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It’s 10:30 am in California, and there’s already been a huge amount of activity surrounding the UC Regents’ UCLA meeting to approve huge increases in University of California fees.

Public comment on the fee proposal was the first item on the Regents’ agenda this morning, and UC Student Regent-designate Jesse Chang has been liveblogging events as they happened.

Originally scheduled for just twenty minutes, that time was doubled, and then extended again when the Regents moved to end it while four speakers were waiting for their turn at the microphone — students interrupted the meeting with chants until the chair agreed to allow the last four speakers to be heard.

When the chanting continued even after those speakers, the Regents moved to clear the room. According to Twitter reports, they recessed and left the hearing room while police dispersed the crowd. Eight attendees refused to leave and were arrested.

There’s lots more going on today — a mass rally against the fee hikes is scheduled for noon — and I’ll be updating with news as I get it.

10:40 am | The Mercury News is confirming reports of eight arrests at the meeting. The police say the eight were booked for unlawful assembly and will be released.

10:45 am | I’ve set up a Twitter list of people posting on the meeting and related protests. Please feel free to suggest feeds I should add.

10:55 am | The UCLA Daily Bruin has a live video feed of the meeting.

11:15 am | A group of students stood in the viewing section of the Regents’ meeting room a few minutes after eleven and began singing “We Shall Overcome” alternating with “We Are Not Afraid.” Meeting went into recess, and police arrested the singers. Many students in the viewing area raised fists in solidarity, breaking into cheers of support as the last of the group was arrested.

11:30 am | Number of new arrestees put at six by local media. Chair of Regents committee warned that if there was another disruption the room would be cleared completely. Two students now addressing the committee, opposing the increases.

12:05 pm | Public galleries just cleared after another blowup. Cops declared the gallery an unlawful assembly. Emotional conversation between student protesters and student regents right before the room was cleared.

1:05 pm | Student Regent Designate Jesse Cheng left the meeting room with the students who were expelled, while Student Regent Jesse Bernal stayed inside for the vote. He was the only regent to vote “no.” Cheng is now back inside, continuing to liveblog the meeting.

1:10 pm | Conflicting information circulating about police activity in connection with the protest outside the meeting. Several reports of taserings on Twitter, but the Daily Bruin says the administration officials deny that tasers have been used. Trying to get confirmation of other claims.

1:50 pm | A UCLA press release says that twelve of the fourteen people arrested inside the meeting today were students. The same press release estimates the size of the crowd outside at five hundred, and says that one protester was injured and taken to the hospital.

1:55 pm | The Daily Bruin is reporting on Twitter that protesters outside the Regents’ meeting are planning to block all exits to the building at three o’clock.

The Regents of the University of California open a three-day meeting at UCLA this morning, where they are expected to approve the largest UC fee increase in eighteen years — and confront some of their strongest student opposition ever.

The hike, which would raise in-state student fees to more than $10,000 a year, is scheduled for consideration by the board’s finance committee on Wednesday. If approved there, it will be sent to the full board for a Thursday vote.

The UC system is technically “tuition free,” but it charges student fees higher than many public universities’ tuition charges. If the current proposal is adopted, fees will rise by 15% this spring and by another 15% this summer, adding up to a hike of about fifty percent over two years.

Student protest actions against the increases — and against cuts to university budgets and enrollment — have already begun, but they’re expected to heat up tomorrow, Wednesday the 18th, with a large-scale walkout, strike, and demonstration at the regents meeting.

We’ll have more detail on planned (and unplanned) events tonight or tomorrow morning, and we’ll be following developments in California all week as they happen.

The conveners of the upcoming Zagreb student protest symposium have made a request of the presenters:

The proposal is this: when you come to Zagreb bring with you a collection of photographs that would give the other participants of the symposium a general idea of everyday context of student life around you. These photographs would ideally include your faculties, dorms and other student-related facilities, and they would provide a general feel of both indoor and outdoor environment in which students spend their time (both study and leisure).

I absolutely love this idea. In fact, the only thing I love more than this idea is the idea of passing the request on to you.

Students around the world are shown Hollywood’s version of college life — now’s your chance to show them the reality. Send me your favorite photos of campus living, and I’ll pass them along to the folks in Zagreb. (I’ll also post them here, if you’re okay with that.)
You can email me the photos at angus at fecko dot com, post links as comments here, or post them to my wall on Facebook. Whatever you like. Just get them to me this week — the symposium starts on Friday!

I’ll be flying to Croatia in a few days for a three-day symposium on contemporary student activism.

The meeting, “Student Protests of 2009: Methods, Context, and Implications,” (or, in the original Croatian, Studentski Prosvjedi 2009: Metode, Kontekst, I Implikacije) is being sponsored by the Sociology students’ organization at the University of Zagreb, which saw a series of student occupations last spring. The upcoming event grew out of that experience, and out of the broader wave of student activism that’s been sweeping Europe in recent months. (The call for papers can be found here.)

I’ll have more to say about the symposium before it happens, and I’ll be blogging and tweeting about it while it’s going on, but for now here’s the schedule:

Friday

Does the Actual European Bologna strategy Respond to the European Students’ Aspirations?, Guillaume Sylvestre, France

The Struggle to Free Higher Education, Luka Matic, Croatia

Bachelor of Ass, Marcel Mansouri, Germany

Opening Banquet

Saturday

Politics in Education, Adis Sadikovic and Gorica Stevanovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina

From Democracy to Social Issues? Student Protests in Serbia Since the Early 1990s, Dorde Tomic, Germany

American Student Organizing in an Age of Social Networks, Angus Johnston, United States

The Student Protests as a Test for Civic Society, Kristiyan Vladislavov Hristov and Diana Boykova Velcheva, Bulgaria

Transitional Education, Azra Hadzihajdic and Emin Eminagic, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Sunday

Affective Politics, Zdravko Popovic, Croatia

Types of Protest Participants: An Empirical Analysis, panel presentation, Croatia

Croatian Student Protests and Video Cameras: The Importance of Filming as Much As Possible, Igor Bezinovic, Croatia

Short Film

Roundtable Discussion

The three faculty members suspended from Southwestern College after a budget protest two weeks ago returned to their jobs on Thursday, but the situation is far from resolved.

Earlier this week college officials floated the possibility that the profs might face criminal charges as a result of their actions, though police at the scene of the protest made no arrests and the only detailed eyewitness report available indicates that the entire event was peaceful and uneventful.

And yesterday the local blog Save Our Southwestern College reported that formal letters of reprimand are to be placed in each suspended professor’s file.

As SOSC notes, SWC has yet to provide any coherent public account of its seemingly erratic actions in the wake of the protest.

Meanwhile SWC president Raj Chopra, who went on vacation just hours after the suspensions were handed down, remains absent and incommunicado.

About This Blog

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StudentActivism.net is the work of Angus Johnston, a historian and advocate of American student organizing.

To contact Angus, click here. For more about him, check out AngusJohnston.com.