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April 10 update: If you’re looking for news on this morning’s New School building occupation, you can find it here.

Dozens of New York City police swarmed into Washington Square Park late last night in response to rumors of a planned midnight protest at NYU’s Bobst library.

An NYU spokesperson said the university had received word that student activists at the New School had been discussing an upcoming Bobst action, and requested the police presence — fifty cops, thirty police cars, and at least one paddy wagon — as a “precaution.”

The cops set up barricades on Washington Square South, but stood down by 2 am when it became clear that no protest was taking place.

NYU student activists Take Back NYU! mounted a 40-hour occupation of the university’s Kimmel Center last month, and New School students sat in at a campus dining hall for 30 hours in December. The New School activists, who call themselves The New School In Exile, have pledged to shut down that campus on April 1 if the university’s widely-reviled president and vice president do not resign before then.

April first is twenty-one days from today. This is shaping up to be a jittery three weeks for NYU and New School administrators.

Evening update: There was an anonymous flyer drop into the atrium of the Bobst library this afternoon. Text: “The time has come to begin our refusal. We cannot allow ourselves to stand idly by while NYU profits by our intelligence, lining other people’s pockets while our future slips away. The crises we face are too great for self-interest-as-usual. This is the beginning of their end, and our beginning. Out of their fall, we will rise. Will you rise with us?”

Morning update: NYU Local has a video from the flyer-droppers.

Kristen Juras, an assistant professor of law at the University of Montana, doesn’t approve of a sex column that runs in the school’s student newspaper, the Montana Kaimin.

The column, Juras says, is “embarrassingly unprofessional,” and “affects my reputation as a member of the faculty.” She wants the student government’s publications board to create written content guidelines that would ban such material. If they don’t, she intends to take her case to the university’s board of trustees — and, if necessary, the state legislature.

Juras, whose son attends UM, has also sent a letter to the university’s president and the dean of its journalism school asking them to meet with the Kaimin editorial board and ask them to drop the column.

Kaimin editor Bill Oram has no intention of backing down. “We welcome the fight,” he says. “We feel we have a right and a duty to publish potentially controversial material.”

“The Bess Sex Column” has appeared weekly since late January. Its five installments to date can be found here.

March 17 Update: Follow-up post here.

The omnibus budget bill that the Senate passed last night may make low-cost birth control available from campus health centers after a four-year absence.

The bill incorporated the Affordable Birth Control Act, which overturns provisions of a 2005 law that, in the words of Choice USA,

stopped pharmaceutical companies from providing prescriptions at lower than market costs to health clinics and College and University health centers. Previously, companies were supplying schools and safety-net providers with low cost or no cost birth control. As a result of the [Deficit Reduction Act], low income women and college students were forced to pay market price, approximately $40-$50 per month.

The Affordable Birth Control Act was the subject of intense organizing by campus groups, making its passage a victory for students and for student activism.

Quoting Choice USA again, “This is an example of the power we as young people have to make real change that directly impacts our lives. Congratulations everyone!”

Chas Freeman, the Obama nominee for chair of the National Intelligence Council has withdrawn his name from consideration. As we noted last week, Freeman once said this about China’s 1989 Tiananmen Square protests:

I do not believe it is acceptable for any country to allow the heart of its national capital to be occupied by dissidents intent on disrupting the normal functions of government, however appealing to foreigners their propaganda may be. Such folk, whether they represent a veterans’ “Bonus Army” or a “student uprising” on behalf of “the goddess of democracy” should expect to be displaced with despatch from the ground they occupy.

Freeman had come under heavy attack in recent days for his ties to Saudi Arabia and his criticisms of Israel, as well as his relationship with the Chinese government.

President Obama’s speech on education this morning provided few new details of his higher education agenda. He reiterated previously announced plans to raise Pell Grants, create a new tuition tax credit, expand direct lending for student loans, and simplify the FAFSA form, but — as far as I can tell — didn’t add any substantive new information about any of these proposals.

A transcript of the speech can be found here.

About This Blog

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StudentActivism.net is the work of Angus Johnston, a historian and advocate of American student organizing.

To contact Angus, click here. For more about him, check out AngusJohnston.com.