Write a brief (one or two paragraph) response to one of the prompts below for class on Wednesday.
"Leftward Kicking and Screaming:"
1. How and why did the sit-in movement propel protest in California? How did _Operation Abolition_ help galvanize students? What other factors contributed to student protest? Why was action so important?
"It Wasn't Hard To Be a Communist in Texas:"
1. How does the definition of communism change throughout this piece? What are Pardun's attitudes toward this term, and how do they change? How did the writer's past experiences contribute to these attitudes?
2. What reasons does Pardun give for young people's embrace of change in the 60s? What experiences caused these changes? What student groups today have concerns similar to SDS? What issues do they emphasize?
3. How did the involvement of "heartland" students change the movement? How did they differ from older participants? Why were there conflicts over the role of the counterculture? Were the tactics participants used successful? Why or why not?
The sit-ins demonstrated the most important tactic used in during the Civil Rights, as nonviolence and "imagination" created a sense that all was possible - all over the nation. This erupted in a national protest because students now felt they were able to participate and make an impact. The decade fostered the abilities of its youth, and the students nourished their need to make a change - a dramatic change that was felt in more than 54 cities in nine states.
The sit-ins helped stimulate students because the film that was created by the HUAC was so scrambled and so untrue that it propelled students to join and laugh at was no longer a horror. The campus activists used this medium as inspiration to make one of the largest impacts of the 1960s.
In addition to the quick national spread of the sit-ins and the impact the young students could make, these young people picked up what their parents left behind. They felt a primary obligation to take action in common; many wanted to redeem what their elder generation had failed at, which was perhaps the ultimate motivator.