09-27-2017

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Wednesday, Sept. 27—Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 104, Issue 7 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

Questions surround student’s death by Jasmine Bermudez ASST. NEWS EDITOR

Friends and family are questioning the circumstances that led to the death of Jasmine Madarang, the San Diego State student who was struck and killed by a car the evening of SDSU’s football game against

Stanford. Madarang, 20, was reported missing by her friends after she attended the Kappa Alpha fraternity’s tailgate party for the Sept. 16 game at SDCCU Stadium. She was said to have last been seen and texting with her friends between 5:30 and 6 p.m.,

according to a Facebook post from her aunt. She was killed two hours later, about two miles away from where she had last been seen. Just before 8 p.m. the same evening, a woman entered westbound Interstate 8 on foot near Waring Road in an attempt to cross the freeway, according

to the California Highway Patrol. The driver of a vehicle traveling on I-8 was unable to stop in time and struck the woman. Paramedics were called, and the woman, later identified as Madarang, was pronounced dead at the scene, the Medical Examiner’s office said. Junior kinesiology major Janie

Giannone said she is confused how Madarang could have ended up walking on I-8, three freeway exits away from the football game. “Someone had to have driven her and left her in a place where SEE STUDENT DEATH PAGE 2

WHAT’S INSIDE

TERREMOTO DE MÉXICO La gente de México ha demostrado unidad y esperanza a través de tareas de rescate. PAGE 7 Graphic by Aidan Prehatny

Jasmine Madarang, 20, was struck and killed nearly two miles from SDCCU stadium, where she was last seen about two hours before her death.

KICKING OFF SDSU men’s soccer opens a tough Pac-12 schedule against defending champion Stanford PAGE 8

SKATER BOY SDSU student Eric Berkemeir launches his new electric skateboard company, Riptide. PAGE 10

INDEX News............................... 2-3 Opinion.......................... 4-5 Mundo Azteca................. 6-7 Special........................... 8-12 Sports.......................... 13-15 The Back Page.................. 16

Yiannopoulos to visit SDSU, College Republicans say

DeVos rescinds Obama-era sexual assault guidelines

by Will Fritz NEWS EDITOR

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos announced Sept. 22 her department will scrap sexual assault guidelines for universities previously established under former president Barack Obama in 2011. The Department of Education rescinded the Obama-era “Dear Colleague” letter on sexual assaults, and will replace the it with new instructions raising the standard of evidence for universities handling complaints. Under new interim guidelines, schools are no longer required to “use the lowest standard of proof” in sexual assault cases while the Department of Education works to create rules universities and colleges

The San Diego State College Republicans announced on Twitter Sept. 22 that they have finalized a deal to bring controversial right-wing activist Milo Yiannopoulos to campus in late October. Yiannopoulos, a former senior editor of Breitbart, is expected to speak in Montezuma Hall Oct. 29, the College Republicans said, as part of a national tour of college campuses. The announcement comes on the heels of news that Yiannopoulos’ “Free Speech Week” event at UC Berkeley has been called off.

©2017 Dickey’s Barbecue Restaurants, Inc.

by Lauren Mapp STAFF WRITER

Brandon Jones, SDSU College Republicans president, said club members have been working with Dean of Students Randy Timm, Conrad Prebys Aztec Student Union Director Stephanie Dathe and SDSU Chief of Police Josh Mays to make the event happen. However, Student Life and Leadership said no official event had been scheduled and noted that, as of Sept. 22, the College Republicans are not a recognized student organization. A representative from SLL SEE YIANNOPOULOS PAGE 3

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that receive federal funding will have to follow. The guidelines also state that “a school may not rely on fixed rules or operating assumptions that favor one party over another,” according to the Department of Education. Title IX was originally signed into law in 1972 as an amendment to the Higher Education Act of 1965 to prohibit any educational program or activity that receives federal funding to allow gender discrimination. During a 1980 appeals court case — Alexander v. Yale — it was determined that sexual harassment “is illegal because it is a form of sex discrimination.” The “Dear Colleague” letter was issued in 2011 as a way to “remind schools of their SEE TITLE IX PAGE 3

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09-27-2017 by The Daily Aztec - Issuu