Independent Student Newspaper for the University of Texas at San Antonio
{SINCE 1981}
UTSA Mayor Ivy Taylor will be giving a lecture over pressing issues that impact the community, nation and world on January 26 in the Buena Vista Theater at the Downtown campus at 5:30 pm. The mayor’s talk is part of the College of Public Policy’s Dean’s Distinguished Lecture Series.
Volume 52
Issue 15
January 8 - January 19, 2015
BYE, COACH
Task force disregards Larry Coker resigns. students’, An era ends. faculty calls for gun-free classrooms Caroline Traylor News Editor
@CarolineTraylor news@paisano-online.com After a semester filled with contentious debate, UTSA’s Campus Carry Task Force has released preliminary recommendations for gun-free zones on UTSA campus. Despite protests initiated by UTSA faculty, classrooms did not make the gun-free zone list. Senate Bill 11 legalized the concealed carrying of guns on Texas’s public university campuses; the legislation takes effect Aug. 1, 2016. Under a provision in the law, university presidents were instructed to consult with students and members of the university community to develop policies specific to each public
Texas Texas Public Safety Trooper Brian Encinia was indicted by a Waller County grand jury for a perjury charge related to the arrest of Sandra Bland. Encinia plans to plead “not guilty” to the charge, which could carry a year sentence in jail and a $4,000 fine. The Bland family attorney, Cannon Lambert, says, “Encinia also should have been charged for assault and battery; the Bland family feels toyed with and disrespected.”
U.S.
President Obama announced his plans to use executive action to enact gun control measures including: requiring background checks for all gun sellers, increase the number of FBI employees that run background checks on all gun holders, requiring states to provide information to the government about those disqualified to carry, increased spending on mental health research and “smarter gun technology.”
World After disturbing images of children starving in the city of Madaya went viral, the Syrian government will now allow aid delivery to the besieged city. The city has been blockaded by loyal troops of Syrian president Bashar alAssad and aid has not been delivered to the city since October of 2015.
Science Janet Kelso, Leader of Research at the Max Planck Institute for evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany states that recent data suggests three genes given to humans by the neanderthals may be the root of modern allergies.
UPDATE:
Jakob Lopez Editor-in-Chief
@jakobll news@paisano-online.com The only coach UTSA Football has ever known, Larry Coker, announced his resignation Tuesday, after five seasons. The 67-year-old — and third oldest coach in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) — compiled a 26-32 record at UTSA, and led the start-up program to the (FBS) from the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) and back-to-back
winning seasons in 2012 and 2013. “He was the total package. He is a gentleman; he is a coach, a teacher, a friend, and a mentor… He made history, not just here at UTSA, but on a national level with the start-up of this program,” said UTSA Athletic Director Lynn Hickey of Coker at the press conference addressing his resignation. “No one has ever done anything like this before and I am guessing that no one probably ever will again.” Coker, a national cham-
pionship winner in 2001 with Miami, brought credibility and pedigree to UTSA. UTSA Football had no facilities, no marching band, and no fight song prior to Coker’s hire. Yet six years later, the program sits bowl-eligible in a fledgling football city with three-star recruits and competitive personality. But Coker’s announcement comes at a peculiar time for UTSA Football. See UTSA football, Page 2
Photos courtesy of UTSA Athletics
See Campus Carry, Page 2
UTSA environmental science students research dwindling monarch butterfly population Alex Birnel
News Assistant
@alexbirnel news@paisano-online.com The Monarch Butterfly population of Texas is dwindling significantly. Their decline has been so dramatic that this past year public pressure emanating from the scientific community mounted to classify the butterfly as an “endangered species,” a status entitling the species to federal protection. A team of researchers working at UTSA - including students and environmental science department staff - have received $300,000 in funding from the Texas State Comptroller’s Office to unearth exactly why these beautiful creatures are disappearing. Dubbed “the Monarch Butterfly project,” former UTSA Environmental Science student Julian Chavez – now a staffed researcher on the team – explains the importance behind the study. “There is a lot of focus on the monarch butterfly right now because there has been a huge crash in the monarch’s
population,” Chavez said Linking monarch biology and ecology, Chavez outlines how a changing environment is implicated in the population’s plummet. “Previously, the area they wintered in Mexico was roughly the size of 40 football fields. Now the area that they winter in is more
the milkweed flower across Texas compounds the problem. “The milkweed is the only plant the monarch lays its eggs on and the only plant the caterpillars eat,” Chavez explained. In addition to connecting the two phenomena, the project involves conducting field experi-
like the size of one football field. There are many things that could be causing this.” – said Chavez. At UTSA, the team’s focus is to zoom in on how a shrinking amount of
ments across Texas intended to explore different land management practices and how these practices may affect the prevalence of the milkweed flower. Such land treat-
ments include mowing, cattle grazing and controlled burning. Getting specific, Chavez says the team is also “conducting greenhouse experiments to better understand the nutrient requirements of milkweed, the milkweed patch size preference for monarchs, the species of milkweed the monarch caterpillars prefer to eat and also fire ant predation.” Not only does the research team seek to explain what is occurring with Texas’ monarch butterfly population, but they also plan to include an outreach and educational component to their work. In partnership with the U.S. Forest Service and the Environmental Science Academic Program at UTSA, the group plans to present an outreach program that will include visits to elementary school classrooms and a summer camp. “Our program seeks to engage participants with opportunities for hands-on scientific discovery and inspiration with activities designed around monarch butterflies while focusing on the TEKS set by
The research team’s focus is the decreasing milkweed flower across Texas and its relationship to the monarch butterfly population.
the state,” says Chavez. “There is a gap i n knowledge linking monarchs and the native milkweed they rely on. Our end goal is to fill in that gap. Our goal for the education outreach is to bring basic concepts in monarch biology, ecology, and conservation to students in the San Antonio area.” As far as personal motivation is concerned, Chavez describes returning to his alma mater for research as a “no-brainer.” “When I was given the opportunity to work in the department with these amazing people again, I felt like it was a no brainer. I get to do what I love, with the people I truly care about,” Chavez said. “My goal in life is to leave the world a little better than the way I found it.” For more information on the project visit: http://www. utsa .edu/crts/monarch.
Photos courtesy of Julian Chavez