Volume 66, No. 31
THE PAN AMERICAN
August 5, 2010
New VP brings years of experience
By Roxann Garcia The Pan American The University of Texas-Pan American will welcome a new vice president for business affairs for the fall semester. Martin V. Baylor, associate vice president for budget and resource planning at the University of Texas at Dallas, will begin in the role Aug. 23. “We are extremely fortunate to have had such an outstanding pool of candidates and especially fortunate to have acquired the talents of Mr. Baylor,” Dr. Robert S. Nelsen, UTPA president, announced in a memo to the University community July 6. Baylor, born in Illinois, has spent almost 25 years in university finance and budgeting, so understands the financial implications of different alternatives quite well. He replaces Jim
Langabeer, who retires in August. “My very first auditing position was back in 1985 as the director of financial services at Baylor College of Dentistry,” Baylor said. “I really enjoyed working in the higher education environment and being around faculty and students.” The new VP earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Illinois State University in 1985 and a master’s in business administration from Baylor in 2005. Baylor will be joining the UTPA community from the UTD after having spent three years as associate VP for business affairs. “Marty,” as his colleagues know him back home, managed the university’s budget and strategic goals after his arrival in 2007. The Illinois native first got wind of the job
opportunity through e-mails from recruiters and headhunters about various positions across the country. When the note arrived detailing the proposed position at UTPA, Baylor jumped at the opportunity. “I was immediately Martin V. Baylor interested not only because of Dr. Nelsen’s leadership qualities but also my because of the location,” he commented. “My wife’s family resides in Pharr so we’re familiar with the area.” Upon receiving notice that he was selected as the new VP, Baylor said he felt “excited
and pleased at the decision.” His initial plan after arriving is to get up to speed on the many projects going on around campus. “I also want to have an opportunity to get around and meet as many people as possible,” he noted. “My first goal will be to get to know the campus and let the campus get to know me.” In easing the strain the university has endured during the state-mandated budget cuts, Baylor plans to set out and talk with folks about their concerns, also entertaining their suggestions. He also believes that by creating and identifying operation efficiencies the university can weather the cuts. “I am so excited about this opportunity and am looking forward to getting to work with the great folks at UTPA,” Baylor said.
Fears intensify as border violence escalates UTPA students struggle to reconcile safety with families
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By Denisse Salinas The Pan American Don’t talk out loud about organized crime, don’t leave the house after dark, don’t run if you’re in the middle of a shooting and don’t honk at someone if they’re stopped on the middle of the road. In border cities like Reynosa and even in the interior, these are some of pieces of advice people give each other to stay secure in places that once seemed so tranquil. Organized violence has hit Mexico so hard in the past three years that many Mexican citizens living in the United States are scared to go south, because even on the highways one stands a decent chance of getting a car stolen or worse, face a violent situation. More than 28,000 people have been killed in the drug cartel wars since 2006, and while most of the violence involves the principles in the conflict, innocent citizens have been increasingly affected. “Before, and I say before which for me is last year, I would go to Monterrey twice a month in a car, now, it is impossible,” said Karen Saenz,
Summer enrollment on the rise
a UTPA psychology student and Mexican citizen. “It is not because something that has happened to me but because of things we hear, it is not safe at all.” In the cities, one can expect crime to happen any time of the day, not only at night. Nightclubs have l o s t money because people are scared to go.
Restaurants and bars close early and tourism has decreased because some countries including the United States have sent warnings not to go to Mexico. Recently, the UT System canceled several Study Abroad programs scheduled to take place in Mexico this summer. At UTPA, the fifth largest campus in the System and the 10th largest public university in Texas, more than 86 percent of the 17,534 students are Mexican-American and a major-
UTPA cartoons: Elías Morán’s latest on campus life
ity still has family in different Mexican cities. Joanna Cantu, a senior speech therapy major, agrees with the suggestion that students stay north of the border as a preventive measure. “I have been here for almost 12 years and I do not go unless I really have to,” she said. “This is affecting every one of us and is taking away lives that do not deserve it.” Along with intermittent reports from the media, word of mouth keeps everyone informed. Due to self-censorship in the wake of a number of violent incidents targeting journalists, it is rare to find a story in a Mexican outlet that relates what is happening in the war-torn nation. “Everything we know about what is going on we know because of other people t h a t know,” Saenz said. “You will not find any news stories that talk about a shooting or about the kidnappings that have been taking place for years now.” Friends and families help each other prevent crimes by sending e-mails with tips or advice on what to do in case something happens, or detailing where not to go. “I received an e-mail saying that we should not be walking by ourselves in the malls, or downtown,” said Karla Dias, a junior marketing student. “It seems like now the trend is to kidnap women, give them a type of drugs so she can forget everything, and leave her in a motel where she will find herself naked
Photos: Joe Garcia displays artwork in the UTPA library
and without any type of identification.” These sort of events have been happening more and more, as organized crime has increased and the country battles for its soul with drug traffickers. “When everything started to happen, I remember saying that it was not going to happen to me,” Dias said. “Until I saw something that changed my mind, that is when I realized that this could happen to anyone, good or bad, young or old, it doesn’t matter.” The majority of the students agree that by going to Mexico they risk a lot of things including their lives. Some insist that the troubles won’t stop them from going when half of their family still lives on the other side of the border. “I need to keep going to Mexico, most of my family are there,” Saenz said. “I am taking the measures to prevent anything that can happen to me, maybe I seem exaggerated but I no longer go in my own car, I travel on the bus and I do not dress up because if you seem to have money, even if you don’t, that is the main thing that catches the attention of robbers.” Actually, the extended period of terror has had a positive, unintended consequence. Families are closer; they call each other every other day to ask if everyone is fine. Kids go home early, they spend more time together, and they say they love each other before they leave; they know that it might be the last time they will see each other. Still, the country is under siege and there is no end in sight to the struggle. “We have to pray,” Saenz said. “Because only a miracle will help our country.”
La clínica de UTPA se expande a través de los años