The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

10
Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio Volume 48 Issue 13 {WWW.PAISANO-ONLINE.COM} {SINCE 1981} } { April 23, 2013 San Antonio At select Fiesta events, the Texas Department of Transportation will be giving away taxi cards, each pre-load- ed with $20, that are intended to prevent Fiesta-goers from driving home drunk. Texas e Texas Legisla- ture is reviewing leg- islation that would prohibit texting while driving. Gov. Perry has threatened to veto any such leg- islation. U.S. e Boy Scouts of America proposed lifting the ban on openly gay youth participating in the organization, al- though adults would still be prohibited based on their sexual orientation. A vote on the proposal will take place in May. UT System e University of Texas System is expecting profits of over $1 billion in 2013 thanks to rev- enues from oil and gas development on land owned by the system. History is week in 2000, UTSA announced an academic restructur- ing plan that would, among other things, expand the number of colleges from four to six. Sports e UTSA softball team will play at Lousiana Tech April 26 and 27. Baseball will play on the road against Dallas Bap- tist April 26-28. Baseball wins series against Sacramento State page 9 Take in some locally brewed beer at Big Hops page 7 Former Congressman donates papers to UTSA Julia Brouillette Staff Writer [email protected] Former U.S. Representative Charles A. “Charlie” Gonzalez has donated his congressional papers to UTSA. ese materi- als are now included in UTSA Library’s Special Collections. Gonzalez’s collection will be made available to students and researchers interested in study- ing his impact during his 14 years of service as a congress- man. Gonzalez is a San Anto- nio native and served as the Representative for the 20th Congressional District of Texas for 14 years. As a congress- man he served on numerous committees, including Finan- cial Services, Small Business, House Administration, Energy and Commerce, Judiciary and Homeland Security. Gonzalez left Congress in 2012 and is now the chief of public engage- ment for VIA Metropolitan Transit in San Antonio. “I’m pleased that my legacy as a public servant of the citizens of San Antonio and Texas will now be widely accessible,” Gon- zalez said. “Representative Gonzalez’s congressional papers help to document important chapters in the histories of San Antonio, Texas, congressional policy- making and Latino politics,” UTSA President Ricardo Romo told UTSA Today. “Acquisitions of this caliber play a role in the university’s ascent to Tier One research status.” e materials consist of speeches, press releases, legisla- tive files, videotapes of inter- views and constituent corre- spondence — information that will be beneficial to researchers in an array of disciplines. “Special Collections is com- mitted to providing access to a robust set of collections that can help propel the students Fiesta kicks off at UTSA. See paisano-online.com for more photos. Will Tallent / The Paisano WEB J. Corey Franco News Assistant [email protected] On April 17, the Senate failed to pass several com- prehensive amendments that aimed to modify the current gun control policies. Reuters referred to the Sen- ate vote as a “crippling blow” to President Barack Obama’s campaign to curb gun violence and a difficult day for previ- ously optimistic proponents of gun control reform as the Sen- ate rejected a plan to expand background checks for gun buyers. Shy of the 60 votes needed, a 54-46 vote struck down the plan to extend background checks for online and gun show sales. President Obama rebuked those calling this a victory in a statement following the vote, saying, “A victory for what? All that happened today was the preservation of the loophole that lets dangerous criminals buy guns without a background check.” Obama asked, “Victory for not doing something that 90 percent of Americans, 80 percent of Republicans, the vast majority of your constituents wanted to get done? It begs the question, who are we here to represent?” e Manchin-Toomey background check amend- ment drafted by Sens. Joe Manchin III (D-West Vir- ginia) and Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pennsylvania) garnered support from both sides of the aisle. Bipartisan compromises in the amendment included the prohibition of a national gun registry and a background check exemption for private sales and gifts between family and friends. ough it initially was en- dorsed by the Citizens Com- mittee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA), support was withdrawn at the last minute. CCRKBA — which calls itself the second- largest gun rights organization in the country — claims to have 650,000 members and supporters, which is second only to the NRA. “Our support for this measure was contingent on several key provisions, the cornerstone of which was a rights restoration provision that is not on the schedule for consideration,” said CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb in a statement following the withdrawal. “We cannot, in clear con- science, continue to support a measure that will not include this critical relief compo- nent. If Democrats like (New York Sen. Charles) Schumer thought we could be flim- flammed on this, they were wrong.” In addition to the back- ground check expansion, the plan to limit the size of ammu- nition magazines drew only 46 votes in support. All Senate amendments require a 60-vote minimum to clear administrative obstacles. In spite of the recent sup- port for gun control reform in the wake of the shootings in Newtown and Aurora, the nation still remains relatively divided over the matter of policy change. According to a Gallup poll conducted this past January, 51 percent of Americans are in some way dissatisfied with the United States’ current gun policies. Of those 51 percent, 38 percent believed that policies should become stricter. According to Reuters, “e influence of the gun culture and the gun lobby was clear when an NRA-backed plan to allow gun owners with permits to carry concealed weapons across state lines also failed to reach the 60-vote threshold — but earned more votes (57) than the back- ground checks amendment.” In addition to the concealed carry plan, the Republicans also sponsored Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley’s plan, which focused on gun crime pros- ecution, improving mental health records for gun owners and funding better school safety measures. Consistent with the trend, the 52-48 Sen- ate vote rejected the proposal. Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz said of Grassley’s mea- sure, “Rather than restrict- ing the rights of law-abiding Americans, we should be fo- cusing on keeping guns out of the hands of violent criminals, which this legislation accom- plishes,” according to Reuters. “Rather than restricting the rights of law-abiding Americans, we should be focusing on keeping guns out of the hands of violent criminals. Ted Cruz Texas Senator CAMPUS NATION See GUN CONTROL, Page 2 Bomb threat forces evacuation of M.H. building Will Tallent / The Paisano CAMPUS The McKinney Humanities building was evacuated just before 2 p.m. on Friday after receiving a “non-credible anonymous threat,” according to the UTSA Police Department’s Facebook page. “The campus remains open during the investigation and the community should expect an increased police presence,” the post went on to say. The building reopened shortly after 3 p.m. Lorenzo Sanchez, director of UTSA’s Office of Business Continuity and Emer- gency Management, told the Paisano in November, “We do the best that we can with the available resources to make sure that we have a secure and safe environ- ment for people to go to school, to work and to come visit and take preparedness very seriously on multiple levels.” See GONZALEZ, Page 2 Will Tallent / The Paisano

description

The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Transcript of The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Page 1: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio

Volume 48 Issue 13 {WWW.PAISANO-ONLINE.COM}{SINCE 1981}

} {

April 23, 2013

San AntonioAt select Fiesta

events, the Texas Department of

Transportation will be giving away taxi

cards, each pre-load-ed with $20, that are intended to prevent

Fiesta-goers from driving home drunk.

TexasThe Texas Legisla-

ture is reviewing leg-islation that would

prohibit texting while driving. Gov.

Perry has threatened to veto any such leg-

islation.

U.S.The Boy Scouts of America proposed lifting the ban on openly gay youth

participating in the organization, al-

though adults would still be prohibited

based on their sexual orientation. A vote on the proposal will take place in May.

UT SystemThe University of Texas System is

expecting profits of over $1 billion in

2013 thanks to rev-enues from oil and

gas development on land owned by the

system.

HistoryThis week in 2000,

UTSA announced an academic restructur-ing plan that would, among other things, expand the number

of colleges from four to six.

SportsThe UTSA softball

team will play at Lousiana Tech April 26 and 27. Baseball

will play on the road against Dallas Bap-

tist April 26-28.

Baseball wins series against Sacramento Statepage 9

Take in some locally brewed

beer at Big Hops

page 7

FormerCongressmandonates papers to UTSAJulia BrouilletteStaff [email protected]

Former U.S. Representative Charles A. “Charlie” Gonzalez has donated his congressional papers to UTSA. These materi-als are now included in UTSA Library’s Special Collections. Gonzalez’s collection will be made available to students and researchers interested in study-ing his impact during his 14 years of service as a congress-man.

Gonzalez is a San Anto-nio native and served as the Representative for the 20th Congressional District of Texas for 14 years. As a congress-man he served on numerous committees, including Finan-cial Services, Small Business, House Administration, Energy and Commerce, Judiciary and Homeland Security. Gonzalez left Congress in 2012 and is now the chief of public engage-ment for VIA Metropolitan Transit in San Antonio.

“I’m pleased that my legacy as a public servant of the citizens of San Antonio and Texas will now be widely accessible,” Gon-zalez said.

“Representative Gonzalez’s congressional papers help to document important chapters in the histories of San Antonio, Texas, congressional policy-making and Latino politics,” UTSA President Ricardo Romo told UTSA Today. “Acquisitions of this caliber play a role in the university’s ascent to Tier One research status.”

The materials consist of speeches, press releases, legisla-tive files, videotapes of inter-views and constituent corre-spondence — information that will be beneficial to researchers in an array of disciplines.

“Special Collections is com-mitted to providing access to a robust set of collections that can help propel the students

Fiesta kicks off at UTSA.See paisano-online.com

for more photos.Will

Talle

nt /

The

Pai

sano

WEB

J. Corey FrancoNews [email protected]

On April 17, the Senate failed to pass several com-prehensive amendments that aimed to modify the current gun control policies.

Reuters referred to the Sen-ate vote as a “crippling blow” to President Barack Obama’s campaign to curb gun violence and a difficult day for previ-ously optimistic proponents of gun control reform as the Sen-ate rejected a plan to expand background checks for gun buyers.

Shy of the 60 votes needed, a 54-46 vote struck down the plan to extend background checks for online and gun show sales.

President Obama rebuked those calling this a victory in a statement following the vote, saying, “A victory for what? All that happened today was the preservation of the loophole that lets dangerous criminals buy guns without a background check.” Obama asked, “Victory for not doing something that 90 percent of Americans, 80 percent of Republicans, the vast majority of your constituents wanted to get done? It begs the question, who are we here to represent?”

The Manchin-Toomey background check amend-

ment drafted by Sens. Joe Manchin III (D-West Vir-ginia) and Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pennsylvania) garnered support from both sides of the aisle. Bipartisan compromises in the amendment included the prohibition of a national gun registry and a background check exemption for private sales and gifts between family and friends.

Though it initially was en-dorsed by the Citizens Com-mittee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA), support was withdrawn at the last minute. CCRKBA — which calls itself the second-largest gun rights organization in the country — claims to have 650,000 members and supporters, which is second only to the NRA.

“Our support for this measure was contingent on several key provisions, the cornerstone of which was a rights restoration provision that is not on the schedule for consideration,” said CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb in a statement following the withdrawal.

“We cannot, in clear con-science, continue to support a measure that will not include this critical relief compo-nent. If Democrats like (New York Sen. Charles) Schumer thought we could be flim-flammed on this, they were

wrong.”In addition to the back-

ground check expansion, the plan to limit the size of ammu-nition magazines drew only 46 votes in support.

All Senate amendments require a 60-vote minimum to clear administrative obstacles.

In spite of the recent sup-port for gun control reform in the wake of the shootings in Newtown and Aurora, the nation still remains relatively divided over the matter of policy change. According to a Gallup poll conducted this past January, 51 percent of

Americans are in some way dissatisfied with the United States’ current gun policies. Of those 51 percent, 38 percent believed that policies should become stricter.

According to Reuters, “The influence of the gun culture and the gun lobby was clear when an NRA-backed plan

to allow gun owners with permits to carry concealed weapons across state lines also failed to reach the 60-vote threshold — but earned more votes (57) than the back-ground checks amendment.”

In addition to the concealed carry plan, the Republicans also sponsored Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley’s plan, which focused on gun crime pros-ecution, improving mental health records for gun owners and funding better school safety measures. Consistent with the trend, the 52-48 Sen-ate vote rejected the proposal.

Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz said of Grassley’s mea-sure, “Rather than restrict-ing the rights of law-abiding Americans, we should be fo-cusing on keeping guns out of the hands of violent criminals, which this legislation accom-plishes,” according to Reuters.

“Rather than restricting the rights of law-abiding Americans, we should be focusing on keeping guns out of the hands of violent criminals.”Ted CruzTexas Senator

CAMPUSNATION

See GUN CONTROL, Page 2

Bomb threat forces evacuation of M.H. building W

ill Ta

llent

/ T

he P

aisa

no

CAMPUSThe McKinney Humanities building was evacuated just before 2 p.m. on Friday after receiving a “non-credible anonymous threat,” according to the UTSA Police Department’s Facebook page. “The campus remains open during the investigation and the community should expect an increased police presence,” the post went on to say. The building reopened shortly after 3 p.m.

Lorenzo Sanchez, director of UTSA’s Office of Business Continuity and Emer-gency Management, told the Paisano in November, “We do the best that we can with the available resources to make sure that we have a secure and safe environ-ment for people to go to school, to work and to come visit and take preparedness very seriously on multiple levels.”

See GONZALEZ, Page 2

Will

Talle

nt /

The

Pai

sano

Page 2: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

NEWS April 23, 2013

2

The University of Texas at San Antonio is looking for single women to be in a

RESEARCH STUDY about social interactions and alcohol.

FEM

ALE

AREYOU

SINGLESOCIAL DRINKER,AGE 21 TO 30?

Call210-458-DYAD (3923)

You could receive up to

$120 CASHfor a one-day research study!

Location: UTSA Campus, PI: T. Zawacki

UTSA Ad_5.75x10.125.pdf 1 1/30/13 9:12 AM

In the wake of these deci-sions, the matter of gun control in the United States seems to remain a deep-seated issue in American culture, as David Brooks, a criminologist with the University of Texas, told NPR. For now, it seems the issue is essentially dead. “I really don’t think there will be electoral consequences. I just think, especially in red states, whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican, all the political pressure is to oppose these gun control measures. It has been and remains sort of a cultural issue,” Brooks said.

TexasOn the state level, Texas’

Legislature has also been looking to modify current gun policies. The state legislative library lists 110 bills currently filed pertaining to weapons in the Legislature. According to the Huffington Post, “Texas is one of several states to consider loosening its gun laws since the Newtown, Conn. shooting that left 20 children and six educa-tors dead.”

The Center for American Progress released a report earli-er this month that ranked Texas 14th in the nation in terms of aggravated assaults committed with a firearm per capita, and 19th in firearm homicides.

On April 4, Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy (D) signed a comprehensive gun control package into law, and the following day, Rep. Steve Stockman (R-Texas) stated in an open letter, “Recent dra-conian gun legislation passed

in Colorado, Connecticut and Maryland has made those states unfriendly to law-abiding gun owners, weapons manufactur-ers and weapons parts manu-facturers.”

“These states have proven they do not value those who obey the law and pump millions of dollars into local economies. This is not the way for govern-ment to treat people,” Stockman stated. “Come to Texas! Your rights will not be infringed upon here, unlike many local current regimes.”

Texas politicians have a fer-vent voice among the national discourse concerning citizens’ rights to keep and bear arms. One of the key points of this discourse is the issue of con-cealed carrying of handguns. The Huffington Post reported, “Indeed, protection is now the top reason gun owners cite for having a firearm, a new survey shows, a figure that has nearly doubled since 1999.” The report stated, “With Americans split over whether guns more often save lives or jeopardize them, researchers have long parsed surveys of crime victims done in the 1990s, arguing over what the numbers mean.”

According to data compiled by the FBI, the rate of violent crimes including murder and assault fell by nearly half from 1992 to 2011, while the rate of reported property crime dropped 41 percent.

The elevated interest that gun owners exhibit towards self-defense is paired with a statistical decrease in violent crimes, according to Mark Warr, a University of Texas

criminologist. “Americans don’t know that the crime rate has been going down,” Warr told the Huffington Post.

Warr attributed the shaping of public perceptions to televi-sion crime dramas and news reports focusing on the most violent offenses. “What hap-pens is that people watch this dangerous image of the world and they buy into the idea that the world is a really, really dan-gerous place.”

A significant part of current state Legislation filed to modify gun control laws pertains to the carrying of concealed handguns on college campuses.

Of the seven bills pertain-ing to concealed carry on college campuses presently filed in the current legislative session, HB 972, authored by Rep. Allen Fletcher (R), is the farthest along. According to the Legislative Reference Library, Fletcher’s bill is currently out of committee and is waiting to be scheduled for a vote.

UTSA freshman and SGA Sen. Lucas Lostoski supported a resolution this past January to endorse state legislation allowing concealed handguns on college campuses. However, the resolution failed to garner enough support as an 8-21 vote ultimately kept it from passing. Lostoski stated, “I can see why people are worried… I be-lieve with common-sense gun control comes the elimination of gun-free zones which invites people to come kill because (these people) go to a place where they know people will be unarmed to commit these acts of violence.”

English professor Mark Bayer told the Paisano that he sees the prospect of weapons on campus as “scary and danger-ous and would really jeopardize the safety of both students and faculty and anyone else at the university.”

Under the current statute, carrying a concealed weapon on an institution of higher education is a third degree felony punishable by a term of two to 10 years in prison and an optional fine not to exceed $10,000. This puts Texas among the 21 states that ban firearms on campus.

In 2011, concealed handgun license (CHL) owners account-ed for about 0.1884 percent of violent crime committed in the state. UTSA police officer Jona-than Pfaff stated that while “it doesn’t bring much fear to me, the thought of having handguns (on campus)… If we really got into a bad situation on campus, I don’t think it would be such a bad idea if someone in a class-room that was a student knew how to handle it.”

Officer Pfaff also stated that the legislative dollars would “probably be better spent on finding a way to increase the University Police Department’s budget because of the fact that officers are trained to handle these types of situations.” He went on to state that officers undergo five months of training while CHL holders only attend a weekend long certification class.

“I don’t believe handguns be-long on college campuses,” said mechanical engineering alumni Matthew Bynum. “That being

said, I see it as a waste of time and money to pass legislature in favor or against since the ultimate outcome wouldn’t be noticeably different either way.”

In contrast, senior English major Katy Almond said, “The potential of a student carrying a gun in class would be enough to possibly deter someone from committing a violent act on campus.”

A 2012 report by the Cato Institute, a public policy research organization, found that after Colorado passed legislation allowing universities to individually decide whether they allowed concealed carry, there was an unexpected effect on crime rates. Colorado State University decided to allow concealed weapons, while the University of Colorado prohibited them. The report determined that while Colo-rado State University had a 60 percent decrease in crime since 2004, the University of Colo-rado had a 35 percent increase over the same time period.

According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, in 2011, about 524,000 Texans were CHL holders. In 2012, that number rose to 584,850.

Additionally, applicants between the ages of 18 - 25 ac-counted for about 6 percent of issued licenses in 2011, which means that concealed carry laws have potential to directly affect students.

HB 972 would need to be voted on prior to May 27 when the 83rd state legislative session ends and the bill, if passed, would become effective Jan. 1, 2014.

Associated [email protected]

Kim Williams wasn’t seen around town much after her health worsened. While in years past the Texas woman occa-sionally would visit a neighbor for chats on his porch, her arthritis and other conditions eventually kept her inside.

Despite being the wife of a well-known county justice of the peace, county officials rarely saw her in public. Even neigh-bors called her reclusive. Few of them knew much about her.

But since Williams was charged with capital murder in the deaths of two North Texas prosecutors, an image has taken shape of a woman who allegedly plotted with her husband to take revenge on the people who prosecuted him for theft and ended his judicial career.

“I don’t think anyone could have written a novel that would play out like this,’’ Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood said Wednesday after her arrest. He said county employees were re-lieved the case that had baffled authorities for weeks was moving forward but also were shocked by the developments.

Williams, 46, was arrested and charged Wednesday after allegedly confessing to playing a role in the slayings of Kaufman County assistant prosecutor Mark Hasse in January and District Attorney Mike McLel-land and his wife, Cynthia, last month.

An arrest affidavit alleges she told investigators that her husband shot and killed the vic-tims, but the document doesn’t specify what role she played. Investigators said they would not release further details until briefing the victims’ families.

The charge was the latest turn in an investigation that had re-cently focused on her husband, former Justice of the Peace Eric Williams, after authorities searched his home and a nearby storage facility stocked with guns.

Eric Williams, also 46, is a

former family lawyer who has not yet been charged in the slayings. He is jailed on $3 mil-lion bail on a charge of making a terroristic threat. His wife was being held on $10 million bail.

Records released Thursday by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education reveal that Eric Williams also was an officer with at least 10 different law enforcement agencies in North Texas from 1987 to 2010. That included a stint as a deputy with the Kaufman County Sheriff’s Department.

Kim Williams’ arrest Wednesday surprised many in this community just southeast of Dallas, though few could offer much insight into her background or personality.

Wood said he met her only once, briefly at a swearing-in ceremony for public officials. A local attorney, Steve Hulme, said he knew Eric Williams’ wife had health issues and called her arrest “just shocking.’’

Richard Mohundro, a next-door neighbor, said Kim Wil-liams used to visit him and talk on his front porch.

“I actually had many more conversations with Kim ... than I ever did with him,’’ Mohundro said. “She is in bad health and hasn’t been outside much in the last two years.’’

Winnie Murrell sold her home to the Williams family in 2001 but returned to the neigh-borhood frequently because her sister lived up the street.

“They were not real friendly people,’’ Murrell said. “In fact I thought she was a recluse. I stayed up at my sister’s house a lot and I never saw her outside or anything.’’

McLelland and Hasse pros-ecuted Eric Williams last year for the theft of three com-puter monitors from a county building. He was convicted, sentenced to probation and lost his law license and his elected position as justice of the peace – a judge who handles mostly administrative duties.

Kim Williams testified at

the sentencing phase of the trial, calling him “a loving man’’ and contradicting the image presented in trial testimony that indicated he made death threats against a former girlfriend and a local attorney.

She testified she suffers from several illnesses, includ-ing rheumatoid arthritis and chronic fatigue syndrome. She said her husband was her sole caregiver as well as the caregiv-er for her two ailing parents.

“He wouldn’t do anything to hurt anybody,’’ she testified, according to a story from the Forney Post. “I’m standing by him 100 percent.’’

Eric Williams has said that after the McLellands were found shot dead in their home March 30 and after Hasse was gunned down Jan. 31 near the county courthouse, he submit-ted to gunshot residue tests and turned over his cellphone to authorities.

He was arrested Saturday on allegations he sent an email to authorities – one day after the McLellands’ bodies were dis-covered – implying there would be another attack if authori-ties didn’t respond to various demands.

A law enforcement official with knowledge of the investi-gation previously said authori-ties were trying to build a case against Eric Williams in the prosecutors’ slayings. The of-ficial spoke on condition of ano-nymity because of the sensitiv-ity of the ongoing investigation.

The official said ballistics experts were testing at least 20 weapons found in a storage locker under Eric Williams’ name at a facility near Dallas. A Ford Crown Victoria similar to one recorded in the McLel-lands’ neighborhood around the time the couple was killed was parked at the storage facility, the official said.

A message left with an attor-ney who had been representing Eric Williams was not returned Wednesday. Jail records did not list an attorney for Kim Wil-liams.

Ex-official’s ailing wife charged in DA deaths

GUN CONTROL: Texas lawmakers debate right to carry firearms on campus

and the faculty — and outside researchers — to perform research and access primary resource materials,” said Mark Shelstad, UTSA Library’s head of Special Collections.

Walter Wilson, professor of political science at UTSA and former staff member of Gonza-les’s congressional office, initiat-ed the acquisition of Gonzalez’s congressional papers.

“He (Wilson) was very interested in being able to do research on Latino issues in Congress as well as the issues that come across in South Texas,” said Shelstad.

With the addition of Gon-zalez’s papers, UTSA will have gained its first congressional collection. Shelstad called the collection “a good stepping stone…It means that we have a larger set of core resources for students and faculty to use.”

The collection is housed at UTSA’s HemisFair Park Cam-pus and can be accessed via the Institute of Texan Cultures Spe-cial Collections reading room.

“As a proud San Antonian, I can’t think of a better place than UTSA to offer my congres-sional papers as a resource for generations of students and

Gonzalez: Collection is first at UTSA from a nation-al politicianFrom Page 1

From Page 1

Page 3: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

NEWS April 23, 2013

3

Page 4: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

The debate on whether guns should be allowed on college cam-puses is especially prominent in the wake of recent di-sasters and terrorist attacks in America. People feel the need

to protect themselves without reliance on civil servants such as police officers or SWAT teams. If students and faculty members have undergone the appro-priate training to become licensed gun holders then they should be allowed to carry concealed guns on campus.

A law prohibiting guns at school is completely justified, but criminals are known as criminals because they break these types of laws. Chances are the guns used in most school shootings are stolen or bought illegally. Shooters who wreak this havoc do so knowing that schools have masses of unarmed people. This is precisely why schools are such frequent targets. These criminals aren’t going to look at a mere rule and say “oh, this is against the law, so I guess I should just go home and forget about this elabo-rate plan.” They go into it knowing how wrong it is.

With all of the tragedies that America has faced lately, wanting to feel safe at school is understandable. When you hear news about another shooting in an-other public place, you feel like you can’t go anywhere without worrying about a life or death situation. Carrying some-

thing a little more potent than pepper spray will put any mind at ease.

Allowing guns on campus would give students and teachers a chance to pro-tect themselves and maybe even prevent senseless death. The student body and the faculty members would be the ones on the inside of a situation. In the time it takes for trained professionals to arrive on scene and save the day, whoever is ter-rorizing the school has that much time to attack unprotected innocent people.

Anyone who legally has a concealed handgun license must be 21 years of age or older. We would need some extra se-curity to ensure that any student carrying a gun at school has a legitimate license, of course, but there’s nothing wrong with that.

If a disaster like this were to arise and a student or teacher could defeat or at least injure any perpetrators, wouldn’t that be helpful as opposed to harmful? This would not only prevent deaths or injuries to innocent people, but it would make a once tragic story a heroic one. The crimi-nals always get all the attention and news coverage. This could take the spotlight off them and project it on a brave, not to mention armed, good samaritan.

Allowing guns on college campuses would call for a lot of regulations and safety precautions, but if it will save more lives in the long run, then it will be worth the hassle.

Beth MarhsallStaff Writer

{The Paisano}Editor-in-Chief: Katy SchmaderAssistant to Editor:Erin BorenManaging Editor:Stephen WhitakerNews Editor:Matthew DuarteNews Assistants:J. Corey FrancoDavid GlickmanPaseo Editor:Sarah GibbensArts Editor: Jennifer AlejosArts Assistants:Wilfredo FloresJanae RiceSports Editor: Sheldon BakerSports Assistants:Delaney MarloweMario NavaPhoto Editor: Will TallentPhoto Assistant:Vince CardenasWeb Editor:Natalie FrelsWeb Assistant:Amanda DansbyBusiness Manager: Jenelle DuffSenior Copy Editor:Alyssa Torres

{Staff Writers}Bridget Gaskill, Christina Coyne, Randy Lopez, Alex Camacho, Shelby Hodges, Stephanie Barbosa, Coun-cil Royal, Julia Brouilette, Paulina Rivero-Borrell, Nick Castillo, Beth Mar-shall

{Staff Photographers}Ruth Olivares, Alyssa Gonzales

{Contributing Writers}Julian Montez, Philip Taele, Eric Mondragon, Jasmine Rodriguez, Pete Torres, Renee Ren-don, Mary Caithn Scott, Chance McDevitt, Chris Rodriguez, Mark Zavala, Aaron Zachary, Crystal Poenisch, Rico Martinez

{Contributing Photographers}Scott Cochran, Katherine Kish, Craig Garrison

{Interns}Amanda Dansby, Janae Rice, Erin Boren, Sheldon Baker, Marcia Perales

{Ads Manager} Kevyn Kirven

{Advisor} Diane Abdo

{Advisory Board}Steven Kellman, Mansour El-Kikhia, Jack Himelblau, Sandy Norman

The Paisano is published by the Paisano Educational Trust, a non-profit, tax exempt, edu-cational organization. The Paisano is operated by mem-bers of the Student Newspa-per Association, a registered student organization. The Paisano is NOT sponsored, fi-nanced or endorsed by UTSA. New issues are published ev-ery Tuesday during the fall and spring semesters, exclud-ing holidays and exam peri-ods. All revenues are gener-ated through advertising and donations. Advertising inqui-ries and donations should be directed towards:

© The Paisano14545 Roadrunner Way San Antonio, TX 78249 Phone: (210)690-9301 Fax: (210)690-3423 E-mail: [email protected]

5OPINION

To the masses: how to handle ‘tragedy’Editorial

O, Say, can you sing like they did in Boston?It was

supposed to be a day of cel-ebration. It began with an e a r l y mor ning Red Sox

game followed by the conclu-sion of the 117th running of the Boston Marathon. It was on track to be another successful Patriots’ Day. Then, at the four-hour nine-minute mark of the race, an explosion happened that would claim three lives, leave hundreds wounded and crush any celebration.

That story has been told countless times in the last week, but two days later anoth-er event occurred that gave new meaning to Patriots’ Day.

On Wednesday, April 17, the Boston Bruins hockey team hosted the first event of any kind in Boston since the at-tacks. They were scheduled to play the Monday evening of April 15; however, the National Hockey League regular season game was postponed after the bombings. The opponent was the Buffalo Sabres, who eventu-ally defeated the Bruins, 3-2, in overtime. For one night, how-ever, it didn’t matter to Bosto-nians that their team lost; that wasn’t important. What was important was that they had a few hours to come together and

cheer after seeing one of their traditions marred by the mara-thon bombings.

The Bruins held a moment of silence for the victims of the bombing and then long-time Boston Garden anthem singer Rene Rancourt took the ice to sing “The Star-Spangled Ban-ner.” He got only to “What so proudly we hailed,” before the capacity crowd of 18,000 plus began singing the anthem in unison.

It was a stirring moment for a city, long known for its pa-triotism, as Bostonians sent a message that would resonate in the heart of every American: You can attack us, but you can’t keep us from gathering togeth-er to celebrate our freedom.

Bostonians also collectively sang the national anthem be-fore the Bruins’ contest with Pittsburgh on Saturday as well as before the Red Sox’s first home game since the attack on Saturday afternoon.

For those of us who don’t live in Boston, their example is one that should be followed by Americans in other cities. They have long understood the importance of being able to gather for events, both sport-ing and non-sporting. Bosto-nians proved this week that no one is going to keep them from joining with other Bostonians to celebrate the institutions of their city.

When they sang the national

anthem in unison, not once but three times, they brought it to life better than any lone singer could. Boston is already known for being the city where “The Star-Spangled Banner” was first played during a sporting event in 1918. Now perhaps they will become known as the city where the crowd joined in the face of adversity to sing the an-them as one.

As America has done in the past, it is time to follow Bos-ton’s lead. Whenever Ameri-cans gather at an event, they should celebrate the flag by singing the national anthem in unison, without the help of an individual singer. It’s our flag, our anthem; we should sing it with voices raised whenever we are gathered together.

When we sing the national anthem before a sporting event, we not only honor the flag and the country but also the ability to come together without fear and lose our voices for a few hours to cheer on our commu-nity’s teams.

It is after times of tragedy that patriotism sees growth. Let us honor Boston and America by following in the footsteps of Boston. They’ve sung the first verse, we should help them fin-ish the song.

Stephen WhitakerManaging Editor

Commentary

On Monday, April 15, two bombs exploded at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three and injuring over 200. Many deemed this a trage-dy. The same day, over 100 Syr-ians lost their lives due to the violence of their war torn coun-try. Tragedy is all around us. Violence occurs everywhere.

Tragedy. Mass attacks. Ter-rorism.

We, the American people, have come to fear these words.

These words have been so stretched and strained from their original definition. We gather around their television waiting while the same infor-mation is contextualized hun-dreds of different ways.

After all of the horrible events we have seen this last year, all these situations are handled in-

correctly.The attempt to timely inform

the public has the potential to turn horrible incidents into glorified American tragedies. When this happens, the me-dia teaches the world that the perpetrators of such crimes go down in history as infamous killers — a title that serves to much undeserved attention. Further, victims relive every

vivid moment, never able to heal.

After the latest tragedy be-comes stale, the horrific details linger.

Given the circumstance, the police and the people of Boston handled the situation correctly and kept it from becoming a commotion. By shutting down the city and capturing the sus-pect within 48 hours, Boston

told the world that violence will not be tolerated.

Let justice be done by the law, not by the gossip around our dinner tables or the speculation around our television sets.

There’s no point in glorying an already traumatic event. It’s time for change.

Follow us on Twitter @ThePaisano

ComicVulpes Vulpes by: Christopher Garcia

{Send letters to}[email protected]

Letters must be less than 400 words and include the writer’s name, classification or title and telephone number.

The Paisano reserves the right to edit all submissions.{ {

Guns on Campus can be a good thingPoint-Counterpoint

Keep the guns off my college campusPersonally, I

am a gun advo-cate. I believe that guns can be used, not only as a form of self defense, but rec-reational use can also be fun if done in a safe

environment, such as a gun range or in a hunting area. However, concealed handguns on a college campus are a dif-ferent story.

The Second Amendment states, “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

The Amendment states that the peo-ple will be allowed to have guns, but it doesn’t clarify how and where they’re allowed to be carried. When you go to a courthouse, or a government build-ing, law officials don’t allow you to en-ter without going through security and, most likely, a metal detector.

Why is the protection of government officials more regulated than that of the American student body?

On Wednesday, April 17, the U.S. Senate decided not to expand back-ground checks when customers pur-chase firearms. This decision alone shows that the U.S. government has yet

to comprehend the intense power that guns can have when in the hands of the wrong person.

In a November 2009 article, pub-lished in the American Journal of Pub-lic Health, Dr. Charles C. Branas and other individuals conducted a study en-titled “Investigating the Link Between Gun Possession and Gun Assault.” The study found that “individuals in posses-sion of a gun were 4.5 (rounded) times more likely to be shot in an assault than those not in possession.”

Not all gun users will be shot because they carry a gun, but knowing the prop-er safety precautions and procedures could be the difference between life or death.

This margin for error, however small, is not one that I want to be subjected to when I am on campus. Although I do believe guns can be useful for self-defense, I do not think that college cam-puses are the appropriate environments on which to have them, especially con-cealed.

I believe that any margin for acci-dents is unacceptable when there are so many people in one small area. My belief: all college campuses should be gun free.

Amanda DansbyWeb Assistant

Correction:UTSA professor Dr. Mansour El-Kikhia’s name was mispelled in the April 16 story titled “Ten-sion in the Middle East after Israel attacks Gaza.”

In the April 16 article titled “Last Light Up: Smoke Restrictions begin June 1,” the Paisano misspelled the name of Deanna White, a writing composition professor at UTSA.

The Paisano regrets both errors.

April 23, 2013

Page 5: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

PASEO4

Sarah Gibbens Paseo [email protected]

Water is an essential life re-source. As global population increases and urban communi-ties grow, the demand for water has become more urgent.

Unsustainable agricultural practices and poor irrigation techniques have led entire com-munities to perish around the world.

Geopolitical conflict bring water rights into the realm of fierce debate. Record-high tem-peratures grow each summer and a lack of adequate rainfall continually subjects San Anto-nio to stringent water restric-tions. In the coming years, the 26 million (and growing) resi-dents of Texas could see their homes become desperate for water.

In 2011, Texas was subjected to one of the worst droughts on record. According to the Lower Colorado River Author-ity (LCRA), water inflow levels were at the lowest in recorded history. Even with recent rain in early 2013, most communities in Texas remain in a drought.

Areas most severely affected and classified as “exceptional” reside along the Rio Grande and Valley regions of South Texas, according to the LCRA.

Responsible for providing water to more than one million residents below the Colorado River, the LCRA relies heavily

on Lake Travis and Buchanan to serve as reservoirs. However, since 2008, the combined stor-age levels for both lakes have been consistently below the av-erage.

In times of extreme water shortages, the LCRA petitions the state for emergency drought relief. During this process, the LCRA releases less Highland Lakes water to downstream farmers so that household use remains unrestricted.

While large agricultural com-panies are prepared for the wa-ter cutbacks, many small farm-ers are greatly affected by this decrease in a basic resource.

In 2013, the LCRA will peti-tion to restrict water access to local communities. “It high-lights the toll, the drought and the availability of water,” stated LCRA General Manager Becky Motal in a press release. “It is clear the board needed to take steps to protect our firm cus-tomers such as cities and in-dustry, while still balancing the need of others who depend on the lakes.”

Earlier in the year, LCRA board members and rural Texas residents had hoped El Niño weather patterns would replen-ish already low reservoir levels – but they did not.

LCRA Chairman Timothy Timmerman expressed frus-tration over the lack of rain in 2013. “This drought that has plagued our region continues. Some of our inflows into the Highland Lake have been lower

than we saw during the worst drought this region has even seen… This plan (emergency drought relief) isn’t perfect, but it’s the best we could come up with.”

Timmerman says, “We are keenly aware of that and al-ways have that foremost in our minds as we decide how to best manage water under these con-ditions.”

While environmental con-ditions determine how much water is in supply, geopolitical factors determine who is then able to use reservoirs. On Jan. 8, 2013, the state of Texas filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Supreme Court alleging that New Mexi-co is not fulfilling water delivery commitments established by the 1938 Rio Grande Compact.

The Rio Grande Compact is an interstate compact between the states of Texas, New Mex-ico and Colorado that equally apportions the water of the Rio Grande Basin. The Texas Commission of Environmen-tal Quality (TCEQ) claims that the state of New Mexico has wrongfully been pumping the Rio Grande River’s groundwa-ter, leaving Texas with a short-age.

“It is unfortunate that we have had to resort to legal ac-tion, but negotiations with New Mexico have been unsuccessful, and Texas is not getting the wa-ter that it is allocated and legally entitled to,” stated TCEQ Com-missioner Carlos Rubinstein.

With water for local Texas

farmers already limited by the LCRA, any further water re-strictions could have detrimen-tal effects. Rio Grande Compact Commissioner Pat Gordon explains, “These illegal diver-sions of water in New Mexico are having an ongoing negative effect on the amount of water available for use by Texas farm-ers. Texas had no choice but to take action against the state of New Mexico.”

Texas v. New Mexico is one of many water disputes devel-oping in regions where water supply is dwindling and popu-lation is increasing. Known as “water wars,” these disputes can lead to high levels of interstate tension.

In response to the suit filed by the state of Texas, New Mexico State Attorney Gen-eral stated that Texas is “trying to rustle New Mexico’s water and using a lawsuit to extort an agreement that would only benefit Texas while destroying water resources for hundreds of thousands of New Mexicans.” Such strong rhetoric suggests that these “water wars” will not be resolved peacefully.

Director of the Global Water Policy Project Sandra Postel wrote in the National Geo-graphic’s blog, Water Currents, that the conflict “is a wake-up call for all states and nations that share transboundary wa-ters to… develop workable gov-erning structures over water where they are lacking.” Postel also believes the conflict is “a

lesson to invest now in water ef-ficiency improve-ments so as to re-duce pressure on both rivers and aquifers.”

Recently, Texas climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon warned that 2013 could rival the record drought of the 1950s. With fed-eral data showing 90 percent of Texas at abnormally dry condi-tions, 22 percent in extreme to exceptional conditions and state reservoirs at their lowest levels since 1990, Nielsen-Gammon told lawmakers, “There is still a good chance that this could be the drought of record for parts of the state.”

In order to mitigate wa-ter shortages over the next 50 years, the Texas Water Devel-opment Board (TWDB) has predicted that $53 billion in in-frastructure improvements will need to be made. Lt. Gov. Da-vid Dewhurst and San Antonio Rep. Lyle Larson have proposed using $1 billion from the state’s

rainy day fund to finance as many as 26 new reservoirs, de-salination plants and pipelines.

San Antonio relies primar-ily on the Edward’s Aquifer to

meet its water needs. Cur-rently, the aquifer capable

of holding 670 cubic feet of water is aver-aging 647 cubic feet, leaving San Antonio in stage two water restrictions.

Stage two re-strictions limit the

availability to water landscape to one day a

week from 7-11 a.m. or p.m. Residential car washing is also limited to one day per week and washing impervious covers is strictly prohibited. The most stringent water restrictions, stage four, come with a sur-charge to residential water bills.

Urbanization and industrial agriculture has made water a scarce resource. The San Anto-nio Water System (SAWS) en-courages San Antonio residents to adopt small changes to their daily lives to conserve water. This can be done by observing and changing wasteful habits, installing high-efficiency show-erheads and replacing leaking water fixtures.

According to Timmerman, “It’s really all about lives and livelihoods.”

Water shortages plague Texas

April 23, 2013

Page 6: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Marcia [email protected]

UTSA’s music marketing program welcomes nationally known singer/songwriter Ernie Halter and Austin’s 21-piece award-winning orchestral in-die band, Mother Falcon on Tuesday, April 24.

Halter has captivated au-diences with his “…milk and honey voice…” Originally from Orange County, Calif., the Nashville resident has had songs played on “Good Morn-ing America,” “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” “Keeping Up with the Kardashians,” “Cougar Town” and many other television

shows. “I’ve pretty much been ob-

sessed with music ever since (I was young),” said Halter

Halter made international headlines in 2011 when Justin Bieber made a surprise appear-ance at his concert in Costa Mesa, Calif., and joined him onstage to perform his original composition “Come Home To Me.”

Following Halter will be, Mother Falcon, a 21-piece or-chestral band based in Austin, Texas. The group of young and talented musicians pres-ent a unique combination of indie rock and classical music. The band has received praise from the Austin Chronicle and has also won an award at the

2010 and 2011 Austin Music Awards. The band’s sound is influenced by classical com-posers and indie artists simi-lar to Beethoven, Beirut, Steve Reich, Ravel and Bon Iver.

With two albums, Mother Falcon has risen to the top of Austin’s live music scene. The large multi-instrumental band that combines orchestra and pop performed at SXSW last month. For the past three years, Mother Falcon won the “Best None of the Above Award” at the Austin Music Awards.

UTSA’s music marketing program and its students are the reason these buzzworthy bands are able to perform for San Antonio. Everyone in this semester’s course is a music

marketing major and the class came together to bring UTSA something that is reflective of the music industry.

“We wanted to present the two contrasting artists who would work well together (within) the intimate setting of the recital hall,” says senior Jor-den Nickerson.

The hall usu-ally hosts classi-cal performanc-es and this style of music would be the first time something of its type would be hosted at UTSA’s recital hall.

Matt Dunne, the course’s

professor, says this was a class project from start to finish. “We wanted to go through the whole process, choose the art-ist, negotiate (and) book a night in the recital hall” he said.

(to continue reading this article, visit paisano-online.com)

April 23, 2013

6 ARTS&LIFE

Indie band, Mother Falcon is composed of 15-20 members and has won many esteemed awards including “Best None of the Above Award” at the 2011 Austin Music Awards.

Award-winning artists Ernie Halter and Mother Falcon come to campus

Earn a Master’s in Engineering at St. Mary’s University

A Catholic and Marianist Liberal Arts Institution

www.stmarytx.edu/GradEngineering

Computer Engineering

Electrical Engineering

Engineering Systems Management

Industrial Engineering

Software Engineering

Thursday, April 25, 7:30-8:30 p.m. University Center 2.01.30 (Magnolia Room) Find keys to accelerate your pursuit of truth and creative techniques to enrich your daily life. Enjoy the journey!

Info: Omid Ghasemi (e-mail) - [email protected] or call Justin: 832-244-6502 www.Eckankar-Texas.org

Sponsored by the Eckankar Student Organization

Spiritual Experiences Guidebook Past Lives, Dreams, Soul Travel and More . . .

Free Guidebook, CD and Discussion (God Worlds of ECK)

For the week’s full calendar, visit:paisano-online.com

Tuesday, April 236 p.m. Film: “Q-Fest”Josephine Theatre (339 W. Josephine) hosts “Q-Fest,” an event benefitting LGBTQ organization, Pride San Antonio. This will be the closing night for the 3-day event. Films presented include “Remember to Breathe,” “Presentation of the San Antonio Four” and “Raid of the Rainbow Lounge.” Admission is $10-$18.

Wednesday, April 2410 a.m. Exhibit: “Fiesta, Fête, Festival”The McNay Art Museum (6000 N. New Braunfels Ave.) presents “Fiesta, Fête, Festival,” an exhibit displaying various objects from numerous festivals from around the world in comparison with San Antonio’s Fiesta celebrations. Admission is $5-$10.

Thursday, April 259 a.m. Exhibit: “Fiesta Medal Mania”The Institute of Texan Cultures (801 E. César Chávez) presents “Fiesta Medal Mania,” an exhibit which will display Fiesta medals from throughout the event’s history. Medals from this year’s Fiesta, as well as some from the past, will be available to purchase, along with a medal-making segment at 10 a.m. Admission is free for UTSA students.

{Local Events}

Phot

o Co

urte

sy o

f Mot

her F

alco

n

Page 7: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

April 23, 2013

7ARTS&LIFE

Jennifer AlejosArts Editor [email protected]

Flavorful stouts, hoppy ales and ciders are just a few brews you’ll find at Big Hops Growler Station. With so many possi-bilities to choose from, it might be hard to pick just one.

Big Hops Growler Station, founded by Rob and Kylie Mar-tindale in March 2013, marks another first in San Antonio as the only bar to sell draft brews to-go in a container called a growler.

A growler is a portable jug meant for carrying beer; its de-sign makes it capable of keep-

ing the beer tasting fresh while being sealed in a container.

Currently, growlers are the standard for transporting beer and are in compliance with Texas law.

Big Hops features brews from distributors all over Texas including the Guadalupe Brew-ing Company; Blanco, Texas’ Real Ale Brewing Co.; and San Antonio’s own Branchline Brewing Company and Ranger Creek Brewery and Distillery. Big Hops also carries a few taps from breweries outside of Texas.

The growlers come in a 32 oz and a 64 oz size for $6.99 each. For those unsure of which brew to pick, the 32 oz growler will

do; the smaller jug leaves room for less commitment on the chosen brew. The taps change frequently throughout the week, which allows customers to broaden their palates. Most brews range from $12-$18 per filled growler or patrons can also purchase pints of their fa-vorite beers for $3-$4.50.

The availability of beer taps rotates each week to guarantee patrons freshness and variety. Beers that may appear one day may not necessarily be there the next, so be sure to fill up on your favorite brews when you go.

For those who enjoy darker beers, Southern Star Buried Hatchet Stout Nitro is the per-

fect brew to try. Nitrogen with pressurized CO2 formula is added to the mix to give the beer the same consistency of a milkshake with a thick, creamy texture.

As the contents rise to the top, the stout gives guests a show with darker hues slowly rising to the surface.

Stouts are darker beers com-pared to pale ales and indian pales ales, as they are generally made of chocolate malts, tof-fee, and in some cases, coffee beans. The overall taste is rich with a smooth aftertaste.

Another worthy brew to try is the Guadalupe Texas Honey Ale. The ale has a sweet aroma, with a hint of floral and citrus

flavors. The brew glows with the color of a bright honey complexion. The ale stays true to its name with honey being the dominant flavor in the mix while leaving a crisp, refreshing aftertaste.

Big Hops, as the name sug-gests, also supplies beer lovers with hoppy brews such as Real Ale Brewing Co.’s 4-squared, a more potent blend of their signature Firemen’s #4 Blonde Ale.

Craft beer, which is currently close to six percent of the to-tal market share in domestic alcoholic beverages in the U.S. according to npr.com, has sky-rocketed within the past few years.

On the future of craft beer in Texas, Martindale says, “I think it’s gonna blow up. I think even in San Antonio, 2013 is a really big year with the new brewer-ies that are opening up and the new ones that are coming.”

Martindale continues, “I think five years from now, it’s going to be a completely differ-ent story here. We’ll have a lot more microbreweries and we’ll be enjoying a lot more local craft beer.”

(to continue reading this ar-ticle, visit paisano-online.com)

Big Hops Growler Station satisfies all palates with an assortment of beers on tap.

L e t t h e g o o d t i m e s f l o w Big Hops Growler Station brings fresh craft beer to-go in San Antonio

May 29, 2013!

Phot

o Co

urte

sy o

f Dav

id E

squi

lin

Page 8: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Shelby HodgesStaff [email protected]

Some players can inspire a team to no end, not only be-cause of their talent but also be-cause of their teamwork and ef-fort. Hope Ortiz was that kind of a player.

“She (Ortiz) was probably one of the greatest teammates. She loved her team, she always played hard and if anyone had a problem they would go to her,” said UTSA Assistant Coach Michelle Cheatham whose first year coaching for UTSA Soft-ball was Ortiz’s senior season.

A former UTSA pitcher, Or-tiz graduated in 2006 after three seasons with the Roadrunners

softball team, which they won the Southland Conference Reg-ular Season Championship all three years.

Ortiz had 28 appearances as a Roadrunner and ranked eighth all-time at UTSA with a 6-1 record. In her final year the team also won the Southland Conference Championship Tournament and she posted 14 strikeouts and a 2.58 ERA for the season. Originally from Odem, Texas. Ortiz attended Temple College her freshman year where she was 5-0.

This talented young woman, however, was diagnosed with leukemia after graduation from UTSA and lost her eight-month long battle with the disease in May of 2009.

Since her passing, the UTSA

softball team has held an annu-al game to memorialize Ortiz as a star student athlete and as an amazing person. The game helps to raise awareness and funds for local cancer research in order to prevent this from happening to other student athletes, as well as people ev-erywhere.

“All the future student ath-letes at UTSA are able to get a piece of her and know her lega-cy this way,” said Cheatham.

This year’s fourth annual Strike Out for Cancer game in memory of Ortiz happened on Saturday April 20 when the Roadrunners played the Seattle University Redhawks at UTSA Roadrunner Field.

The event raised $1,068 for the San Antonio Leukemia and

Lymphoma Society. The funds were donated by over 300 at-tendants at the game, who participated in a silent auc-tion where the prizes included signed jerseys and softballs. The players sported orange ribbons and Ortiz’s name written on sweat bands to show support for those fighting cancer. The softball staff wore t-shirts that read, “I wear a ribbon for my hero” and had a large orange ribbon printed on front.

“She was a really important person in our program,” said UTSA catcher Megan Low, af-ter the game. “Any way we can honor her is really awesome.”

Ortiz’s family, which includes her parents Arnold and Sandra and her siblings Christopher, Nicolas and Allison, attend the

game in San Antonio every year and are very involved with their daughter’s alma mater. Allison, Ortiz’s younger sister, even threw out the first pitch on Sat-urday.

“Honestly, you cannot get more of a classy family. They are unbelievable and we always love having them. I hope they had a great time today,” said UTSA Head Coach Amanda Lehotak.

“Whenever we play in Cor-pus, they always come out and support us, and little Alison, we are going to recruit her… She will be a pitcher just like her big sister,” added Cheatham.

Ortiz was a vital figure in UT-SA’s softball program while she was playing and today is a role model and a symbol of the great

things a team can do when they work together.

“That is what we are trying to instill in our kids today—feel-ing of loyalty and being there for each other,” said Cheatham. “We try to pass that on by re-membering her.”

SPORTS8

In Softball

Roadrunners softball takes two of three games against the Seattle Redhawks during the Strikeout for Cancer event.

{Please visit the Paisano-on-line.com to read the recap}

SOFTBALL

Hope Ortiz gives cancer patients hopeHope Ortiz, former UTSA softball player, passed away of caner. Strike out for Cancer has raised $1,068 for the San Antonio Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. This organization honors Ortiz by raising money for cancer research.

Jeff

Hueh

n/UT

SA A

thlet

ics

April 23, 2013

Page 9: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

Nick CastilloStaff [email protected]

On April 19-21, the UTSA baseball team entered the weekend’s series against Sac-ramento State on a four-game losing streak. After being swept last weekend by CSU Bakers-field and losing to Lamar on Wednesday, the ‘Runners were in desperate need of a series victory.

UTSA defeated the Sacra-mento State Hornets two games

to one.In game 1, on April 19, UTSA

starting pitcher Brock Hartson pitched a gem. Hartson pitched eight innings and allowed only two runs on four hits. The Roadrunners’ offense helped Hartson by scoring runs in the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh innings. The Roadrunners’ of-fense scored an additional three runs in the eighth inning to caputre a 7-2 vicotry.

In game 2, on April 20, the ‘Runners offense was held to one run on three hits. Unlike

UTSA, Sacramento State’s of-fense was running on all cyl-inders. The Hornets scored 12 runs on 16 hits which led them to a 12-1 victory over the Road-runners in eight innings.

Game 3, the rubber match, was a difficult game for both teams. At first it appeared as if the momentum Sacramento State had accumulated from their 12-1 victory in game 2 would propel them to an easy series victory. The Hornets scored four runs in the first three innings.

However, the ‘Runners were able to cut the Hornets’ lead to 4-1 after Mike Warren scored on a Riley Good RBI sac-fly in the second inning.

UTSA scored two runs in the bottom of the fourth inning to make the Hornets’ lead 4-3. UTSA tied the game, 4-4, in the next inning when Daniel Rock-ett scored off Hornet’s pitcher Horacio Correa III RBI sac-fly. The Hornets reclaimed the lead in the top of the sixth inning with a solo home run by An-drew Ayers. UTSA answered back in the bottom frame

with an RBI double by Rodney Garza to tie the game at 5-5.

In the bottom of the eighth inning, Daniel Rockett came up to bat with two men on base and battled with Sacramento State pitcher Brandon Creel. Rockett got the best of Creel when he crushed a ball to left field for a three-run homer to give the ‘Runners an 8-5 lead.

UTSA pitcher Matt Sims closed the game and captured his third save in an 8-5 victory and a series victory over Sacra-mento State. Although Daniel Rockett hit a heroic home run,

the UTSA pitching staff were the true heroes of the game. In the seventh inning, pitcher Mi-chael Kraft relieved starter No-lan Trabanino and Kraft struck out four batters in 1 and 2/3 in-nings of relief. Sims picked up where Kraft left off and struck out two in 1 and 1/3 innings of relief.

The Roadrunners (21-18, 6-8 WAC) will look to build off this weekend’s momentum when they face Texas-Pan American (19-17, 10-2 Great Western Conference) on April 23.

SPORTS 9April 23, 2013

BASEBALL

UTSA wins needed WAC series against Sacramento State

The Roadrunners are currently ranked eighth in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). UTSA’s next series is against Dallas Bapist on April 26.

Will

Talle

nt /

The

Pai

sano

Page 10: The Paisano Volume 48 Issue 13

ADVERTISEMENT10April 23, 2013