College Media Network - Search the largest news resource for college students by college students Jobs and internships for students -

Students deserve the truth about their own officials

Published: Thursday, March 25, 2010

Updated: Monday, March 29, 2010 14:03

ragtoon 1

Christopher C. Long/The Inquirer, 2010

Sexually suggestive photographs of ASDVC President Lindsay St. Hill were recently given public exposure via a false Facebook profile that included links to the Web sites from which they were taken.

Although Facebook quickly took down the fraudulent page after St. Hill complained, it was an open secret among ASDVC board members and others that she had posed for hundreds of these photographs and several videos available on several public Web sites.
 
Inquirer editors discussed whether or not this was a legitimate news story that outweighed St. Hill’s right to privacy. Ultimately, we voted unanimously to run the story, knowing that many readers would accuse us of sensationalizing what St. Hill described in an interview as “modeling swimwear and lingerie to be sold.”


Bill Oye, dean of student life, expressed just such a reaction to the Inquirer editor in chief: “If this is headline, page-one news, then someone isn’t looking at the larger picture.”

But the “larger picture” is that St. Hill is an elected official, and her actions merit more attention than that of the average person.

We chose to go ahead with the story because St. Hill is the public “face” of DVC students. Her picture is on the cover of the spring schedule, she represents us at statewide leadership conferences and she presides over weekly ASDVC board meetings where decisions are made that affect DVC students.

As a result, we believe the existence of these photographs and videos on publicly accessed Web sites is newsworthy – particularly since some of them were taken during summer 2009 after St. Hill was elected ASDVC president.

St. Hill refuses to say when and where she posed for the photographs and videos, although she insists she was not the ASDVC president at the time. Yet the photographer who holds the copyright on many of these pictures says the photo shoot was last summer and the pictures themselves carry date stamps for July and August 2009.
 
The fact that St. Hill made a conscious choice to pose for sexually suggestive photos and videos raises questions about her judgment. It also offers a valuable lesson to all students about how what you put on the Internet can come back to bite you at any time. 

We invite readers to continue this debate by expressing their views on The Inquirer’s decision by visiting our website at theinquireronline.com, emailing us at inquirer@dvc.edu or by sending letters to The Inquirer at 321 Golf Club Road, H-102, Pleasant Hill, CA 94523.
 

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

6 comments

Anonymous
Wed May 12 2010 14:47
Get rid of ASDVC, is a poorly run institute that wastes A LOT OF THE SCHOOL MONEY.

You've been tricked again, students. By "politicians" who will transfer in a year and do nothing.

Anonymous
Wed May 12 2010 14:42
Lindsey is posting on here or its her mom. We know because of the way she types.
Anonymous
Tue May 4 2010 13:57
To the first anonymous writer, it is obvious that you have some sort of connection with ASDVC since you readily defend Lindsay and "a good portion of them who are trying their best at their positions" and you mention that "we're here to serve students"..... So if my intuition is correct and you are indeed a member of ASDVC, then tell me, as a student and non-ASDVC board member that you are "here to serve," what have YOU done to help students? Did you help with the failed student services festival? Did you help prepare for the March-in-March which less than ten ASDVC board members attended? Wasn't that a mandatory event for ASDVC members?

I must say, I am extremely ashamed at my elected representation with or without nude pictures.

Anonymous
Mon Apr 19 2010 21:50
To the first anonymous.

The main reason why the shooting didn't have priority is because at the time, no one was confirmed killed or even hit. So the relevance to DVC was incredibly low.

And there wasn't any knowledge if the people were students of DVC. There were only rumors.

There were only reports of 5 gunfire shots. This would not be front page news.

As for the rest of everything you said, it was a direct insult. It was in no way shape or form gossip.
You chose to directly attack the writer which makes what you wrote very unappealing. You might as well attack all the people who unanimously voted to run the story. It still doesn't make your argument any more valid.

Furthermore, read the article. There are no taunts, insults, or attacks of any kind.

If you have a logical and calm way of expressing your dislike of the article, then by all means post it without personally attacking the writer.

Anonymous
Tue Mar 30 2010 04:57
...Oh, I forgot to add - someone getting hit by a car by the school is pretty important too, like, y'know, for safety reasons.

Not like we're here to serve students and make sure they're safe or anything. God forbid.

Anonymous
Tue Mar 30 2010 04:55
Please consider the direction the Inquirer is going in.

The fact that you put Lindsay's story above the shooting says something about the priorities and integrity that the Inquirer has. Lindsay's pornographic-like pictures do not compromise the safety of students here at DVC. Why the f**k would you place Lindsay's story as more important than a school shooting? Do I need to say more when the words "school shooting" are in a sentence?!

And if Ariel chooses to gossip, then so can I.
I hope that woman lies awake at night hoping her whale-like figure could be qualified for some modeling position some day. I question whether Ariel has some kind of vendetta against women who look a lot better (in not all, but quite a few aspects) than her. I do applaud her ability to write in a school newspaper as her means of projecting her insecurities and unfounded hatred for ASDVC, in particular Lindsay.

She seems to have been targeting the current ASDVC team since the get-go, and though they have not been anywhere near perfect, and least (a good portion of them) are trying their best at their positions.

In tribute to middle school taunts - Ariel, you are horrendously ugly, and you seriously can't hide behind the Mac studio fix foundation you probably wear, and I suggest enrolling in Jenny Craig. I also suggest you pursue an internship with TMZ or People magazine or something. Maybe you can find a life there.







log out