Protesters: No more budget cuts
Jesse Kimbrel
Issue date: 4/23/08 Section: News
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Dinesh Kakumani, a sophomore software engineering major, said he came out because one of his teachers said he would get extra credit - but he said, "I am staying to march because the budget cuts aren't fair."
The march was staged "to raise attention to the CSU system because they are a large organization that can help fight the state's budget cuts," said Maria Rodriguez of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.
The march is also for AB 540, a bill that was approved in 2001 by Gov. Gray Davis, which allows undocumented students and citizens to attend college by paying in-state tuition, according to Rodriguez.
But students who are eligible for AB 540, are not eligible for state or institutional financial aid, making college difficult to attain, according to a flier Rodriguez handed out.
She said this is an important part of the march because students who qualify under AB 540 need help paying for school just like everyone else.
Before the group started marching though campus, A.S. President Benjamin Henderson said on a bullhorn to the students, "It's great to see students out here to get their voices heard."
The march began at 11 a.m. and the group could be found for the next half hour making its way through campus until the marchers went through the bottom level of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library and ended in front of the Tommie Smith and John Carlos statue.
As they marched, they chanted, "Education now, politics later," and "Don't deny access if you want success."
Once the march concluded, students, professors, community college representatives and immigrant rights representatives presented information about the budget cuts to the audience in front of the statue.
Carrissa Bishop-Sage, a sophomore comparative religion major, said she worked with underprivileged kids and her dream has always been to be a teacher. She said she wanted everyone to have the chance to attend college.
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