Occupy protesters acted in the Halloween spirit Monday.
Students dressed as zombies staged a “die-in” at Krentzman Quad. Frank Marino, a junior human services and international affairs major with a focus on activism and an organizer of the Occupy Boston protests at Northeastern, said the demonstration was to represent the “ethically dead 1 percent,” as well as the American dream and “true” democracy. Marino and other students then held a mock funeral and a “resurrection,” where they proceeded to march throughout campus and the city.
The scene looks like something out of a 1960s peace march. Hundreds of people, many of them young students, swarm the street carrying homemade cardboard signs and chanting out slogans. Peace signs flash from the crowd. Police officers stand on watch, alert for the kind of trouble they have witnessed in recent weeks. This sight, however, is not from a civil rights demonstration or an anti-Vietnam war protest from days past – it describes the scene of downtown Boston near Dewey Square during protests and other cities around the world with Occupy movements alike.
Some have drawn comparisons between the flavor of the rallies of the 1960s and ’70s and today’s Occupy Wall Street protests, including Oklahoma Senator Josh Brecheen.
Some reporters have drawn comparisons between Occupy Wall Street and the recent uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. Even the protesters themselves list Arab Spring revolutions as inspiration on their website. With the Occupy movements in their seventh week, the comparison continues to gain significant backing.
No two universities’ Greek lives are the same. With only one fraternity house still standing, Northeastern’s is especially unique.
Fraternity houses at NU were extremely prevalent in the past, but have disappeared over time, according to retired sociology professor Wilfred Holton. The exception is the Beta Gamma Epsilon chapter, which has the only officially licensed fraternity house at Northeastern, located on Commonwealth Avenue.
With tuition debts in the United States at an all-time high, American students have taken to the streets.
They are not resorting to violence, but they are occupying their cities and calling for change.
By Erica Thompson, News Staff
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News Graphic/Adam Sandore
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A city within a city has been constructed in downtown Boston.
Since pitching tents Friday night, Occupy Boston has taken over Dewey Square, serving as a self-sufficient city of protest.
The on-going leaderless initiative, inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement that began in New York Sept. 17, is fighting unemployment and corporate influence in politics.
By Angel Feliciano
Several well-known authors are scheduled to come to the Boston Public Library (BPL) throughout October to talk about their work on topics ranging from “economics to environmentalism and from personal tales to local history,” according to the...
By Sarah Henry
Mayor Thomas M. Menino is continuing his crusade against harmful health habits in Boston with the recent launch of a public awareness campaign against sugary drinks. The campaign, which was unveiled Sept. 6, was designed to convince residents to reduce their...