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Today is Dr. Seuss’s 105th. I went looking this morning for a quote of his on activism — not something from one of his books — but apparently I’m misremembering it, because Google turns up nothing. So I’ll settle for this one:

Look what we found 
in the park 
in the dark. 
We will take him home. 
We will call him Clark.

He will live at our house. 
He will grow and grow. 
Will our mother like this? 
We don’t know.

I’ve always thought that kind of summed up the craft of historical research.

Feel free to pass along your favorite Seuss quotes (or books!) in comments.

I haven’t yet fully unpacked the politics around Obama’s nomination of Chas Freeman to chair the National Intelligence Council, but though his views on Israel and the Middle East are getting the most attention, my eye was drawn to this email he wrote three years ago on the Chinese government’s handling of Tiananmen Square :

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. I cannot conceive of any American government behaving with the ill-conceived restraint that the Zhao Ziyang administration did in China, allowing students to occupy zones that are the equivalent of the Washington National Mall and Times Square, combined. while shutting down much of the Chinese government’s normal operations. I thus share the hope of the majority in China that no Chinese government will repeat the mistakes of Zhao Ziyang’s dilatory tactics of appeasement in dealing with domestic protesters in China.

The Chinese government reported the death toll of their suppression of the Tiananmen Square protests at 241. Amnesty International estimated that one thousand protesters were killed, and other observers believe that the true number may have been several times that.

I’ve come across three pieces of writing about Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the last couple of weeks, and they’re all worth passing along.

First, an article from the New York Times about the devastating effect that the current economic downturn is having on HBCUs. Second, a personal reminiscence from an HBCU alum. And finally, a response to that reminiscence. The third piece, a short post by Ta-Nehisi Coates of the Atlantic, produced a comment thread that’s well worth reading for its own sake.

 

The folks behind the Take Back NYU protests have come in for a lot of abuse in the last week, and though some of it has been on-target, quite a bit has fallen wide of the mark. I’ll be posting my own take on the occupation itself soon, but before I do that I want to explore a few of the critics’ more telling errors and misstatements. 

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After the jump, excerpts from President Obama’s address to Congress last night on the subject of higher education.

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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.