Vol. 105 Issue 83
@thepittnews
Pittnews.com
Friday, December 5, 2014
Christina Lim | Staff Photographer
Theo Schwarz | Visual Editor
Left- Students lie on the ground for four and a half minutes at Towers Patio to commemorate the four and a half hours Michael Brown spent on the ground. Right- Sevin Hunnid raises a finger to the chant “not one more” during a protest downtown.
A city in solidarity
Harrison Kaminsky Assistant News Editor Protests on Pitt’s campus continued Thursday afternoon, as students gathered in Towers lobby to organize a die-in to raise awareness for those who have died in police-related incidents. At 12:45 p.m., students trailed from Towers lobby to the Fifth Avenue side of Towers patio. They then laid down on the patio in silence for four-and-a-half minutes. Roughly 100 students attended the protest, said Pitt spokesman John Fedele. Organizers of the protest refused to speak
with The Pitt News. Police monitored the protest but did not interfere, allowing for a peaceful expression of students’ First Amendment rights, Fedele said. “It’s the way freedom of expression is supposed to work in this country,” he said. Students chanted, “No justice, no peace, no racist police,” and “We can’t breathe,” as they held signs on the patio. Before dispersing at approximately 1:12 p.m., protest organizers spoke to the crowd through a megaphone, announcing that another protest will occur Friday at 5 p.m. in Schenley Plaza.
Protests flared up again Thursday night as roughly 20 students marched down Forbes and Fifth avenues chanting, “Hands up, don’t shoot.” The protest ended in Schenley Plaza following a moment of silence. Police again monitored the protest but did not interfere, following behind the marching students in Pitt police cars. Earlier in the afternoon, dozens marched Downtown protesting the verdict in the Eric Holmes case in New York City, in which a police officer who killed Holmes using a chokehold
Protest
3
Battle of the Consol Center Pitt looks to City Game
page 7