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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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<text>
<title>
(1960s) Student Movement
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1960s Highlights
</history>
<link 02420>
<link 05150>
<link 05363>
<link 00165><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
The Student Movement
</hdr>
<body>
<p> [Americans who were young in the 1960s influenced the course
of the decade as no group had before.]
</p>
<p>(January 6, 1967)
</p>
<p> The young have already staked out their own minisociety, a
congruent culture that has both alarmed their elders and,
stylistically at least, left an irresistible impression on them.
No Western metropolis today lacks a discotheque or espresso
joint, a Mod boutique or a Carnaby shop. No transistor is immune
from rock 'n' roll, no highway spared the stutter of Hondas.
There are few Main Streets in the world that do not echo to the
clop of granny boots, and many are the "grannies" who now wear
them. What started out as distinctively youthful sartorial
revolt--drainpipe-trousered men, pants-suited or net-stockinged
women, long hair on male and female alike--has been accepted by
adults the world over.
</p>
<p> The young seem curiously unappreciative of the society that
supports them. "Don't trust anyone over 30," is one of their
rallying cries. Another, "Tell it like it is," conveys an abiding
mistrust of what they consider adult deviousness.
</p>
<p> Sociologists and psychologists call them "alienated" or
"uncommitted." In fact, the young today are deeply involved in
a competitive struggle for high grades, the college of their
choice, a good graduate school, a satisfactory job--or, if need
be, for survival in Vietnam. Never have they been enmeshed so
early or so earnestly in society. Yet they remain honestly
curious and curiously honest.
</p>
<p> Despite their tolerance of quixotic causes and idiosyncratic
roles, the young reflect--more accurately than they might care
to admit--many of the mainstream currents in society at large.
In 1966, the young American became vociferously skeptical of the
Great Society. Though he retains a strong emotional
identification with the deprived and spurned citizens of his own
and other societies, he recognizes that the civil rights
revolution, in which he was an early hero at the barricades, has
reached a stage at which his own involvement is no longer vital.
And, as a letter to the President signed by 100 student leaders
across the nation showed last week, he has become increasing
perturbed by the war.
</p>
<p> [Youthful Americans protested the rigidity and elitism of
their universities, and through their actions they expressed
the frustration, rage and alienation felt by many of the young
about racial inequality, social injustice, the Vietnam War and
the economic and political constraints of conventional life and
work.]
</p>
<p>(May 10, 1968)
</p>
<p> At 2:30 a.m., said one combat-wise cop, "Harlem is asleep."
At that propitious hour, 1,000 New York City police, armed with
warrants signed by Columbia University trustees, marched on the
Morningside Heights campus and dispossessed the student rebels
who had occupied five buildings for nearly six days.
</p>
<p> After successfully capturing the campus buildings, the
demonstrators--led by the far-left Students for a Democratic
Society and the all-Negro Student Afro-American Society--seemed
far more interested in a bloody confrontation with the
administration than in any meaningful negotiations. They
demanded a complete surrender on all points at issue, including
amnesty for all participants in the rebellion. Columbia
President Grayson Kirk refused, on the ground that this would
mean a complete abdication of all disciplinary authority.
</p>
<p> A majority of the university's 17,000 students and 2,500
faculty members undoubtedly shared the initial goals of the
strike. But many were also appalled by the hooligan tactics of
the demonstrators, who had held university officials captive,
broken into offices and overturned furniture.
</p>
<p> Inside Hamilton Hall, 85 Negro students, who had been advised
by such cool heads as Negro Psychologist Kenneth Clark, decided
that their most effective tactic would be to file quietly into
the vans. It was a model arrest operation--except that no one
had brought a key for the main door and it had to be forced
open.
</p>
<p> Elsewhere, the police were less carefully supervised--and
less considerate of the rebels. Professors and students who had
linked arms to keep police and demonstrators apart were charged
by wedges of plainclothes men. Uniformed officers plunged into
the breach to smash open the doors, while others broke into
through underground tunnels. Neat plans went awry as police
kicked and clubbed their way through Fayerweather Hall. Although
the action united hopelessly confused Columbia in anger over
police brutality, it also moved the campus toward order--and
touched off a much needed re-examination of the university's
future.
</p>
<p>(May 24, 1968)
</p>
<p> A loosely formed amalgam of some 35,000 young people--barely
6,000 of whom pay national dues--the far-left S.D.S. (Students
for a Democratic Society) boasts chapters on at least 250
campuses. Opposed to "imperialism" (whatever that means these
days), racism and oppression, S.D.S. finds the American
university guilty of all three.
</p>
<p> S.D.S. concentrated at first on civil rights issues. It
organized Northern ghetto dwellers in such projects as Chicago's
Jobs Or Income--Now (JOIN) and fought to get Mississippi's
"Freedom delegation" seated at the 1964 Democratic Convention.
The Vietnam War, however, led to a change of tactics. By 1966,
S.D.S. had broken with the L.I.D. (League for Industrial
Democracy) and decided against working within the existing
political framework. Since then, the group has been trying to
be what National Secretary Michael Spiegel, 21, a one-time
Harvard student, calls "an independent radical force."
</p>
<p> What draws young people into S.D.S., says Berkeley Sophomore
Peter Stone, 20, is a desire to translate their sense of
alienation from society into "a political thing."
</p>
<p> Products of comfortable, middle-class homes, S.D.S. members
typically are disenchanted young liberals. Most feel that
anti-Communism is an irrelevant stance. Probably no more than
2% of all S.D.S.ers belong to the Communist Party.
</p>
<p> S.D.S. is animated not by an master plan for revolution but
by a sense of moral outrage--to say nothing of a fascination
with rhetoric a la Che. Says Columbia S.D.S. Chairman Mark Rudd:
"It has energy, and that's why I'm in it."
</p>
<p>(May 16, 1969)
</p>
<p> The deluge of disorders made it harder and harder for most
Americans to keep the events in perspective. Bewildered citizens
understandably forget that most of the nation's 6,700,000
collegians are still quietly studying for final exams. The U.S.
has 2,500 colleges and universities; this year, scarcely two
dozen have been seriously disrupted. The fact that each incident
has a particular context is also frequently overlooked. Because
universities differ so greatly, condemnation of all "protest" is
not very helpful without an analysis of specifics at each campus.
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, an underlying pattern has emerged: the American
university has suddenly become a political arena--the prime
forum for a generation that has lost faith in the ability of
regular political institutions to solve such national problems
as war, race and poverty. As a result, the university is losing
whatever neutrality it professes. In pushing it toward social
action, students are helping to create a new U.S. institution:
the political university. It is a dangerous role for
universities.
</p>
<p> The growing hooliganism of many protesters threatens to wreck
universities in the process. This danger now worries even some
New Leftists, not to mention the vast majority of moderate
sympathizers, who are more and more weary of having their
expensive education constantly disrupted. The fundamental
solution, of course, lies far beyond the campus. As Yales'
President Kingman Brewster Jr. put it at a press conference last
week: "Campus violence will grow worse unless an intense effort
is made to end the war in Vietnam, remove the inequities in the
draft, solve problems of the cities and improve race relations."
</p>
<p> [he hippie movement marked another response to the decade as
the young experimented with music, clothes, drugs and a
"counterculture" lifestyle.]
</p>
<p>(July 7, 1967)
</p>
<p> The hippies have emerged on the U.S. scene in about 18 months
as a wholly new subculture, a bizarre permutation of the
middle-class American ethos from which it evolved. Hippies
preach altruism and mysticism, honesty, joy and nonviolence.
They find an almost childish fascination in beads, blossoms and
bells, blinding strobe lights and ear-shattering music, exotic
clothing and erotic slogans. Their professed aim is nothing less
than the subversion of Western society by "flower power" and
force of example.
</p>
<p> Although that sounds like a pipe-dream, it conveys the
unreality that permeates hippiedom, a cult whose mystique derives
essentially from the influence of hallucinogenic drugs. Unlike
other accepted stimuli, from nicotine to liquor, the
hallucinogens promise those who take the "trip" a magic-carpet
escape from reality in which perceptions are heightened, senses
distorted, and the imagination permanently bedazzled with
visions of teleological verity.
</p>
<p> The key ethical element in the hippie movement is love--indiscriminate and all-embracing, fluid and changeable, directed
at friend and foe alike. SUPERZAP THEM ALL WITH THE LOVE!
proclaims a sign in Los Angeles' Sans Souci Temple, a hippie
commune.
</p>
<p> Today, hippie enclaves are blooming in every major U.S. city
from Boston to Seattle, from Detroit to New Orleans: there is a
50-member cabal in, of all places, Austin, Texas. There are
outposts in Paris and London, New Delhi and Katmandu, where
American hippies trek the "hashish trail" to get cheap but potent
hallucinogens and lessons in Buddhist love.
</p>
<p> They are predominantly white, middle-class, educated youths,
ranging in an age from 17 to 25 (though some as old as 50 can be
spotted). Overendowed with all the qualities that make their
generation so engaging, perplexing and infuriating, they are
dropouts from a way of life that to them seems wholly oriented
toward work, status and power. They scorn money--they call it
"bread"--and property, and have found, like countless other
romantics from Rimbaud to George Orwell, that it is not easy to
starve.
</p>
<p> Perhaps the most striking thing about the hippie phenomenon
is the way it has touched the imagination of the "straight"
society that gave it birth. Hippie slang has already entered
common usage and spiced American humor. Department stores and
boutiques have blossomed out in "psychedelic" colors and designs
that resemble animated art nouveau. The bangle shops in any
hippie neighborhood cater mostly to tourists, who on summer
weekends often outnumber the local flora and fauna.
</p>
<p> San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district--a throbbing
three-eights of a far-from-square-mile--is the vibrant
epicenter of the hippie movement. Fog sweeps past the
gingerbread houses of "The Hashbury," shrouding the shapes of
hirsute, shoeless hippies huddled in doorways, smoking pot,
"rapping" (achieving rapport with random talk), or banging
beer cans in time to ubiquitous jukebox rhythms.
</p>
<p> A major new development in the hippie world is the "rural
commune," some 30 of which now exist from Canada through the
U.S. to Mexico. There, nature-loving hippie tribesmen can escape
the commercialization of the city and attempt to build a society
outside of society.
</p>
<p>(April 5, 1968)
</p>
<p> After a winter in which the hippie movement seemed so moribund
that its own members staged mock burials in honor of its death,
the Yippies have suddenly invested it with new life through their
special kind of antic political protest. The term Yippie comes
from Youth International Party, an amorphous amalgam of the
alienated young that coalesced in Manhattan two months ago around
a coterie of activist hippies, all in their late 20s and early
30s. "The YIP is a party--like the last word says--not a
political movement," argues the East Village's Abbie Hoffman,
who last fall tried to levitate the Pentagon. Says Yippie Leader
Ed Sanders, 28, of the Fugs rock group: "It's the politics of
ecstasy."
</p>
<p> Ecstasy begins with a platform certain to make any hippie
yell yippie: an end to war and pay toilets, legalization of
psychedelic drugs, free food, and a heart transplant for L.B.J.
"Rise up and abandon the creeping meatball!" goes the rallying
cry, and it has brought to the Yippie standard such underground
gurus and goblins as Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, Realist
Editor Paul Krassner and Jerry Rubin, a key organizer of the
Pentagon March. Hard-core Yippies may number as few as 400
nationwide, but Fug Sanders reckons that the total following may
now have reached 250,000.
</p>
<p> [Not only the hippies, but many Americans experimented with
illicit substances that turned them on, tuned them in and
dropped them out.]
</p>
<p>(September 26, 1969)
</p>
<p> It used to be that "better living through chemistry" was just
another advertising slogan: now it is a sly joke to the young
and a grievous worry to their parents. In their quest for
sensory experience, an alarming number of kids are swallowing
its message whole. Marijuana ("pot," "grass," "mary jane,"
"weed") is their favorite preparation; in lesser numbers, they
are smoking hashish ("hash"), taking mescaline, peyote,
psilocybin, LSD ("acid"), using barbiturates and sedatives
("goofers," "downers," "red devils"), swallowing or injecting
amphetamine stimulants ("meth," "bennies," "speed"). The prices
of their mind excursions fluctuate almost daily with the black
market where kids must make their purchases.
</p>
<p> These are the pop drugs--the drugs widely taken by
middle-class young people, most of whom are white. Their use is
growing; marijuana smoking, in particular, is increasing.
(Heroin use, by contrast, remains comparatively static.) "For
the first time," says California Psychopharmacologist Dr. Leo
Hollister, "pot is entrenched in our society, with untold
millions using the drug. We have passed the point of no return."
</p>
<p> Its signature is everywhere. Rock musicians use drugs
frequently and openly, and their compositions are riddled with
references to drugs, from the Beatles' "I get high with a little
help from my friends" to the Jefferson Airplane's White Rabbit.
</p>
<p> Growing numbers of adults are taking up the habit. Many
veterans return from Vietnam with a taste for grass; some
military and civilian observers estimate that marijuana is
smoked by as many as half the men below the rank of captain.</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>