The Oracle THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 39
Inside this Issue
Meet the ghost of USF. Page 6
SG discusses possibly charging students for A&S-funded concerts. By Wesley Higgins N E W S
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
Paying twice for a concert?
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L I FESTYLE
The Index
Opinion.......................................................4 Classifieds..............................................8 Lifestyle......................................................5 Crossword......................................10 sports.........................................................12
E D I T O R
Student Government (SG) is considering changing a statute that allows students to be charged for tickets to concerts such as Homecoming, USF Week and Bull Stock. Current statutes allow SG to charge students for events paid for with Activity and Service (A&S) fees paid alongside tuition. The Senate Rules Committee, however, decided the wording is unclear on what events SG
may charge for. SG Senate President ProTempore Abdool Aziz said the rationale behind reserving this power is to help subsidize the budget for concerts. “Say we only have $100,000 and Maroon 5 costs $200,000,” he said. “Students may rather pay — like at FIU — $5 for floor tickets or club tickets.” SG hasn’t charged for concerts in the past, Aziz said, but the ability is there. “That’s not the road we want to go down,” he said. “Although it could be a possibility.” The rules on what SG can charge students came up when the Senate Rules Committee reviewed Title VIII and noticed it conflicted with Florida state law, which states SG may only charge for concerts hosted by A&S-funded entities, such
as the Center for Student Involvement. Aziz said the Florida law allowing SG to charge for concert tickets is to give them more flexibility with sponsored activities. SG Senator Michael Malagon, who sits on the committee, said the change should make students less concerned with abuse. “The way it’s worded right now is very vague,” he said. Any organizations that want to subsidize a concert would have to receive authorization from the student body president or a majority vote from SG Senate. “If they come before students, they’re going to need a very, very good reason,” Malagon said. “I know most senators wouldn’t vote for it.”
n See CONCERT on PAGE 3
Happy Halloween
Greek Village hosted the annual “Trick or Treat with the Greeks” on Wednesday for the local community. ORACLE PHOTO / SEBASTIAN CONTENTO
USF Library hosts ‘gay landslide’ By Nataly Capote A S S T .
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Recent years have seen a number of victories for the LGBT community that will be the subject of a lecture titled “Gay Landslide! Victories for Human Rights: Four Decades of Progress.” USF alumnus Mitchell Katine, who served as the attorney in the Supreme Court case of Lawrence v. Texas in 2003, will be at the USF Alumni Center today to discuss the progression of LGBT civil rights, along with Commissioner Kevin Beckner and USF associate professor Sara Crawley. The 2003 case struck down sodomy laws in Texas and invalidated them in 13 other states. Katine served as the lawyer for John Lawrence and Tyler Garner, who were charged with having “deviate sex” by a jealous ex-partner. The anti-sodomy laws were ruled unconstitutional as a violation of privacy. Katine has created numerous LGBT organizations in Houston and Texas, and voices issues on samesex marriage, gay adoption, HIV/ AIDS and civil rights on national news programs. He received his bachelor’s degree at USF in mass communications and public relations and was also a USF Ambassador. Katine, who hasn’t been on campus since he graduated, will talk about the new issues since events like Lawrence v. Texas that have plagued the LGBT community, and how it brought about change and talk of legal marriage. Crawley and Beckner will follow Katine’s lecture with a panel discussion on issues of gender and sexuality. “It’ll be a lively discussion,” said William Garrison, dean of the USF Libraries. Garrison also said an LGBT col-
n See LGBT on PAGE 2