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The Mercury 10 17 22

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October 17, 2022

FOOT MENACE ON THE PROWL

READ MORE PG. 6 THE MERCURY | UTDMERCURY.COM

Student Union Fee Passes, Athletics Fee Fails Over 6,000 Comets voted in both referendums, Athletics fee fails by 212 votes FATIMAH AZEEM Managing Editor

Comets voted in favor of a new Student Union and narrowly voted down an increased athletics fee in the recent fee referendum polls. UTD's next steps for a new SU are to secure approval from the state legislature to CASEY RUBIO| MERCURY STAFF

UTD Mental Health App aims to help

legally raise the fee cap. If passed through the legislature, the new SU fee – $100 per semester – will go into effect in fall 2023. Over 6,000 students –a bout 20% of UTD's population – voted in both polls. Vice President of Student Affairs Gene Fitch said this referendum vote was one the highest

turnouts in the history of the University. “We never get that, not even in Student Government elections,” Fitch said. “This is beyond significant – it shows us that students care. Now what’s disappointing, obviously, is

SEE REFERENDUM, PAGE 2

ELECTION

MANYA BONDADA Mercury Staff

A mental health text line will be available through the UTD app for students to get emotional support from peers. Kavya Kannan, neuroscience sophomore and creator of the help line, collaborated with several campus departments including OIT, the Wellness Center and UTDesign to increase the availability of mental health resources to students. In her first semester of freshman year, Kannan proposed an innovative solution to facilitate support systems on campus and alleviate stress. Her app acts as a text line Kavya where stuKannan dents who need mental health support can anonymously message a trained student volunteer for help. While the app is still being developed, it is expected to be ready for use by the end of the fall semester. “The main idea behind this project was basically to create this first line of support,” Kannan said. “So before you escalate and reach out to a mental health professional, which may seem like a hard task and isn’t always realistic, you can tell someone who you feel like you can relate to but who is also trained to help you.” After pitching her app, several department directors, professors and CS students helped Kannan implement her idea. Ravi Prakash — a computer science professor and Collegium V honors college faculty member — has been overlooking this project and advising on possible improvements. Similarly, Kacey Sebeniecher, the director of the Student Wellness Center, has been helping Kannan work out the legalities of the project. Finally, several senior CS students have been working on the app through the UTDesign program to include many of the features that Kannan believed would be beneficial to UTD students.

SEE APP, PAGE 2

RYLEE RUSSELL| MERCURY STAFF

Beto O'Rourke made the campus visit as a part of the Beto for Texas College tour, organized by the League of United Latin American Citizens and Students for Beto.

BETO MAKES STOP AT UTD Students filled the Davidson Gundy Alumni Center and flowed outside to hear the candidate make his case FATIMAH AZEEM Managing Editor

MARTIN FRIEDENTHAL Mercury Staff

D

emocratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O’Rourke detailed his plans for potential governorship at a packed rally of over a thousand students last Friday. The League of United Latin American Citizens and Students for Beto hosted O’Rourke in the David Gundy Alumni Center, where he discussed hot button topics such as economics, health care and abortion rights. This was O’Rourke’s second visit to UTD, as he spoke to comets in the

SSA Auditorium during his run for senator against Ted Cruz in 2018. In November, UTD will be one of nearly 20 universities on O’Rourke’s Beto for Texas College Tour. In painting his vision for Texas, O’Rourke highlighted his desire to legalize marijuana and end the STARR test as the crowd thrust their campaign signs into the air. Later in the speech, O’Rourke got into more polarizing subjects like condemning Abbott’s trigger laws that make abortion a felony, per the recent Dobbs v. Jackson decision. “Don’t ever allow him to persuade you

that this is about life or about heartbeats or about the life of the mother,” O’Rourke said. “This is about power and control, especially over women.” Abbott, he said, “owns every piece” of Uvalde and other shootings in Texas, a state which — according to the Dallas Morning News — has the highest mortality rate from mass shootings in the country. Those waiting to meet O’Rourke lined up all the way from Davidson to Chess Plaza. O’Rourke took pictures and greeted supporters from all grades and degrees for almost two hours.

First drag queen candidate for ordained ministry delivers sermon in drag

ANDRE AVERION

BEN NGUYEN JACK SIERPUTOWSKI Opinion Editor

A student was temporarily detained after interrupting a post-sermon drag show in the SU green on the night of Sept.12. Economics freshman Kyle Randle was taken off-site by UTD PD after disrupting a sermon and drag show hosted by the Synergy Wesley Foundation. Halfway through the performance, Randle began shouting that the event was “not Christlike.” In response, the crowd booed Randle as “Move B*tch” played on the speakers, and organizers tried to prevent further conflict. Isaac Simmons–who performs as Ms. Penny

SEE BETO, PAGE 2

IQ Headquarters opens

Protester detained at post-sermon drag show Editor-in-Chief

Neuroscience sophomore Soumya Joshi said she wanted to get involved in politics because she has hope in O’Rourke’s promises for Texas. “I think this new generation has a voice and has a community that should be heard,” Joshi said. In an exclusive interview with The Mercury, O’Rourke touched on issues closer to the hearts of UTD students. “I want to make sure that the use of state resources is a little bit more equitable across

Distribution Manager

Cost and is a candidate for ordained ministry in the United Methodist Church–then performed “You Can’t Pray The Gay Away.” After further discussion with Galerstein Gender Center Director Matthew Winser-Johns and a responding police officer, Randle was detained on-site Isaac away from the Simmons event. The show continued with-

out further incident. Simmons is the first drag queen and gay individual to be certified as a candidate for ordained ministry in the United Methodist Church and was invited to preach at UTD to celebrate National Coming Out Week. At Wesley’s event, Simmons delivered a sermon about the androgyny of the biblical figure Joseph and how people should not be afraid to speak up against injustice. Afterward, Simmons said that they hoped to show that anyone should be able to preach. “I come and I preach to be like, the pulpit belongs to all people,” Simmons said. “And

SEE DRAG, PAGE 6

BEN NGUYEN| EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Kyle Randle was detained on-site away from the main event until it ended.

UTD students are now welcome at the new IQ Headquarters, the next step in student entrepreneurship and city development which aims to turn 1,200 industrial acres into the future of the city. Located in the heart of the city, the Richardson Innovation Quarter, otherwise referred to the Richardson IQ, is a city-led revitalization of the Telecom Corridor, which was one of the largest conglomerates of neighboring businesses in the world between 1992 and 2010. In 2003, the dot-com bust rendered the Telecom Corridor obsolete.

SEE IQ, PAGE 8


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