The Independent:

Cooper Union in the USA was founded to offer ‘education equal to the best’ while staying ‘open and free to all’ – but this ideal is under threat from new management. This is the story of the students’ battle to keep their institution true to itself
Looking out over Manhatten, the occupiers at Cooper Union seem to have a pretty good setup. With the college president’s office now occupied for eight weeks, the protestors have made themselves into the school’s alternative administration.
Alumni have made key campaigners plaques for their desks, and the entrance to the space, formerly a reception area, now shows a proportion of the artwork and installations that the campaign has inspired. The message that education is a public good, and that it should be available to all regardless of finances, rings loud and true.
Cooper Union, founded in 1859 by Peter Cooper, was created to ensure that ‘education equal to the best’ was, and is, ‘open and free to all’. The university at present provides a full tuition scholarship to all its students, ensuring that at least in principle, the opportunity to study in the institution is not hindered by race, class or wealth. This ideal is core to both the campaign currently taking place, and also the beliefs of all those who I met during my time in New York.