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The Paisano shows you how to get, how to get to Avenue Q p8
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Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio
{SINCE 1981}
Volume 48
April 9, 2013
Issue 11
{WWW.PAISANO-ONLINE.
PASEO
UTSA
Liberal arts degrees losing ground to STEM
UTSA will begin the transition to a tobacco-free campus on June 1, 2013. The transition will run until June 1, 2014 during which time smoking will be only allowed on select surface parking lots.
Matthew Duarte News Editor
news@paisano-online.com
Will Tallent / The Paisano
Two Kaufman County prosecutors have been gunned down on two separate occasions over the last two months.
Over 200 dancers participated in FTK’s fourth annual Dance Marathon.
U.S. Residents of Mayflower, Ark. have filed a class action lawsuit against ExxonMobil after thousands of barrels of crude oil spilled into a residential neighborhood.
World Tensions have continued to increase with North Korea, with the communist state increasing activity at their nuclear facilities, despite warning from the US and South Korea, along with withdrawing workers from joint work facilities with South Korea.
CAMPUS
Just Dance!
FTK Dance Marathon raises over $40,000 for childhood cancer assistance Erin Boren
Assistant to the Editor news@paisano-online.com For the Kids (FTK), the largest UTSA organization and largest studentled philanthropic group in San Antonio, raised a total of $40,455.63 during their fourth annual 18-hour dance marathon, which started at 7 p.m. Friday, April 5 and ended at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 6. The funds benefit, the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio, and families with children battling cancer. This year’s total was a $5,000 increase from last year’s dance marathon. Established by the Leadership Challenge class in 2009, FTK’s purpose is to create strong leaders through hands-on experi-
ence running an organization. This year, however, FTK is transitioning from a registered student organization on campus to a full non-profit organization in San Antonio. “It all started because we wanted to make a difference,” said Andy Linares, morale overall chairperson with FTK. “Yes, we’re college students; yes, we’re getting degrees, but having the ability to do something bigger than yourself—it adds meaning,” Linares said. FTK operates on a small budget, funded by membership and operational donations. All other funding is passed directly on to the allocation committee, which is made up of FTK members and doctors from the Children’s Hospital of San
Antonio. “Families battling childhood cancer are the prime beneficiaries of FTK,” said Linares. “FTK is here to maximize the money that goes to the kids, so all the donated money goes straight to them.” Linares explained that the money goes directly to the families’ personal needs, not to scientific research, and helps with anything from gas to utility bills. “It’s basically an emergency fund because parents miss work. We want the family to focus on the child and worry less about the bills.” The marathon consisted of dancers, those who stand for the entire 18-hour period; moralers, those who provide support and enSee FTK, Page 4
CITY History This week in 1981, the first university level Air Force ROTC unit in San Antonio was announced to start at UTSA.
Sports The UTSA baseball team will play at CSU Bakersfield April 12- 14. Softball will play New Mexico State in Las Cruces, N.M. April 12 and 13.
Student housing headed downtown Marcia Perales Intern
news@paisano-online.com Students attending class at UTSA’s downtown campus will be able to choose to live in one of two student housing options, both of which are projected to be open by the fall 2014 semester. “Mayor Castro called for the creation of 5,000 new housing units and 13,000 new jobs in downtown, and, as part of their SA 2020 Plan, commissioned a consulting group to deal with
the student housing marketing demand,” said Harrison Pierce, chair of Student Government’s Downtown Student Community Affairs Committee. “A lot of the universities don’t have housing in the downtown area and the reason for [the housing] to get pushed was actually initiatives from the city,” Pierce said. The two options are a co-op housing development, which has yet to be named, and the Peanut Factory Lofts at 1025 S. Frio St. The co-op housing will only house UTSA students,
while the Peanut Factory will lease to both students and San Antonio residents. The San Antonio ExpressNews stated that “there is no student housing available to 6,860 students who attend UTSA’s downtown campus” and called for downtown improvements. “This project is part of the Decade of Downtown initiative, which aims to bring growth to the city’s west side,” according to KENS 5. See DOWNTOWN, Page 4
“Everything in the future is heading towards science, technology, engineering, math.” Brandy Alger
Coordinator for Engineering Outreach Times reported that only seven percent of all eighth graders in the U.S. reached an advanced level in eighth grade math, compared to the 47 percent in South Korea and 48 percent in Singapore. “These numbers are a disgrace, honestly,” Rankin said. “We wouldn’t tolerate it if it was one of our sports teams competing internationally. The whole country would be up in arms.” According to Raymund Paredes, Texas Higher Education Commissioner, jobs in STEMrelated fields are in high demand. “We have a shortage of basic scientists, particularly in the physical fields, chemistry and physics,” Paredes said to lawmakers at a recent hearing. “We have a shortage of physicians, a shortage of pharmacists and we’re projecting a shortage of veterinarians who treat large
Will Tallent / The Paisano
Texas
UTSA’s College of Liberal and Fine Arts (COLFA) has seen its funding increase by 22.4 percent over the last four years, a respectable amount for the university’s largest college both in terms of enrolled students and number of awarded degrees. So why did the College of Science, which accounts for only 17 percent of all students, have spending increase of over 35 percent? Many leaders in higher education believe that science, technology, engineering and math (STEM)-related fields will be at the center of job growth in the coming years. The current CEO of the Math and Science Initiative and former Dean of the College of Natural Sciences at UT-Austin Mary Ann Rankin believes, “The lifeblood of our country is innovation and the creation of new knowledge and technology.” Rankin, in an interview with the Texas Tribune, acknowledges that the U.S. is no longer a leader in science and math related fields: “In the era of Sputnik, there was this urgency around math and science and achievement in these areas, which sparked everybody’s interest and commitment. Somehow, we’ve lost that.” For example, the New York
animals. We have a shortage of high-skilled fields across the board.” In an interview with the Texas Tribune, Tom Luce, former United States Assistant Secretary of Education for Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development and current chairman of the National Math and Science Initiative, stated, “We have about 3.5 million unfilled jobs in this country at a time of high unemployment because we don’t have enough skilled workers.” “Everything in the future is heading toward science, technology, engineering, mathematics,” explained Brady Alger, coordinator for Engineering Outreach at UTSA’s College of Engineering. “Even if you do fine arts, you still have to know math.” Because STEM degrees have taken on a new importance, degrees in the liberal and fine arts field have taken a backseat when administrators look to bring in new talent. This has been the case at state schools such as UTSA, and at liberal arts colleges as well. “I think that the main issue here is that we tend to lose focus on the other aspects that bring strength to our society,” said Rosalyn Huff, who represented COLFA in UTSA’s Student Government Association (SGA) last year. “The main thing that people focus on is ‘What do
I want to get paid for?’” While many liberal arts colleges have shifted more toward STEM enrollment, some have not been so fortunate. Lon Morris, a two-year college in Jacksonville, Texas, was forced to close in 2012 due to a lack of enrollment. According to the San Antonio Express-News, Richard Vedder, director for the Center for College Affordability, predicted that similar colleges will “wither away.” In a study by Michigan State, professor Roger Balwin claimed the number of “true liberal arts colleges,” defined as those colleges that award less than 60 percent of their degrees in professional fields, is rapidly declining. In 1990, by Balwin’s count, there were 212 liberal arts colleges, but today, that number is just 130. See STEM, Page 6
ARTS 99 problems but a snitch ain’t one as Quiddich takes off at UTSA. Page 7