November 2, 2011

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november 2, 2011

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

INSIDEOPINION

INSIDEPULP

INSIDESPORTS

Night owl Colleges across the United

Join the club The Daily Orange Editorial

Dethroned Danny Fersh reprimands

Starting strong Behind the interior presences of Fab Melo and

States are beginning to implement midnight classes for working students. Page 3

Board comments on SU’s entrance into the 50K tuition club. Page 5

those responsible for his rejection by the Homecoming Court selection committee. Page 7

Baye Moussa Keita, Syracuse defeats Cal State-Los Angeles by 30 points in its first exhibition game of the 2011-12 season. Page 16

SYRACUSE CITY ELECTIONS 2011

Councilor candidates debate jobs, education By Nick Cardona STAFF WRITER

Candidates for the 4th District Common Council seat went head-to-head Tuesday night. The candidates, Khalid Bey and Howie Hawkins, spoke in front of about two dozen people at Syracuse University and will face off on Nov. 8. Bey, the Democratic candidate, touched on numerous issues that have affected his community throughout his life, both as a Syracuse resident and a political activist. Bey focused on the relationship between the community and its elected officials during the debate at 6 p.m. in Watson Theater. Hawkins, a longtime community activist, focused his side of the debate

“The main goal is to get SU students involved in the process and to eventually vote in November.” Mallory Lang

INTERN FOR THE NEW YORK PUBLIC INTEREST GROUP

on the economy and how the rich can help by paying their “fair share” — a term that was echoed throughout the debate from the Green Party candidate. The lack of city-funded jobs for Syracuse citizens was one of the topics the candidates discussed. The main initiative people need to take is to get their name out there, be proactive and get involved, Hawkins said. In relation to SU, Hawkins said students need to bring their skills into the community and be able to assist in their specific field. Bey said people, especially SU students, need to find what type of jobs are in demand in the area. Bey said he believes there is a lack of knowledge facing the public about what the job market is really about. SU students have to blend into the community if they really want to get involved with the public, he said. When discussing education, the two candidates disagreed about where to get the money to fund the school system. “I know where the money is, the rich have it,” Hawkins said. In comparison, Bey said citizens have to be “cautious of painting a picture that cannot be delivered.”

SEE DEBATE PAGE 4

chris griffin | staff photographer KHALID BEY, the Democratic candidate for 4th District Common Council, talks during a debate in Watson Theater on Tuesday night. Bey stressed the relationship between the community and its elected officials.

mary wagner | staff photographer HOWIE HAWKINS, the Green Party candidate for 4th District Common Council, addresses nearly two dozen people Tuesday. Hawkins focused on the economy and how the rich can help by paying their share.

Hancock 38 trials begin following April arrests, defendants arraigned By Peter Wayner CONTRIBUTING WRITER

A group of defendants known as the Hancock 38 began a series of trials at the DeWitt Town Court on Tuesday evening. The protesters, many who are senior citizens, were arrested in April for lying across the entrance of Hancock Air National Guard Base in Mattydale. Approximately 30 of the original 38 will stand trial. “There shouldn’t be a trial. We

should not have been arrested,” said Ed Kinane, a defendant and 1967 graduate of Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. “We were involved in behavior protected by the First Amendment.” Those arrested were protesting the MQ-9 Reaper drones remotely piloted from Hancock. They wrapped themselves in red-spattered sheets and lay down, blocking the gate to rep-

resent innocent civilians killed by the unmanned intelligence and armed aircraft, according to an article published in The Post-Standard on April 22. Kinane said the issue is personal for him, as he is a Syracuse resident. “It’s our tax money that’s supporting this, it’s being done in our name, it’s generating enormous amounts of ill will against the United States, which threatens the safety of all of

us,” he said. “Right here in central New York, in effect, we’re within the war zone.” Tuesday’s trial was preceded by demonstrations at the U.S. Attorney’s Office on South Clinton Street and at Hancock. At the Attorney’s Office, a scene including a scale model drone and several protesters pretending to be dead innocents and freshly enraged al-Qaeda trainees. Signs at the air

base read, “Drones=Terrorism,” and “What if They Used Drones on Us?” Retired Army Col. Ann Wright of Honolulu helped with the demonstrations. She retired from her 29-year military career in 2003 as a reaction against the U.S. invasion of Iraq. She worries about what blowback could come from using drones. “What goes around comes around,” she said. “I think that

SEE DRONE PAGE 6


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