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Shakesville reports on an event at The College of New Jersey in which men literally walked a mile in women’s shoes to raise awareness of rape and to emphasize male responsibility to fight sexual violence.

Shakes’ favorite part? The article that alerted her to the event was titled “OMG Shoes.”

(Good discussion in comments about the slightly iffy aspects of this action, too.)

The anti-sweatshop sit-in at the University of North Carolina that began last Thursday is now in its sixth day. About a dozen students spent Monday night outside the university chancellor’s office, and the university has so far made no move to expel them from the building.

Protest organizers have set up a blog where they are providing regular updates on the protest as it develops. That site also includes information on the sit-in’s demands, links to press coverage of the action, a roster of individuals and groups who have endorsed the Designated Suppliers Program campaign, and a series of short profiles of the members of the “occupying force.”

It also features a YouTube video of the university chancellor dancing to the protesters’ chants.

Police seized the cell phones of the nine students arrested in last week’s anti-sweatshop sit-in at the U of Montana, and have yet to return them. 

According to the chief of the UM office of public safety, the phones are evidence — he says “students were using the cell phones, some to take pictures within the building, some to communicate with the rally outside, helping them and facilitating the crime of disorderly conduct.” 

Protesters claim that the seizures were intended to disrupt future protests. Ella Torti, a UM sophomore and one of the nine arrestees, told the local newspaper that she believes that the police are “trying to hinder our ability to organize.”

Historians of American student activism will be familiar with Robert Cohen’s When the Old Left Was Young, a history of the American Student Union of the 1930s, and of the activism that surrounded it. Cohen has put a series of excerpts from that book up on the web, along with about a hundred documents and memoirs of the era.

The site, Activist Impulses: Campus Radicalism in the 1930s, is well worth taking a wander through.

I find this YouTube video of a “Freeze” action at the University of Vermont last Friday interesting for a couple of reasons.

First, I’m fascinated by the connections between contemporary Improv Everywhere style “actions” and pre-internet campus pranks and playfulness, and this blends those traditions in a compelling way.

Second, the freeze commemorated a 1988 administration building takeover — that a protest from that era is what’s being memorialized gives us yet another reminder that today’s activists have far more on their minds than the sixties.

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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.