12 BANDS, 96 HOURS AND A LOT OF FLANNEL PAGE 6.
VOLUME 45, ISSUE 16
WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2011
campus protest defend public education protest occupies campus
CAMPUS LIFE
Ché Café to Hold Benefit Concert
Ché Café reaches onesixth of their $12,000 fund raising goal to save a UCSD landmark.
By Natalie Covate
Staff Writer
Students and faculty protest cuts
B rian M onroe /G uardian
By Nicole Chan and Rebecca Horwitz
Associate News Editors
A
bout 50 people surrounded the Silent Tree yesterday, Nov. 9 at noon to protest the UC Board of Regents proposal to raise tuition 16 percent a year for four years. Protesters chanted, “They say cutback, we say fight back,” and “It’s bullshit get off it, schools are not for profit, cuts to education, will never lead to liberation,” at the march. Revelle College freshman Emily Stoffer co-founded the Public Education Coalition in September after hearing about the UC Regents’ proposal to raise tuition. The PEC collaborated with other organizations, including the People’s Assembly at UCSD, to organize the Nov. 9 protest. “It doesn’t matter if you can personally pay the $22,000, there are lots of people that can’t and that’s not okay,” Stoffer said.
The proposed tuition increases would bring tuition to approximately $22,000 by the end of the four-year installment plan. UC President Mark Yudof announced Nov. 8 that the proposal to raise tuition will not be voted on at next week’s UC Regents meeting. Despite this, Stoffer said Wednesday’s event was still important. “There will be cuts in services here,” Stoffer said. “The general experience at UCSD is going to dwindle. This affects every student and professor and everyone here on campus.” Instead of raising tuition next year, Yudof plans to ask for additional funding from the state, according to “UC to seek state funds to avoid a tuition hike next year,” published Nov. 9 in the Los Angeles Times. “Even though the plan to raise tuition isn’t going to be voted on anymore, See protest, page 3
CAMPUS SAFETY
Student Drugged and raped in the village last weekend By Zev Hurwitz
Contributing Writer A UCSD student was drugged and raped a week ago in The Village East transfer housing area. Police are still investigating the incident, which occurred Oct. 28. According to the UCSD Police Department’s daily report from Oct. 30 — the day the incident was reported — the rape likely occurred between 2:11 a.m. and 3:18 a.m. on Oct. 28 in The Village East Building 1. Neither the victim nor any suspects have been identified. UCSD spokesperson Rex Graham said that the department would not make any statements regarding the occurrence until the investigation progresses further. “As this is an ongoing police investigation, we are unable to comment on [the incident] at this time,” Graham said in an email. “We have no further comment.” Last spring, several similar incidents occurred that brought attention to sexual
sSPOKEN
“
home of the brave
violence on campus. On May 20, 2010, an unidentified female student escaped an attempted kidnapping by a male assailant near Geisel Library around 8 p.m. Two weeks later, on June 3, an attempted rape occurred in the apartments of Earl Warren College. In those instances, UCSD Police sent out a safety alert to the campus that cautioned students against taking shortcuts across campus. UCSD’s Sexual Assault & Violence Prevention Resource Center launched a campaign last year to raise awareness of sexual violence and prevention on campus. University police also offer the Community Service Office Program, a program that allows a student to call a community service officer to escort him or her around campus between sundown and 1 a.m. The assailants in the incidents from last year are still unidentified. Readers can contact Zev Hurwitz at zhurwitz@ucsd.edu
FORECAST
SPOKENWe know our best is better than
everybody else’s best.” Annie Wethe
UCSD Women’s Soccer Senior Captain
Thursday
friday
H 74 L 52
H 68 L 53
saturday
sunday
H 61 L 53
H 62 L 52
Reggie Ballesteros/Guardian
UCSD’s Student Veteran organization placed flags on the West Lawn of Library Walk on in honor of serve members who lost their lives this year.
NIGHT WATCH NIGHT WATCH thursday
saturday
friday
sunday
SURF REPORT SURF REPORT thursday
The Ché Café Benefit Blog has raised approximately $2,000 toward its goal of saving the Che Cafe via benefit t-shirt sales. The Ché Café currently faces closure if they fail to raise $12,000 to pay off insurance debts. Ché Café enthusiasts are utilizing the Ché Café Benefit Blog to raise the money necessary to make the payment. The t-shirts made exclusively for the Che Cafe by the Hellfish Family — a merchandise company for Southern California bands — feature the hardcore bands Bane, Unbroken and Seven Generations. All profits from the $13 shirts go directly to the Ché. The band Bane created the first t-shirt design, which was available for purchase at the Ché during Bane’s show on Oct. 24. It is also available online at the Hellfish Family website. “[Hellfish] will be printing these shirts on demand, so as they are ordered, they will be printed,” Ché Café Benefit Blog founder Jesse Kranzler said. The hardcore bands Unbroken and Seven Generations will also be releasing Ché Café Benefit t-shirts for purchase directly from the Hellfish Family. “I didn’t think it was in the DIY interest of the Ché to get corporate support,” Kranzler said. “But I felt this would be in the DIY spirit of the Ché.” The Ché Café Benefit Blog will move into the second phase of fundraising — the Ché Benefit Festival from Jan. 6 to Jan. 8. The lineup will be released on Nov. 15. “All of the bands have agreed to play for free, we’re just covering expenses for gas,” Kranzler said. “For the most part, everything is going to the Ché. We’re also doing a benefit with a [merchandise] company [at the event].” A CD is to be released — with exclusive Ché Café Benefit tracks — in early 2012. “Hopefully, the festival will [raise] enough to keep [the Ché] going, but [the Benefit CD] will be a more steady, long-lasting form of income for them,” Kranzler said. Readers can contact Natalie Covate at ncovate@ucsd.edu
GAS PER GALLON
Height: 2 ft. Wind: 4-5 mph Water Temp: 62 F
friday Height: 2-4 ft. Wind: 1-5 mph Water Temp: 62 F
saturday Height: 4-6 ft. Wind: 5-10 mph Water Temp: 62 F
sunday Height: 6 ft. Wind: 4-9 mph Water Temp: 62 F
LOw
$3.65
Arco, South San Diego 3724 Del Sol Blvd. & Picador Blvd. HIGH
$4.49
76, Coronado 900 Orange Ave & 9th St.
INSIDE As Per Usual...........................2 New Business.........................3 Poltics As Usual.....................4 Letter to the Editor.................5 Dodging the Horizon..............6 Sudoku...................................9 NCAA Regional Preview.......12