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Students hold quad protest in Occupy solidarity

A handful of students weathered a brief flurry of snow yesterday during a four-hour Occupy the Quad demonstration. The demonstration was an attempt to gain momentum for the Occupy movement on campus, even after the group was denied RSO status by ORCSA.

A handful of students weathered a brief flurry of snow yesterday during a four-hour Occupy the Quad demonstration. The demonstration was an attempt to gain momentum for the Occupy movement on campus, even after the group was denied RSO status by ORCSA.

The event, organized by U of C students involved with the Occupy Chicago movement, preludes Occupy Hyde Park, an upcoming mass protest of the University’s Condoleezza Rice and Henry Paulson talk next Monday night.

The event was meant to raise awareness of student involvement in the Occupy movement, organizers said. Demonstrators chanted popular protest slogans, exhibited the use of the “human microphone,” and held a mock General Assembly meeting—mainstays of the Occupy protests around the country.

Photo: Darren Leow
About 20 people gathered on the main quad for an Occupy the Quad event Thursday afternoon.
“The thing is, it’s a long trip from here to downtown. I make it because I know what it is, but I understand people who don’t know what’s going on might not make the entire trip. So we wanted to make our presence known and try to get people involved who might not be otherwise confronted by it,” social sciences graduate student and Occupy the Quad organizer Kyla Bourne said.

UChicago Occupy listhost administrator and Social Service Administration graduate student Doug Stalnos said he was pleased with the turnout, despite the weather.

“Even if it seems slow, events like this really foster momentum. It’s only going to speed up again. We’re focusing our attention to Monday,” Stalnos said.

While the goal was to reach out to those who were curious to learn more about Occupy, students traversing the quad had a wide range of responses, social sciences graduate student and event organizer Zeshan Aleem said, with some speaking out supportively and others downright hostile.

“The hostility manifests only as people smirking or laughing. I’d be like, ‘Are you interested in Occupy Chicago?’ and they’d say, ‘Interested in shutting it down’—snide stuff, but nothing more,” Alean said.

Currently, UChicago Occupy meets weekly to discuss campus activity with varying attendance. The group’s attempt at becoming an official RSO was denied by ORSCA, history Ph.D. student Guy Mount said, on “the grounds that they believe that the Occupy movement was a ‘temporary political movement and that was not sustainable.’”

ORSCA recommended that UChicago Occupy piggyback with other activist organizations instead.

“Well, you didn’t tell the karate club that they should work with the aikido club because it’s basically the same kind of thing,” Mount, who handled the group’s RSO application, said. “So the Zombie Task Awareness Force has RSO status and we don’t qualify?”

3 comments on “Students hold quad protest in Occupy solidarity

  1. reply

    You’re right Mr Mount, they don’t tell the karate club to work with the aikido club, because karate is not just a passing trend in social activism. Further, as much as I despise the Zombie vs Humans crap on campus, a great number of my peers seem to enjoy. Since we all pay for RSO funding with our student activities fee, it seems as if those things which many people like to be involved in should take precedence. By the way, do Ph.D students pay a student activity fee?

  2. reply

    “The event, organized by U of C students involved with the Occupy Chicago movement, preludes Occupy Hyde Park, an upcoming mass protest of the University’s Condoleezza Rice and Henry Paulson talk next Monday night.”

    So, are they protesting the fact that these two people will speak on Monday, or just using the occasion to schedule a protest?

  3. reply

    I count 16 in the photo. 2 more and you could have a nine vs nine softball game. That would probably be a better use of your time. If so, you could use the human microphone as a unique way to announce the next batter, or to call balls and strikes. You may be on to something actually relevant if you did.

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