11-18-2020

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Wednesday, Nov. 18 - Tuesday, Nov. 24 Weekly Digital Edition

Vol. 107, Issue 8 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

Aztec’s bounce back; beat Hawaii 34-10 In-person by

instruction on pause until next semester

Kyle Betz

SPORTS EDITOR

San Diego State football defeated Hawaii 34-10 in the team’s third home game of the season at Dignity Health Sports Park on Nov. 14. With another 100+ yard performance from senior running back Greg Bell, the Aztecs (3-1) broke away for a 28-0 halftime advantage and led comfortably the rest of the game. Here are three observations from Saturday’s game. 1. Aztecs rely on Greg Bell, ground game to move the ball The Aztecs started the game on offense with three straight punts. The only notable play that happened during those drives was a 40-yard run from Bell. Junior running back Jordan Byrd kept the momentum going during the Aztecs’ fourth drive, scoring

by

Photo courtesy of Derrick Tuskan, SDSU Athletics Junior linebacker Caden McDonald strip sacks Hawaii sophomore quarterback Chevan Cordeiro during the Aztecs’ 34-10 win over the Rainbow Warriors at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, Calif. on Nov. 14

the first touchdown of the game with a 51-yard run. Before the Aztecs’ next drive, Bell told Byrd he wanted a touchdown of his own. “We’re chasing each other,” Bell said of competition within the running back room. “Jordan breaks a long one, I come to the sideline, tell him I’m going

to get mine. If I break a long one (and one of the other running backs comes) to the sideline, (I) tell them to go get theirs. We just try to match each other’s intensity and it worked out well today.” Bell would end up scoring a 62-yard scamper on the first play of the next SDSU series, extending the

Aztecs’ lead to 14-0 near the end of the first quarter. But for Bell, things didn’t stop there. The Nebraska transfer scored another touchdown from three yards out to build upon the Aztecs’ already-commanding lead before halftime. see

FOOTBALL page 5

Prop 17 passes granting state parolees voting rights by

Catlan Nguyen

SOCIAL MEDIA EDITOR

Earlier this month, California voters passed five of the propositions on the ballot and rejected seven. Proposition 17, which allows state parolees to vote in California, passed with support from about 59% of voters, according to the Associated Press. “I just think that it was a step in the right direction, and it’s going to give people a voice who have always felt speechless before and like their voice never mattered,” San Diego State senior and parolee Sarah Norris said. “It’s a generational feeling. It’s a lot on our generation to educate those who can vote now.”

Brenden Tuccinardi

EDITOR IN CHIEF

About 50,000 new voters will be eligible to vote in future elections, thanks to Proposition 17. “There’s a huge population of people who are on paperwork who do want to vote,” SDSU alumnus and former parolee Moises Garcia-Perez said. “They have a political opinion that they feel towards their government, and they want their voice to be heard.” While the passage of Proposition 17 seems to be an indicator that Californians want to reform the state’s criminal justice system, other propositions that would do just that failed to garner voters’ support. Proposition 25 looked to replace cash bail with

a system based on public safety and flight risk, among other misdemeanor changes. “I’m gratified that voters saw fit to continue our state’s criminal justice reform,” Criminology professor and Executive Director of SDSU Project Rebound Dr. Alan Mobley said in an email. “And I’m surprised the proposition on eliminating cash bail failed to pass. I’m interested in (an) analysis that addresses this seeming discrepancy.” Norris said she wasn’t surprised that Proposition 25 didn’t pass because lots of money is made through the bail industry and the prison industrial complex. “I think (passing it) would make it more equitable for everybody when they are

arrested because as it is now, the only people who can make bail are people who have the money or their parents or family have that money,” Norris said. “That means it’s more of an upper-class, middle-class privilege.” Heavy hitters in the bail industry threw more than $11 million behind campaigns opposing Proposition 25, according to CalMatters. On the other hand, Garcia-Perez said he is in favor of keeping a cash bail in place. “If I wouldn’t have been able to get bailed out, I probably wouldn’t have finished school on time, and it would’ve just backsee

PROP 17 page 2

On the same day that San Diego County reported 718 new cases of COVID-19, San Diego State announced that its limited number of in-person courses would transition online and remain virtual for the remainder of the fall semester. The decision comes as news of positive developments in the race for a vaccine is overshadowed by yet another devastating and unprecedented surge in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations across the country. In a university-wide email sent on Nov. 17, SDSU President Adela de la Torre and Provost Salvador Hector Ochoa announced approximately 2,100 students would not be returning to the classroom after the Thanksgiving holiday. “Further restricting the number of people physically returning after the Thanksgiving holiday will help us to mitigate the spread of COVID-19,” de la Torre and Ochoa wrote in the email. What Happens Next? The university recommends faculty make the switch to virtual instruction by Wednesday, Nov. 25 at the latest. Students enrolled in a course that consists of in-person activities will receive more information from their professors. However, many faculty see

IN-PERSON page 2


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11-18-2020 by The Daily Aztec - Issuu