Friday, October 10, 2014

Slippery Rock State College and the Vietnam War

For those of us who were not privileged enough to live during America's rebellious times, the Sixties, we are told of the times that changed and shaped American history. We are told of the Woodstocks, the summers of free love, and of course we hear all about the Beatles.

The one thing that we are told over and over again is of the protests; the two biggest types regarding equal treatment and against the Vietnam War. Time and time again we hear how the nation was fed up with Lyndon B. Johnson and his war in Asia, sending our troops overseas to die. We're told of the colleges and protesters who aimed to make a statement during this turbulent time aimed to make a statement.

But what if there was an area in the country that remained neutral, for the most part? What if there was an area that had more important values than the War, instead, focused on the treatment of the students than they did about the country's wartime endeavors? I am here to tell you that such a place did exist, and that I am an alumnus from such an institution, Slippery Rock University (called Slippery Rock State College at the time).

During my senior year at Slippery Rock University I enrolled in a class called "Historian's Craft," which prepared us to research and write like professional historians. It was during this class that the research paper topics were left up to us, as long as they related to the university or the town of Slippery Rock in some way. My topic choice started out as how the SRU community responded to national tragedies. During that research I found a new angle that interested me: how Slippery Rock State College reacted during the troubling times of the Vietnam War.

Now I know what some of you are going to say, "how can you justify the ideals of a nation from a small sample size like Slippery Rock?" Thank you for raising that question dear reader! The subject of this topic is not to argue that the entire story that we heard regarding this time period is wrong, but that if such a case was possible in a small area such as Slippery Rock, then the possibility of more cases like it exist in one way or another.

Now that you are introduced to the subject now comes the product of my research. Below this paragraph is my research paper from my "Historian's Craft" class. Enjoy and hope you have some discussion questions and comments afterwards!

Edit: Made an edit to the second sentence in the second paragraph of the paper. Simple error that should have been fixed beforehand. Fixed it now.







SLIPPERY ROCK STATE COLLEGE:
LOCAL WORRIES DURING A NATIONAL PHENOMENON











Bryan Brown
History 205: Historian’s Craft
December 13, 2012
            Living on a college campus in the United States in the 1960s was an eventful time in American history, but there is one campus in Northwestern Pennsylvania that was sheltered compared to other colleges, Slippery Rock State College. As the Vietnam War dragged on, as well as the Civil Rights Movement took place, Americans protested in a variety of different ways: through the music industry, articles in the newspapers, and the popular demonstrations. These are just a few ways Americans took a stand against the war and injustice.
            As Americans throughout the nation protested, Slippery Rock State College on the other hand unevenly divided its attention between the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement. On the issue of the war Slippery Rock had a much more conservative approach, but when it came to aspects of Civil Rights the students made it a priority. Slippery Rock’s political viewpoint played a role in the students’ perspective on the war, but had a limited role in their perspective towards civil rights on campus. Because of President Carter’s leadership, continued by President Watrel, and the Slippery Rock area’s political viewpoint the student body’s involvement in demonstrations focused on student rights on campus, and remained relatively conservative compared to other protests throughout the nation.
            To understand student activism and political perspectives Slippery Rock University’s archives made the most contribution. Many of the Board of the Trustees Minutes reports, which provide immense amounts of information on the process the Slippery Rock faculty and staff used to deal with student activism and other issues. Newspapers such as The Rocket and the Butler Eagle were crucial for understanding student activism and political opinions on campus and in the area. Remarkably the school had very few demonstrations and remained quiet on a number of issues, therefore the student newspaper did not have a lot of articles regarding protests. Still, the newspaper offered insight into other issues like the rights for African-American and women students.
            Scholars in the past looked at similar situations in schools with similar conditions like Slippery Rock: small school in a relatively conservative area. Historian Gregg L. Michel examined the same type of activities Slippery Rock State College experienced in a small Baptist college called Furman University. The title of Michel’s article was It Even Happened Here: Student Activism at Furman University, 1967-1970. Michel argued that Furman’s students demonstrated in an orderly manner because they had the support to demonstrate from their president. Furman’s students’ method of demonstrating provides other scholars that schools had unique methods of demonstrating for student rights and other issues that students dealt with.
            As America continued its war in Vietnam a war at home over civil rights developed as well. City streets filled with protestors voicing their opinions in regards to both issues. Rights of both African-Americans and women became a big issue in this time. Slippery Rock State College, now called Slippery Rock University, had a very unique role in the string of protests that swept the nation.
            Following the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Slippery Rock State College students involved themselves in movements for equality of students throughout campus. The Civil Rights Act made it illegal for discrimination of any person regardless of race, gender, or religious creed. Because of this, women’s rights became a frontrunner of activism alongside African-American rights. The battle for African-American and women rights certainly impacted the Slippery Rock State College campus.
In the midst of nation-wide protests, Slippery Rock officials made a decision to hire rental policemen to help with security on campus. Slippery Rock hired the rental police from the United Detective Agency of Pittsburgh.[1] The decision came from Carter to ensure that campus life would be a safer place for students and property of the school. The installment of the rental police represented oppression in the minds of the students. The Butler Eagle reported that the students thought that Slippery Rock hired the agency to spy on them.[2]
The students protested the rental police following an assembly where the rental police went through the crowd of students and demanded for their identification cards. 2800 students protested by “marching around buildings,” during this demonstration 318 students were injured. President Carter met with the disgruntled students in the field house to inform them that he would not talk to a mob and would only speak to “duly elected representatives.”[3]
            Following the meeting with the student elected leaders Carter explained in the monthly meeting with the trustees of the college that the students “didn’t really have any” grievances, that it was a misunderstanding regarding the Security Police. Carter also exclaimed that the problem with the security police was still a work in progress, but quick to reiterate that “we are better off with the Security Police than we were before.”[4]
The Butler Eagle reported that the elected leader of the students’ main grievance came from “student administration control over dress and appearance and ‘unreasonable search and seizure.’”[5] The Butler Eagle also reported that the reason that the students protested the way they did, while they followed Carter’s process, was to have actions taken then and not during the next school year when the issues would have blown away. This moment truly defined Slippery Rock State College’s method of demonstrating against unfair policies and key issues.
            The student demonstration against the Security Police achieved one goal in the following school year: it got rid of the student dress codes, but only for the male students, the female students’ dress code remained the same.[6] The dress code for women remained in effect until the following school year, 1968-1969 school year. As long as the female students thought their appearance appropriate, it passed. According to this version of the Green and White, no specifics on clothing restricted the students.
The main grievance of the students, after the issue of the Security Police diminished, came from the student dress codes. According the student handbook, the Green and White, students had different set of rules based on gender. These separate rules focused on appropriate dress code at certain points of the day and on certain occasions. [7] Key differences between the rules imply a difference of treatment between the two groups of students. In the student handbook, both male and female students were subject to specific dress codes that differed depending on where the student was. One example, according to the student handbook, female students were forbidden from wearing “thongs,” or flip flop sandals, in the cafeteria.[8] Female students also faced the restriction of dress in the classroom by the professor of their class. The professor had the power to deem appropriate dress for the women. These restrictions on dress hindered the freedom of women students in the college.
            Although the dress codes restricted more heavily on women, male students also faced restricting dress code rules. For instance, male students who wore shirts without collars, blue jeans, shorts, and “thongs” violated the code. Day assemblies required the male students to wear “class dress,” what men wore during class: shirts with collars, slacks, sweaters, while for night assemblies required a “coat, dress slacks or suit.” Another form of restriction came in the form of a ban on any “extreme apparel,” things like offensive shirts and over-revealing clothing, and beards. [9] Although the dress code for male students differed from female students, they restricted student freedom the same.
            Following the demonstration against the Security Police, Slippery Rock State College remained relatively calm until the 1970s. This holds true even though in 1969 when a “National Moratorium Day” on October 15 was held, The Rocket reported on the story. According to The Rocket, the event took place to call for an end to the Vietnam War. The article also stated that Slippery Rock State College and the new president, President Watrel, took no stance on the issue. The plea, orchestrated by college presidents in schools such as the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University, Chatam University, and seventy-four other schools nationwide. Slippery Rock’s no stance on the national moratorium signifies Slippery Rock’s refusal to take part in efforts to protest the Vietnam War.[10]
            As the student newspaper, The Rocket represented what students held high in their priorities and what they wanted to discuss on campus. In the early years of the war, the newspaper staff took a more sympathetic opinion. The editor of The Rocket, Judy Lagnese, wrote an editorial in 1967 that begged the Slippery Rock community to make sure they opened up their eyes and see the world issues that the school shunned before.[11] The newspaper staff seemed to be the ones who viewed the situation in Vietnam as one that needed to end.
Another newspaper writer Becky Wilson also wrote about the situation in Southeast Asia in a sympathetic view in her article “A Different ‘Slant’ on the ‘Gooks.’” Wilson reported that the United States bombed Hanoi 527 times, and explained the hardships the Vietnamese people suffered because the United States dragged the war on. Wilson wanted her audience to make a decision on the issue that would have an effect on the war. The choices included that if the people were good and willing the war would end, but if not “the future is very bleak for the Vietnamese.”[12] The sharp twist in the article really emphasizes the newspaper staff’s frustration with the lack of activism outside The Rocket staff.
            As the war continued The Rocket developed a different attitude towards the war. In 1969, the editor believed that the students held the key to a better life to live in, a life that “will not resort to demonstrations or violence to accomplish this end.”[13] The editor’s opinion reflects Carter’s want for organized protests rather than mob demonstrations. As the war in Vietnam progressed and other schools and universities across America protested the war, Slippery Rock remained in their ways, unwilling to physically protest the war.
A reason for the Slippery Rock students’ refusal to protest the Vietnam War stemmed from the political standpoint of the Slippery Rock are. The area prior to and during the war remained a relatively conservative one that voted Republican in 1952, 1956, 1960, 1968 and 1972, the only exception came from the 1964 election which the area voted Democratic. This relatively conservative area had an effect on the political viewpoints of the majority of the students attending Slippery Rock State College. This reason was why the majority of the student population refused to physically protest the war.
            According to America Votes, a governmental book series that recorded the results in political elections by state, Butler County, where Slippery Rock is located, in the 1952 election 25,243 voted Republican compared to the 15,295 who voted Democrat.[14] Butler County among other counties in Pennsylvania outnumbered the Democratic counties in Pennsylvania, only nine counties of the sixty-seven in Pennsylvania voted Democratic in 1952.[15]
            In the following election, 1956, Butler County remained Republican. Of the 39,989 total voters 26,238 voted Republican, roughly sixty-five point six percent of the vote.[16] Other counties relatively close to Slippery Rock, like Mercer and Allegheny Counties, also voted Republican. Scammon recorded that all but five counties in Pennsylvania voted Republican in the 1956 election.[17] Butler County continued its Republican voting ways in 1960. In that year Pennsylvania became a Democratic state for the election despite only having fifteen counties vote Democrat.[18]
           
            The 1964 election year, brought change to Butler County. Among the 44,722 total voters in Butler County, only 17,360 voted Republican.[19] The 1964 election marked a change not only in Butler County but also other counties in Pennsylvania. Out of the sixty-seven counties in Pennsylvania, only three voted for the Republican candidate.[20] This election became the exception to the steady Republican voting in Butler County during this time period.[21]
 In the 1968 election year, Butler County returned to its Republican ways. Among the 45,291 voters, 21,618 people voted Republican compared to the 19,415 voters who voted Democrat. [22] In the following election, 1972, Slippery Rock again voted Republican in an even more decisive manner. According to America Votes, Butler County voters voted Republican 29,665 times compared to the 14,695 Democrat votes, more than double the votes.[23] These statistics indicate the county that a majority of Slippery Rock students hailed from voted Republican for many years, one can assume that the area’s political sphere played a role in the decision of the students not to protest the war.
            Even though the American offensive in Vietnam continued throughout the 1970s and advanced into Cambodia, Slippery Rock students continued their focus on the local issues on campus. Following the May 4, 1970 Kent State shooting, Slippery Rock maintained their stance of refusing to fight the war cause. The Kent State shooting developed because the students rallied to protest the United States invasion of Cambodia. The author of “Bullets vs Bottles at Kent State Rally” in The Rocket explained how the student rally developed into a hostile shooting by the National Guard. The author also provided insight on what Kent State should have done instead of using the National Guard. The author suggests that to counteract the student protest the college officials should have used “REASONING RATHER THAN MILITARY INTERVENTION.”[24]
            The author used all capital letters at the end of the article to make their point known, especially to Slippery Rock students and faculty alike. This article clearly demonstrates how the Slippery Rock State College community talked out their grievances: through writing with President Watrel rather than the use of violence. This article further demonstrates Slippery Rock’s belief in Carter’s system, that Watrel continued, that established a method for the students for their demonstrations and protests.
            In that same issue of The Rocket, the newspaper staff also wrote about the United States involvement in Cambodia. The article titled “First Vietnam – Now Add Cambodia” examined the United States’ decision to invade Cambodia. The article also provided Nixon’s promise for peace by the withdraw of troops out of Vietnam. The author provided their own insight on the issue that fighting in Cambodia would result in United States defeat, similar to Vietnam. The author stated that because Cambodia was the new battleground with the Viet Cong “it is illogical to expect anything except the same result.”[25] This author’s opinion on the war provides insight on how the newspaper developed into a stance against the war, but only protest through dialogue.
            During this time of political unrest, African-American and women students continued their fight for their rights on campus. African-American students formed the Black Action Society in 1969 with the goal to advance the rights and treatment of black students and ensure “better race relations in the best interest to all concerned.”[26] Women students formed the Association for Women’s Rights on campus, to ensure that the women student body was guaranteed their rights. In 1971 the Black Action Society gave a list of demands focused mainly on equal treatment for black students at Slippery Rock, they also demanded more black students and culture courses. Their reasoning for this stemmed from the “increase in Black student enrollment on campus.”[27]
            Black students on campus indeed increased throughout the years because of the administrations actions to follow the Equal Educational Opportunity Program. In a press release in 1971 the administration met the demands of black students the previous year to recruit more black students. Because of the recruitment 110 Black students were added to the student body of 5000, representing two-point-two percent of the student population.[28]
            The Campus Equal Educational Opportunity Program made it a priority to ensure that more African-American students enrolled to Slippery Rock State College. But the program faced several hurdles for instance, “Black students [were] reluctant to enroll at Slippery Rock because of poor social life [and] small enrollment at the present time.”[29] The program eventually became successful following the 1969 school year because of the “recruitment of the Admissions Committee ninety-eight students applied for admission…ninety-four Blacks.”[30] Slippery Rock State College students achieved their local goals through a form of protest that did not use violence and followed Carter’s model for organized formal protesting.
            While African-American students fought for their rights on campus, women students did the same. Women did not have the same kind of grievances that the African-American students had, but faced challenges of their own. Alongside the previously mentioned dress code restrictions, the women students at Slippery Rock faced invasive housing regulations on campus. Among the restrictions on housing was, prior to 1972, the mandatory sign-out sheet for female students leaving their dorms past a certain hour, infamously known as “No Hour Policy.” The Slippery Rock Women’s Liberation group fought for the repeal of the policy on female students and for the equal treatment of men and women on campus. The article claimed that the Civil Rights Act made it illegal to discriminate against students on race, creed, and religion. The Slippery Rock Women’s Liberation argued that women and freshmen fell into that category. The group gave the Trustees the issue, who gave it to Dr. Watrel.[31]
            The following year another article posted in The Rocket by the Association for Women’s Rights, (AWR), which again called for the equal treatment of women students for housing. The article state that the men never had the same housing restrictions that the women had. Some restrictions included signing in after certain hours and only living off campus based on class. The AWR wanted to have the same rules as the men had on campus living.[32]
            Female equality in housing policies became reality in 1972 following a decision ruling in favor of the Equal Rights Act. The Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission ruled that the discrimination was illegal in regards to the Equal Rights Act. Because the law made it illegal for women to be discriminated against it enabled women students to have the same opportunities that men had at Slippery Rock State College for housing. This protest, like the others, used the type of protest that followed Carter’s guidelines for demonstrations.[33]
            Throughout the duration of the Vietnam War, colleges nationwide broke out in protest, while Slippery Rock State College refrained from such activities. The Slippery Rock community filled other agendas with their time rather than joining the nationwide protest against the war. A variety of reasons caused this outcome. The first reason came from the students’ focus on local issues on campus like the dress code. Women on campus fought for their rights on campus and off-campus living. Black students fought for their advancement of fellow black students on campus. Slippery Rock’s conservative basis played a role in the politics of the students. With all of these reasons the Slippery Rock students pushed the issue of Vietnam to the side and made way for their rights on campus.
            Slippery Rock State College, students and staff including President Watrel, followed President Carter’s guidelines for formal and organized protests to ensure that the students’ voices were heard. This form of organized demonstrations, not uncommon in America and conservative areas, made Slippery Rock one of few places that did not resort to violence or mob demonstrations. President Carter’s guidelines, continued by Watrel, enabled Slippery Rock students to fight for their rights, but in a peaceful and organized manner.



Appendix 1

Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1952
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,515,237
733,072
359,224
370,945
9948 R
50.6% D
Butler
97,320
40,723
25,243
15,295
11,721 D
62% R
Mercer
111,954
47,537
26,424
20,770
5,654 R
55.6% R
Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1956
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,515,237
702,030
384,939
315,989
68,950 R
65.6% R
Butler
97,320
39,989
26,238
13,672
12,566 R
54.8% R
Mercer
111,954
48,674
28,785
19,769
9,016 R
59.1% R


Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1960
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,628,587
750,718
320,970
428,455
107,485 D
57.1% D
Butler
114,639
46,305
28,348
17,805
10,543 R
61.2% R
Mercer
127,519
53,480
29,109
24,243
4,866 R
54.4% R
Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1964
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,628,587
719,725
241,707
475,207
233,500 D
66% D
Butler
114,639
44,722
17,360
27,267
9,907 D
61% D
Mercer
127,519
50,563
18,153
32,199
14,046 D
63.7% D

Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1968
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,628,587
713,817
 264,790
364,906
100,116 D
51.1% D
Butler
114,639
45,291
21,618
19,415
2,203 R
47.7% R
Mercer
127,519
49,105
23,131
22,814
2,452 R
47.1% R

Appendix 2
Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1972
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,605,016
 668,535
371,737
282,496
89,241 R
55.6% R
Butler
127,941
45,574
29,665
14,695
14,970 R
65.1% R
Mercer
127,125
47,100
27,961
18,087
6,322 R
59.4% R

Pennsylvania Presidential Elections by County: 1976
County
Total Population
Total Vote
Republican Votes
Democratic Votes
R-D Plurality
% of  Winning Party
Allegheny
1,605,016
647,857
303,127
328,343
25,216 D
50.7% D
Butler
127,941
50,198
26,366
22,611
3,755 R
52.5% R
Mercer
127,125
48,235
22,469
25,041
2,572 D
51.9% D



Bibliography
Green and White Handbook. Bailey Library Archives, Slippery Rock University. Slippery Rock, PA.
Scammon, Richard M. America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (New York: MacMillan Company, 1956).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (New York: MacMillan Company, 1958).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1962).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1966).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting.  (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1970).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1973).
---., America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics. Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American voting. (Washington DC: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1977).
Social Equity Office Collection. Bailey Library Archives, Slippery Rock University. Slippery Rock, PA.
The Rocket (Slippery Rock, PA.) The Keystone Library Network. http://digital.klnpa.org/.




[1] “It’s Spring!: Hiring of ‘Private Eyes’ Sets Off Campus Capers at The Rock,” Butler Eagle, May 3, 1966, p. 1.
[2] “It’s Spring!: Hiring of ‘Private Eyes’ Sets Off Campus Capers at The Rock,” Butler Eagle, May 3, 1966, p. 2.
[3] Council of Trustees Record Group, Board of Trustee Minutes, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock University, June 1, 1966.
[4] Council of Trustees Record Group, Board of Trustee Minutes, June 1, 1966.
[5] “New Gripes Aired: Slippery Rock Students Stage Class Boycott,” Butler Eagle, May 4, 1966, p. 2.
[6] Green and White: The Student Handbook (1967-1968), (Slippery Rock, PA: Slippery Rock State College, 1967), 42, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock, PA.
[7] Green and White: The Student Handbook (1966-1967), (Slippery Rock, PA: Slippery Rock State College, 1966), 34, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock, PA.
[8] Green and White: (1966-1967), 42.
[9] Green and White: (1966-1967), 34.
[10] “National Moratorium Day, October 15 Was Nationwide Success,” The Rocket, October 24, 1969, p. 1.
[11] Judy Lagnese, “Editor,” The Rocket, (PA.), April 28, 1967, p. 2, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on November 7, 2012).
[12] Becky Wilson, “A Different ‘Slant’ on the ‘Gooks,’” The Rocket, February 17, 1971, p. 5.
[13] Paul Pikovsky, “Commendations,” The Rocket (PA.), April 18, 1969, p. 2, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on November 7, 2012).
[14] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 1, 1952, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (New York: MacMillan Company, 1956), 310.
[15] Scammon, America Votes: 1952, 311.
[16] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 2, 1956-1957, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (New York: MacMillan Company, 1958), 346.
[17] Scammon, America Votes: 1956, 347.
[18] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 3, 1960, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1962), 348.
[19] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 6, 1964, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1966), 354.
[20] Scammon, America Votes: 1964, 355.
[21] See Appendices 1-2.
[22] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 8, 1968, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1970), 330.
[23] Richard M. Scammon, America Votes: A Handbook of Contemporary American Election Statistics, vol. 10, 1972, Governmental Affairs Institute Series on American Voting, (Washington DC: Governmental Affairs Institute, 1973), 317.
[24] “Bullets vs Bottles at Kent State Rally,” The Rocket (PA.), May 8, 1970, p.2, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on October 25, 2012).
[25] “First Vietnam – Now Add Cambodia,” The Rocket (PA.), May 8, 1970, p. 2, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on October 25, 2012).
[26] Green and White: The Student Handbook (1970-1971), 92-93.
[27] Social Equity Office – Minority Affairs Coordinator, Black Student Demands, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock University, Folder 5-2.
[28] Social Equity Office – Minority Affairs Coordinator, Press Release: 1971, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock University, Folder 5-2.
[29] Social Equity Office – Minority Affairs Coordinator, Summary Report – First Semester, 1969, Slippery Rock University Archives, Slippery Rock University, Folder 5-2.
[30] Social Equity Office – Minority Affairs Coordinator, Summary Report – First Semester, 1969, Folder 5-2.
[31] Slippery Rock Women’s Liberation, “Letters,” The Rocket (PA.), March 22, 1971, p. 5, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed October 18, 2012).
[32] Gail Bieri and Sharon Schulberger, “AWR Statement on Housing Policy,” The Rocket (PA.), February 18, 1972, p. 1, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on October 18, 2012).
[33] “AWR On Men’s Response to Locked Dorms,” The Rocket (PA.), March 7, 1972, p. 5, http://digital.klnpa.org/ (accessed on October 18, 2012).



Thank you again for reading through this long and tedious research paper, if you have any comments on the subject or my viewpoint/angle, feel free to leave a comment. Thanks again dear reader, until next time!

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