Spartan Daily Vol. 151, Issue 10

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Wednesday, 9.12.2018

Volume 151 No. 10 WWW.SJSUNEWS.COM/SPARTAN_DAILY

SERVING SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1934

AABSSC promotes excellence By Hugo Vera STAFF WRITER

San Jose State University students, alumni and faculty gathered at the AfricanAmerican/Black Student Success Center (AABSSC) welcoming ceremony on Tuesday. The event ran from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. The ceremony was both a commemoration of the center’s long-awaited opening in February 2018, as well as a celebration of black and pan-African culture. Organizations represented in the ceremony included the Black Male Collective, the Black Woman Collective, the Nigerian Student Association, the African American Faculty Staff Association (AAFSA) and the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. “This event was mainly

about welcoming the community and making students aware of the countless services and connections we offer,” founding director Paula L. Powell said. According to the SJSU Office of Institutional Effectiveness and Analytics, African-Americans made up 3.2 percent of the SJSU population during the fall 2017 semester. “There might not be that big a population of AfricanAmerican students [in San Jose] and while this [university] is not an HBCU (Historically Black College/ University), you still see our presence,” Powell said. “We’re welcome to all cultures and its the university has really institutionalized that multiculturalism,” he added. The emphasis on multiculturalism was evident by OPENING | Page 2

HUGO VERA | SPARTAN DAILY

The African-American/Black Student Success Center welcoming ceremony highlighted resources offered at San Jose State University on Tuesday. African-American students made up 3.2 percent of the SJSU population during the fall 2017 semester, according to the SJSU Office of Institutional Effectiveness and Analytics.

Movie fest competition begins today San Jose State University will participate in Campus Movie Fest’s annual film competition By Huan Xun Chan STAFF WRITER

PHOTO COURTESY OF SJSU SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DANCE

The Spartan Marching Band is under scrutiny for an annual tradition deemed as hazing by the dean of the College of Humanities and the Arts.

Tradition flushed for potential hazing By Vicente Vera STAFF WRITER

On Sept. 5, the Office of Student Conduct and Ethical Development (SCED) advised the Spartan Marching Band to cease an annual tradition of playing instruments inside of port-a-potties to celebrate the beginning of the fall semester. The band ran out of the Music Department under the class title MUSC 156, worth two credits. Each fall semester, the band, Color Guard and Spartan Spectrum Dancers play their instruments and orchestrate the halftime show during the football team’s home games. Orchestrating the SJSU fight song inside portable bathroom stalls was a season commencement tradition that had been passed on to the fall 2018 class from previous classes. The tradition was made public once videos of band members piling into stalls surfaced on

Campus Movie Fest (CMF) is hosting its 17th annual nationwide movie-making competition with around 50 colleges participating. Starting Sept. 12, San Jose State students will have one week, ending on Sept. 18, to create and submit a five-minute original film. CMF will be lending recording equipment today on Tommy Smith and John Carlos lawn from noon to 5 p.m. for students who wish to participate. The top 16 films from SJSU will screen at 6 p.m. with a red carpet premiere inside of Morris Dailey Auditorium on Sept. 26. From there, four finalists will be awarded a oneyear Adobe Cloud subscription, and given the opportunity to apply for

[The Office of Student Conduct and Ethical Development] were explaining to us the definition of hazing before trying to tie it into the whole ‘port-a-potty’ thing. “Porta-Potty Fight Song,” as titled in one of the videos, has been the marching band’s voluntary initiation practice for at least the past ten years. Dean of the College of Humanities and the Arts, Shannon Miller, sought to retire this tradition. “Some members of the Spartan Marching Band at San José State University were participating in an initiation practice that the university asked them to cease,” Miller stated in an email received by the Spartan Daily.

‘The Conjuring’ franchise serves a flop Page 3

Sports Men’s water polo team dives into new season Page 8

MARCHING | Page 2

FILM| Page 2

A&E

Haley Sherwood Kinesiology senior

YouTube in 2008 and 2009. The clips showed members of the band playing the “Spartan Fight Song” with two or three musicians in each stall. Fellow musicians outside the stalls pounded along to the beat on the bathroom doors while one conductor stood in front of the enclosed band and pretended to conduct. Audiences comprised of dancers and the color guard cheered on the portion of the band. Once they finished the song and stepped out, they were greeted with a round of applause and pats on the back.

the Fest’s Cannes Program. The organizers of CMF held an info session on Monday in the Student Union Meeting Room 2A to explain the rules and criterias for a winning film. “Films will be judged by three criterias: content, film quality and technical excellence,” tour advisor and SJSU radio-television-film alumnus Raghav Ravi explained. He mentioned that all filming must be shot during the one week period, music must be devoid of copyright and all participants of the film must be SJSU students with the exception of the actors and musicians. Tour manager of CMF, Danielle Cook said that she’s seen much change in the way students are filming their videos for the contest.


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