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On February 27, 1860 Abraham Lincoln made a speech at Cooper Union in the city of New York that is largely responsible for his election to the Presidency. It is now referred to as the Cooper Union Address.
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Israel Castillo Photography
“These events took place in 2023, not 1943,” wrote John Cronan, a U.S. District Court judge for the Southern District of New York, in the de
by Izzy Salant
On Oct. 25, 2023, a little more than two weeks after the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, anti-Israel protesters screamed “free Palestine” and pounded on a door at a Cooper Union library, as Jewish students, including two wearing kippahs, hid within. (JNS sought comment from Cooper Union.)
The private school blamed the Jewish students for gathering “in a prominent place in the library where they could be seen by the demonstrators” and for refusing a recommendation to hide “in the windowless upstairs portion of the library out of the demonstrators’ sight,” per the judge’s decision.
Cooper Union also faulted them for not escaping “the library through the back exit,” he added.
“These events took place in 2023—not 1943—and Title VI places responsibility on colleges and universities to protect their Jewish students from harassment, not on those students to hide themselves away in a proverbial attic or attempt to escape from a place they have a right to be,” the judge said.
“In sum, the physically threatening or humiliating conduct that the complaint alleges Jewish students in the library experienced ‘is entirely outside the ambit of the free speech clause’” and “was objectively severe,” the judge wrote.
“The court is dismayed by Cooper Union’s suggestion that the Jewish students should have hidden upstairs or left the building, or that locking the library doors was enough to discharge its obligations under Title VI,” the judge added.
“The judge was not impressed at Cooper Union’s ‘why couldn’t the Jews just hide in the attic?’ argument,” wrote Jason Bedrick, a Heritage Foundation research fellow.
“The audacity of a university to tell Jewish kids to pound sand as they indulge Islamists and their soft terror tactics on campus,” wrote Marina Medvin, a criminal defense lawyer in Arlington, Va. “The judge who got the case was appalled.”
This Day in History: Abraham Lincoln's Cooper Union Speech
On this day in 1860, Abraham Lincoln gives a speech that would propel him toward the presidency. He wasn’t yet the well-known figure that we think of today. To the contrary, his New York audience was being introduced to him for the first time.
They knew him only as the Illinois lawyer who had engaged in a series of debates with Senator Stephen A. Douglas two years earlier.
“No man ever made such an impression on his first appearance to a New York audience,” the New York Tribune soon concluded.
FULL STORY: https://www.taraross.com/post/tdih-cooper-union-lincoln
Jewish students at Cooper Union College in New York City have been locked inside the library for their own safety. There is a large crowd of anti-Israeli protesters banging on the doors to intimidate them. What going on at U.S. campuses? 🇺🇸🇮🇱pic.twitter.com/JLG4Rq5omG
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) October 25, 2023
H/T @scartale-an-undertale-au
LAST COPY! In This Book Are 12 Original Typefaces... (Type@Cooper)
Available at www.draw-down.com
"A book containing 12 original typefaces designed partly at the @cooperunion and partly in quarantine while protesting racism and police brutality, wearing masks and maintaining 6ft distance during a global pandemic, watching a president be impeached, seeing astronauts launched into orbit, dodging murder hornets, learning about UFOs, working from home, and studying type design at the Type@Cooper Extended Program in 2020."
With type designs by Maxime Gau, Serena Ho, Mike Martins, Sabrina Nacmias, Peter Nowell, Ruben Pineda, Allyn Reiss, Kristin Schultz, Jaimey Sapey, Kevin Smith, Brenan Stetzer, and Luis Valencia.
Typefaces include Match Sans, Oyez, Saramago, Toast, Cantilever, Fortius, Zamler, Trixter, Kent, Fratres, Auteur and Sempiternal.
The specimen includes graphics, comparative layouts, and text about each typeface's intended use and the context for its creation.
Includes an introduction by Peter Nowell
Designed by Maxime Gau and Sabrina Nacmias Set in Work Sans by Wei Huang
Published in a limited edition of 500 copies
Softcover, 104 pages, wire coil binding, 5.625 × 8.75 inches
Looking up 4th Ave. from Astor Place, October 7, 1942. Cooper Union is at the right. Kodachrome slide.
Photo: Charles W. Cushman via Indiana Univ.