1.22.19

Page 1

5 | Arts & Life

7 | Sports

Becoming San Antonio

Athlete of the week

Vol. 59, Issue 2

Est. 1981

January 22 - January 29, 2019

The Paisano

Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio Community /PaisanoOnline

/ThePaisano

@ThePaisano

@PaisanoMedia

www.Paisano-Online.com

Thousands march for ... Locals discuss reasons for marching

Leonard Wilson: San Antonio native “First of all, I think if we can keep it alive and in terms of making the dream a reality it’s one thing to have a dream but it’s another thing to make the dream become possible. One of the things that Dr. King talked about was making sure that little white kids and little black kids will have the opportunity to walk hand in hand, and until we can really embrace that diversity, I think we can say not we shall overcome, but we have overcome and that’s why I believe.”

Stephanie Keene: Acadmic advisor in business studies “You just have to, you can’t let his legacy die. People have worked so hard to have the right to walk together and to even eat at the same restaurant and to throw that away would be ridiculous.”

Grace Adedipe: junior, biomedical engineer

“Today means a lot to me because I believe in civil rights for minority groups and the LGBT+ community. I believe that by taking a stand to come to this march we are saying we are an all-inclusive city and an all-inclusive country. With our political climate right now that is exactly what we need. And I’m all for inclusivity!”

The San Antonio community gathers to march in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.

By Carlos Prado Staff Writer San Antonio held it’s 51st annual march to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Jan. 21. The dream that was envisioned by Dr. King came out in full force.

UTSA hosts Success Walk

Hundreds of people from all walks of life participated in this act of unity and fellowship. Many guest speakers showed their support, such as Apostle T.E. Booker, Shaun King, San Antonio’s own Mayor Ron Nirenberg and many more. UTSA’s

By Joseph Torres Staff Writer

Joseph Torres/The Paisano

The Roadrunner Success Walk was held at UTSA on Jan. 16 as part of Roadrunner Days Spring Edition. The John Peace Library (JPL) and Multidisciplinary Studies (MS) Building provided open source information

designed to promote student success on campus. The Roadrunner Success Walk aimed to bring awareness to students about educational resources available at UTSA. This self-paced tour took place from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. at four different student service locations inside the JPL and the MS

African-American and MexicanAmerican study programs were also in attendance accompanied by UTSA students, staff and alumni.

President Eighmy seeks campus improvement By Heather Montoya Co-News Editor

Students stand in line for refreshments.

Jack Myer/The Paisano

Building. UTSA offers these services through a student funded program, also known as a student service fee, applied to tuition costs. These services Continued on page 2 See “Roadrunner day event informs students of campus resources”

President Eighmy’s priorities for 2019 emphasize the university’s strategic initiatives, next capital campaign and funding. The strategic initiative that Eighmy would like to highlight for students is the Classroom to Career initiative. Kimberly Andrews Espy, provost and vice president for academic affairs, leads this initiative which promotes learning outside of the classroom. “I am a huge believer in the impact of experiential learning — it transformed my own college experience and so I know the value first hand,” Eighmy said. “Our goal is to have 75 percent of all UTSA students participate in some kind of learning opportunity outside the

classroom by the time they graduate.” Eighmy hopes to make the most of UTSA’s 50th anniversary celebrations and will launch UTSA’s next capital campaign, which seeks a 500 million dollar endowment and R1 Carnegie classification by this September. Eighmy will also be working with lawmakers in Austin during the spring and winter to make a case for UTSA’s funding. “It’s a short and intense legislative season that comes once a biennium, so we’ll have lots of work to do to be sure we’re making a good case for our funding priorities,” Eighmy said. In addition to focusing on the classroom to career initiative, launching a capital campaign and advocating for UTSA’s funding, plans for campus

expansion will also be underway in 2019. “On the Main Campus, we have two new residence halls in the works—one specifically for freshmen and one for Honors students,” Eighmy said. “We’re also building a new mini-neighborhood adjacent to UTSA Boulevard called Roadrunner Village. It will have housing, dining and shopping, really adding to the sense of vibrant residential life on campus.” UTSA also plans on working on the Roadrunner Athletics Center of Excellence, adding a center to house student success programs and also expandContinued on page 2 See “UTSA plans to work on strategic initiatives, capital campaign and funding”

UTSA alumnus announces entrance in 2019 NFL Draft By Adrianne Kristianto Social Media Coordinator Josiah Tauaefa, UTSA alumnus and former Roadrunner linebacker, announced that he will forgo his senior season and enter the 2019 NFL Draft on Dec. 28 via social media. In the 2018 football season, Tauaefa had 113 tackles, 11.5 tackles for loss, 4.5 sacks and

three quarterback hurries. Tauaefa was named honorable mention All-Conference USA by the league’s head coaches in 2019, was the first Roadrunner to achieve the Freshman AllAmerican Team his freshman year and is one of the 10 semifinalists for the Butkus Award, which acknowledges the nation’s top linebacker. “It was a tough decision

because so much went into it,” Tauaefa said. “I’m going to miss playing with those guys and that brotherhood, but I feel like I made the right decision.” Being the biggest inspiraContinued on page 2 See “Tauaefa forgoes senior season” Josiah Tauaefa forgoes senior year to enter NFL Draft.

Ricky Galindo/The Paisano


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