DEFENDING THE FIRST AMENDMENT SINCE 1911 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2018
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OPINIONS
LIFE & ARTS
NEWS Texas State Jewish community remains strong after antiSemitic flyers
Students honor loved ones during Día de los Muertos
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Volume 108, Issue 10
SPORTS
Letter to the Editor: University must raise non-tenure line faculty pay
Bobcats crowned regular season champions
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County extends early voting on campus following community uproar By Kaiti Evans News Reporter Following hour-long voting lines and the threat of a lawsuit, the Hays County Commissioners Court voted unanimously Oct. 26 at an emergency meeting to extend early voting hours on campus. As lines wrapped around the LBJ Student Center’s construction, students, faculty and staff waited hours to participate in early voting on campus, which was open Oct. 22-24 from 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. The three-day stint of early voting was inundated with unanticipated voters, as Hays County reported recordbreaking voting numbers. On the first day of early voting, Hays
County reported among the highest percentage of registered voter turnout out of Texas Counties. Early voting records for Oct. 29, the eighth day of early voting, report Hays County has had 134,403 early voters, totaling at 34.36 percent of the total registered voters. For the 2014 midterm elections, on the eighth day of early voting, there were 10,790 early voters, totaling at 9.88 percent of the total registered voters at the time. Currently, 134,403 residents are registered to vote in Hays County compared to 106,581 in 2014 and 121,326 in 2016. SEE VOTING PAGE 2
GRAPHIC BY MCKENNA STRAIN
#FireTeis takes to the air during homecoming game By Jakob Rodriguez | Sports Editor & By Andrew Zimmel | Sports Reporter
Following multiple losing football seasons, Texas State students, alumni and fans took to crowdsourcing to call for the firing of Athletic Director Larry Teis. A GoFundMe was set up Sept. 26 to get a banner flown over Bobcat Stadium an hour before the Oct. 27 homecoming game between the Bobcats and the New Mexico State Aggies. According to organizers who shall remain anonymous to protect their identities, the movement stems from alumni, students and fans' frustrations with the program’s stagnancy. Currently, Bobcat football has a 2-6 record, and head coach Everett Withers, who was hired by Teis, has an overall record of 6-26 with the program.
Through social media, the movement's many Twitter pages have cultivated a slim following, including @TXST_FireTeis, which has 192 followers. With #FireTeis, #CutTiesWithTeis and a slew of other hashtags, the account gained enough traction to crowdsource 19 donors to donate the $700 to pay for the banner. One of the Twitter posts stated, “These are not winning percentages or results of a successful athletic program. It all starts at the top (Larry Teis). He is the one that makes the hiring/firing decisions and the one that is supposed to hold coaches accountable for their on-field results." SEE ATHLETICS PAGE 8
The FIRETEIS.COM banner flew over Bobcat Stadium and surrounding areas Oct. 27 before kickoff. PHOTO COURTESY OF KEFF CIARDELLO
Sugar daddies: How some students choose to pay the bills By Sonia Garcia Assistant Life & Arts Editor Editor's note: This story recounts details of a sexual encounter that may be triggering for some readers. Additionally, the identity of a source in this story has been changed upon request. The source will be referred to as Lily. Sunlight reflected off the pavement as Lily made her way to a hotel lobby. It was noon on a Saturday. She shook with nerves. She was a 20-year-old Texas State student with no job. The financial burden of college had begun to take a toll and she needed money. Recently, one of Lily's friends had made an account on a mutually beneficial arrangement site: a dating site that connects sugar babies to sugar daddies or sugar mommas. According to Merriam Webster, sugar daddies are older men who support or spend lavishly on a mistress, girlfriend or boyfriend. Lily's friend made $700 after only having lunch with an older man. Lily liked the idea of getting easy money and was quick to sign up. Lily was meeting face-to-face with the 50-year-old man she had met on an arrangement site. Lily and her suitor had been texting for a few days about each other's interests and their arrangement. He said he would pay her $200 after they spent some time together. She managed to negotiate for $300. SEE SUGAR PAGE 5
Texas State to participate in Microsoftsponsored business pitching competition By Abby Gutierrez News Contributor Microsoft selected Texas State as one of four universities to hold a businesspitching event to help grow San Marcos' economy. Microsoft, along with Net Impact, a nonprofit organization that promotes using business skills to promote social and environmental causes, will host the
Community Impact Pitch-Off Nov. 30 at the McCoy School of Business. Texas State's Net Impact chapter, McCoy College Bobcat Net Impact, will compete in a pitch-off event where students and community members are invited to pitch business ideas. Arizona State University, the University of Illinois at Chicago and the University of Iowa were also chosen to host the event. Texas State was the only university
chosen not in a state capital. Teams of two to five participants must submit a proposal idea of 300 words maximum by Oct. 31 based on one of four prompts: extending environmental sustainability, bridging the digital divide, expanding access to digital skills or engaging community stakeholder. Net Impact will select 10 finalists Nov. 3 to compete in the Nov. 30 live pitchoff event. The week after the finalists are
chosen, they will gain access to virtual and live feedback from Microsoft experts through a webinar, as well as the opportunity to pitch their idea in front of a professional Microsoft judging panel. The winning team of the pitchoff event will receive $1,000 in prize money and $5,000 seed money to help implement their idea in San Marcos. SEE BUSINESS PAGE 2