Weds. April 13 - Tues. April 19, 2022 Weekly Print Edition
Vol. 108, Issue 24 www.thedailyaztec.com
San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913
Alumna demands better accessibility on campus WATCH OUR LIVE BROADCAST ON WEDS. @ 12:30 PM
by Nicholas Ebadat STAFF WRITER
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
President Adela de la Torre was sent an open letter on April 4, pleading for a campus that lifts people who are Deaf, Hard of Hearing, or Disabled with the opportunity to meet the standards of their peers with goals that include: removing barriers, providing communication alternatives and including Deaf/Disabled advocates with deliberative processes. The 12-page letter came from Donna Duarte, a longtime SDSU Alumna, educator, contributor and advocate for Deaf and Disability Rights who began her time as a student at campus as a non-disabled hearing person and is now a person who is Deaf and has disabilities. Duarte calls for SDSU to “eliminate the communication deprivation” she said is prevalent in most events, meetings and even emergency services. Interpreters at sporting
OPINION Having an unpaid internship is not a feasible option for students of color. PAGE 3
ARTS & CULTURE SDSU alumnus Ed Marx creates an interactive surfing game that reflects his love for surfing.
Neikon
SDSU budget
allocation called into question by Catlan Nguyen EDITOR IN CHIEF
Photo by Katelynn Robinson
In a 12-page letter, Duarte explained the many inaccessible aspects of SDSU’s campus.
events are not placed next to the speaker segregating Deaf people from others, automated captions are hard to understand or nonexistent unless asked for, emergency towers around campus are made for two-way communication and SDSU Police Department denied her request for 911 texting, according to the letter. “That day I learned SDSU does not value my life and would not do the right thing
to ensure I had an accessible way to reach SDSU PD in case of emergency,” she said in the letter. With the unveiling of the new Snapdragon stadium coming soon, Duarte has submitted a binder with signatures for accessible open captions at both the new stadium and Viejas Arena.
“It’s putting lipstick on a pig is what it is,” Biology Professor and Chair Scott Kelley said, regarding his opinions on San Diego State spending in the last academic year. Debates over university budget allocation, changing COVID-19 mandates and more were discussed at the university senate meeting on April 5. During the last fiscal year, SDSU was budgeted to collect an additional $180.7 million from net student tuition and fees and $67.7 million from revenue-based fees (including the Student Success fee) during the last fiscal year, according to the university’s 2019-2020 Budget Book. Net student tuition and revenue-based fees
SEE ONLINE
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Mental health basketball event unites campus communities Photo by Catlan Nguyen
MUNDO AZTECA Candidato Shawki Moore es elegido com el nuevo presidente estudiantil para el nuevo año. PAGE 6
SPORTS Photo courtesy of Freepik
Matt Bradley said basketball saved his life. PAGE 8
INDEX News............................... 1-2 Opinion..............................3 Art..................................4-5 Mundo .............................. 6 The Back Page, Sports..... 7-8
The first annual Noah Hytken Memorial Basketball Tournament will take place on April 18.
by Sumaia Wegner STAFF WRITER
Viejas Arena will host the first annual Noah Hytken Memorial Basketball Tournament on Monday, April 18. Last semester, seniors Ofek Suchard, Chris Abbott, junior Philip Bury and sophomore Samantha Ruderman started the Noah Hytken Memorial Fund to honor and cherish the legacy of their late friend Noah
Hytken who passed away on October 14, 2020. Hytken was a student at San Diego State studying Business Finance and Political Science. He was an active member of SDSU as he was a part of the club lacrosse team, a brother of Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity, TAMID, and a leader in the San Diego Jewish community. The NHMF was created to raise awareness for mental health and suicide prevention
and to give back to the community that Hytken so dearly loved. This organization has provided SDSU students with resources and handouts on where they can get help if they need it. They have held seminars as well as yoga sessions to help reduce stress and anxiety before finals. Since then, they have grown to a group of 22 directors alongside an executive board. A two-day basketball tournament will take place on April 17 in Sol City and April 18 at SDSU’s Viejas Arena. The tournament will include 16 teams composed of various fraternities, clubs, and other organizations on campus, as well as SDSU alumni. The goal of the tournament is to bring the SDSU community together in support of mental health awareness and in memory of Noah. There will be tabling from different mental health organizations at this tournament, as well as raffling baskets. SEE ONLINE
Part of SDSU’s budget was allocated to the newly designed logo.
made up more than half of the university’s total Operational Fund budget of $475.3 million during the 2019-2020 fiscal year. Kelley chimed in with this metaphor after Academic Coordinator Amanda Fuller gave an update on the university senate budget request of an additional $42,000 to support the operational budget needs of the University Senate. The University Senate is expected to have closer to $60,000 in unspent funds from the current fiscal year 20212022. So, it was discussed that these carry-forward savings can instead be used to cover the $42,000 requested for the 2022-2023 fiscal year, according to SDSU. “I would like to clarify that as the Senate has enough carry forward savings from the last two years of low COVID spending (e.g. no in-person meetings, no travel), we ... SEE ONLINE