Campus Unrest

1988 Words4 Pages

Campus Unrest

In response to great opposition to United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War, the antiwar movement of the 1960s sprung forth. A vast majority of involvement in this movement was represented on college campuses across the nation. Many college students wholeheartedly believed that the war in Vietnam served no point. America was simply once again sticking its nose in business that was not our own. As a result of the war, universities nationwide in the sixties were in uproar as students attempted to express their opinions through both violent and nonviolent means.

Anti-Vietnam protests were first displayed through teach-ins that took

place during the fall and spring semesters (“Campus Unrest” 1). These events were large discussions held on college campuses where students, faculty and administration met to openly learn about and discuss issues relating to the war. Teach-ins were efforts for Americans in relation to universities to voice their opinions and get the attention of government officials with the prayer that United States involvement in the war would not continue to increase at such a rapid rate. They stressed the importance of peace, not violence. Such teach-ins first took place in March of 1965 at the University of Michigan. This set a precedent for other colleges and universities as these rallies began to take place more and more frequently (“Campus Unrest 1).

One example of a teach-in that occurred during the anti-Vietnam war movement was discussed in the Rutgers Daily TARGUM. In April of 1965, students and faculty at Rutgers in New Jersey staged a “Teach-in on Vietnam”. Professors William Fitzpatrick, Lloyd Gardner, and Warren Susman had taken the podium to debate their stances on the war i...

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...graphy:

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“Campus Unrest.” 28 Apr. 2001. .

“Campus Unrest at Virginia Tech.” 28 Apr. 2001. .

Dunnigan, James F., and Albert A. Nofi. Dirty Little Secrets of the Vietnam War. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 1999.

Hochman, Jerry. “Viet Policy is Blasted by Faculty During All-Night Teach-In Protest.” Rutgers Daily TARGUM. 9 May. 2001. .

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