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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Cornell and the Spring of 1969 revisited Review: Cornell campus events in April 1969 ran beyond the power of university administrators to manage them. The world witnessed the decline of docile, gentle student behavior, managed by old white men in tweed coats. Students found new, forceful ways to express themselves, and opened an era of campus struggles.Downs demonstrates that students know enough to know they don't want to learn some of the things that there teachers are teaching, yet they are also young and naive enough to stumble about agressively and sometimes irrationally for a solution. And the senior professors, save a few stalwarts, had no capacity to deal with this new breed of students. Based on Cornell's desire to "do good", to promote social justice, to provide meaningful educational opportunities, and to add diversity (before there was such a common, abused term on American campuses), the Trustees approved a plan to enroll disenfranchised students from urban areas at their bucolic campus. Cornell was Ivy League, yes, but more rural than sophisticated, more agricultural than urbane. Cornell was to provide a strange environment for a noble experiment. Did it work? After the takeover of the administration building by armed students, most Americans never looked at university education the same way again. Meticulous archival research of previously unsurfaced or unpublished records brings life and details to a college's uncomfortable history.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: I was there Review: I was a junior at Cornell in April, 1969, and only after having read this book did I really understand what events happened that weekend. I'm not sure I understand even now what the significance of those events has been, but this book has put my own history in perspective for me, along with Cornell's.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: I'm Here Now (Class of '02) Review: The dust cover picture of armed students leaving Cornell's Straight Hall in April 1969 tells a story close to my heart in time and geography. Downs' wonderful study of student power shows the inevitable problems that emerged when well-intentioned university liberals surrendered their fundamental academic principles in the name of compassion. Downs illustrates the unintended consequences of affirmative action, from students who did not want so much to learn from the institution...they wanted to radically change the institution. The students understood politics, public relations and the power of the "big lie". While they may not have been competent to lead Cornell through needed change, Downs makes it clear that neither was the Cornell administration ready or able to manage change. Once the violent takeover began, what little control President Perkins had was lost. The subsequent finger-pointing and resignations were unavoidable. Yet questions remain: Was it institutional racism fostered by a priest or political correctness that set off the furor? Who burned the cross in front of the African-American residence hall? Did the administration have a hand in the fraternity "counterattack" on Straight? Was this a spontaneous act out of frustration by African-American students or an SDS plot to radically reform Cornell? After it was over, did Cornell learn any lessons? I could not put it down. A must read for baby boomers, especially those intent on understanding events that formed the ideology of those in the White House today.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: I'm Here Now (Class of '02) Review: The reason I came to Cornell was because not only was it prestigious, but also large enough to be truly diverse. It has always been political, but political in both directions. In the Straight, stacks of the ultra-liberal "Progressive" sit next to the reactionary "Review". But what I think bears remembering is that we didn't lose anything by becoming "politically correct". We are free to abhorr violence no matter what our political leaning, but to question the human worth of others is never acceptable.
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