ABSTRACT

T he movement coordinated by SNCC breathed life into a national student movement for the first time. Although centered on a few cam-puses-most notably Berkeley-the movement spread through student governments, campus newspapers, and the emerging bohemian subcultures in every campus town. Some efforts directly mirrored SNCC, like the Northern Student Movement, which mobilized students to become active in tutorial programs in the ghettos next to their campuses. The largest of these groups was Students for a Democratic Society, which blossomed in Ann Arbor.