April 26, 2022

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TUESDAY April 26, 2022 VOLUME 111 ISSUE 27 www.UniversityStar.com

DEFENDING THE FIRST AMENDMENT SINCE 1911

Students explore what transportation services offer as gas prices rise SEE PAGE 2

Opinion: Tattoos are acceptable

Senior - 30 -

Baseball Gallery

SEE PAGE 6

SEE PAGE 3-4

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MAIN POINT

The University Star’s 2021-22 editorial board takes a group photo Saturday, April 2, 2022 outside of Old Main at Texas State University. PHOTO BY LILIANA PEREZ

Yours truly, The Star Board By Editorial Board Like all great things, the 2021-22 editorial board’s term has come to an end. It feels like our year just started and it’s quite surreal that in a few days The University Star’s editorial board as it currently stands will no longer exist. Some of our editors will move up to bigger roles while the rest of us will graduate and be forced to find “real jobs.”

Every year, each editorial board is presented with their respective challenges that force them to adapt and grow in unexpected ways. For us, our main obstacle was navigating staffing shortages and leading a newsroom that, for the most part, consisted of younger staff members. On top of that, this was the first time in nearly two years that we were able to connect with our audience in person and print our work for a campus bustling with students. Throughout this experience, we have

been nothing but grateful for the opportunity to serve our community and share content that matters. Like the editorial boards that have gone before us, our term hasn’t been easy. A year ago when we moved into our current positions, we questioned whether we were capable of doing the job as we stayed in our newsroom until nearly 2 a.m. putting together our first print issue. That was just the beginning of the long days and

SEE MAIN POINT PAGE 6

CLUB SPORTS

Fencing club victory at SWIFA not expected, nor swift By Dillon Strine Sports Contributor For the Texas State Fencing Club, its win at the Southwest Intercollegiate Fencing Association (SWIFA) competitions came as a pleasant surprise. They considered themselves underdogs and took that attitude into the first conference championship victory in the competition's return. SWIFA held three competitions for the South Texas Conference, the first competitions since before COVID-19, from March 5-April 16. Seven schools from across the state competed and all three weapon disciplines were tested in. Texas State University came out on top as the 2021-2022 Grand Champion. The Bobcats defended their hometown with a victory as the top foil and overall squad at SWIFA 1 on March 5, hosted by Texas State in San Marcos. On April 2,

they backed up their victories with wins as the top foil, epee and overall squad at SWIFA 2 hosted by Texas A&M in College Station. Heading into the final event on April 16, SWIFA 3 hosted by The University of Texas at Austin, fencing club president Josh Paez saw that his team had a chance after calculating past results. In Paez’s years with the club, he had never experienced a win in saber, the event that would take the team over the hump for its grand achievement. “We won by a very close margin, and it was an uphill battle the entire time,” Paez, a biochemistry senior, said. “Everything was kind of set against us, all their people had more experienced fencers in their second or third year, their best fencer was in his fourth year.”

SEE CLUB SPORTS PAGE 7

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April 26, 2022 by The University Star - Issuu