zombies! hi
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thursday
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april 15, 2010
t h e i n de pe n de n t s t u de n t n e w spa pe r of s y r acuse , n e w yor k
INSIDenews
I N S I D e o p ini o n
INSIDesports
INSIDEpulp
Quiet riot Students support the LGBT
You will be drunk Courtney Egelston
Second time around Sports is inside today, as The Daily Orange
The more the merrier “Humans vs. Zombies” game
community by staying silent for a day. Page 3
discusses the EuclidWalnut controversy of MayFest. Page 5
sports staff has all you need for Doug Marrone’s second spring game at the helm. Page 13
further infects campus as student interest gains. Page 28
commencement 2010
football
Detectives question 2 SU players
Common concern Protests against Dimon not unordinary, speakers criticized in the past
By Rebecca Kheel and Conor Orr The Daily Orange
By Brittney Davies
P
Copy Editor
rotesters paraded down the street outside the Carrier Dome on May 9, 1981, the day of the Carrier Dome’s inaugural commencement. Some wore costumes, others held signs, a few carried a cardboard coffin. Two of the protesters were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct, according to Summer Orange records, The Daily Orange’s former summer edition. Inside the Dome, hundreds wore armbands that students distributed with commencement gowns. About 150 to 200 students turned their backs to the stage. A similar number of students walked out during the speech. And in the midst of it all, about 20 protesters dressed as bleeding nuns and fascists stood in Section 103 of the Dome pointing down below, according to Summer Orange records. The commotion was in response to then-Syracuse University Chancellor Melvin Eggers’ commencement speaker choice of Alexander Haig Jr. Haig was the current secretary of state, White House chief of staff during the Nixon administration and former commander of NATO. Backlash erupted mere days after the announcement because of international controversy regard-
see commencement page 12
jenna ketchmark | asst. photo editor Emily gagliardi , a senior international relations major, makes a sign for Friday’s protest against commencement speaker and chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Jamie Dimon. The protest is at 4 p.m. Friday on the Quad.
Dimon plans to deliver graduation address despite protests By Kathleen Ronayne Asst. News Editor
Jamie Dimon said he still plans to deliver the 2010 commencement speech to Syracuse University and State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry students on May 16, according to an article on Bloomberg.com. Dimon, chief executive officer of
JPMorgan Chase & Co., answered questions regarding SU students’ protests in a conference call with a group of reporters Wednesday. The call was originally intended for Dimon to report the company’s firstquarter earnings. “I gather that this was a group of students who made the selection, but I also completely understand
that some people may be opposed to it,” Dimon told reporters from Bloomberg during the call. “People should stand up for what they believe in. I applaud that some folks there want to stand up for something different.” A group of SU students began protesting the choice of Dimon as commencement speaker after the uni-
versity’s announcement on March 25. The group still plans to protest its concerns on the Quad on Friday and through student petitions, said Ashley Owen, one of the students leading the movement. “It’s not like we are trying to silence him and limit his freedom of speech,” she said. “It’s all about time,
see dimon page 6
Syracuse football players Delone Carter and Ryan Gillum missed practice today and were questioned by police, SU head coach Doug Marrone said in a postpractice media opportunity. “Detectives came into my office and asked to question Delone Carter and Ryan Gillum,” carter Marrone said. “That’s all I know about it. It happened right before the team meeting. So that’s why they weren’t at practice today.” Attempts to gillum reach Carter at his South Campus apartment Wednesday were unsuccessful. Carter did not answer the door or was not home. Marrone said that he was approached by police at roughly 2:20 p.m. Wednesday and asked if the players could be questioned by detectives. Neither Carter nor Gillum were available for comment following Wednesday’s practice. The coach said the detectives did not tell him why they were being questioned and did not know if they were taken into custody. Syracuse police are in the process of questioning two SU students in relation to an assault that happened roughly a month ago, said Sgt. Gary Bulinski of the Syracuse Police Department. Bulinski said he could not confirm the names of the students SPD has talked to, as it may be intersee detectives page 8