Not yet 17, I disobeyed my parents and drove to the police barricades at the far end of Osage Avenue after nightfall, as close as I could get to the bombing – I needed to see it with my own two eyes. The overwhelming memory I carried away with me, though, was olfactory, and not visual: I promise you that nobody within a five-mile radius of West Philadelphia that night will ever quite be able to get the smell of that murder out of their nostrils. It’s 38 years gone by and it feels like yesterday.
@adamgreenfield And don’t forget how they took the bones of those children and put them on display in anthropology courses, without the parents’ permission. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/22/move-bombing-black-children-bones-philadelphia-princeton-pennsylvania
Bones of Black children killed in police bombing used in Ivy League anthropology course

Remains of those killed in 1985 Move bombing in Philadelphia serve as ‘case study’ in Princeton-backed course

The Guardian

@stopthatgirl7 @adamgreenfield

Adventures in forensic anthropology course… Reality bleaker than anything you could imagine.

While there are numerous exceptions - there is something about elite universities that seems to bring out academics inner asshole.