we had moved our tables onto the center of sproul hall and jack weinberg was arrested. and someone yelled, "sit down," and we all sat down around the police car and that was--it was very spontaneous. that was not planned. we had no way of knowing they were going to bring a police car onto the center of campus. peter: they sat for 32 hours. the police car, with jack weinberg still inside, sat there too. someone brought a microphone. students, including protest leader mario savio, made speeches from atop the police car, careful to remove their shoes so they wouldn't damage city property. bettina: we were '50s children. we grew up in the '50s. look how we're dressed. look at the pictures of us. mario's always in a suit and tie when we're protesting, you know. and i'm in a dress or a skirt. you know, if you look at the attire, you can see how conservative. and it was a conservative movement in the sense that it was trying to conserve the first amendment. so it was not--it had radical actions, the militancy of the sit-in and so forth and the passion of mario's speeches, you