10-04-2017

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Wednesday, Oct. 4—Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2017 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 104, Issue 8 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

That 5-0 feeling

WHAT’S INSIDE

After their win over Northern Illinois, No. 19 SDSU is 5-0 for the first time since 1975. The Aztecs head to Las Vegas for a matchup with UNLV this Saturday. For full football coverage, see page 13. STD RATES UP Sexually transmitted diseases are up among teenagers and young adults.

by Mike McDonald STAFF WRITER

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Vegas has changed the feel of this game,” SDSU head coach Rocky Long said. “The game itself is important, but it’s not near as important as the other things that are going on.” There will be a pregame tribute honoring the victims, and both teams will wear red ribbon decals on their helmets

Aztec Shops and USE Credit Union have decided to cancel a program offering loans to students to pay for meal plans after receiving negative feedback from both parents and students. Associate Director of Dining Services Robert Isner said the short-lived program came about with good intentions after the success of a similar program offering loans for computers. “We put out the marketing,” he said. “A few people thought it was a great idea and (we) did it. Then word got out that ‘What we’ve got to take a loan out to eat?’ It was not meant to be that way.” Isner said after a great response to the computer loan program, it made sense to create a program to help upperclassmen with food costs. After a two-week run, the program was shut down. Isner said student voices led to the decision to discontinue the loans for meal plans program. “We were surprised that that was the feedback, so we just cut it out,” he said. “We certainly don’t want people to have the impression that you have to take out a loan to buy food on campus. We’re always trying to put something out there for the customer that doesn’t have a lot of money.” Isner said while Dining Services was attempting to offer a solution to students who need a better way to buy food on campus, they appreciate the student feedback. “We really encourage all students, no matter what, to come in and talk to us,” Isner said. “That’s the only way. We have students come in and tell us we’re not doing (a good job). So we work with them and we move forward.” Some students saw the program as a choice between further debt and eating. Joseph Tinglof, a computer science senior and a member of the Young Democratic Socialists of SDSU, said the program was taking advantage of low income students. “We found (the meal plan loans program) to be pretty despicable,” he said. “Like saying, ‘We know you can’t afford to eat, so if you want to eat, you’re going to go into more

SEE UNLV PREVIEW, PAGE 8

SEE MEAL PLAN LOANS, PAGE 2

XOCHIPILLI Ballet Folklorico Xochipilli embraces their vibrant culture throgh traditional dance. PAGE 8

JACK OF ALL TRADES Professor Roberto Rubalcaba is by day a mathematician, and by night a sushi chef DJ. PAGE 10

Photo by Kelly Smiley

Senior running back Rashaad Penny and sophomore fullback John Carroll celebrate after sophomore running back Juwan Washington returns the opening kickoff for a touchdown in SDSU’s 34-28 win over NIU.

Student survivors of Las Vegas mass shooting speak out by Will Fritz NEWS EDITOR

XANDER’S ZONE Men’s golf reacts to SDSU alumnus Xander Schauffle’s 2017 PGA Tour Championship win. PAGE 14

FOLLOW US /dailyaztec @TheDailyAztec @thedailyaztec /DailyAztecVideo

INDEX News............................... 2-3 Opinion.......................... 4-5 Mundo Azteca................. 6-7 Special........................... 8-12 Sports.......................... 13-15 The Back Page.................. 16

University, credit union scrap loans for meal plans program

At least 59 people were killed and over 500 were injured in the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history at a concert in Las Vegas the night of Oct. 1. The violence touched people from all across the country, including some San Diego State students. Marketing sophomore Beth Bushey was at the Route 91 Harvest Festival with friends and

family when the gunfire began. She said Jason Aldean had just begun his performance a couple minutes before when she heard a noise. “It just sounded kind of like firecrackers,” Bushey said. After a few seconds, she said the sound went away, and she didn’t think much of it. Then it started again. “It was just kind of a series of pops,” Bushey said. “Nobody was really doing anything, but I saw the drummer run off stage as fast as he could, and that’s

when I grabbed my friend by the arm and we started running.” She said the next moments were a blur, but she and her friend ended up finding her parents before escaping to a nearby motel with a group of people. At that point, she said she lost track of her father, but later found out he had stopped to help someone who had been injured. “My dad took off his shirt and SEE LAS VEGAS, PAGE 3

UNLV prepares for game in wake of tragedy by Abraham Jewett ASST SPORTS EDITOR

San Diego State football puts its undefeated record on the line on Saturday, Oct. 7, when it travels to Las Vegas to face University of Nevada, Las Vegas in a Mountain West Conference clash. The Aztecs, ranked No. 19 in the AP Top 25 for the second consecutive week, are 5-0 to start the year for the first time

since 1975. The game will be the first for UNLV since tragedy struck the city of Las Vegas on Oct. 1, when a mass shooter killed 59 concertgoers and wounded 527 more on the Las Vegas Strip. The shooting was the deadliest in United States history and makes the upcoming game about more than just football. “Obviously it’s a much different week than is normal, tragedy that’s happened in Las


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10-04-2017 by The Daily Aztec - Issuu