1.30.18

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6 | Arts & Life

8 | Sports

Cuidad, a crecer: Break a leg

UTSA baseball on the brink of a new season

Vol. 57, Issue 3

Est. 1981

January 30 - February, 6 2017

The Paisano

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

/PaisanoOnline

@PaisanoMedia

@ThePaisano

www.Paisano-Online.com

SJP Activism on and off campus

Graphic by Amber Chin/The Paisano

UTSA experienced an increase in sexual assault and harrasment report statistics from 2015 to 2016.

Sexual assault and harassment reports increase at UTSA The silent protest featured students with a name of a Palestinian child imprisonment victim

Justice Lovin/The Paisano

By Justice Lovin Senior Copy Editor The UTSA chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) held a silent protest in the Sombrilla on Jan. 23 to raise awareness of the many Palestinian children who have been imprisoned by the Israeli military (IDF). The protest followed events on and off campus at which the group hosted Dr. Luke Peterson who spoke about his research on media representation of the Israel Palestine conflict. At the first event, held on Friday, Jan. 19 in the Travis room, Dr. Peterson spoke to students about the history of and media narratives surrounding the Israeli settlement movement. This was followed by a Q&A session with students. The next day, Saturday, Jan. 20, Dr. Peterson spoke at SJP’s annual “A Night of Hope for Gaza” fundraiser dinner. At this event, he spoke about Ahed Tamimi, the 16-year-old Palestinian girl who became a symbol of resistance when she was arrested by Israel after a video of her slapping an IDF soldier went viral and also spoke about how neoliberal economic policy has shaped the Israel Palestine conflict. “(Israel) has become a military technocratic state, marrying war-making industries and capitalism in a unique way. That makes them very valuable for other military institutions, including and especially the one here in the United States that wants to also capitalize on their research and development; … the actual implementation of deadly technologies against a captive population,” Dr. Peterson said. The event was hosted by SJP president and senior anthropology major Maureen Kaki, who spoke about her own experiences and identity as a Palestinian. The event raised approximately $10,000 for the Middle Eastern Children’s Alliance, a group that provides medical aid, clean water, educational funding and project funding for communities in Gaza that have been devastated by Israeli military strikes. Then on Tuesday, Jan. 23, SJP held a silent protest in the Sombrilla. Around a dozen SJP members stood on either side of the walkway through the tables with tape over their mouths. They held signs with the names and ages of imprisoned children written on them. “We are demonstrating against the imprisonment of Palestinian children in Israeli prisons. Who are subject often without any kind of reasonable process to military law,” Kaki said, placing the protest in the context of SJP’s goal to “give a more nuanced perspective of the quote unquote conflict (between Israel and Palestine).” Ammar Musa, an SJP member and mechanical engineering major at UTSA, also participated in the protest. “These kids don’t have voices. Their childhoods are ripped away from them. They can’t speak for themselves, so we’re out here telling their story,” Musa said.

By Heather Montoya Assitant News Editor UTSA’s 2017 Annual Security and Fire Safety Report, listed five incidences of rape on campus, one incident of rape off campus, four incidences of fondling and one incident of statutory rape were made at UTSA’s main campus in 2016. In 2015, two incidences of rape and two reports of fondling were made at Main Campus, and one incident of fondling were made at Downtown Campus. Leonard Flaum, director of the UTSA Equal Opportunity Services (EOS) and Title IX coordinator, said more students are going to EOS to report sexual violence since the #MeToo movement. “The majority of students that come to us, they are not coming to us to use

“The majority of students that come to us, they are not coming to us to use our process to find someone responsible. They are coming to us to get assistance so they can succeed in school, because the majority of our sexual violence issues don’t occur on campus, and the perpetrator is not a student.” - Leonard Flaum Director of EOS

our process to find someone responsible,” Flaum said. “They are coming to us to get assistance so they can succeed in school, because the majority of our sexual violence issues don’t occur on campus, and the perpetrator is not a student.” Any student who has been assaulted —on or off campus—can go to the EOS and Title IX office for services. “That can be in the form of academic relief, meaning that if the student has to miss classes because of what happened or they have to have medical appointments, court dates, if psychologically they are having difficulty concentrating on their school work, they can come to us,” said Flaum. Continued on page 2 See “EOS assists students”

Supreme Court Justice visits UTSA By Isaac Serna Editor-in-chief U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s inspirational account of her life elicited applause throughout her presentation to the UTSA community, but when President Taylor Eighmy said, “She is the first Latina to sit on the high bench,” the audience began cheering. “That gives me goosebumps, and I’m already noticing that some of you have tears,” Eighmy said to the standing room only audience. Sotomayor was familiar with San Antonio warm welcomes. She recounted a moment during the launch of her book “My Beloved” when she knew she had to visit the city. “When I was in Austin, busloads of people came to see me from San Antonio. I was so deeply touched that people did that, I made a promise,” Sotomayor said. “I told them the next time I came to Texas, San Antonio would be my first stop.” Sotomayor accepted UTSA’s longstanding invitation to visit the campus. Her request to visit was described by Eighmy as, “the easiest question I’ve ever got in my life.” Sotomayor addressed the roughly 500 UTSA students, faculty, staff and community leaders who packed the Retama Auditorium Thursday. She walked the aisles as she answered questions, patting shoulders and shaking the hands of audience members. Before she began her presentation, she visited with another 500 persons in the overflow room. Sotomayor exemplified what UTSA

Gaige Davila/The Paisano

Supreme court justice Sonia Sotomayor high fives UTSA president Taylor Eighmy.

advocates and supports: a first-generation Hispanic graduate who reached success through perseverance. “It’s okay to say you’re not as smart as someone else. It’s not okay to say you don’t work as hard as someone else,” Sotomayor said. “Perseverance can overcome a lot of things. “I lived my life goal to goal. I started with ‘I’m going to be a lawyer,’ and ‘someday, I’m going to be a judge,’” Sotomayor said. “The first thing I had to do was go to college, and I had to finish college because no one in my family had ever finished college.” Sotomayor credited her desire for higher education to her mother, whose determination to get an education began when she was young girl in Puerto Rico and observed students leaving the

Gaige Davila/The Paisano

college that was near her home. Her mother later joined the military and moved to the U.S. The dream followed her. Sotomayor graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1976 and earned her J.D. from Yale Law School in 1979, where she was an editor at the Yale Law Journal. She described her approach to school candidly. “I studied as hard as I could,” Sotomayor said. “I went to get help in studying because I didn’t write English well. I had a professor who helped me learn how to write English well and I did all that I needed to do to become a top student.” Among the audience members were Continued on page 2 See “Sotomayor speaks”


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