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Outrage at arrest intensifies

Student detained for chalk drawings finds support on campus

By Hank Dean Stephenson

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Published: Monday, September 28, 2009

Updated: Monday, September 28, 2009

Outrage

Casey Sapio/ Arizona Daily Wildcat

Tabitha Spence (left), a first year Masters in Geography, traces Lawrence Hoffman a third year masters in geography, at the budget protest on Thursday. The chalk body outlines also showed price tags that rally organizers said were meant to represent the commercialization of higher education.

Students upset by University of Arizona Police Department’s arrest of Jacob Miller, a 24-year-old graduate student who used sidewalk chalk to advertise a protest Thursday, have been speaking out on campus and online. 

On Facebook.com, a group called ‘Support Jacob Miller’ started Friday and had grown to 172 members by press time Sunday. 

The group’s founder, Tom Shea, is a biochemistry junior who decided to start the group after reading about Miller’s arrest in the Arizona Daily Wildcat

Shea, who doesn’t know Miller and couldn’t even find him on Facebook, said, “I was completely outraged by what I read in the article.”

Shea is trying to organize an online petition and a protest on Miller’s court date.

“(This arrest) can be compared to being arrested for playing hopscotch or finger-painting …” he said. “The entire idea behind chalk as a medium is that it does no damage and is easily removed. It’s not something akin to spray paint or graffiti — it’s quite the opposite.”

On the Daily Wildcat’s Web site, readers are also talking. Many were upset by the university’s initial claim that it cost $1,000 to clean the chalk from sidewalks and walls. 
UA officials have since backed off their initial estimate.

Chris Kopach, associate director of facilities management said the actual figure is closer to $350.

Kopach said $1,000 was the initial approximate estimate, before he knew the writing was in chalk.

Anne Ranek, a graduate student and member of Arizona for Education, the group that organized Thursday’s protest, said she was excited by the amount of support Miller is getting from undergraduates who probably don’t know him.

Dave Talenfeld, president of the Graduate Professional Student Council, told the Wildcat the arrest was “very silly.”

Talenfeld said the anonymous faculty member who reported the chalk probably had a problem with the content, not the medium, of the message.

“I would not be surprised to learn that political considerations were involved,” he said.
UAPD spokesman Sgt. Juan Alvarez said he hasn’t received any comments about the case and declined to comment on the ongoing investigation.

Miller, at his lawyer’s request, declined to comment on the matter any further. 

His lawyer, Cornelia Honchar, said she found it surprising that a student would be charged with criminal damage, because the crime “seems so banal.”

“He’s also charged with disrupting the operations of a university,” she said. “So we’ll see how a campus of 35,000 or 40,000 was interrupted by Jacob Miller drawing something on the student union sidewalk.”

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17 comments

idontknownothing
Tue Sep 29 2009 01:30
that's funny, whatdoiknow, uofa students spent the day chalking the campus and the charges against the students were dropped. funny how doing nothing works so well...
whatdoiknow
Tue Sep 29 2009 00:24
The lack of "outrage" speaks for itself. This rag is engaging in pseudo-hype (faux news anyone?).

A great distraction device from the issue at hand (the budget) which NOBODY has a good answer for.

Except maybe the uber-rich.

Or maybe a just a plain-ole suburbanite who's mommy and daddy had the SUV repo'd and the mortgage foreclosed on.

BTW, good luck with your logic class.

Humans are, after all, such a logical species.

Robert Rowley
Mon Sep 28 2009 23:27
john q public, esquire ...obviously another anti free speech neo-nazi Republican.
whatdoinotknow
Mon Sep 28 2009 19:52
yep, again, whatdoiknow hit it on the head. since there are only 13 comments on this page, people are obviously doing nothing. actually there are almost no comments on ANY article. probably b/c most ppl read the print version, but I could be wrong... btw, i'm pretty sure the math dept offers a logic course, philosophy might too. i'm too busy doing nothing to check though...
whatdoiknow
Mon Sep 28 2009 18:54
Sadly, the difference between doing "something" and doing "nothing" is nearly imperceptible here.

A whole 13 comments . . .

WAAAAAA! The outrage!

ignorance
Mon Sep 28 2009 18:03
yeah, I know I was talking to whatdoiknow...

...which is obviously not that much

mat
Mon Sep 28 2009 16:34
um, i think john q public's comments were meant to be a sarcastic rebuttal of the person "whatdoiknow" who seemed to actually think that the outraged are crybabies...
ignorance
Mon Sep 28 2009 15:20
Are you kidding, if you were arrested for drawing in chalk, you would protest the severity of the charge. Don't be stupid, you aren't above all this. All it shows is you don't give a sh*t about other people, you narcissistic, blind person. The reason people are given a voice in the country IS to keep the government in check. Doing nothing, as you suggest, is the stupidest thing I've ever heard from a citizen. Do you even vote? I doubt you value any of your civic duties.
john q public, esquire
Mon Sep 28 2009 14:44
yep, this is clearly the work of crybabies. calling out the police and administration for an unjustified, politically motivated arrest... protesting policies that directly affect their life... i can smell the tears of those crying babies now...

i'll take my world with my mouth shut and eyes closed thank you very much

whatdoiknow
Mon Sep 28 2009 13:00
Looks like a bunch of spoiled-rotten American crybabies who have so much extra time on their hands that they can afford to engage in the same-old, tired, ineffectual protest. How did they ever manage to get out of grade school?
intensifying
Mon Sep 28 2009 11:56
The facebook page in support of Jacob Miller is now up to 194 members
Sonic Youth
Mon Sep 28 2009 11:55
Or we could leave some spare change beside the drawings as that is about how much it would really cost to get the stuff off.
Chalk is cheap!
Mon Sep 28 2009 11:34
Let's all start carrying around chalk and using it to leave messages on campus. We must stick to the ground of course. And we could offset the $1000/incident (or $350 --- MUCH better) costs by leaving little packets of alcohol wipes beside our messages too.
REB
Mon Sep 28 2009 11:23
A big concern here is that Robert Shelton hasn't picked up the phone and said "drop the charges". This is yet another example of this administration's autocratic governance. They don't care about students; they don't care about faculty; they care only about blind obedience. Anyone who dares to take actions in disagreement of their policies or even actions that might suggest they are not in complete control of this campus, is met with swift and vindictive responses. It is not going to change until this campus stands up in one voice and says, "we're not going to take it anymore."These recent weeks are all wake up calls. So wake up people!
Dig Deeper
Mon Sep 28 2009 11:04
I agree with "just the facts". Only a handful of people on campus would - dig deeper.
Sonic Youth
Mon Sep 28 2009 09:37
Facutly should be outraged as well. This is one of our students! And it was a protest to benefit US. Disgusting.
Just the facts
Mon Sep 28 2009 05:31
This article mentions that Talenfield said an "anonymous faculty member" reported the chalking?

The original article mentioned the police had been send by "higher ups."

Calling the UAPD to bust someone for chalking just doesn't sound like something a faculty member would do. IS the Wildcat sure of their facts here?







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