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NEWS PAGE 5
Tre’ Newton mourns end of football career, looks to future
Invisible Children screens documentary on campus
SPORTS PAGE 7
LIFE&ARTS PAGE 12
Faculty members showcase art, talent in exhibit
THE DAILY TEXAN Tuesday, November 16, 2010
TODAY
Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900
The cuts would be in addition to the 5-percent cuts already ordered for the current budget biennium, which covers 2010 and 2011. State leaders say they will still request an additional 10-percent cut for the next budget that covers 2012 and 2013 — which could amount to a 17- to 18-percent budget cut for many agencies.
Operation Christmas Child
University celebrates diversity
Check out the Texan’s latest video at dailytexanonline. com on Operation Christmas Child’s efforts to send presents to children in developing countries. The campaign runs through Nov. 22.
www.dailytexanonline.com
“This is a new development, and I think it’s prudent in light of where the revenue shortfall seems to be heading,� Branch said. “If I was a college president, I would be preparing to do another 2 to 3 percent.� The short time frame universities have to
Symposium on “Beyond El Barrio: Everyday Life in Latina/o America,� explores how Latinos are approached in the media and public policy, featuring UT professors Frank Guridy, Cary Cordova and John McKiernanGonzalez. San Jacinto Conference Center, Room 207 AB.
Foreign Service Careers
As part of International Education Week, former U.S. ambassador to Eritrea Ronald McMullen will host an information session on careers in the U.S. Foreign Service. McCombs School of Business, 3.202. 12:30-1:30 p.m.
I have no money
Carothers Dorm, 2501 Whitis Ave. Public Intoxication: A UT staff member reported a UT student was wandering from dormitory to dormitory while exhibiting a physical reaction to the overconsumption of alcohol in several locations. The officers located the subject in the hallway. He became combative toward the officers when he realized they had found his wallet further down the hallway. When he discovered Austin EMS was there to assist him, he began yelling, “I can’t afford this!� and kicking at the officers. Because of the student’s intoxication, he was transported to a local area hospital for further treatment. Occurred on: Saturday at 11:23 p.m.
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Allen Otto | Daily Texan Staff
Plan II freshman Lucy Junker teaches Zeal Desai, an international relations and global studies junior, the steps to Irish folk dances at a free workshop as part of International Education Week on Monday.
Cultural exchange promoted through International Education Week By Vidushi Shrimali Daily Texan Staff More than 2,000 students left Austin to study abroad last school year, and this fall about twice as many international students from 115 countries came to the city to study at UT.
The University’s second annual International Education Week, Monday through Friday, celebrates cultural diversity on campus and promotes international exchange. Thirty-five campus organizations will host 55 events this week,
ranging from lectures on traveling tips to foreign film screenings and a world trivia competition Thursday night. On Monday, Russian language and East European and Eurasian studies graduate student Elliott Nowacky spoke about interning
By Lauren Giudice Daily Texan Staff UT’s Center for Electromechanics, along with Atlantabased Center for Transportation and the Environment, delivered two hydrogen-powered utility vehicles to the U.S. military’s largest combat support agency. The cars have a much greater range than other vehicles of
their type and use “the fuel of the future,� said program manager Richard Thompson. The team increased hydrogen storage and maximized efficiency in weight, volume, cost, safety and commercialization potential. To make the vehicle as efficient as possible, the team used high-energy batteries and a high-pressure hydrogen stor-
t BMUFSDBUJPO UZQF t GBNJMZ WJPMFODF t SPCCFSZ SFMBUFE t HBOH SFMBUFE t EFGFOTF PG TFMG PS PUIFST t VOLOPXO NPUJWBUJPO t NPUJWBUFE CZ ESVHT t TFY SFMBUFE t PUIFS Source: APD Reports
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age unit. The team worked together to build and test the vehicles, but UT’s center developed the highenergy battery that was essential for the creation of the vehicle. “[The Department of Defense is] very interested in the use of hydrogen-fueled transportation
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Allen Otto | Daily Texan Staff
Marketing department representative Linda Golden whispers to Elizabeth Cullingford, an English department representative, on Monday.
Council seeks alternate appraisal of professors
“I know a lot of the students have commented and came up to me and said, ‘Wow, I didn’t even know so-and-so made work like that’ or ‘I haven’t seen more work from that artist in a long time.’�
LIFE&ARTS PAGE 12
at the U.S. Embassy’s Office of Defense Cooperation in Ukraine and later serving as the chief of the defense cooperation branch in Kazakhstan. Nowacky said that as a diplomat he often had to follow
Of the 31 murders in 2010:
UT explores hydrogen fuel, sparks government interest
Quote to note
— Jade Walker Senior program coordinator of the Visual Arts Center
APD reports increase in homicides during 2010
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Eid al-Adha
Campus watch
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By Aziza Musa Daily Texan Staff The Austin Police Department is facing its fifth spike in the number of murders committed during the past 15 years — despite an overall drop in the violent crime rate. Murder rates usually average in the low to mid-20s every year, and 2007 marked the latest rate increase, said APD Cmdr. Julie O’Brien, who oversees the violent crimes division. But since January 2010, police have reported 31 homicide victims, 14 more than the same time last year. O’Brien said although several homicides happened in unusual ways this year — such as the death resulting from Austin resident Joe Stack flying his plane into the Echelon Building on Feb.
Beyond the Barrio
The Islamic Dialogue Student Association will host its celebration of Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of Sacrifice in UTC, 4.104. 6:30-8 p.m.
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“With 10 months left, we’re looking for more reductions as a prelude into budget cutting in the session,� Straus said. Public colleges and universities will not be exempt from the latest round of budget cuts, said Rep. Dan Branch, R-Dallas, chairman of the House Committee on Higher Education.
Alejandro Escovedo
The Austin-based singersongwriter will perform at the Continental Club at 10 p.m.
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State demands additional budget cuts By Nolan Hicks Daily Texan Staff Texas needs to cut its spending an additional 2 to 3 percent for the current budget cycle as state revenues lag almost $4 billion below projections, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Texas House Speaker Joe Straus announced Monday.
Calendar
TOMORROW’S WEATHER
Erika Rich | Daily Texan Staff
Research engineers Clay Hearn and Michael Lewis stand alongside program manager Richard Thompson in front of a hydrogen fuel bus project at the J.J. Pickle Research Center. The bus preceeded their invention of two hydrogen-run cars that have recently been delivered to the Department of Defense in Georgia.
By Nick Mehendale Daily Texan Staff UT’s Faculty Council created a new committee at its Monday meeting to determine the best way to conduct annual evaluations, hoping to ensure the faculty has a say in how professors and staff are reviewed. Faculty Council Chairman Dean Neikirk, an electrical and computer engineering professor, proposed the committee reach a consensus about the way the faculty would like to be evaluated. Under current evaluation procedure, students review non-tenured teachers every semester. These teachers also submit annual reports to administrators, who review any research or papers they have published.
Although the new committee is not seeking to change the way evaluations are conducted, Neikirk said the committee would open discussion to new proposals about evaluations from outside sources. “Some people in the state and nationally are not sure that their faculty is working at their maximum,� said Janet Staiger, a radio-television-film professor and former council chairwoman. “We think almost all faculty is doing a great job. We need to explain what we do, that we are not overpaid and that, many times, we are overworked.� Neikirk cited a Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board recommendation that would have
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