Daily Egyptian for 10/15/12

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LEFT: Fans cheer as SIU’s football team scores a touchdown during Saturday’s Homecoming game against University of Northern Iowa. Students and alumni created a sea of maroon in the stands by sporting their team colors. The Salukis defeated the Panthers 34-31. LAURA ROBERTS | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Below: The 2012 Homecoming Queen Whitney Clark, left, and King Corbin Doss, right, were crowned Saturday during halftime at the Homecoming game at Saluki Stadium. Last year’s Queen Autumn Anthony, second from left, and King Christopher Shelton, third from left, attended to crown this year’s winners. The student body elected the king and queen through an online voting ballot. CHRIS ZOELLER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

LAURA ROBERTS | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Members of Carbondale Community High School’s Marching Terriers dance to the beat Saturday morning as they proceed down South Illinois Avenue during the university’s annual Homecoming parade. The parade included many floats that showcased this year’s theme, “Let the games begin!” as well as a line up of middle and high school marching bands. Many community members, students and alumni came out for the morning spectacle.

It’s only a matter of time before a company is chosen to build the city’s new fire station. After City Council members approved Tuesday to build a station at 401 N. Glenview Drive, the next step will be to put the project up for bid and hire a construction firm. The station will include an Emergency Operation Center, a training facility and a safe environment among many other features that make it an upgrade from the old station. Kevin Baity, city manager, said project bids will open in late November, which will be awarded

to a company at the Dec. 11 council meeting. Fire chief John Michalesko said the facility on West Walnut and Oakland Avenue was built in the 1960s and is structurally unsafe for earthquakes. “In this case, the building has a number of issues both structural or mechanical that are going to be cost prohibitive when it comes to upgrading and repairing,” Michalesko said. He said the old building has unreinforced masonry walls as well as plumbing and electric systems that do not meet today’s standards. Please see STATION | 3

Douglas Allen was leading protests at SIU 40 years ago and was later fired for his actions. Now, he shares his views on the importance of non-violent action. Allen spoke Thursday at the Gaia House Interfaith Center about using non-violent action such as protesting to improve society. He cited Mohandas Gandhi and his experiences with social movements such as the civil rights movement as inspiration to his philosophies. One such social movement Allen was a part of was the university’s late 1960s Vietnam War protests he helped assemble. “(SIU) was an incredible place to be because this place had the biggest Vietnam Center in the United States,” he said. “It wasn’t just opposing the war, it was how our university … was central to

the war effort.” Allen said he helped conduct research, publish articles and organize anti-war protests, which led him to be illegally fired by the university. He said the case was in the national news, and he eventually won a U.S. Circuit Court case against the university for being removed, though it took several years. Allen said the university suffered after his case because the American Association of University Professors launched an investigation and recommended most teachers avoid working there. He said the Board of Trustees almost considered not firing him. He said the last vote they held on the matter came down to one trustee’s vote. Allen presented the non-violent philosophies he learned from his protesting experience to Gaia House attendees.

“To me, a non-violent approach (to any situation) is more ethical and expresses our higher human potential,” he said. “But we have to explore how to apply it in different context (because) there are no simple non-violent solutions.” Allen also said he thought political and war violence takes people in the wrong direction. “Our present violent ways of doing things are not sustainable,” he said. “They are not economically sustainable. They are not environmentally sustainable. So we have to look for alternatives, even just practical (alternatives).” Allen said he uses non-violent methods becasue he enjoys what they accomplish. “When I act in a non-violent way ... I feel better about myself,” he said. “I feel like my life has more meaning.” Please see ALLEN | 3


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