01-26-2012

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Student fights protest charges Ashley Wardle was arrested protesting CSU’s tuition hikes

THURSDAY January 26, 2012 Volume 97, Issue 63 W W W.T H E D A I LYA Z T E C . C O M

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SDSU’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT N E W S PA P E R SINCE 1913

INDEX:

Sandy Coronilla investigations editor &

Carl Hensley staff writer

FINANCE BEAT

FOOD & DRINK

Cooking classes turn everyday cooks into culinary pros.

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ANTONIO ZARAGOZA, PHOTO EDITOR

“I have first amendment rights. They can’t silence them by using the student code of conduct ... If they continue to raise tuition, students are going to continue to protest.” Ashley Wardle, SDSU graduate student Responsibilities conveying that Wardle must attend an informal hearing regarding her alleged misconduct at the protest the month prior. Accompanied by a union representative, Wardle met with university judicial officer Julie Logan, after which time Logan and her staff were to decide what punishment, if any, Wardle was to receive. On Jan. 6, Wardle received an email from the center with a proposed settlement agreement that included the sanction of suspension until Dec. 19, 2013, in abeyance. Basically, as long as Wardle signed the agreement, she could forego a formal disciplinary hearing. This means she could still attend classes at SDSU and graduate this December as she plans to do, but could not hold a leadership position in any campus organization.

Stocks started the week out stable, for the most part. The Dow Jones industrial average was down 11 points to end at 12,708, the Nasdaq lost two points to end at 2,784 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose a fraction of a point to end at 1,316. The yield on the 10-Year Treasury note rose slightly to 1.92 percent. Gold also traded lower by a third of a percent to end at 1,673. Stocks continued trading lower on Tuesday morning with all of the averages down no more than half a percent. Data collected from the Monday close and Tuesday morning open on Wall Street.

Last semester, Wardle was the president of campus organization United Students Against Sweatshops, which succeeded in bringing the first-ever sweatshop-free clothing line, Alta Gracia, to the SDSU Bookstore. “I have first amendment rights,” Wardle said. “They can’t silence them by using the student code of conduct.” SDSU’s Manager of Media Relations, Gina Jacobs, declined to comment on Wardle’s possible sanctions. “It is university policy not to comment on the ongoing review of student conduct,” she said. “The Center for Student Rights and Responsibilities will follow its normal protocol for such cases.” The protocol will bring Wardle face-to-face with Vice President of Student Affairs James R. Kitchen this

week to try to resolve the issue. If attempts are unsuccessful, Wardle said she will move forward with a formal hearing rather than accept the settlement proposal sent to her earlier this month. An onslaught of support for Wardle has prompted the college community to come together. An email campaign has been launched asking SDSU President Elliot Hirshman to grant her amnesty. Students involved with the Occupy San Diego movement met on campus yesterday at 1:00 p.m. at the Peabody Coffee stand near the Education and Business Administration building to discuss Wardle’s situation and the dangers of using academic sanctions in response to students’ political activities. Despite the situation Wardle now finds herself in, she believes she did the right thing in November. “If they continue to raise tuition, students are going to continue to protest,” she said.

Regardless, this is just part of a small Stanford professor hosted open revolution taking place in the education online course An article by NPR reports that, last year, a Stanford University computer science professor named Sebastian Thrun and several colleagues decided to teach a class open to anyone with a computer and Internet access. Anyone around the world could attend, ask questions and even receive a grade, all for free. Stanford administrators however, would not allow credit or any certificates bearing the Stanford name to be given out.

ENTERTAINMENT Wilco played a beautiful set at Copley Symphony Hall on Sunday to a sold-out audience.

ENTERTAINMENT

SCAN CODE FOR F O OTAG E O F WARDLE ARREST

Two months ago, when San Diego State graduate student Ashley Wardle decided to attend a statewide protest on Nov. 16 of a California State University Board of Trustees meeting in Long Beach, she hadn’t envisioned being arrested. Before the arrest, Wardle said, “An officer pepper sprayed me.” “He hit me on my back with a baton. When another student from a different school stood between me and the officer, he was hit and arrested, too.” The protest was held in response to a proposed, and now approved, 9 percent system-wide tuition increase. Beginning this fall, student tuition will increase by $498 a year for all fulltime undergraduate students attending CSU schools. Additional cuts to higher education within the state system amount to $650 million for the academic year, according to the CSU Media Relations Specialist Erik Fallis. These cuts are what prompted people like Wardle to converge on the meeting of the financial board that day in November. The protest made headlines throughout the state after protesters caused a glass door at the chancellor’s office to shatter. Despite the protesters’ outrage, the board voted 9-6 to increase tuition. According to Wardle, protesters were gathered peacefully outside Chancellor Charles B. Reed’s office when some of the meeting’s attendees were kicked out unexpectedly. She couldn’t say for certain why the attendees were removed from the meeting, but their ousting caused some commotion. She said police began yelling at the protesters to move back, away from the office. Wardle and others refused, she said, because the meeting was still going on. The next thing Wardle knew she was being handcuffed and sent to jail. Four students, including Wardle and another undergraduate student from SDSU, were arrested and charged with impeding the police officers on duty that day. She was held in jail for 12 hours before being released. At her arraignment one month later, the district attorney did not file charges against her. Wardle assumed the worst was behind her, but she was wrong. During the first week of December, she received a letter from SDSU’s Center for Student Rights and

world. As Steve Henn states in the NPR article, nonprofits and start-ups are springing up, especially in Silicon Valley, in an attempt to transform the way knowledge and education are delivered to students. Thrun’s free, online course was a huge success. The course ultimately attracted more than 100,000 students from 190 countries. – Compiled by staff writer Chet Galloway

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I was a freshman in high school when I caught my parents having sex ... I knew what sex was and what it looked like, but I’d never seen ... a free show of my parents. B A C K PA G E

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W E AT H E R : SUNNY HIGH: 77 LOW: 48 SUNSET: 5PM


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01-26-2012 by The Daily Aztec - Issuu