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90° San Marcos
The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star




The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star

The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star










Both Cayman and Herman plan to visit from Oklahoma and Austin once the bar opens. Cayman is excited for her sister to be remembered in a place that she loved so dearly.

“It’s the best feeling, especially [because it’s in] San Marcos because she loved that town,” Cayman said. “It really is an amazing town. They deserve to have a little bit of Bayle in it.”

For Herman, watching the process of Bayle’s was amazing, and believes it is exactly what Bayle would’ve wanted. Going through the loss of someone so close to her is hard on her, and she hopes the bar reaches people the same way it reaches her.

“I just really hope everybody understands how special she really was. I hope [the bar] shows everybody how special she was,” Herman said. “I hope everybody gets that, and not just, they go and they’re like, ‘It’s just something named after a dead girl.’ This is big, really big. She was a big person, and her death made a huge impact on so many people.”

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