The Daily Texan 2016-09-14

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Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900

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Wednesday, September 14, 2016

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UNIVERSITY

Fenves allocates $15 million in aid By Paul Cobler @paulcobler

UT will commit $15 million in financial aid over the next two years to middleincome families starting next fall, University President Gregory Fenves announced during his State of the University address on Tuesday. Fenves said this is being done in order to keep UT affordable and accessible by targeting families that may not qualify for federal aid but are still struggling to pay for college.

However, not all students say they agree the money is going to the right place. Biochemistry junior Rosamaria Marquez said the money would do more good going to families of a lower socioeconomic status. “I’m from a low-income family, my parents are from Mexico,” Marquez said. “When he said it was for middle-income families, I was not so happy with it, because, obviously, low-income families need it more. I’m paying for college mainly through

loans and grants, and my family contribution is zero.” Student Government president Kevin Helgren said he doesn’t think the University is prioritizing one socioeconomic class over another, but rather trying to assist a larger group of students. “I think it is an effective way to target a large population of people who are expected to pursue a higher level of education, but who don’t necessarily have the

FENVES page 2

probably the coolest aspect of it.” Brennes and the selection group looked for very specific qualities in their

The House Higher Education Committee held a meeting Tuesday to hear recommendations on how to amend the Texas Hazlewood Act going into the next legislative session. The Hazlewood Act allows qualified veterans to be exempt from up to 150 credit hours worth of tuition fees at public institutions of higher education in Texas. In 2009, the Hazlewood Legacy Act was passed, which allows veterans to pass on this exemption to their children if they decide not to use it for themselves. Representative John Zerwas, Higher Education Committee chair, began the meeting by stating the majority of tuition costs are attributable to students taking the legacy exemption. The committee invited people to testify at the meeting in order to hear issues universities may have with the exemption. “Providing this exemption to non-Texans was never an intention of this act and at the time this legislation was debated, the US district court had issued a judgment ruling the fixed point residency requirement as unconstitutional,” Zerwas said. “This ruling [led] to a tremendous increase in cost of an exemption that in 2014-2015 accounted for $350 million in unfunded costs to Texas institutions of higher education.” In 2015, a veteran who had resided in Texas since 2004 sued the University of Houston for denying him a tuition exemption from the Hazlewood Act. He had enlisted in the army in 1996 while living in

BEVO page 6

HAZLEWOOD page 2

Zoe Fu | Daily Texan Staff

President Fenves discusses his future plans at his State of the University address on Tuesday.

By Ezra Siegel @SiegelEzra

Zoe Fu | Daily Texan Staff

Sunrise Spur was unveiled as Bevo XV on Sept. 4. At 19 months old, he is one of the youngest Longhorns to be named Bevo in the mascot’s 100-year history.

Brennes, 38, along with six other current and former Silver Spurs manned the selection committee. He said he personally looked at over 300 steers throughout the process.

State House considers amending Hazlewood @nguyen_van

Bevo XV: Steering into a new era

of bovine leukemia last October. Ricky Brennes, executive director of the Silver Spurs’ Alumni Association, said the organization began its search for the new Bevo late in 2015.

STATE

By Van Nguyen

SPORTS

Over 102,000 fans packed Darrell K Royal — Texas Memorial Stadium for the Longhorns’ season opener against then-No. 10 Notre Dame on Sept. 4. The record-breaking crowd had plenty to cheer about as Texas topped the Fighting Irish 50–47 in a double overtime thriller. But one of the largest ovations came before the Longhorns even took the field. Just minutes before kickoff, Bevo XV trotted out from the tunnel in the south end zone, bringing Texas fans to their feet for the first of many times throughout the evening. “It was such an exciting time for the University and everyone as Longhorn fans,” said Jack Eltife, a senior corporate communications major and handler of Bevo XV. “To introduce him to 100,000 people is electrifying, it’s incredible … he handled it like a champ.” Bevo XV’s unveiling marked the end of nearly a year-long process to replace Bevo XIV, who died

bit.ly/dtvid

“[You realize] you’re picking a symbol of the University,” Brennes said. “You’re about to pick a Longhorn steer to become the most famous Longhorn steer in the world — that’s

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

HEALTH

SG approves budget, presents legislation Activist lectures on By Van Nguyen

University Wide Representative Ashley Choi speaks at the student government meeting Tuesday evening. She spoke on gender inclusive bathrooms and how they are striving for one in each building.

@nguyen_van

reproductive justice By Michelle Zhang

Student Government approved the 2016-2017 budget at Tuesday’s meeting, and representatives presented legislation for the upcoming school year. Members of SG approved the budget unanimously. Legislation presented at the meeting proposed adding a political debate for the general election, syllabi access for students and genderinclusive bathrooms. The proposed debate would be held on Sept. 28, and SG will reach out to the Austin-American Statesman and The Daily Texan for moderation. SG will also reach out to political groups on campus like College Republicans and University

Democrats to participate in the debate. “We thought it’d be a good idea for SG to continue tradition of hosting a debate [for the general election] and we want to include actual state party

representatives,” SG communications director Colton Becker, SG communications director said. The debate will be focused on issues in the presidential race, not on the candidates. A question committee

will prepare questions for the debate. Organizations involved in the debate will be offered opportunities to table to advertise the debate. Bishop Wash, Senate of College Councils policy

NEWS

OPINION

SPORTS

LIFE&ARTS

ONLINE

Traffic related fatalities have decreased in 2016. PAGE 3

9/11 effects Muslim Americans the most PAGE 4

Texas and Texas A&M rekindle classic rivalry PAGE 6

UGS sophomore wins philanthropic award PAGE 8

RideAustin CEO speaks on entrepreneurship. PAGE 3

Stock interview questions hinder individuality PAGE 4

Women’s golf finishes third at opening meet PAGE 6

Cold Cookie Co. food truck offers cookies, ice cream PAGE 8

President Gregory Fenves gave the annual State of the University on Tuesday. Watch our video at

Jenan Taha Daily Texan Staff

SG page 2

@michelle05155

Amanda Williams, executive director of the Lilith Fund, led a “Reproductive Justice 101” training to talk about equal rights and the freedom to choose to have an abortion at the UT School of Law Tuesday morning. The Lilith Fund provides direct financial assistance to empower people seeking abortion, as well as education and outreach within the community about reproductive rights. Reproductive justice is about people’s freedom to make reproductive decisions, such as those about abortion and family planning. It exists when all people have

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the social, political and economic power and resources to make healthy decisions for ourselves and our communities, Williams said at Tuesday’s training. “The issue is not just about abortion ... The problem is that there is racism, there is classism, there are structural systematic problems that prevent people from having the basic need to care for a family,” Williams said. Williams later pointed out that the number of abortion care clinics is decreasing in Texas, and women of color are usually the most vulnerable group affected by this issue. “We have to listen to

JUSTICE page 2 REASON TO PARTY

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