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Volume LXXVII, Number 77
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
The IFC President
The Advisory Chair
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FIRST LOOK:
The Board Member
The Resident Adviser
Nate Honeycutt
Daniel Wasta
ASI presidential candidates Jason Colombini
Haley Houle
SEAN MCMINN
smcminn@mustangdaily.net
Major: Agribusiness junior
Major: Sociology senior
Experience: Former ASI Board of Directors College of Agriculture, Food and Environmental Sciences representative
Experience: University Union Advisory Board chair Words from a supporter: (Sorority sister Alex Spooner) “I’ve definitely seen she puts 100 percent into everything she does. That girl has her schedule booked from mornings to night with meetings, interviews — it’s just everything. She works with the police staff and everyone, and I know she’s ready to take the next step in running for ASI president.”
Words from a supporter: (Fraternity brother Hayden Richter) “He’s extremely good at organization and following bylaws, creating bylaws and using them effectively and to the point. He doesn’t make mistakes — in the sense people do stuff and then realize they’re wrong. He always does things right the first time.”
The 2013 ASI Presidential Election will take place next quarter on April 24.
The names and colleges of all candidates for next year’s Associated Students, Inc. (ASI) leadership were made public this week, revealing a pool of four students aiming for the ASI presidency and 62 who will campaign for the Board of Directors. Two of the four candidates are not currently members of ASI; agricultural business junior Jason Colombini is the Interfraternity Council president, and political science junior Daniel Wasta is a resident advisor in Sequoia Hall. Sociology senior Haley Houle, who chairs the ASI-run University Union Advisory Com-
mittee, and psychology junior Nate Honeycutt, who represents the College of Liberal Arts on the ASI Board of Directors, are also running. Assuming no candidates exit the race or are disqualified during academic reviews, this April 24 election cycle will be the first since 2009 with more than two students running for president. Because of this, Student Life and Leadership Director Stephan Lamb said it opens the possibility of a more complex election system in which each student has two votes for president, and the winner must take a majority of votes cast. Write-in candidates can still join the election, Lamb said, but must register with ASI.
Major: Psychology junior
Major: Political science junior
Experience: ASI Board of Directors College of Liberal Arts representative
Experience: Sequoia Hall resident adviser
Words from a supporter: (ASI executive member Cale Reid) “Nate is definitely a different candidate than what we’ve seen before. I see Nate as someone who, at the end of the day, wants to honestly represent the student body and do what’s best for the student population. I think it’s because of the experience he’s had on the Board of Directors, and kind of having that background of representing the student body.”
Words from the campaign: Campaign manager Wyatt Oroke declined to comment and added no resident advisers who work with Wasta in Sequoia Hall could comment because they are involved in campaigning.
*Pursuant to ASI regulations, candidates cannot comment to Mustang Daily until open campaigning begins in April. Courtesy Photos
Student teaches math to prisoners AMANDA MENESES
Special to Mustang Daily
In high school, Michael Bower tutored his peers in math. Calculus made sense to him, he said, and he was eager to help in any way he could. While at Cal Poly, Bower, a mathematics senior, has offered his understanding of algebra and calculus to tutor a range of students from middle school to college. But Bower wanted a different teaching experience, he said. So, he went to the California Men’s Colony. “Many of the students honestly have a story, and they have something to say,” Bower said. “I’m not saying it’s the story of how they got there, but just speaking to them for five to 10 minutes, you can tell they aren’t stupid.” Bower wanted to pursue opportunities that would challenge and prepare him to be a more effective teacher in the future, he said. “I started researching the opportunities they had there and found out they had an extensive set of classrooms devoted to get the inmates
their GED,” Bower said. He tried to find contact information for the prison online, but was not able to find it. Bower decided to mail an old-fashioned letter to the warden. Three weeks later, Bower received a phone call from Robert Green, the principal of the education department, saying he had received the letter, and was interested in interviewing Bower. Bower’s interview was a walk through of the prison and a chance to ask the principal questions about how the classes ran. Bower began helping inside the classroom in October 2012. Since then, Bower helped in six different classrooms whenever it has fit his own school schedule. He walks around the classroom and helps answering questions by explaining the basics. Students usually have difficulty with the prerequisite knowledge, and that’s where their question is coming from, he said. “The opportunity to work see MATH, pg. 2
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Chi Delta Theta, a Cal Poly cultural sorority, is currently under investigation after allegations of hazing arose this past month, but no new information will be released until the investigation is completed.
Campus examines hazing policies Hazing has become the subject of national conversation this week, in light of recent incidents across the country. Last week, twelve members of the marching band at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU) were charged with manslaughter for a hazing incident in which a drum major was beat to death
as part of an initiation ritual. That incident has had a wide-reaching impact, even stretching across the country to influence Cal Poly’s own hazing policies. “That group had a very structured tradition of physical abuse in order to gain membership into the band,” Cal Poly Director of Student Life and Leadership Stephan Lamb said. “The first thing I would say is that I think hazing can
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exist across a wide variety of groups that we might not immediately think about.” Cal Poly has had its own recent incident — this past week, it was revealed that multicultural sorority Chi Delta Theta was under investigation for reports of hazing. The investigation is still ongoing, and according to Director of Student Rights and Responsibilities Adrienne Miller, who is organizing the investigation,
there is no end in sight. “I don’t have any updates at this time and my work is confidential, so I wouldn’t be able to give any if I could,” Miller said. She confirmed there is currently no time frame set as to when the investigation will be completed. Miller said once she has enough information, she will see HAZING, pg. 2
INDEX
Opinions/Editorial..............6 News.............................1-3 ClassifiedsComics..............7 Arts...............................4-5 Sports..................................8
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