Difference between revisions of "Nicholas de Genova"
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While an undergraduate at the [[University of Chicago]], he apparently was a "orthodox Marxist", frequently wore a "pea-green trench coat", badgered students he didn't agree with, and prided himself on attending Communist Party meetings on Chicago's south side.<ref>[http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/oped/moore/03/chicago.html "More Than a Million Mogadishus, We Need One Good Chicago"], 4/2003, Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs at Ashland University</ref> Which goes to show you that not all [[ISO]] people become failures in life; some become academics. | While an undergraduate at the [[University of Chicago]], he apparently was a "orthodox Marxist", frequently wore a "pea-green trench coat", badgered students he didn't agree with, and prided himself on attending Communist Party meetings on Chicago's south side.<ref>[http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/oped/moore/03/chicago.html "More Than a Million Mogadishus, We Need One Good Chicago"], 4/2003, Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs at Ashland University</ref> Which goes to show you that not all [[ISO]] people become failures in life; some become academics. | ||
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+ | Conservative [[David Horowitz]] named him one of the "101 most dangerous" professors in America. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 01:41, 16 October 2007
- See also Wikipedia's article about "Nicholas de Genova".
- See also Nicholas de Genova's entry in Columbia's directory.
Nicholas de Genova is a controversial anthropology prof who wished "a million Mogadishus" upon U.S. troops during a 2003 teach-in to protest the Iraq War.
While an undergraduate at the University of Chicago, he apparently was a "orthodox Marxist", frequently wore a "pea-green trench coat", badgered students he didn't agree with, and prided himself on attending Communist Party meetings on Chicago's south side.[1] Which goes to show you that not all ISO people become failures in life; some become academics.
Conservative David Horowitz named him one of the "101 most dangerous" professors in America.
See also
References
- ↑ "More Than a Million Mogadishus, We Need One Good Chicago", 4/2003, Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs at Ashland University