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Thursday, January 23, 2014
dailytexanonline.com
UNIVERSITY
Faculty, staff donate to campaigns By Bobby Blanchard @bobbycblanchard
Two UT System Regents gave almost 10 times more in campaign contributions to Greg Abbott than what more than 100 UT individuals combined gave to Wendy Davis, according to the latest campaign finance reports from the Texas Ethics Commission.
Data collected on UTaffiliated contributors to Davis and Abbott demonstrate a trend also present in the Texas governor’s race at large: Davis attracts more individual contributors while Abbott has more money on hand. Abbott, the current Texas attorney general and the likely Republican nominee for governor, has about $27 million in donations.
Davis, a state senator from Fort Worth and the likely Democratic nominee, has raised $9.5 million. Davis reported more than 71,000 contributions in January over Abbott’s 11,000. The information in the thousands of pages of campaign finance reports show Republican-leaning
ELECTION page 3
Wendy Davis Democrat
Strong’s hire comes long after athletic integration
Republican
Girl Scouts restricted in on-campus sales By Nicole Cobler @nicolecobler
COOKIES page 2
THROWBACK
Greg Abbott
CAMPUS
As students plunge into the throes of Thin Mint season, young girls toting boxes of cookies and bags of change seem to take over every street corner — but, in reality, the University only allows two Girl Scout cookie booths on campus. The on-campus booths are organized by the Girl Scouts of Central Texas council, which includes smaller service units, such as Sunnyside. The booths are located on the West Mall and outside the Perry-Castaneda Library. According to Cindy Cassidy, Sunnyside’s service unit director and cookie manager, girls who sell at these two booths must be in sixth grade or older. The University determines the locations and the dates with the Girls Scouts
bit.ly/dtvid
Ethan Oblak / Daily Texan Staff
Dakoda Dauner buys cookies from Girl Scouts Mackenzie Soldano (left) and Emma Schmidt in front of the University Coop. For more than 10 years, the Co-op has allowed Girl Scouts to sell cookies in front of the store.
By Sara Reinsch @sreinsch91
Two years after a 1961 student referendum called for integration of the University’s athletic programs, the UT System Board of Regents removed all of its race-based student restrictions on Nov. 9, 1963. Seven days later, the University’s Athletic Council opened its doors to black athletes for the first time. In 50 years, UT has made policy-based strides toward racial equality in athletics. But the hype surrounding the recent hiring of head football coach Charlie Strong — who is UT’s first black men’s head coach — indicates that many racial barriers are still unbroken. Darrell K Royal, UT’s former athletic director and head football coach, announced the Athletic Council’s decision to open all University sports to black athletes on Nov. 16, 1963. “The Athletic Council
RACE page 2
SYSTEM
CAMPUS
SeekUT to provide data on student debt
South Korean ambassador hosts lecture
By Madlin Mekelburg tools that are provided by @madlinbmek
To better understand student earning and debt after graduation, the UT System will be gathering data about students who are one year and five years out of school and publish the findings on a new website, seekUT. Stephanie Huie, vice chancellor for the UT System Office of Strategic Initiatives, said her office was responsible for creating the seekUT site. “I knew that there was a need for us to look at what happens to our students after they graduate,” Huie said. Thomas Melecki, director of Student Financial Services, was a member of the task force that led to seekUT’s creation. “I do think they did a really nice job with it,” Huie said. “This is a tool that, at least, could suggest what might be an affordable level of borrowing, especially if a student uses this in conjunction with some other
the U.S. Department of Education.” Huie said her office partnered with the Texas Workforce Commission and Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to acquire the data available on the website. According to Huie, employers in Texas are required to file information about every employee’s wages to the Texas Workforce Commission. “We developed an agreement with our legal counsel within [the UT System] and within the workforce commission so that we could match the unemployment insurance with the student records so we could find out, of these students [who] graduated, where are they working and in what fields and how much money are they making, one and five years later,” Huie said. According to Huie, seekUT only provides information about students
DEBT page 2
By Natalie Sullivan @thedailytexan
In a speech on campus Wednesday, Suk-bum Park, consulate general of the Republic of Korea, said that, although there are many cultural differences between the U.S. and South Korea, increases in trade have improved the two countries’ diplomatic relationship with each other. Park is responsible for spreading Korean cultural awareness in Southeastern U.S., including Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma. Park said that despite differing in cultural viewpoints, the two countries have still managed to get along. “The U.S. is seen from the outside as a superpower,” Park said. “It’s a big juggernaut, a behemoth, something [Korea] cannot touch. … But the status quo in East Asia is changing. South Korea has … formed a relationship based on mutual trust with the U.S.” Park said a major benchmark in U.S.-Korea relations was the Mutual Defense Treaty, signed in 1953, which led to a 60-year friendship
between the two nations. “The U.S.-[Republic of Korea] treaty gave birth to an unshakable alliance between the U.S. and Korea,” Park said. “These alliance relations … were the lynchpin to peace and stability in East Asia.” Stratton Gaines, an Asian cultures and languages sophomore, said
he attended the talk because of his enthusiasm for the region. “I have a strong interest in East Asian relations,” Gaines said. “I plan on working, maybe, in the future in a diplomatic position, so it’s a field I’m interested in.” Robert Oppenheim, director of the Center for East Asian Studies, said the
relationship between the U.S. and Korea was particularly important because of the economic ties between the two countries. “The alliance between the U.S. and [Korea] is one of the oldest relationships the U.S. has in Asia, and factors as well into a lot of other
Shweta Gulati / Daily Texan Staff
Ambassador Suk-Bum Park, consul general of the Republic of Korea, gave a talk on the future of Korea-U.S, relations in the William C. Hogg Hall on Wednesday afternoon.
KOREA page 2
NEWS
OPINION
SPORTS
LIFE&ARTS
ONLINE
REASON TO PARTY
Ransom Center aquires Billy Collins’ archives. PAGE 5
Students should pay attention to urban rail. PAGE 4
How do Mack Brown and Charlie Strong differ? PAGE 6
Artists craft jewelry out of wood instead of diamond. PAGE 8
Professor advocates black queer representation. PAGE 5
We hope we get to play in the snow again. PAGE 4
Vince Young files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. PAGE 6
Science Scene notes a tweet from space. PAGE 8
One little girl meets Macklemore while another gets accidentally peppersprayed in this week’s Sidewalk Stories. dailytexanonline.com
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