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Northeastern students warned to stay indoors Sunday night or face arrest

UPDATE: Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis says memo is misleading; people can't be arrested just for being outside; a Northeastern official agrees. More in the comments.

Residents of at least a couple of Northeastern dorms got a warning tonight from college Residential Life: Don't even think about going outside during or after the Super Bowl:

The anxiety around the city - stay inside! When Boston sports teams were in previous championships, people took to the streets. Some were just walking around to hug or high-five other excited Bostonians, some were cheering – but there was also significant rioting and excessive consumption of alcohol/drugs. This was true surrounding Boston college campuses as well. Near Fenway Park, a college student died tragically during a riot following the World Series in 2004. As a result, the Boston and Northeastern University Police Departments have asked us to keep people inside as much as possible. We don't believe that NU students will behave that way, but do we want you to be safe - being swept into such a crowd is dangerous because you don't have control of the decisions of others and the mood of the crowd can turn without warning. If you do choose to go outside during or after the Superbowl, know that you will likely be questioned and directed to go somewhere indoors as quickly as possible. If you refuse, you are subject to immediate arrest. Since an arrest could have serious consequences with OSCCR, for co-ops & jobs you apply for later, and your visa status if you are an international student ...just stay inside!

The school will be hosting Super Bowl parties for students at various locations on campus.

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Comments

As an alternative to the Blackout thing tomorrow night, students can pick up coupons for dinner at the Uno's on Huntington and Gainsborough for which the chain will donate 20% of the student's tab to the Boston Area Rape Crisis Center. Or they can go to a session at which the Violence Support, Intervention and Outreach Network at Northeastern "will engage students in a dialogue with faculty and staff focusing on providing prevention, response and education for sexual assault and all types of violence, for Northeastern students."

Also:

Consider that the recent debate has become very polarizing. The opinions you choose to share and how you choose to share them could have a serious & detrimental effect on your friends and our community. Understand that some expressions of those opinions or interactions you have with others, especially given that the debate centers around issues of gender & sexual orientation, may be responded to under our bias-related incident protocol if they contribute to a hostile or intimidating environment. This includes all sorts of interactions – including those online or by text message. If you have questions or concerns or believe you have witnessed or experienced something that may be bias-related, please respond if you feel comfortable & always contact a staff member promptly.

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"If you do choose to go outside during or after the Superbowl, know that you will likely be questioned and directed to go somewhere indoors as quickly as possible. If you refuse, you are subject to immediate arrest. "

WTF...

look i understand rioting, but this just seems straight f'ed up.

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what sucks, is that it probably is. Because Northeastern is a private university, they can basically do whatever the fuck they want to you as long as you are on school property. so if they want to enforce some bullshit trying to reduce rioting/drinking, they can.

my recommendation, watch the game as far away from campus as possible. Can't do shit if you arent on campus.

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Steve Annear at the Metro tweets:

Police comm. Ed davis says #northeastern notice is misleading. People can't get arrested just for going outside, he said.

Annear adds, however, BPD will be out in force Sunday night, and will have extensive video monitoring - including from a helicopter - to catch any ne'er-do-wells.

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Not true. NU alumn here-- I was at a party, off-campus, that was broken up by the police. No one was arrested, yet I still had to go to OSCCR.

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Were you underage? Did they kick you out or just give a warning?

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I've seen reports in the Huntington News of students who are drinking at bars off-campus and are of age and got reported to OSCCR for being drunk in public.

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The Huntington News reports:

Renata Nyul, Northeastern's director of communications, said in an interview Thursday that the RD had misinterpreted information from her superiors. "We do not arrest people simply for going outside," she said.

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Telling them they can't go outside because cops will tell them to go back inside?

Is that even legal for them to do? Can they actually prevent students from leaving their residence halls to go to work or to the library or grocery shopping or grandma's house or any number of other places they might want to go that don't involve drunken crowds?

Mind you, I don't actually think police are going to be stopping individuals walking to work or to do an errand, but in that case, why not actually be realistic and respectful and tell them "we recommend that you don't participate in drunkenness and/or congregating in mobs" instead of acting like they're all on house arrest on what for many people is just another day?

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I think you're misinterpreting the email. Nowhere there does it say that you're forced to stay inside, in fact it specifically says "if you choose to go outside."

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And are stopped by police and then refuse to go inside, you could be arrested and if you're a foreign student, face deportation. Kind of a fine line there.

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You're not even a student there, but just happen to be walking across campus on your way somewhere else? I may have to make it a point to walk to a rehearsal I have that night, which happens to be in a place that I might plausibly cross Northeastern to get to from my house.

Or maybe not, because I don't particularly want to face drunken revelers/mourners either.

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Because if El Prez read this, he'd make his usual great point about how school administrators don't live in reality. What part of "18 years old" eludes these people? Serious question.

Also, classy move by Uno to donate to the anti-rape charity. Also, for anybody who chose to debase me in the comments on the last Barstool item on UH: Do YOU know Dave personally? If not, why pass judgment on me for defending him?

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Agree that in a normal world this would be silly. But we live in a society where every injury sparks litigation (at least every injury to someone with access to the civil justice system). Thus we get reactive foolishness like this.

Fast-forward to Sunday night. NU student goes outside to join in the revelry. Car gets turned over on student's leg. Student sues fellow rioters, car owner, Toyota, the City of Boston, and of course NU. NU now has a good defense - Hey, we told student it'd be dangerous and to stay inside! NU can settle for $5,000 instead of $50,000.

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Agree that in a normal world this would be silly. But we live in a society where every injury sparks litigation (at least every injury to someone with access to the civil justice system).

FACTS AND STATISTICS PLEASE

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Is that quote hyperbolic? Yes, but:

1. I'm talking about the impressions of risk management and in-house legal counsel, who influence - directly or indirectly - the decision to distribute hand-holding disclaimers and warnings like this. And yes, some of these people are Democrats.

2. In 2004, a young woman sadly lost her life after the Sox WS win. It cost the City $5.1 million. If I think sending out this letter can save my institution from footing that bill, then I'm sending it. Cold, callous, calculating, but that's how it works.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Victoria_Sne...

3. Subscribe to the Courtroom News Service and see the stream of lawsuits, both serious and ludicrous, that get filed every day.

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Check your facts!

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BECAUSE WE FUCKING SAID SO, MOVE ALONG CITIZEN!

IMAGE(http://www.occupythegame.com/pepper_spray_cop.jpg)

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And this sounds like it is coming from residential life and not the City. NU can tell their students to do whatever they want on their property I assume.

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Where does it say in that vague statement that this rule is confined to campus? It seems to have been left intentionally vague to at least imply it was citywide. Further, what exactly is the Northeastern campus? There are numerous public roads (with public sidewalks) that run through campus, could they be subject to this sort of campus curfew?

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That the NU police will beef up patrols and enforce drinking laws more than they normally do. This happens on Marathon day in areas where they have had problems in the past.

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Don't they just say that?

This sounds like they are putting the entire campus under house arrest because a handful of students in the past, many of whom are not even at NU any more, got drunk and caused problems.

1984 meets helicopter parenting.

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I don't think NU can hold students against their will like that, even if it's on their private property. However, I would be surprised if this was a message coming from the school administrators. It's more likely that this was sent by an overzealous RA or maybe an RD who don't have their facts entirely straight.

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This might be news to you but just because you're on private property doesn't mean you can take prisoners.

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Since the NUPD can arrest people on their own property for tresspassing with a notice to said tresspasser. If an NU cop tells you to move off of NU property and you refuse? You can legally be arrested but the NU police.

Sidewalks, public ways, streets, etc are different.

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Remember, the memo was clearly stating that you would be arrested for being outside (still, no mention of whether this was confined to campus or not) but if it were confined to campus, it would only include private walkways on the NU campus and none of the public roads and sidewalks that run through campus, thats a pretty small area to say you can't be. Since this memo also doesn't specifically mention trespassing, wouldn't you need to be warned first and asked to leave NU property before you can be arrested for trespassing?

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That just means if the student is on NU property then they can leave the property by going to the sidewalk. This letter states that if they attempt to do that, they'll be arrested. Inappropriate.

Pete, don't feel like you need to defend this letter just because it's giving NUPD and BPD credit for more power than they legally have. It's okay for NU's administration to just be flat wrong about this one.

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since it isn't really clear what they mean, and there isn't too much they can do.

If NU cops see drunk or rowdy NU students walking across campus, the NU cops are going to stop them and ask them where they are going and check if they are students. If they are doing something illegal (drinking, possessing underage, drunk disorderly) they might be cited/arrested unless they go back to their dorm and do whatever they want in the dorm.

As far as the BPD? They can enforce the drinking laws or disorderly laws if people are blocking traffic etc. They might try to do this before the streets become uncontrollable and unsafe for every one.

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Why don't they just say that?

Heightened security is warranted. Penalties for drunks causing trouble is warranted.

Threatening students with arrest and extreme penalties if they so much as dare to leave their dorms is completely ridiculous.

If they think that parents who are looking into colleges with their students don't see these things, either, they are crazy.

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That's all I can think of.

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It is clear from this "poor writing" to anybody not looking really hard and long for sanity "between the lines" that NU intends to arrest people who go outside. Period.

I suspect this will also be the interpretation when I put this up on some discussion sites for parents of students looking at colleges.

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Arresting trespassers is not taking prisoners. You can use reasonable force to eject trespassers from your private property. You can't hold them in your house.

The only real thing NU can do is kick the kids out of school. That is the essence of their authority here. They set a curfew, you don't follow it, you are disciplined up to expulsion.

And as you mention, since they don't own the streets, I'm not sure how they can enforce their curfew. I'm a NU alum, maybe I'll go to the public ways of NU campus to celebrate. They got nothin' on me...

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Students living in Northeastern housing have a contract stating that they are paying for the use of a room and must abide by certain rules, but this doesn't include curfews or anything like that. The police can't just randomly tell someone they can't leave a building unless there's an actual situation like an armed person running around or something. People have the right to go to work, visit relatives, etc. Or just freakin walk around if they aren't bothering anyone.

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The girl who died in the World Series riots was shot square in the chest by a cop with a bean bag gun. She died from her resulting injuries. The cop was never brought up on disciplinary charges.

EE '06

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If she were hit in the chest, she'd probably be alive. She was hit in the eye. The officer in question was suspended for 45 days, two other officers were also suspended, a captain was demoted and the city made a $5 million payment to her family. Wikipedia is your friend.

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Maybe Northeastern can warn cops not to indiscriminately fire rubber bullets or beanbag rounds into students' faces as well. That would cover all pre-Super Bowl bases.

Brings up a valid question, though. Considering this is Northeastern, which victory would put more students in the streets: Giants or Pats? Tons of NY/NJ students at that school.

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It wasn't a bean-bag gun. It was an FN-303 pellet gun firing pepper spray containing rounds. A few years ago, BPD disposed of them due to the Snelgrove incident.

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The cops WERE given disciplinary charges against them.

City of Boston press release (Sept 2005):

One of the leads of that night's operations: Superintendent James Claiborne is demoted from Superintendent to his civil service rank of Captain.

The officer who fired the FN-303 that struck Snelgrove: Officer Milien has agreed to accept a ninety (90) day suspension, and will serve forty-five of the days. The remaining forty-five (45) days will be held in abeyance for a period of one (1) year. In addition, Officer Milien is required to participate in re-training regarding the use of force. Officer Milien will also transfer out of the Special Operations Division.

Another officer who fired as many as 12 pellets at close range at an injured man in the crowd: Officer Silta has agreed to accept a ninety (90) day suspension, and will serve forty-five (45) of the days. The remaining forty-five (45) days will be held in abeyance for a period of one (1) year. In addition, Officer Silta is required to participate in re-training regarding the use of force. Officer Silta will also transfer out of the Special Operations Division.

The officer who improperly trained other officers on the use of the FN-303: Sergeant Flynn has agreed to accept a ten (10) day suspension, and will serve five (5) of the days. The remaining five (5) days will be held in abeyance for a period of one (1) year.

Two officers who did not secure the scene afterwards correctly: Sergeant Cataldo has agreed to accept a written reprimand. Officer Gallagher has agreed to accept a written reprimand.

Finally, she died after the 2004 ALCS win in Game 7 against the Yankees...not the World Series.

So, about the only thing you got right was her sex and that she died.

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I remember when it happened. It was all over the news for a good while.

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google James Grabowski.

He died the night of the Patriot's win in Superbowl 38.

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The girl was shot through her glasses and in/through the eye. Without warning, BPD opened up with rubber bullets, aiming high on the crowd. I got hit in the jaw myself. These were NOT beanbag rounds. The crowd was not doing anything but milling about celebrating at the time. The police had no valid reason to start shooting. Said action provoked the crowd to a fervor and they struck back against the police, hurling whatever wasn't welded down in there general direction. A lot of folks who were there feel this police brutality was the nexus that caused the riots that year, as anyone who was there can attest a lot of the violence was directed AT the police. And for good reason. I will never trust the police again after going through what I went through and seeing what I saw over that week, stomping 100lb women to the ground, firing tear gas at people point blank, and the use of rubber bullets as a first option. F*ck the police. They're good for nothing.

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If I want to go outside on Sunday evening, guess what NU can do about it: nothing.

There is NOTHING illegal about me being on the street. The people have a RIGHT TO PEACEABLY ASSEMBLE.

This letter is almost a DARE to walk down Huntington Ave after the game just to make a principled stand in defense of our first amendment rights.

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is on the "RIGHT TO PEACEABLY ASSEMBLY".

The adverb here is critical to understanding your rights.

The incident (drunken student riot) that resulted the the tragic death of a student WAS NOT PEACEFUL. The NU administration is trying to avoid the very real possibility that their inebriated (and probably underage) students will cause some kind of mayhem or destruction.

They have worked very hard in the past 15 years to improve their image and if they have to impinge on the perceived freedoms of some drunken students to keep Northeastern out of the media circus, they will. I'm not saying it's legal, but I understand where they are coming from.

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Keep your place, don't think for yourself, take your prescription drugs, be scared for your safety if you don't do as you are told.

Democracy will be okay if you just have faith in your freedoms.

And don't dare try to live life like a free adult.

Remember FREEDOM IS SLAVERY.

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I don't know if you were there, but I was. It wasn't exactly a riot. Or particularly dangerous. And there were plenty of sober people, like me, who were just excited to be celebrating something. It was a huge, tragic overreaction on the part of the cops.

That said, Northeastern students seem to start their weekend drinking at 10:30 am on Wednesday, so maybe they should tone it down a little.

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When a bunch of people stood outside Newbury Comics waiting for Odd Future, it was called a "riot." When a bunch of suburbanites got a little rowdy after a Mac Miller show, it was called a "riot."

I'm of the belief that, once a year, the oldest cops on the Vancouver, L.A., Detroit, Newark, Baltimore, Chicago and Seattle should come in and explain what a riot is. Maybe folks from London, Belfast, Athens, etc., could come across the pond and fill them in as well.

Then again, this is Boston. Having fun of any kind is a public disturbance.

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I wasn't referring to the Victoria Snelgrove tragedy, I was thinking about the death earlier that year of James Grabowski.

http://www.bostonmagazine.com/articles/anatomy_of_...

Seems like, by all accounts, THAT was a riot.

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Jeezy Chreezy, that is just awful.

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a non Northeastern student got drunk in a bar not on northestern property and ran over a bunch of kids. We lost out Springfest for that that year...still a sore spot.

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Aside from the fact that someone died, there was also extensive property damage and physical injury that WAS caused by NU students.

Bottles and bags of trash were being thrown off the rooftops.

The students in the area were beating on cars, then turning them over. Some were smashing the windows of cars with WITH PEOPLE IN THEM.

Fires were being set in the middle of the street. You didn't DESERVE "Springfest".

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There are alot more students in that area than just Northeastern Students and there are also *gasp* non students. Northeastern got unfairly blamed for the actions of a few idiots. Most people were just standing around and being happy. Then president Freeland caved to pressure and cancelled Springfest. No other fenway school took similar action. And the cops were liberally peper spraying people that were just standing around (like me). Have fun sitting on your high horse.

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...and not "if you go out, stay peaceful."

Stationing cops outside dorms telling people who are peaceful to get back into the building or face arrest is false imprisonment and color of law.

I hope students challenge it and sue the ever-living-shit out of Northeastern.

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Honestly though, no one spoke up for Occupy. They after all needed to be babysat by the cops, and removed; because... we don't like them.

Menino and BPD tried to do the same thing there, but luckily they went to the courts right away. Students probably won't be so fast to do so.

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First amendment doesn't really exist in absolutes. Time place and manner restrictions can be legally upheld. Example: License to protest

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There can be time, place, and manner restrictions on expressions of speech. Not on being outside on a public street.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPeWSpB_7w4

This is a public service announcement
With guitar
Know your rights all three of them

Number 1
You have the right not to be killed
Murder is a CRIME!
Unless it was done by a
Policeman or aristocrat
Know your rights

And Number 2
You have the right to food money
Providing of course you
Don't mind a little
Investigation, humiliation
And if you cross your fingers
Rehabilitation

Know your rights
These are your rights
Wang

Know these rights

Number 3
You have the right to free
Speech as long as you're not
Dumb enough to actually try it.

Know your rights
These are your rights
All three of 'em
It has been suggested
In some quarters that this is not enough!
Well..............................

Get off the streets
Get off the streets
Run
You don't have a home to go to
Smush

Finally then I will read you your rights

You have the right to remain silent
You are warned that anything you say
Can and will be taken down
And used as evidence against you

Listen to this
Run

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Adam, you're usually so good about linking to sources or stating them if that's not appropriate. Was this forwarded to you in an email? If so, from whom? What's the source? Officials from the administration?

That single thing frames this whole back and forth discussion. If a friend sent out an email to other friends advising them just to stay indoors, that's one thing. If the campus police sent that out, it changes the nature entirely.

Nothing in the Huntington News this morning indicates anything about this particular announcement, just a more general "don't be stupid" campaign from the university: http://huntnewsnu.com/2012/02/nu-safe-super-bowl-s...

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It was from a Housing and Residential Life director to residents of two specific dorms; the source was a student in one of the dorms I know.

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I wonder if administration knows ResLife sent this out like this.

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I guess that is semi-official. Just seems like an awful lot of butthurt here over what was essentially an advice email from residential life (an RA?) to a few students. Amazing how most people jumped to "The NU Police have announced Martial Law!!!!1!"

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It didn't seem to come off as an advice email, and it was from an RD (Residence Director), not an RA. RDs are paid staff that directly oversee at least one residence hall, and RDs also serve as judges in NUs internal disciplinary process. That said, an email from such a person stating immediate arrest for no good reason is not just "advice", its an (incorrect) statement of fact.

If this was just simple advice in the email, I'm sure the university wouldn't have felt the need to make a statement about it (or send out a retraction email to the students that received the memo).

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Back in 1986 when I was a student at UMass/Amherst and the Red Sox were making a run at the World Series, the university didn't attempt to keep us indoors. Indeed, they laid in LOTS of extra toilet paper in the dorm bathrooms knowing what nuttiness was likely to occur.

But then the ball bounced between Bill Buckner's feet...

Of course, Amherst is in the middle of freaking no-where, not a city. This might also explain why I transfered to Northeastern the following year. Unfortunately it would be a while before the Sox got their act back into gear and took another credible run at the World Series, and by then I'd mostly out-grown my rioting days. Ah well.

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Also, if I remember correctly, that turned into a race riot.

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That living area (and here is my age showing; I've forgotten the name of it. It wasn't Central...Down by the athletic fields...You know where I'm talking about.) generally had a race riot *every* weekend at the time. Up on Orchard Hill we TPed the trees in the quad, and that was about it.

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Can they do this every night?

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Taking the totalitarian approach, Boston rips away citizens constitutional rights once again. What is this, Nazi Germany? Stalinist Russia?
Who is this Ed Davis guy? Is he the guy who presided over the Ohio State Student Massacre (by police and guardsmen) in the 60's?

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Well, the person who sent the email likely doesn't have a badge, and just didn't understand what actions the police would actually be taking. One email to students of one college doesn't equal scrapping the constitution.

This is not Nazi Germany, or Stalinist Russia. If you think an email sent advising students that they should stay inside makes it so, I think maybe your understanding of Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia is lacking.

Ed Davis is the Boston Police Commisioner. He didn't preside over any massacres at Ohio State. I know this because there was no such occurrence. Perhaps you're thinking of the shooting of four students at Kent State University by National Guardsmen (police were not involved) during a period of rioting and looting? If so, I don't think Ed Davis had anything to do with that.

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Some day the government will live in fear of the people. They will care more for the people than for the corporations. It is not ananrchy, it is voting with the power of the people that want a fair price for our vote.

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