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UNIVERSITY
Interviews for next UT President begin By Josh Willis @joshwillis35
Members of the UT presidential search advisory committee have begun interviewing candidates to replace President William Powers Jr., who announced in July he would be resigning after the end of this school year. AN advisory committee is
working with consulting firm Spencer Stuart in the search for Powers’ replacement. According to a tentative timeline on the UT System website, the committee is conducting first and second rounds of interviews with candidates and will be making recommendations to the Board of Regents by the end of January. UT System spokeswoman
Jenny LaCoste-Caputo said the committee is on schedule to meet the January deadline; however, the Board of Regents is waiting until February to release the names of the candidates they decided to interview. The committee is led by Pedro Reyes, System executive vice chancellor for academic affairs, and Larry Faulkner,
UT-Austin president emeritus. The rest of the committee is comprised of members representing the Board of Regents, the UT System, the campus’ Dean Council, faculty, staff and Texas Exes. Geetika Jerath, international relations and global studies senior and president of the Senate of College Councils, represents the student body on the committee.
In July, Powers announced his plan to resign in a letter to former UT Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa. In the letter, Powers said he would remain at his post through the end of the legislative session in an effort to make the change of leadership more gradual and review legislation he felt would benefit
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HYDE PARK page 2
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Daulton Venglar | Daily Texan Staff
UT students, staff and other members of the Austin community gathered to celebrate the life of civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. through performances, speeches and a march throughout Austin. See it all in our video at www.dailytexanonline.com.
Biochemistry senior Tia Scott, who attended the march, said she thinks African-Americans often fear they will be racially profiled by police officers. “I think many AfricanAmericans have an unspoken fear,” Scott said. “Maybe they don’t say it outright, but they
By Jackie Wang
MLK page 2
By Samantha Ketterer
“If you are black in this country, we have never yet fully realized the possibility of a state that exists to protect us and to serve us and to have us live into the pursuit of happiness,” Foster said. “In fact, the reality has been that the darker your skin, the more likely you are to be shot while unarmed.”
Hyde Park residents form online association
think it. When a cop drives by, it’s just nervousness because it’s like, ‘Am I going to be treated unfairly, or am I going to be pulled over because I’m black or because I’m a black woman?’ I think there’s a general unspoken fear, and we shouldn’t
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Thousands participate in MLK Day march
them to not shoot because they do get scared.” Foster said all people should work to protect the right to use video cameras in the event of an altercation and also promote the use of police body cameras. Many people of color still face police violence today, Foster said.
CAMPUS
Hyde Park residents formed an online-based neighborhood association that seeks to better represent renters’ interests than the Hyde Park Neighborhood Association, which was formed in 1974. The association, “Friends of Hyde Park,” formed after several Hyde Park residents voiced concerns over a lack of renter representation within the original neighborhood association. The new association will support the construction of accessory dwelling units, which are smaller homes built in addition to the homes that already exist on a given property. Ricky Hennessy, a biomedical engineering graduate student, is one of the founders of the Friends of Hyde Park. He said members will be able to vote until Jan. 29 on a resolution supporting “easing restrictions on accessory dwelling units,” something the original association voted against. Hennessy said he feels the original association was not inclusive. “The Hyde Park Neighborhood Association, the original [association], had a bunch of rules,” Hennessy said. “You had to pay dues, and you couldn’t vote until 30 days after you did.” Hennessy said the new association will emphasize transparency and anonymous voting. Hennessy also said Friends of Hyde Park will focus on a streamlined participation process for maximum member input. “The main goal of
CITY
Thousands of students and community members gathered around the Martin Luther King Jr. statue in the East Mall on Monday morning to celebrate King’s legacy and call attention to a number of social justice issues, including police brutality against AfricanAmericans. Brenda Burt, a Diversity and Community Engagement officer, said at least 15,000 people walked in the annual MLK Day march from campus to Huston-Tillotson University. The event began with speeches from civil rights activists and concluded with a festival at Huston-Tillotson, a historically black university. In his keynote speech before the march, Kevin Foster, associate professor in the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies, said police brutality is one of the most crucial issues facing AfricanAmericans today. “Our police are the most heroic when they don’t shoot,” Foster said. “That might sound like an odd thing to say, but the reality is they have been trained to be scared. We need to be developing the policies and programs to help [the officers] live into that greatest possibility. And the reality is that sometimes it’s difficult for
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WEST CAMPUS
Pointe on Rio continues to push back move-in day By Samantha Ketterer @sam_kett
Although spring semester classes began Tuesday, wouldbe residents at the Pointe on Rio apartment complex still have not been allowed to move into their apartments. In an email sent to leaseholders, managers said the building will open Saturday. Pointe on Rio managers have delayed move-in day four times since mid-August. In the email to leaseholders, Pointe managers said they are waiting to receive a certificate of occupancy because of an “inability to get sidewalks/drives poured.” Pointe officials repeatedly declined to comment on the delays.
Advertising junior Dito Prado, who signed a lease with Pointe last summer, said he thinks upper management has been unreliable throughout the leasing process. “When I signed my lease, I was already pretty skeptical of whether it would be done by August,” Prado said. “It’s definitely gotten more frustrating over the past couple of months because they’re telling us that, ‘For sure, this time it’s going to be done,’ but something happens. They don’t always tell us that movein has been pushed back right away.” Prado said he was told leaseholders cannot break their contract with Pointe without paying a $500 fine.
Some students have contacted lawyers to try to opt out of their leases without charge, Prado said. Would-be Pointe residents, who were provided with accommodations in Dobie Center for the fall semester, will be allowed to stay another week, and leaseholders’ rents will be prorated from Jan. 10 until the day of move-in, according to the management email. Dobie Center managers declined to comment on the number of Pointe leaseholders currently staying in Dobie Center. Although Allison Peregory, government sophomore and leaseholder, said she does not entirely blame management, she would
The Pointe on Rio apartment complex has delayed the move-in date for leaseholders until after classes begin. This is the fourth time that the Pointe on Rio managers have postponed the move-in day.
Marshall Tidrick Daily Texan Staff
have liked more notice about the delays. “I would love to already be living [at Pointe], and I did not
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plan on living in Dobie when I signed my lease, but you have to do what you have to do,” Peregory said. “And, unfortu-
nately, I have just had to wait longer than expected to live in
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Tuesday, January 20, 2015
NEWS
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Volume 116, Issue 80
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HYDE PARK
significant difference between the two neighborhood associations is that Friends of Hyde Park will allow members to vote online. “They think that will allow them to represent a greater cross section of the neighborhood,” Heyburn said. “Their group also doesn’t have membership fees. You can join without having to attend a meeting 30 days before. We have a rule that if you want to be a voting member, you have to attend at least one meeting before voting.” Heyburn said he believes
MLK
whether they are Asian — that their lives matter, that we will stand up each and everyday — not just on the day that we march.” President William Powers Jr. also spoke before the march and characterized Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a day of renewing the fight for equality. In his speech, Powers referenced recent protests in Ferguson, Missouri, which broke out after 18-year-old African-American Michael Brown was shot and killed by a white police officer in August, and protests in New York
the issue of accessory dwelling units may have motivated continues from page 1 Hyde Park residents to form the new association. Friends of Hyde Park is to take “A number of people who the process and make it easier I saw at the [Friends of Hyde to participate,” Hennessy said. Park] meeting were people who “All [potential members] need were on the losing end of a vote to do is register to vote on our we had over accessory dwelling website, and we’ll give them units,” Heyburn said. “There’s updates. They can participate as been some concern in Hyde little or as much as they want.” Park; if we had additional housKevin Heyburn, Hyde Park ing units in the neighborhood, Neighborhood Association’s how will the neighborhood co-president, said he also include that increase in trafjoined Friends of Hyde Park as fic? I know some people in this a member to stay involved in new group may have wanted neighborhood decisions. Heyto see our neighborhood [be] burn said he thinks the only more supportive of accessory dwelling units.” Advertising sophomore Sarita Hodges currently lives just outside Hyde Park but said she hopes to move inside the neighborhood and join Friends of Hyde Park. “I see a lot of houses with the signs out front, so it seems like there’s a lot of support [for the new association],” Hodges said. “We’re not really in Hyde Park, we’re on the end. I would rather be a little closer anyway — I Daulton Venglar | Daily Texan Staff want to rent a house and I’m having trouble finding one, but Rick Hennessy is a board member of Friends of Hyde Park, one of two neighborhood associations in the Hyde Park area. I like the area a lot.”
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be afraid of people that are supposed to protect us.” State Rep. Dawnna Dukes (D-Austin) said King’s work toward equality is not yet complete. “We cannot sit back on our laurels when we continue to see actions that discriminate and profile against a few,” Dukes said. “And if we truly believe that every single person — whether they are black, whether they are Hispanic, whether they are Anglo,
City, where Eric Garner, also African-American, died after a white police officer put him in a choke hold. “If we look at Ferguson and New York, the poverty that still exists in our communities — the inequality — the dream has not yet been fulfilled,” Powers said. “So yes, today we celebrate a great man, a great legacy and a great dream, but, more important, is that we rededicate ourselves and our energy not just today, but every single day when we wake up — rededicate them anew to his dream.”
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Tuesday, January 20, 2014
LEGISLATURE
UT interns will help with Texas legislation By Eleanor Dearman @ellydearman
Hundreds of UT students will work alongside state lawmakers in the 84th Texas Legislature to craft policies the lawmakers will propose during the 140day legislative session. “Have you ever seen the movie ‘The Devil Wears Prada?’” said Dan Luiton, history freshman and intern for Rep. Mary González (D—Soccorro), when describing his first day on the job. “I felt like Anne Hathaway my first day. People walk inside assuming that you know who they are, but you don’t know, and you have to know.” For the next four-anda-half months, lawmakers will fill the House and Senate chambers and work to shape Texas law while, in the background, student interns help keep administrative work at bay.
Genevieve Cato, legislative director for González, said interns are vital to the success of the session and the administrative offices need all the help they can get. “There’s only 140 days to get everything done here,” Cato said. Finance senior Anna Hiran, an intern for Sen. John Whitmire (D-Houston) said Whitmire encourages hands-on work, something she appreciates in an internship. “He provides us with tasks where he believes that we can learn as much as possible, and it’s not menial things like making copies and hole punching,” Hiran said. Hiran said she learns more by working in a realworld environment than she would in a classroom. “The benefit of it is getting to observe all of it on a firsthand basis,” she said. “There’s only so much you can learn in a classroom,
and I feel like this internship is very hands-on. I feel that I have been given a lot of responsibilities, and I’m learning a ton.” Cato said an intern’s job description often changes day-to-day. “Things happen so quickly, and things come up so fast that a lot of times, like other staffers, interns are doing everything from answering phones to researching bills to talking to constituents,” Cato said. According to John Falke, a UT graduate interning for Sen. Brandon Creighton (R-Conroe), legislative internships require students to master time management skills. “There’s less time in the day to do the things that I want to do, but it also keeps me focused on my schoolwork,” Falke said. Cato said students interested in government and public policy are most likely to apply for internships during the
Ellyn Snider | Daily Texan Staff
History freshman Dan Luiton sits on the steps of the Capitol on Monday afternoon. During the 84th legislative session, Luiton and several other UT students will intern as the House of Representatives and the Senate work on Texas laws and policies.
legislative session. “There are people who are [political science] or government majors,” Cato said. “They’re interested in getting law degrees and running for office. They want to get into working on policy or government, so this is their first step to that goal. Then there are other people who are interesting in policy issue areas.”
Luiton said he hopes to become the first Hispanic president of the United States and believes his internship is a means to reaching that goal. “My parents are like, ‘Why are you doing it if they don’t even pay you?’ but I love it,” Luiton said. “It’s going to help me know people inside. It’s going to help me achieve my goal.”
POLICE
Crime on campus continues over break By Wynne Davis @wynneellyn
Although thousands of students left campus over winter break, UTPD stayed active because crime never takes a vacation. The most common offenses reported by UTPD were criminal trespassing, public intoxication and bike theft. During the five-week break from classes, UT police officers responded to multiple in-progress bicycle thefts and recovered additional stolen bicycles. Other thefts that occurred included thefts of laptop computers left
DELAY
continues from page 1 my apartment.” Pointe leaseholder Ross Marabella, student in the Denius-Sams Gaming Academy, said he would like managers to compensate future Pointe residents for the delays.
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unattended on University property, as well as University-owned computers that were not locked properly in rooms on campus. Here are some of the highlights and trends of winter break crime: Jan. 1, officers were alerted about a bicycle theft that took place at the Perry-Castañeda Library. The bike was recovered after they found a nonUT subject riding the bike off campus. Jan. 7, a non-UT subject was found pulling on bicycles parked outside of the Winship Drama Building. Jan. 12, bed sheets, a
comforter and clothes were reported missing from a laundry room inside San Jacinto Residence Hall. Officers also responded to a report of missing bacon on Jan. 13, after two boxes of bacon and sausages were stolen from a storage room in the O’Donnell Jr. Building. UTPD officers found non-UT subjects in the Jester Academic Center and other university buildings over break and cited them for criminal trespassing. The majority of criminal trespassing offenses happened between the hours of 12 a.m. and
“I’d hope the people at Pointe on Rio would make an earnest effort to make up for the time and the delays,” Marabella said. “I don’t know — by making an honest effort to communicate that to us or at least provide some compensation in some way.” Pointe officials ac-
knowledged the situation is unfortunate for both management and wouldbe residents. “We more than appreciate your patience with us as we know this has not been an easy process for any parties involved,” Pointe officials said in an email.
8 a.m. The officers wrote most subjects criminal trespass warnings but took some subjects with prior warnings into custody. In one incident, police sent a group of six high school students back to school when they were found skipping class. Traffic violators were also issued tickets for driving while intoxicated, driving without a valid driver’s license and driving without insurance. In emails sent to faculty, staff and students, UTPD said it is promoting the city’s new ordinance prohibiting the use of handheld
cell phones while driving. The ordinance applies to both drivers and bicyclists, although UTPD officers will not enforce it on campus. Police also alerted the UT community to a number of email scams that targeted university students, faculty and staff by capturing their employee login information and then making changes to route their paycheck money to the scam artist’s bank account instead. UTPD has not reported any scam cases involving UT students, faculty or staff.
NEWS
PRESIDENT
continues from page 1 the University. “For all these reasons, an abrupt change now would seriously disrupt the progress of UT-Austin,” Powers said in the letter. “A more constructive course of action would be for me to step down as President at the conclusion of the legislative session.” Powers’ announcement came after the System released findings of its own limited investigation into legislative influence over admissions. That inquiry, conducted by two System officials, found no evidence of wrongdoing, but determined instances where letters from legislators sent directly to Powers or a dean likely influenced the admissions process. Cigarroa initially told Powers to resign by October, but, after students voiced their support for Powers, Cigarroa released a statement stating Powers should remain in his position to complete his last initiatives for UT. However, Cigarroa said that UT was due for a change in leadership. “While ultimately productive, the past years have not been without struggle and, at times, conflict and controversy,” Cigarroa said. Cigarroa said that, despite the timing of the call for resignation, there was no single reason behind his decision to ask for Powers’ resignation but rather a series of problems. “There was no single incident that prompted my decision to ask President Powers for his resignation last week, but a long history of issues with communication, responsiveness and a willingness to collaborate,” Cigarroa said. In accordance with System rules, the committee will make the final recommendations for potential candidates to the Board of Regents, which will make the final decision on who will replace Powers.
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4A OPINION
5
RILEY BRANDS, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TexanEditorial Tuesday, January 20, 2015
EDITORIAL
EDITORIAL
Most important legislation to watch this session What you missed over break, what to look forward to this semester The 84th Legislature of Texas convened last week and will vote on a number of education bills throughout the legislative session. The UT community is no stranger to heated dialogues regarding higher education. Last July, the UT System’s former Chancellor, Francisco Cigarroa, served President Bill Powers with the ultimatum to resign or be fired as Cigarroa prepared to launch an investigation into what anti-Powers Regent Wallace Hall and his supporters believe are crooked admissions practices at the flagship. Although the two had often butted heads, Powers was allowed to stay on through the end of this academic year and the just-launched legislative session. With all this attention on the state’s institutions of higher education, legislators will be keeping themselves busy with a number of university-related bills, such as Senate Bill 177, authored by state Sen. Kel Seliger, R-Amarillo, that aims to limit the regents’ powers. But it isn’t the only bill that can affect UT students. Here’s our take on some of the most important higher education legislation to watch in this legislative session.
Gaining college credit in high school Two bills in the House aim to expand students’ current opportunities to gain college credit early. House Bill 462, authored by Rep. Craig Goldman, R-Fort Worth, aims to open the possibility for students to retake end-ofcourse assessments, or even scrap the need for an end-of-course assessment altogether at the Commissioner of Education’s discretion, in an effort to make gaining college credit easier. House Bill 505, authored by Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, hopes to expand upon House Bill 5, an overhaul of the secondary education system that passed in 2013. Currently, most
Texas high school students are limited to taking two dual credit courses a semester, whereas students at early college high schools can take as many as their schedules allow. Of Texas’ 8,375 high schools, only 58 are early college high schools. HB 505 will enable students to earn college credit to all Texas high schools, instead of the mere 58 schools whose students currently can. These bills will give high school students the opportunity to earn college credit early, which can save money in tuition and help students that may be wavering on their path to an advanced degree, whether at a four-year institution, community college or trade school, by showing them that when the opportunity is given, they can succeed. DREAM Act Two other bills seek to repeal a key part of the Texas Dream Act by revoking the ability of non-legal residents of the United States to apply for in-state tuition. House Bill 209, authored by Rep. Jonathan Strickland, R-Bedford, strips the current opportunities for undocumented residents of the state to apply for in-state tuition— if they are both graduates from Texas high schools and submit a signed affidavit affirming their intention to apply for permanent residency during their time in college. House Bill 360, authored by Rep. Mark Keough, R-The Woodlands, cited within the bill as the “Texas Fair Tuition Act,” goes further by requiring those who can’t show proof of citizenship or lawful residency to face verification by the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements Program. The motivation behind these bills is the belief that allowing undocumented residents to receive in-state tuition is both a reward for and encouragement of undocumented immigra-
tion. However, we believe that it is an opportunity for undocumented residents and students to study in an institution of higher education while seeking citizenship, empowering them to better themselves through education and creating future members of the workforce and taxpayers alike. HB 360 and HB 209 does not make it easy for undocumented residents to become students or change the reality that undocumented residents are students at our University, working for a diploma and a better future just like everyone else.
Campus carry Last but not least, one of the biggest stories in higher education this legislative season is campus carry, which was part of Gov. Greg Abbott’s platform in the recent election. Six proposed bills will expand gun carry and build up to the lawful carry of guns on college campuses, so Texas students should be aware of the possibility for a huge change. In formal remarks made to the Houston Chronicle, UT System spokesperson Jenny LaCoste-Caputo acknowledged worry among administrators that campus carry would jeopardize the UT System’s primary mission of ensuring students’ safety and expressed the System’s wish that bills will include a measure that would allow universities to “opt out” of campus carry, should it pass. Despite the opposition from leaders in higher education, Abbott has vowed to sign any bill expanding gun rights that hits his desk. With palpable worry regarding the safety of students from administrators, students should consider their safety on campus and, as always, exercise their voice in the future of higher education by getting in touch with their representative’s office.
Q-AND-A
Fine Arts dean discusses direction of college Editor’s Note: This is part of a series of Qand-A’s with the deans of the University’s 18 schools and colleges. The Daily Texan: Could you talk about some goals you have for the next year and some accomplishments you’d like to note from the past couple of years? Douglas Dempster: One of our largest programmatic goals is to launch something we call the Center for Arts and Entertainment Technologies... It has a research component. We’ve got a Bachelor of Arts in Arts and Entertainment Technologies that is under review and we hope will be approved for the 2016 catalog. We’re hoping to build a maker space in the fine arts library... for all students on campus. We’re also engaged in a major facilities review, a 10-year facilities review of the college in hopes of improving some of our oldest and most antiquated facilities as a result of that. We’re also doing a major review of our professional development initiatives and programs in the college so that we can think about better ways to prepare students for their professional lives after college. One of our major goals is to survive another year under the current budget circumstances without further drastic cuts to programs, faculties and services, but I remain very nervous and worried about that. DT: What kind of appreciation do you feel like the fine arts school receives from not just the university, but from the regents and legislators? How do they interact with y’all? Dempster: The University’s been very supportive of fine arts. I feel throughout the University of Texas System, there’s much greater emphasis on STEM fields. We have some very old, antiquated facilities that really hold us back as a college in different ways, and for instance, it’s hard to imagine that the College of Fine Arts would end up being nominated for a tuition revenue bond... In this day and age, there’s a lot of pressure on the STEM fields. Business, engineering, science, mathematics, and that’s a larger cultural phenomenon. I think the fine arts are underestimated for what they bring to the economy, which is partly why we’re creating this center on arts and entertainment technologies, which is all about commercialization of artistic and entertainment content and patents, because we’re trying to make the point that our students move out into that commercial world as well, and that we shouldn’t think that it’s all about oil and gas and software technologies. It’s a big marketplace, and the colleges that are contributing to the economy of Texas and the United States are not just confined to two or three colleges. I think the University has been generous to the fine arts, but the STEM fields are obviously getting a much greater amount of attention.
DT: How do you plan to work with the medical school? Dempster: Dean [Clay] Johnston of the medical school feels very strongly about the role of design studies in health care and being more thoughtful about how we design not just our spaces — the architectural spaces — but also the interface with the public and the business practices, and we’re building a much larger design program than we’ve had before, so there’s a partnership right there... Design studies is an area where, one, it’s very popular with students and two, it has very good employment prospects for students. Right now, our design program, I think it has about 60 undergraduate majors, but we turn away hundreds of applicants every year. There’s something wrong with that picture. DT: The music school froze the music business and recording technology program partially in order to start up the arts and entertainment technologies program? Dempster: We’re finding that we can’t fund all of our initiatives. That’s what it’s coming to. We’ve been doing pretty well for about four years. This bad budget situation’s been going on for four, now we’re looking into five years, so I feel pretty good about how long we’ve hung in there with very little new revenue every year. The good news for y’all is that your tuition has been frozen for five years. The bad news is that we’re really starting to see the effect on the quality and diversity of programs we can offer... How crazy is it that we have a music school in the middle of Austin that won’t have a music business program? That seemed like a no-brainer, right? So it’s really painful for me to imagine that we might not be offering that in some future, but we are at the point where we’re having to make hard choices about what we can and can’t do... I think the truth of the matter is that those programs, we launched, but our timing was terrible because we launched them right into the recession, and they’ve never been very well funded or well supported and they’ve struggled... There is not a decent recording studio in the music school. There is a recording studio, but it’s about 30
LEGALESE | Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the UT administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees.
SG leadership We started last semester with a close examination of President Kori Rady and Vice President Taylor Strickland’s platform points and goals for their administration. Now, as the new semester starts up, we believe they have a chance to effect real change this semester. Perhaps the signal achievement of Rady and Strickland’s year in office will be the opening of the Flawn Academic Center 24 hours a day, seven days a week. We previously lobbied for this change and believe that it will deliver a great deal of good to students. Rady and Strickland also won big with their successful implementation of Safe Ride, a late-night car service that ferries students home to select areas from their weekend revelry downtown. The duo have also won chits with the student body by their support of embattled University President William Powers Jr. over the summer as well as their work toward extending Thanksgiving break to the Wednesday of that week. Unfortunately, however, the team’s good works have, to a certain extent, been drowned out by an intermittent racket of political dramas. We saw this most recently in the attempt to impeach Chief of Staff Chris Jordan. One of the charges is his supposed complicity in the “cover-up,” as some have called it, of the internal and external appointees’ interview notes. Previous Student Government internal rules required that they be disclosed to the Assembly, but in August, the UT Office of Legal Affairs determined that releasing them would violate the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. This requirement has thus been removed from the new governing
Rady and Strickland have a great opportunity to finish out their terms strong this semester. They will finally have the chance to enact certain state legislative goals that will really be able to gain steam this semester.
Photo courtesy of Marsha Miller
years old. You can find a better recording studio at ACC... The [Butler School of Music] director, Dr. Poole, just made a very hard choice that we weren’t doing a great job at this, it deserves better, and until we can do a better job, we need to pull back to what we’re already doing well and try to revive these programs when we can do a better job. DT: When students graduate, what do they generally do? Dempster: About 40 percent of our graduates, at some time in their career, will make a living through teaching the arts. Much to my happy surprise, about 70 percent of our graduates are making some part of their living in the arts, and the rest are working the same place that all college-educated people go. Some become doctors and lawyers and bankers and nurses and you name it. They’re doing all kinds of things. A relatively small number become celebrities in the arts. Oscar-winning actors, or Grammy award-winning composers or celebrated playwrights, but we know that that’s a minority... Our undergraduate programs are largely liberal arts programs, with an emphasis in the arts, so our students follow all kinds of careers, but as a matter of fact, 70 percent of them stay in the arts in some fashion. [Fine arts] is what I would call a pre-professional major. It tends to orient people’s careers in a certain direction without defining that direction for them.
SUBMIT A FIRING LINE OR GUEST COLUMN | E-mail your Firing Lines and guest columns to editor@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be between 100 and 300 words and guest columns between 500 and 1,000. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability.
documents, which were adopted earlier this month. Despite our hesitation for Jordan’s removal, there are many areas in which his behavior could stand to improve this semester. First of all, he absolutely must improve his tone of communication with certain members of the Assembly and the student body. Another issue is Rady’s likely inadvertent release of a number of internal and external appointee candidates’ GPAs by not blacking them out on their resumes, which were released to the media. Rady and Strickland have a great opportunity to finish out their terms strong this semester. They will finally have the chance to enact certain state legislative goals that will really be able to gain steam this semester. Summer Incentive program cut Graduating on time became a little more difficult for CNS students late last semester as University administrators have decided to end a summer program from the provost’s office that promised additional funds to departments in different colleges if they could “teach more students than their historical target.” CNS can continue to fund the extra courses out of its own pocket but with a flat budget and an ever-growing student body, it won’t be able to pull that off. For CNS students who need plentiful summer courses in order to graduate on time, this could mean extra money spent on tuition, rebates lost and additional student loan debt piled on. The college administration has assured the Texan that it is taking great pains to facilitate on-time graduation for all its students. We understand that budget issues are a perennial problem for the schools and colleges. But those budget issues, as with CNS, are precisely why the Summer Enhancement Program was needed in the first place. Even if the program wasn’t having quite the desired impact, cutting it altogether sends a message to students that the University’s bottom line is more important than theirs.
RECYCLE | Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it. EDITORIAL TWITTER | Follow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@TexanEditorial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns.
6 OPINION
6
GARRETT CALLAHAN, SPORTS EDITOR | @texansports Tuesday, January 20, 2015
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Texas takes down TCU in road battle
SIDELINE NBA PISTONS
By Peter Sblendorio @petersblendorio
Maybe sophomore guard Isaiah Taylor was rusty; perhaps it was just a mid-season shooting slump. Either way, Taylor wasn’t quite himself in his first four games back after suffering a broken left wrist. He bounced back from these offensive struggles in a major way Monday, leading the Longhorns in rebounds and assists to help guide No. 17 Texas to a 66-48 road victory against TCU. Taylor scored 13 points, his most since returning from injury, while racking up seven rebounds and season-high six assists in the victory. He made six of his 12 shot attempts in the game after going just 10of-40 from the field in his previous four games. The Longhorns turned in one of their better offensive performances of the year, shooting 48 percent from the field while recording 16
TCU page 7
HAWKS
76ERS
WIZARDS
TIMBERWOLVES
HORNETS
CELTICS
CLIPPERS
Shelby Tauber | Daily Texan file photo
Junior center Cam Ridley put up 10 points and grabbed four rebounds in Texas’ dominating win over the Horned Frogs on Monday night. Ridley has amassed 29 points and 10 rebounds over the past two games.
Longhorns looking to make splash in Big 12 play By Evan Berkowitz @Evan_Berkowitz
Before winter break, the men’s basketball team was breezing through the season. It was No. 6 in the polls, and its only loss was to top-ranked Kentucky on its home court in Lexington, Kentucky. People were labeling the Longhorns as the frontrunners to end Kansas’ decade-long perch atop the Big 12 standings. But then they lost to Stanford, struggled against Texas Tech, lost badly to No. 19
Oklahoma and then to Oklahoma State. Texas looked lost at times on offense, and its once-dominant defense began to look vulnerable. “The most disappointing thing is that I don’t think we’ve played well in three weeks,” head coach Rick Barnes said after the blowout loss to Oklahoma at home. Sophomore guard Isaiah Taylor hasn’t looked the same since breaking his wrist in the game against Iowa in November. Before the injury, he averaged 15 points and four rebounds
per game. Since returning, he’s averaging 9.2 points per game and just a touch over three rebounds per game. He looks timid attacking the rim, something he used to do fearlessly. Junior center Cameron Ridley looked like a shell of his former self before breaking out against West Virginia. Senior forward Jonathan Holmes went 2-of-19 in the back-to-back losses to the Oklahoma schools. It appeared as though the team lost its identity.
SPLASH page 7
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Mike Finger @mikefinger
Ethan Oblak | Daily Texan file photo
Texas suffers third loss of the season at the hands of Baylor By Jeremy Thomas @jeremyobthomas
The women’s basketball team dropped its third game of the season Monday with a 75-58 loss against No. 3 Baylor. Texas shot 34 percent, gave up 28 fouls and had 18 turnovers. Texas battled to lead the game early in the first half but soon faced a 9-point deficit. The Longhorns cut the lead to 3 points with less than four minutes remaining in the first half, but Baylor extended its first-half lead to 3522. Baylor never looked back as the Bears shot at 43 percent. Baylor totaled 41 rebounds compared to Texas’ 37. The Bears became the first opponent to outrebound the Longhorns this season. Freshman guard Brooke McCarty led the team with 14 points. Sophomore center Kelsey Lang and senior forward Nneka Enemkpali each grabbed six rebounds. Baylor was the Longhorns’ third opponent in the past six days. But the
Bears have won the last nine meetings against the Longhorns, including the last five in Waco. Texas is now 3-1 this season against top-five opponents. Over the holiday break, Texas found continued success from its early season wins. The Longhorns started the season 13-0, completing their nonconference schedule undefeated for the first time since the 1986 championship team. In the latter half of its non-conference campaign, Texas overcame an 11-point second-half deficit against rival and then-No. 4-ranked Texas A&M to win, 67-65, on a game-winning layup by junior guard Empress Davenport with only seconds remaining. But the team’s undefeated record came to a halt last week against Iowa State in Ames, Iowa. The Longhorns led by 13 at halftime, but the Cyclones shot 52 percent in the second half and outscored the Longhorns, 35-20. Enemkpali tied up the game at 57 from the charity stripe with 42 seconds left in
regulation. But Iowa State guard Seanna Johnson scored with a layup to give the Cyclones a 59-57 lead and the victory. Four days later, the Longhorns traveled to Oklahoma to get back on the winning track. However, Texas had its worst shooting performance of the season, shooting 26.2 percent from the field. With four minutes remaining in the first half, Texas led by 8 points before Oklahoma regained the lead going on to win 70-59. In both losses, Texas shot a combined 29.4 percent from the field. Despite the recent losses, Texas rebounded at home against Texas Tech on Saturday for a 55-44 victory. The win stretches the Longhorns’ home winning streak to 13 and marked the first time all season the team had a full, healthy roster. The Longhorns look to rebound from their loss to Baylor and extend their home winning streak Sunday against Iowa State at 3:30 p.m.
Texas has played 80 consecutive minutes of zone defense. Barnes says it’s the first time in 17 years at UT that’s happened.
Senior Jonathan Holmes and the Longhorns are looking to make up ground in Big 12 play after a disappointing start to conference competition.
Strong’s first season earns average grade By Jacob Martella @ViewFromTheBox
Joe Capraro Daily Texan Staff
GRIZZLIES
TOP TWEET
FOOTBALL | COLUMN The Longhorns couldn’t takedown the Bears on Monday night. Brooke McCarty led Texas’ valiant effor with 14 points.
MAVERICKS
At his weekly press conference, a little past the halfway mark of the season, head coach Charlie Strong was asked what grade he would give himself for his season performance. He replied by saying he hadn’t done a great job. At the time of the conference, the Longhorns were sitting at 3-5 after a 23-0 loss to Kansas State — the first time the team was shutout since 2004. After Strong’s comments,Texas went on to defeat Texas Tech, West Virginia and Oklahoma State by an average of almost 20 points. Then the streak came to an end: The Longhorns would end the season on a low note with blowout losses to TCU and Arkansas. So now that the sting of the bowl loss has subsided, and the season has come to a close, let’s revisit the question: How did Strong fare in his first season on the 40 Acres? If you asked Strong, he would probably answer the same way he answered the question earlier in the season: He hasn’t done a great job. But considering that this is a rebuilding season and that Strong had to lay the foundation for how he was going to run this team — which led to the dismissal of nine players and multiple suspensions — I don’t think it went all too poorly. Let’s start by looking at the defensive side of the ball, where Strong had his greatest success. In former head coach Mack Brown’s final season, the Longhorn defense steadily improved, and Strong and defensive coordinator Vance Bedford only built upon that to develop
a defense that stopped the vaunted Baylor offense and kept the Longhorns alive in almost every game. Texas finished atop the conference in total and passing defense and third in scoring defense with 23.2 points allowed per game. Aside from the lapse against Iowa State, any failures the defense had came from the struggles of the offense and special teams. On offense, the team’s prospects took a dramatic turn for the worse when redshirt junior quarterback David Ash and senior center Dom Espinosa went out for the season in Texas’ first game. These losses forced sophomore quarterback Tyrone Swoopes into starting action before he was ready — especially given that he was standing behind an inexperienced offensive line. Still, despite those “excuses,” the fact of the matter remains: The offense failed to execute when it mattered most — apart from a few moments of brilliance, which came against the weaker opponents — and this is a spot that Strong and his staff are going to have to focus on throughout the offseason. As for Strong’s final season grade, it would have to be somewhere around a C-plus or B-minus. Although this was the Longhorns’ first losing season since 2010, there were some moments when fans caught a glimpse of what the future could be — unfortunately, those moments came few and far between. If Strong can build off his first season with a full offseason of recruiting — and better instituting his style of play — a better report card may be on the horizon.
TODAY IN HISTORY
1985
The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Miami Dolphins, 38-16, in Super Bowl XIX. San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana was named Super Bowl MVP.
SPORTS BRIEFLY Texas baseball makes top 10 in poll
The Longhorns found themselves ranked No. 10 in D1Baseball.com’s preseason poll released Monday. After making their way to Omaha, Nebraska, for the College World Series, the Longhorns missed out on a chance to play for a national championship after losing a heartbreaking 3-4 game against Vanderbilt last season. Texas finished the season with a 46-21 overall record and a 1311 record in the Big 12. The Longhorns were also ranked No. 7 in the Collegiate Baseball preseason poll. The Longhorns have a multitude of players returning and look to make a return trip to Omaha. Texas kicks off the season in Houston for a four-game series against Rice on Feb. 13. —Nick Castillo
CLASS 7
SPORTS
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Tuesday, January 20, 2015
SPLASH
continues from page 6 “We haven’t been playing well these past couple of weeks,” junior guard Demarcus Holland said after the Oklahoma loss. “We really just have to figure out who we are. Get back to basics
TCU
continues from page 6 assists as a team. Five different players scored at least 9 points in the game for Texas, while four players registered at least five rebounds. Junior guard Javan Felix played a major role in the victory as well, leading Texas with 15 points on 6-of-11 shooting. It was the first time Felix shot above 50 percent from the field in a game since the Dec. 20 match against Long Beach State. After dominating the paint on both sides of the ball against West Virginia on Saturday, the Texas frontcourt continued its hot play against the Horned Frogs. The Longhorn big men clogged the paint and forced TCU to take contested perimeter shots all game long, leading to the Horned Frogs’ 33.3 percent from the field. Fresh off his seasonbest 19-point performance against West Virginia, junior
of how we started — just playing defense and out-rebounding teams. [We need to be] blue-collar players and go out there and execute what the coaches have laid out for us.” But Barnes wasn’t worried. “We’re going to be all right,” Barnes said. “We have center Cameron Ridley had another good game against TCU with 10 points, four rebounds and three blocks. Freshman forward Myles Turner tallied 11 points, six rebounds and two blocks in the game, and senior forward Jonathan Holmes added 9 points and six boards. With the victory, the Longhorns improve to 14-4 on the season and 3-2 against Big 12 opponents. After winning their first game of conference play against Texas Tech, the Longhorns dropped backto-back games against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State in a span of five days, leading to concern from Texas fans about the state of the team. They’ve since won each of their last two games in convincing fashion and are now on their first winning streak of conference play. The road only gets tougher, as their next two games are at home against No. 11 Kansas on Saturday and on the road against No. 9 Iowa State on Monday.
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a long way to go, but it goes back to this: We’ve proved that we can play harder, we can be focused, and we can execute.” After a 77-50 win over No. 16 West Virginia and a 66-48 win against TCU, Texas seems to have found its groove and at least be a contender
for the Big 12 crown. Taylor must regain his old form. Ridley must continue to be a force. Holmes can’t disappear in big games. Freshman forward Myles Turner, who is averaging 2.7 blocks per game, needs to keep being himself. Texas (14-4, 3-2 Big 12)
is not far off the Big 12 lead, which Kansas State (11-7, 4-1) holds, but a plethora of teams challenge that top spot. Eight of the 10 Big 12 teams have already won two conference games — only TCU and Texas Tech appear to be out of it right now. The schedule doesn’t get any
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easier, as the Longhorns will consecutively battle No. 11 Kansas, No. 9 Iowa State and then No. 21 Baylor. Six Big 12 teams are ranked in, arguably, the deepest conference in the nation. With a tough stretch, Texas is looking to separate itself from the pack.
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Tuesday, January 20, 2015
LIFE&ARTS
FOOD
Healthy, smart tips to ‘smoothie’ out the new year By Elisabeth Dillon @thedailytexan
“This semester, I’ll read the required books for every class.” “I’m going to go to Gregory five times a week.” “No more skipping classes.” It’s that time of year. A new semester starts, and students head back to campus with resolutions stacked on top of resolutions. Food-related resolutions are popular during the first few weeks of the year — that is, before exams start and bring along a flood of stress-induced eating. It shouldn’t be that hard for you to work on your diet and maintain a healthier lifestyle, even as work begins to pile up, if you make small changes that are easy — and tasty — to maintain. Simple, occasional switches, such as grabbing an apple instead of a bag of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, will make a “what starts here changes the world” of difference. You’ll still get that addictive crunch but without the finger stains and empty calories. Other small changes are just as obvious. Cut back on the soda or Frappuccinos and go for water or green tea. Start really looking at the nutritional information of things you are putting in
your body. Even if a yogurt label says “all-natural” or “low-fat,” it could be loaded with added sugar — which is by far one of the worst substances for your body. Ultimately, however, taking control of diet and learning how to cook are the real solutions to maintaining a healthy body. There are other benefits, too — cooking is the perfect way to bond with your friends, roommates or crushes. Your options are endless: Homemade granola bars are great to snack on while you cruise from class to class; quinoa salads and trays of roasted vegetables are an easy and tasty way to get extra nutrients; and breakfast tacos at any time of the day with homemade roasted salsa and guac are something to tacobout. Upping your smoothie game is the easiest option of all: time needed (5 minutes), tools required (just a blender), adaptability (endless ingredient combinations) and health (fruit and raw greens). Smoothies are an easy way to ingest loads of veggies and fiber without even realizing it. A basic smoothie should start with a base of banana and avocado, which is full of healthy fats that keep you full longer — no stomach
Elisabeth Dillon | Daily Texan Staff
There are plenty of ways to work on staying healthy this semester, but an easy fix is to treat yourself to healthy green smoothies. Find the recipe for this mango avocado smoothie online at www.dailytexanonline.com.
gurgling in your 11 a.m. class. Next, add a little bit of frozen fruit for sweetness, plus kale or spinach. Unsweetened almond milk is the final component to turn it all into a dreamy treat. But the real magic comes in just how much you can play off this base to customize something for your
tastes. Are you a nut butter addict? Throw in a spoonful. Trying to stave off that cold? Add some fresh ginger and squeeze in the juice of an orange or grapefruit. Want to turn into Gwyneth Paltrow? Add in “superfoods,” such as chia seeds, goji berries, açaí powder or cacao nibs. With an option of healthy
UT alumni who achieve noteworthy success in their field. Our “300” series spotlights the stories of people who are constant fixtures around campus but tend to go unnoticed. These 300word pieces could be about the barista at the café in the Belo Center for New Media, a UT shuttle driver
or the security guard at a sorority house. Since 2011, physics doctoral candidate Robert Starr has filled the Thursday paper with his research-based science pieces. This semester, journalism graduate student Paepin Goff joins him with a focus on climate change. Their series, Science Scene, attempts to enlighten
homemade smoothies, there’s no need to impulsively buy those artificially sweetened juices lining the refrigerated shelves of Jester City Market. Students will make and break many resolutions in the upcoming months, but eating better doesn’t have to be one of them. It’s easy to
Multimedia Check out a smoothie recipe and other healthy treats at dailytexanonline.com. make choices that lead to a smoother semester. Just press blend.
PREVIEW continues from page 10 coverage of major Austin events, a number of our writers will review new albums, books and recently released movies. One of our writers, Elisabeth Dillon, who runs the food and lifestyle blog www.food-mouth.com, will be the Texan’s go-to source for nutritional advice. Each week, Life & Arts publishes a variety of
profiles to provide exposure to voices from all across our community. Our subjects will be as diverse as the students of the University. Our section will feature series about current UT students who partake in activities ranging from heart research to founding their own businesses. At other times, stories will focus on
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Our “300” series spotlights the stories of people who are constant fixtures around campus but tend to go unnoticed. students on relevant topics, such as water conservation and psychological issues. Our aim is to provide coverage that accurately and comprehensively reflects University life. We hope to
be an informative resource for all our readers, on campus and throughout the city. We are excited to continue a proud tradition of compelling and inclusive storytelling here at the Texan.
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Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Best of the Last: hits from fall semester!
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KAT SAMPSON, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR | @thedailytexan Tuesday, January 20, 2015
FILM
SEMESTER PREVIEW
Oscars nominations lack racial diversity
Life & Arts editors give preview of spring 2015
By Alex Pelham @TalkingofPelham
This year’s Academy Awards nominations saw several of 2014’s critically acclaimed films rewarded for their effort, while the Academy snubbed other prominent films. In a controversial move, the Academy nominated exclusively white actors and actresses in the leading and supporting actor categories. Meanwhile, no women received nominations for Best Director or Best Screenwriter. The lack of diversity among the nominees marks a stark distinction from last year’s ceremony, in which “12 Years a Slave” was named Best Picture, and its star, Lupita Nyong’o, won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. The nomination announcements prompted a backlash across multiple social media platforms and led to the trending hashtag #OscarsSoWhite on Twitter. It is hard to pinpoint why the decision was made, but a deeper look into the demographics of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences reveals a pervasive lack of diversity. A 2012 study done by the Los Angeles Times showed that 93 percent of Academy voters are white, and 73 percent
are male. Efforts are underway to create a more inclusive ballot, according to Cheryl Boone Isaacs, president of the Academy. Isaacs, who is the Academy’s first African-American president, said for the past couple years, the Academy has added more than 400 new voting members with the goal of increasing diversity. However, the Times study revealed that a staggering 87 percent of the members inducted in 2012 were white. In 2013, the percentage of white voters fell to 82 percent. Public reactions to the nomination have ranged from accusatory to satirical, although Ava DuVernay, director of “Selma,” chose to focus on the film’s nominations for Best Original Song and Best Picture, rather than the fact that she was not nominated for Best Director. On her Twitter profile, DuVernay tweeted “Happy Birthday, Dr. King. An Oscar gift for you. To SELMA cast + crew led by our miracle David Oyelowo! To Common + Legend! Kudos! March on!” If DuVernay had received a nomination for directing “Selma,” she would have been the first black female nominee in the category. Common, whose song “Glory” was nominated, starred in
The Academy added more than 400 new voting members with the goal of increasing diversity, but the study revealed that a staggering 87 percent of the members inducted in 2012 were white. the film as the civil rights activist James Bevel and expressed disappointment in the film’s overall snub. Amid the controversy, it was an overwhelmingly good day for Texas filmmakers. The academy rewarded radio-television-film alumnus Wes Anderson with several nominations for “The Grand Budapest Hotel.” Anderson received his first nomination for Best Director, and the film also snagged nods for Best Picture, Original Screenplay and other categories. Meanwhile, prominent Austinite Richard Linklater has his eyes set on Best Picture and Director for “Boyhood.” The ceremony will probably hold its regular audience of loyal viewers, a l o n g with its
By Danielle Lopez & Kat Sampson @thedailytexan
It is the first day of the spring semester. Everyone’s grades look promising as syllabuses make their way to the bottom of backpacks. Students fill agendas with attention to detail before the stress starts piling on. Here at The Daily Texan, not much is different. Editors patiently wait for their computers to reboot as writers schedule their first interviews. Our job as the Life & Arts editors is to provide stories that celebrate the people behind every business, event and organization in our community. Here are some of the things we are excited to cover this semester: Life & Arts will publish a 20-plus-page insert the week before South By Southwest with information ranging from concert schedules to advice on how to avoid the festival entirely. Our readers can expect live SXSW updates via Twitter and our website, www.dailytexanonline.com. In addition to thorough
usual number of critics. Neil Patrick Harris is this year’s host, which may be a much-needed boost for the otherwise bland show.
PREVIEW page
Illustration by Lindsay Rojas | Daily Texan Staff
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