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One day after 20 undergraduate students were arrested at the University of California Santa Cruz during a strike, two more protesters were arrested as marches continued Thursday.Violence broke out for the first time on Thursday when a young woman struck an officer in the head, UCSC spokesman Jim Burns said. A second woman was arrested for refusing to move out of a road.PHOTOS: Find out who was arrested at UC Santa CruzUC Santa Cruz remained open Thursday as students and employees were shuttled around the strike. At 1:30 p.m. strikers had all entrances blocked, but the west entrance was clear again by 2 p.m. Many more Banana Slugs were arrested Wednesday morning. Campus police armed with riot gear asked students who were peacefully protesting to disperse from the university's west entrance on Empire Grade Road.They were ordered to move three times by police because they were blocking the entrance. When they did not, 20 were arrested on misdemeanor charges such as failing to disperse and being pedestrians in a roadway.Burns said 19 of the protesters acted peacefully and quietly as they were restrained with plastic restraints and transported on a bus to the Santa Cruz County Jail. One student pretended he was shot with a Taser, yelled, had to be forced by multiple officers onto the bus, and was charged with resisting arrest."The first individual fell to the ground, started flailing his arms and legs around, alleging he was being roughed up. Really, the officers were just trying to arrest him. He was not Tasered," Burns said. The strike is being held for the university's graduate student employees, who are represented by the United Auto Workers union. The union informed UCSC last week that it was going to hold a 2-day strike at four University of California campuses to protest unfair labor practices and intimidation of workers April 2-3.Strikes are also happening at UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, and UC Davis. Union spokeswoman Caroline McKusick described the four strikes as peaceful and legal.The Santa Cruz strike began at sunrise Wednesday when a picket line blocked UC Santa Cruz's main entrance on Bay and High streets. Police diverted traffic to the west entrance until students marched over there and blocked that entrance as well.Because of the strike, some professors held their classes off campus or cancelled them.UC Santa Cruz student Tyler Simowitz was among the students who were not happy with how the strike effected their education."I'm paying thousands of dollars to come to this school, and I can't get my education within the first week of Spring quarter and it's throwing me off," Simowitz said. Burns said the university has managed to stay open Wednesday despite efforts by the students and union to shut it down. Protesters continued marching with signs reading "STRIKE CAMPUS CLOSED," and "SLUGS ON STRIKE," even the arrests. United Auto Workers Local 2865, which represents 13,000 student employees, has been in negotiations with the University of California since last summer.The union claims students have experienced a "pattern of the intimidation of workers" by UC administrators, including when a UC Santa Cruz director threatened to fire future strikers.“The strike is exclusively about intimidation practices, it is not about the bargaining," Robert Cavooris, a UC Santa Cruz graduate student and a union representative, told The Daily Californian.A press release issued by the union states, "On February 23, 2014, the Director of the Writing Program at UCSC, told a group of union members in his employ, 'If you strike, you will not work in this program again.' UAW 2865 then filed the most recent in a series of Unfair Labor Practice Charges focused on retaliation for protected union activity. From threats, to international student’s visa status who participate in union activity, to unlawful videoing, and calling legal strikes illegal, the UCs are taking every opportunity to try and intimidate its members. In response, the 12,000 front line educators in the UCs represented by the UC Student-Worker Union UAW 2865 filed multiple ULPs and will now be striking from April 2-3."The press release continues, "On October 29, UC Berkeley and UC Santa Cruz police filmed union members striking. Labor law is very clear: it is unlawful for employers to film protected activities undertaken by employees. Finally, in the week preceding a potential strike at UC Santa Cruz which was later called off, the director of the Writing Program threatened UAW members, telling them they would not work again in his department if they participated in the upcoming strike. This threat was especially severe because the Writing Program’s hiring is left almost entirely in the director’s hands. He leads a course in which students learn pedagogy and apply for work at the same time, a class which has been the subject of previous complaints regarding the lack of transparency in its process."Mug Shots: 20 arrested during strike at UC Santa Cruz20 students arrested Wednesday at UC Santa Cruz:Joshua Brahinsky, 43, Santa Cruz.Juan Carlos Davila, 25, Santa Cruz,Amanda Rachael Reyes, 25, Farmersville, TexasJameson Andrew Rush, 20, Santa CruzMatthew Carson Wranovics, 19, Santa CruzPalom Connolly, 18, Pacific PalisadesSteven Glen Araujo, 30, Santa CruzMagally Alejandra Miranda, Santa CruzMarisa Rose Parrotta 19, Santa CruzDuncan Makana Siscon, 19, Santa CruzArash Ehya, 19, Santa CruzDanielle Nicole Williamson, 25, Santa CruzAndres Sandoval, 25, Santa CruzBennett Goldman Koss, 22, Santa CruzCorina Claire Martinez, 19, San JoseElen Mariana Colman, 24, Santa CruzMarjohnny Torres Nativi, Santa CruzNatalie Cherrington Black, 19, Santa CruzSophie Jo Pappenheim, 27, Santa CruzTala Louis Sullivan, 19, Santa Cruz