the arrests, though, are a fascinating 
example of debates over college journalism. The original article 
about the arrests took what seems, even today, a rather flippant tone 
when describing the arrests. The unflattering opening line read: "In 
a dilapidated Negro church which looks like a grey orange crate, 12 
Swarthmore students Saturday night decided to 'invite' mass arrest."

A flood of letters to the editor accused the reporter of making "what 
was a very serious effort sound like an irresponsible, congenial, 
off-campus extension of Folk Festival." Conversely, the protesters 
were accused of self-righteousness and "vicious verbal attacks, 
public and private … on some of us who do not share a highly 
sectarian view of current events." It's funny how timeless these debates are.

In 1964, Lyndon Johnson came to Swarthmore to fulfill an invitation 
originally extended to JFK-­ although shortly afterward, Johnson 
stopped visiting campuses in the wake of anti-Vietnam demonstrations. 
Generally, though, I'm surprised at how muted Swarthmore's anti-war 
sentiments were. When Student Council introduced a resolution to the 
student body in 1965 arguing that America's actions violated 
international law and that its military tactics were "deplored on 
humanitarian grounds," the results were evenly split: 36% of the 
student body agreed with the resolution, 25% opposed it, and 38% didn't vote.

In fact, rather than our famed progressive political engagement, 
political indifference may have been the norm for parts of the 
Vietnam era. An article in a November 1968 Phoenix entitled "Wall of 
Apathy Surrounds Swarthmore Students" begins with the apparently 
known assumption, "We've all heard about how much apathy there is 
around here…" Of course, this may be the bias of the Phoenix 
editorial board, or just one of those tropes you hear around campus 
that isn't wholly true (nobody pays attention to sports, nobody goes 
into Philly, etc.).

Swarthmore students participated in plenty of marches in Washington 
and Philadelphia, but most interesting is the attempted school strike 
in May 1970. Following Nixon's invasion of Cambodia and resumption of 
bombing in North Vietnam, an impromptu meeting of over 500 students 
and faculty gathered to discuss Swarthmore's response. Proposals 
included everything from "a short-term burst of politically-oriented 
activity" to "an indefinite suspension of normal college activities."

Support for a schoolwide strike, with special conditions for those 
taking Honors exams, seemed popular; yet the next week's Phoenix 
headline read "Mass Enthusiasm for Strike Evaporates; Long-Term 
Activities Receive Emphasis." Although "for a few days last week 
Swarthmore college appeared to have been jarred out of its normal 
state of political apathy," the "revolutionary fervor of a week ago 
could not last at such a fever pitch for very long." Instead, 
activists would focus on working with local high schools toward anti-war goals.

So while schools like UPenn and Yale went on strike, and 
demonstrations at Kent State and Jackson State led to violence, 
Swarthmore stayed moderate. Friends Library Curator Chris Densmore 
contends this was "largely because they didn't have a paranoid 
administration. Campuses with more rapport have people who can defuse 
the situation."

One hypothesis is that the death of President Courtney Smith 
discouraged student radicalism. No discussion of Swarthmore student 
activism in the 60s would be complete without mention of the "Crisis 
of 1969." In what has been called the "most traumatic week in college 
history," members of the Swarthmore Afro-American Students Society 
held a sit-in in the admissions office to protest the college's lack 
of support for black students shortly before President Smith died of 
a heart attack. I won't go into the Crisis in great detail, simply 
because so much has already been written about it. Check out the 
excellent Phoenix article written by Ashia Troiano '11 for Black 
History Month this year for a comprehensive review of the crisis.

You could easily do more research about Swarthmore's actions in 
Chester and the student power movement within Swarthmore itself to 
provide a more comprehensive view of Swarthmore student activism in 
the 60s. I've simply chosen to focus on protests that connect to a 
more national level. It's interesting­our generation of liberals (or 
me, at least) tends to mythologize the 60s as a time of wholesale 
political engagement and idealism. It's worthwhile to remember that 
for the most part, the activist community in the 60s consisted of a 
small segment of students, much as it does today.

Although, if you'd like to feed into stereotypes about the 60s, there 
are a couple of Phoenix columns that look suspiciously like they were 
written while under a hint of chemical influence: "You are you. 
Fascinating, aren't you? People are so strong! People are so weak! 
The axe that strikes low the mighty elm may tomorrow sever the 
fetters of the captive butterfly."

I asked Stieren and Pope how they feel about their activism more than 
40 years later, and whether they would encourage current students to 
risk arrest. They both stood by their actions, but qualified their response.

"I will say that I'm often skeptical about the value of civil 
disobedience because it can distract from the original cause … the 
motive that impelled people to get arrested in the first place 
sometimes gets lost in the shuffle," Pope said. "But I think civil 
disobedience in the Southern civil rights movement of the sixties was 
on the whole highly successful. I don't think anybody I know (at 
least among us privileged white Swarthmoreans) suffered unduly for 
getting arrested. I'm sure there are situations now where risking 
arrest would be morally justified and strategically effective."

Stieren gave a more prescriptive analysis of his college years, and 
what might have been.

"If we had been both far-sighted and committed to nonviolence, we 
would have studied Gandhi and King and figured out how the Eastern 
Shore's black community could win their freedom without violence. We 
would have raised the funds to send young Black leaders to Highlander 
Folk School in Tennessee to learn community organizing. We would have 
connected with Martin Luther King, Jr. and Ralph Abernathy and would 
have set up the means­how about something called 'freedom 
scholarships' ­-for young Black men and women to study with them and 
return to Cambridge. We would have set up freedom scholarships of our 
own to let the smartest of these brave young people study at Swarthmore.

"And if we had been really far-sighted, we would have kept in mind 
that basic principle of organizing­replace yourself as quickly as possible."

.

--

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.


Reply via email to