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Friday,
September 21, 2001
Students
rally against violence
By Jay Lindsay
Associated Press
Students
staged peace rallies at campuses around the country Thursday
and called for nonviolent justice not revenge
for those responsible for last weeks terrorist attacks.
Nerds
Against War, read one of the student-made signs at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. War Is Also Terrorism,
proclaimed another sign made by Harvard University students.
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Jim
Barcus/KANSAS CITY STAR (KRT Campus)
Georgetown
University students hold a peaceful, silent protest
on the college campus Thursday to bring awareness
to a peaceful process against last weeks terrorist
attacks.
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Several
hundred students gathered at Harvard Yard for the midday rally.
From the library steps, organizers pleaded for peace through
a bullhorn.
In
denouncing the terrorist attacks, we as a nation must not
forget that while we have been grievously wronged, it will
do us no good to wrong others in return, said Alisa
Khan, 17, of Herndon, Va., who described herself as a Muslim
and an American.
Rallies
were planned at more than 100 campuses, including the University
of California-Berkeley and Wesleyan University, in what was
being billed as a national day
of action to stop a war.
In
Rhode Island, students at Brown University used rap music,
poetry and song and dance to speak out against violence and
express anger over the way the media have covered the incident.
At
Boston College, about 150 students held a peaceful rally
but all visitors and media were kept away because the campus
was shut down to anyone but students, faculty and staff.
We
wanted the students to have an opportunity to host their rally
free from any security concerns that the result from outsiders
coming on campus, said spokesman Jack Dunn.
In
Amherst, the communitys five colleges issued a joint
statement imploring the U.S. government to seek justice in
a way that honors humanity, including through the resources
of the national and international legal systems. The
statement was signed by the directors of Amherst, Hampshire,
Mount Holyoke and Smith Colleges and the University of Massachusetts.
Not
everyone favored a peaceful resolution.
Tom
Lancaster, 24, of Somerville, Mass., stood on the fringe of
the Green holding Support America signs and engaged
in lively debate with some of the students wearing peace signs
on their shirts. He thinks the United States has been patient
enough.
I
think weve tried it their way, said Lancaster,
a graduate student in chemical engineering.
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