Wednesday, Dec. 2 - Tuesday, Dec. 8 Weekly Digital Edition
Vol. 107, Issue 10 www.thedailyaztec.com
San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913
Spring Break cancelled, ‘recovery days’ added The University Senate approved the change despite massive student opposition Brenden Tuccinardi & Patrick Doyle by
On Dec. 1, with over 700 people in attendance at the peak, the San Diego State University Senate voted 44 to 28 in favor of a change to the academic calendar that breaks up Spring Break, essentially canceling the traditional nine-day holiday. The adopted proposal will enact four “rest and recovery” days on Friday, Feb. 12, Monday, March 8, Tuesday, March 30 and Thursday, April 15. Vice President of Student Affairs & Campus Diversity, J. Luke Wood, said the university would work closely with faculty and staff to ensure these recovery days will not have any required classes or work. This was to address some students’ concern that these days off would be similar to this semester’s Veteran’s Day
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break when some professors still assigned work to their classes. Provost Salvador Hector Ochoa echoed this statement. “What we did was we tried to distribute these days throughout the semester so students would still have the breaks that they need,” Wood said.
“The Provost has committed to working with and communicating to the faculty the importance of really seeing these as rest and recovery days for everyone.” The proposal was met by pushback from hundreds of students who attended the meeting.
SDSU football struggles on the road against Colorado by
Luis Lopez
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
San Diego State football lost to the Colorado Buffaloes by a score of 20-10 Saturday afternoon, bringing the Aztecs to a record of 3-3 on the year. Both teams had just two days to prepare, as the game was scheduled Thursday due to prior COVID-19 game cancellations for both programs. Colorado was able to outplay SDSU enough on both sides of the ball to come away with the win. Here are three observations from the Aztecs’ sec-
ond consecutive loss. 1. Offense struggles again With junior graduate starting quarterback senior Lucas Johnson out with a hamstring injury, head coach Brady Hoke turned to sophomore Carson Baker and junior Jordon Brookshire to go under center in his place. Hoke said he went into the game intending to use both quarterbacks. “As we went through the week, and really all the way until Thursday, we were hoping for Lucas,” Hoke said. “(We) weren’t sure if that was going to happen.
(Offensive coordinator) Jeff (Hecklinski) did a good job getting the other two guys ready at the same time. “We decided that we would play both of them and see who reacted well and who played well. I think we’ve just got to keep honing in at that position.” The Aztecs struggled to get anything going offensively in the first quarter and for much of the second. However, thanks to a pick-six from junior cornerback Darren Hall and a “FOOTBALL” see page 5
“Justifying an alternative spring break proposal that has two three-day weekends in the name of public health is buying into the agenda of scapegoating universities and university students for the county’s, state’s, and country’s lack of control over a global pandemic,” Associated
Students President Christian Holt said. The contentious meeting was interrupted on several occasions as dozens of students unmuted their microphones while senators spoke in support of the changes presented. Many students were confused about when the vote would take place, whether the Senate would allow speakers in opposition, and some were even confused about who was allowed to vote. The chat lit up with opposition throughout the entire meeting. At the same time, some unmuted students yelled phrases such as “listen to the students” and “we pay tuition, and you’re not even letting us have a say,” among more vulgar insults of senate members. Supporters of the resolution argued that breaking up Spring Break was essen“BREAK” see page 2
Students express concerns about the Weber Honors College by
Patrick Doyle
STAFF WRITER
The Weber Honors College at San Diego State University has attracted students who didn’t fully understand the work it requires and the types of benefits it brings. Due to a successful increase in fundraising in 2015, the previous honors program recently became the official Weber Honors College. The college claims to foster an “intentional community of diverse, engaged students, a unique atmosphere of creativity,
interdisciplinary conversation, intellectualism, and collegiality,” according to its website. One of the biggest attractions to the Weber Honors College is the Honors Minor in Interdisciplinary Studies, which all members are required to earn. The minor consists of varied classes on a wide array of topics meant to challenge students to think through an interdisciplinary lens. Similar to other minors, the honors minor “HONORS” see page 2