Students and colleges and universities were a major target of Crusade for Freedom operations in the 1950s. Below we briefly look at some of the activities.
1950
In the summer of 1950, the Crusade for Freedom organizers put out a newsletter to college and university Crusade committees with suggestions for campus activities.
THE FREEDOM BELL is the symbol of the CRUSADE. Arrange to ring your campus chimes or bells to call attention to the CRUSADE ... maybe to signalize the start ... or at intervals during the CRUSADE to indicate the triumphant 100% enrollment of each group.
ABOVE ALL, be sure your chimes ring long and loudly on October 24th, United Nations Day. All over the free world bells will ring at that time on that day. For at that time the Freedom Bell itself, by then installed in the western sector of Berlin, will first peal out its call to liberty. And just as Radio Free Europe will continue to broadcast every day to the people behind the Iron Curtain, so will the Freedom Bell ring out every day, bringing its message of hope for permanent peace and freedom.
1955 College Crusade for Freedom
The University of Minnesota had been chosen by the Crusade for Freedom as a “combined educational and fund-raising campaign” for the 1954-1955 campaign “on an experimental basis.” In February 1955, the 12th Annual Greek Week organizers at the University of Minnesota also used Radio Free Europe (RFE) and the Crusade for Freedom as its theme. Proceeds of its variety show were contributed to the Crusade campaign.
During National Freedom Week, February 12-22, 1955, 25 universities adopted a combined education and fund raising campaign in support of the Crusade for Freedom, e.g., Barbara Gibbs, president of the student government at Ohio State University, said, “This is just the kind of program that will capture the interest of the university student. To know you are helping to alleviate the world crisis is a gratifying thing.”
J.W. Ashton, vice president of Indiana University, remarked, “It is most appropriate that as a part of their experience in the world of scholarship. Students should be given the opportunity to participate in so significant an activity.”
1956 Colleges Crusade
25 colleges with a student population of over 300,000 accepted to be part of the national campaign, with the purpose of making the students aware of the international crisis facing their generation and what they could do help. The Advertising Council sent a publicity kit to college newspapers and a promotional package was sent to different student groups.
In April 1956, college fraternities and sororities around the United States celebrated “Greek Week” by holding dances, parties, dinners, stage presentations and other social events. At the University of Iowa, “the Greek letter groups planned activities to make the campus and community aware of the efforts of Radio Free Europe and the Crusade for Freedom.“ Included in the week’s programs was the musical show “Damn Yankees“ prepared by the Phi Kappa fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, with the processed going to the Crusade for Freedom. William T. Rafael, program director of RFE, was the principal speaker at the “Greek Week“ campus convention.
The Cedar Rapids Gazette carried photographs of university students, including one of student waiters dressed in “Balkan-inspired” costumes at an exchange dinner sponsored by the Pi Beta Sorority.
The University of Minnesota had been chosen by the Crusade for Freedom as a “combined educational and fund-raising campaign” for the 1954-1955 “on an experimental basis.” In February 1955, the 12th Annual Greek Week organizers at the University of Minnesota also used RFE and the Crusade for Freedom as its theme. Proceeds of its variety show were contributed to the Crusade campaign.
The Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity at Indiana University in Bloomington held a car wash, resulting in $35 in contributions.
1957College Campaign
The 1957 campaign reportedly reached over 250,000 students in 45 colleges and universities. Students at Brigham Young University, for example, wrote scripts and made tape recordings for local radio stations, made a half-hour program for broadcast over the local television station in Salt Lake City and covered the Crusade in the campus newspaper.
| Ohio State Students |
There was a leaflet drop at the University of Minnesota, which also witnessed an “Iron Curtain” dinner and forums “Are We Gaining in our Fight for Eastern Europe” and “How True is Our Propaganda?”
In March 1957, Evansville College, Drake University, and Emory University had College Crusade programs. At the University of Illinois, during the annual “Geek Week,” the Crusade program included a jazz concert and variety show, with the proceeds going to the Crusade for Freedom. In Toledo, Ohio, students washed cars, manned gasoline pumps and changed tires in support of the Crusade. At Ohio State University, 80 sororities and fraternities combined their effort during “Geek Week” for, group discussions, dinners, a “Stunt Night and a variety show. $2,300 was collected.
25 schools participated in a contest sponsored by the Crusade for Freedom and RFE for the most outstanding College Crusade. From the winning college or university, one student was selected for a summer intern job with RFE in Munich.
Pennsylvania State University Chapel Choir
The Pennsylvania State University Chapel Choir went on its biennial six-week concert tour of Europe in the summer 1957, including a concert in Munich, Germany, where they also visited RFE. Many of the 60 students were featured in local newspapers in Pennsylvania after their return home, e.g. Carole P. Young, who was featured in the New Castle, Pennsylvania News on September 4, 1957, in an article “Miss Carol Young Aids in RFE Radio Program.” She was described as, “One of the American College students, contributing to the effort of RFE in carrying the fight of freedom directly into the camp of totalitarian Communism through this College Crusade.”
Another student was Penny Robey of Smethport, Pennsylvania, who was similarly identified in the article text under her photograph, part of which read, “Thousands of American students contribute to this effort through the College Crusade, which is beamed via RFE’s transmitters to captive nations to captive nation students who are subject to Communist indoctrination.”









