1 LIFE&ARTS PAGE 16 COMICS PAGE 14 SPORTS PAGE 10 @thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan Friday, May 2, 2014 dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900 CAMPUS Bike to UT Day riders face police crackdown By Julia Broulliette @juliakbrou During Parking and Transportation Services’ annual “Bike to UT Day” on Thursday morning, APD issued 47 tickets to cyclists heading to the University as part of a “special as- signment bike initiative,” according to APD officer Will Harvey. Harvey said APD did not purposely schedule the initiative to coincide with the event. “I predetermined all of the dates back in January,” Harvey said. “We had no way of knowing. It just hap- pened to fall that way.” APD officers wrote one of the tickets for going the wrong way on a one-way street and issued the rest for running stop signs, accord- ing to Harvey. “We get a large number of complaints on a regular ba- sis,” Harvey said. “If you’re out in West Campus or North Campus, it’s just get- ting more and more popu- lated and congested. When that happens, complaints go up, and we felt we needed to get out and do something.” Harvey said the initia- tive began in February and focuses not only on enforc- ing bike safety but also on pedestrian and driving vio- lations in the West Campus and North Campus areas. “hus far for this opera- tion, from February till now, we have written a total of 175 warnings and 128 tickets to TICKETS page 3 Students Henry Yoo and Philip Cho order food at the Korean Komfort food truck. The food trucks located at the Rio Ranche- ria currently do not recycle. Helen Fernandez Daily Texan Staff UNIVERSITY Regent to runof election: Ongoing news to watch for in the summer By Madlin Mekelburg @madlinbmek REGENT CONTROVERSY he almost year-long in- vestigation of UT System Re- gent Wallace Hall will come to a close on May 12, when the house transparency com- mittee investigating him will vote on whether to recom- mend his impeachment. Hall is under investigation for potentially overstepping his bounds as a regent and conducting what some leg- islators have referred to as a “witch-hunt” to oust Presi- dent William Powers Jr. recommend If the committee decides to impeach- ment, Hall’s case will go to the full Texas House of Rep- resentatives. If a majority of the members of the House approve of the case’s merits, it will go to the Senate, where members will convene as a University of Texas System Regent Wallace Hall prepares to leave after a UT System Board of Regents meeting Tuesday. Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff court to make a inal deci- sion. If the Senate concurs with the committee’s recom- mendation, Hall will be the irst nonelected oicial to be impeached in Texas history. Hall is also facing the pos- sibility of criminal charges. On April 25, the public in- tegrity unit in the Travis County district attorney’s oice said they will open an investigation into allegations that Hall mishandled private student information, which is protected by federal pri- vacy laws. The investigation is only PREVIEWS page 2 Year in Review Shelby Tauber and Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan ile photos This school year was a year marked by change. Some of the University’s most recognizable faces — from the chan- cellor to the football coach — stepped down, while others, such as President William Powers Jr. and men’s basketball coach Rick Barnes, held onto their jobs despite signs indicating long odds. Most students dealt with icy weather, some students voted for a new Student Government administration and one student got stabbed in the face with a fork. From Abigail Fisher to ACL and from protesters to presidents, the 2013-2014 school year featured plenty worth writing about. Page 8 and 9 CITY Food truck ordinance could allow on-site recycling By Wynne Davis @wynneellyn at Customers food trucks may soon be able to recycle on-site, after the Austin City Council voted Thursday to ask the city manager to create an ordi- nance enabling food trucks to provide recycling and composting receptacles. The council’s vote, which was in keeping with the Austin Resource Re- covery Department’s Zero Waste Master Plan, asked city manager Marc Ott to present a draft of the or- dinance to the council on May 22. adequate he current health code hinders food trucks from providing re- for cus- cycling options tomers, to Jessica King, division man- ager for the Austin Resources Recovery department. according “Right now, the health code and the new build- ing code do not allow [food FOOD TRUCKS page 2 CITY The Luci and Ian Family Gar- den will hold its grand opening Sunday, May 4. The garden provides mul- tiple interactive educational areas for chil- dren, such as a maze made of shrubs. Miriam Rousseau Daily Texan Staff Family garden opens Sunday By Natalie Sullivan @natsullivan94 Visitors can dig in fake dinosaur tracks, build tee- pees out of bamboo and explore a spiral hedge maze at the opening of the Lady Bird Johnson Wild- flower Center’s new fam- ily garden Sunday. The center has been $5 constructing the million Luci and Ian Fami- ly Garden since May 2013. According to Samantha Elkington, senior horticul- turist at the center, the 4.5 acre garden added a dirt dig and nature build area this year. “The dirt dig will al- low kids to get their hands dirty and dig around in the dirt and sand,” El- the said. kington “At nature build area, we’ll have different materials like hay and bamboo sticks so kids can build things — buildings, gnome trails — whatever they want.” teepees, he garden’s other fea- tures also include a grotto with caves and a waterfall, 10-foot-wide bird nests and FLOWERS page 2 Sell all your books for more money BookHolders ground level in dobie mall bookholders.com | open super late 2 Friday, May 2, 2014 NEWS FRAMES featured photo 2 Volume 114, Issue 154 CONTACT US Main Telephone (512) 471-4591 Editor-in-Chief Laura Wright (512) 232-2212 editor@dailytexanonline.com Managing Editor Shabab Siddiqui (512) 232-2217 managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.com News Ofice (512) 232-2207 news@dailytexanonline.com Multimedia Ofice (512) 471-7835 dailytexanmultimedia@ gmail.com Sports Ofice (512) 232-2210 sports@dailytexanonline.com Life&Arts Ofice (512) 232-2209 dtlifeandarts@gmail.com Retail Advertising (512) 475—6719 lhollingsworth@austin. utexas.edu Classiied Advertising (512) 471-5244 classiieds@ dailytexanonline.com The Texan strives to present all information fairly, accurately and completely. If we have made an error, let us know about it. Call (512) 232-2217 or e-mail managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.com. COPYRIGHT Copyright 2013 Texas Student Media. All articles, photographs and graphics, both in the print and online editions, are the property of Texas Student Media and may not be reproduced or republished in part or in whole without written permission. TOMORROW’S WEATHER High 91 Low 60 Eyebrow game: on point! Gus Walsh and Sage Walsh look at military supplies inside of Quonset Hut on Thursday afternoon. Jonathan Garza / Daily Texan Staff FLOWERS continues from page 1 a wildlife blind. Elkington hopes the new garden will attract more visitors over the summer months. “We hope to attract more families, and since summer is the perfect time for kids to be outside, hopefully we’ll see an increase in visitors,” Elkington said. The garden will hold a special preview day only open to members of the center Saturday. Both the preview and the opening day will include live mu- sic, food carts and activities on the children’s play lawn from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. El- kington expects between one-third and one-half of the center’s 10,000 mem- bers to attend. According to senior as- sociate Ronnie Stafford, who worked with the archi- tecture firm TBG to plan the garden, native plants were chosen specifically to align with SITES standards, which are international pa- rameters that promote sus- tainable land development. Emily Mixon, environ- mental science senior and campus environmental cen- ter director, who has part- nered with the wildlower center, said the garden could be a good site for student learning and relaxation. “It’d be great for students to see the integrated ap- proaches in the garden and think about what they’ve seen around campus in terms of our main campus irrigation innovations and energy efficiency,” Mixon said. “Plus, I think visit- ing the garden could be a really cool study break for students.” Elkington feed- back on the garden has been positive. said “We had kids come in for a photo shoot, and they were all excited about the features,” Elkington said. “here was one girl who liked playing in the dirt dig so much that she wouldn’t get out of it.” PREVIEWS continues from page 1 one of many developments concerning the regents. Paul Foster, chairman of the UT System Board of Regents, said the board plans to hire a new chan- cellor over the summer, to replace outgoing UT System Chancellor Fran- cisco Cigarroa. In Febru- ary, Cigarroa announced he will be stepping down to return to medicine full time as the director of pe- diatric transplant surgery at the UT Health Science Center–San Antonio. he board has hired an executive search irm, Wheless Partners, to assist in its search for a chancellor. AROUND CAMPUS On Monday, Faculty Council will vote on wheth- er to extend the hanks- giving break by one day. If the vote passes, classes the Wednesday before hanks- giving will be formally canceled for the 2014-2015 This issue of The Daily Texan is valued at $1.25 Permanent Staff Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Laura Wright Associate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christine Ayala, Riley Brands, Amil Malik, Eric Nikolaides Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shabab Siddiqui Associate Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Elisabeth Dillon News Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jordan Rudner Associate News Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Antonia Gales, Anthony Green, Jacob Kerr, Pete Stroud, Amanda Voeller Senior Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Julia Brouillette, Nicole Cobler, Alyssa Mahoney, Madlin Mekelburg Copy Desk Chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sara Reinsch Associate Copy Desk Chiefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Brett Michaels Donohoe, Reeana Keenen, Kevin Sharifi Design Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jack Mitts Senior Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hirrah Barlas, Bria Benjamin, Alex Dolan, Omar Longoria Multimedia Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Charlie Pearce, Alec Wyman Associate Photo Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sam Ortega Senior Photographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jonathan Garza, Shweta Gulati, Pu Ying Huang, Shelby Tauber, Lauren Ussery Senior Videographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jackie Kuenstler, Dan Resler, Bryce Seifert Life&Arts Queen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hannah Smothers Life&Arts Princess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lauren L’Amie Senior Life&Arts Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Eleanor Dearman, Kritika Kulshrestha, David Sackllah, Alex Williams Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stefan Scrafield Associate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chris Hummer Senior Sports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Evan Berkowitz, Garrett Callahan, Jori Epstein, Matt Warden Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Massingill Associate Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hannah Hadidi Roommate to the Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Riki Tsuji Senior Comics Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cody Bubenik, Ploy Buraparate, Connor Murphy, Aaron Rodriguez, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stephanie Vanicek Director of Technical Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jeremy Hintz Associate Director of Technical Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Stancik Senior Technical Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jack Shen, Roy Varney Special Ventures Co-editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bobby Blanchard, Chris Hummer Online Outreach Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fred Tally-Foos Journalism Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Michael Brick Issue Staff Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wynne Davis, Adam Hamze, Natalie Sullivan Multimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Helen Fernandez, Miriam Rousseau, Zachary Strain, Daulton Venglar Sports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chris Caraveo, Daniel Clay, Grant Gordon, James Grandberry, Jacob Martella Copy Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Rainier Ababao, Cameron Peterson, Claire Yun Comics Artists . . . . . . . . . . Nathan Burgess, Andrew Cooke, Alyssa Creagh, Erin David, Crystal Garcia, Isabella Palacios Life&Arts Writer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vanessa Silva Business and Advertising (512) 471-1865 | advertise@texasstudentmedia.com Interim Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frank Serpas, III Executive Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chad Barnes Business Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Barbara Heine Advertising Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CJ Salgado Broadcasting and Events Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carter Goss Event Coordinator and Media Consultant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lindsey Hollingsworth Campus & National Sales Associate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carter Goss, Lindsey Hollingsworth Student Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ted Sniderman Student Assistant Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rohan Needel Student Acct. Execs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dani Archuleta, Aaron Blanco, Hannah Davis, Crysta Hernandez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robin Jacobs, Erica Reed, Mayowa Tijani, Lesly Villarreal Student Project Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Aaron Blanco Student Office Assistant/Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mymy Nguyen Student Administrative Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dito Prado Senior Graphic Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Daniel Hublein Student Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Karina Manguia, Rachel Ngun, Bailey Sullivan Special Editions/Production Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael Gammon Longhorn Life Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ali Killian Longhorn LIfe Assistant Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Andrew Huygen The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Media, 2500 Whitis Ave., Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published daily, Monday through Friday, during the regular academic year and is published once weekly during the summer semester. The Daily Texan does not publish during academic breaks, most Federal Holidays and exam periods. Periodical Postage Paid at Austin, TX 78710. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. 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Box D, Austin, TX 78713. 5/2/14 Texan Ad Deadlines Monday .............Wednesday, 12 p.m. Tuesday.................Thursday, 12 p.m. Wednesday................Friday, 12 p.m. Thursday.................Monday, 12 p.m. Friday......................Tuesday, 12 p.m. Classified Word Ads 11 a.m. (Last Business Day Prior to Publication) Through August 3 This exhibition illuminates the experience of World War I from the point of view of its participants and observers, preserved through letters, drafts, and diaries; memoirs and novels; and photographs and propaganda posters. Free public tours on Tuesdays at noon, Thursdays at 6 p.m., Saturdays at 2 p.m., and Sundays at 2 p.m. 21st and Guadalupe Streets Free admission, donations welcome www.hrc.utexas.edu 512-471-8944 school year. In June, Student Gov- ernment members will launch a UTexas app for Android specifically phones. The free app, which was created by com- puter students, will allow students to ac- cess handheld maps and University-related news. It is currently only available to iPhone users. science LT. GOVERNOR RUNOFF On May 27, state Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, and current Lt. Gov. Da- vid Dewhurst will com- pete in a runoff election to determine the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor. In March, Pat- rick won roughly 41 per- cent of the vote but did not get the 50 percent nec- essary to be confirmed as the nominee. Dewhurst, who has been in office 12 years, received 28 percent of the vote. The winner of the runoff will com- pete against state Sen. Le- ticia Van de Putte, D-San FOOD TRUCKS continues from page 1 trucks] to place additional containers separate from their trailers,” King said. “Everything has to be at- tached to their trailers. … It’s not as convenient as they would like it to be.” King said the City of Austin manages 25 percent of the waste generated by the community and the other 75 percent is man- aged by the private sector. Because of this, King said, the Zero Waste Advisory Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees Meeting Tuesday, May 6, 2014 Board of Operating Trustees Meeting 11:30 a.m. Hearst Student Media Bldg. Room #3.302 2500 Whitis Avenue Visitors Welcome We encourage any community member who has any kind of temporary or permanent disability to contact Texas Student Media beforehand so that appropriate accommodations can be made. Anyone is welcome to attend. T E X A S S T U D E N T M E D I A The Daily Texan • Texas Student Television • KVRX 91.7 FM • Texas Travesty • Cactus Yearbook • Longhorn Life Antonio, in the general election in November. LAW AND ORDER Rashad Owens, the driver accused of crashing a car into a crowd during South By Southwest, will have a pre-trial hearing on June 3. Owens, who has been in Travis County Jail since March 13, has been charged with one count of capital murder and 24 counts of aggravated as- sault with a deadly weapon. Gene Vela, the public affairs graduate student accused of engaging Aus- tin police officers in an armed standoff last No- vember, has two upcom- ing court dates on May 15 and June 30. Vela, who is currently being held at the Travis County Cor- rectional Complex, faces eight charges, including two charges of unlaw- ful carrying of a weapon, two charges of aggravated assault against a public servant and one charge of terroristic threat. Commission — which doesn’t have the power to require food trucks to pro- vide these bins — focuses on making recommenda- tions based on infrastruc- ture, outreach prospects and implementation plans. In the Rancho Rio Eat- ery, a food trailer park in West Campus, vendors such as Korean Komfort can recycle because the park management pro- vides recycling bins for the food trucks in that area. Korean Komfort owner Paul Cho said his employ- ees do their best to recycle plastic bottles, cardboard boxes, glass and any other recyclable materials. Cho said although he supports recycling efforts, is more concerned he about finding a way to dispose of the wastewater each truck creates. “If there was a city ordi- nance in place or a service that provides for the col- lection of this wastewater it would benefit all truck trailer operators,” and Cho said. Mechanical engineer- ing senior Robin Zou said he visits the West Campus trucks every month. He said more recycling options would be good, especially in a city like Austin. “Food trucks are very popular in this city since people come here for events like ACL and South By [Southwest], so it’s im- portant for us to be en- vironmentally conscious and show everyone how to recycle and that Austin re- cycles,” Zou said. W&N 3 Managing editor relects on best days of his life 3 Shabab Siddiqui, pictured here on the “best day of his life,” served as managing editor in the spring and the fall. Previously, he worked as a news editor, associate editor, senior reporter, volleyball writer, and, most impor- tantly, a women’s golf writer. Charlie Pearce Daily Texan Staff 3. Don’t judge people by their words, actions or deeds but rather by the autocorrect function of their phones. We can meticulously measure every word we say, but in the end, it’s the autocorrect and the predictive-word functions of our phones that reveal the most about us. 4. he two most frequent errors in human judgment are overvaluing one’s IM Sotball skills and overestimating how awesome a goatee looks. 5. Make good friends with “stand up” guys; make better friends with “stand-in-line” guys. A good part of life is just waiting for things — ind people you would want to wait in line with. 6. he world is illed with bedwetters; learn to embrace them. Bedwetters are people who are easily shaken by the unanticipated. Bedwet- ters can come in the form of everyday stressors to GPA obsessors, but ultimately, they mean well and keep the rest of us on track. 7. he more you expect out of people, the more you will need to care about them. In an environment in which we pay people so little, care and commitment are the only real currencies. 8. Act like you’re living in the most important mo- ment in history — but know that it isn’t. No single issue of a daily newspaper ever changed the trajectory of human history on its own. But I like to think that the re- porter who wrote the Play 1 story stripped across the top of the paper on any given day thought she was. And that the photographer who shot the DOM photo right in the middle of the page thought he was too. So did the copy editor who caught the 12th dangling modiier of the night and the designer who ixed every last misaligned stroke right at midnight. And this is what working at the Texan has taught me: hat we have to both live in the world as it is and act like it is the world it can be. To think and act like that, you need to be conident and critical, idealistic and insis- tent. Basically, you have to be a little bit of a moron. he most formative experi- ence of my college career has been working with these staf- ers — these morons like me. -30- “Five or six other cops were just south of the in- tersection, and they were just picking off people left and right,” Kasischke said. “They were hiding behind the bridge. It was very off.” Kasischke said although he did not disagree with the police’s decision to ticket him, he thought the officers could have been more lenient. “Writing a ticket for run- ning a stop sign, I totally understand,” Kasischke said. “I definitely didn’t come to a full stop. It was kind of the demeanor in which they did it: They kind of jumped up in the middle of the road and forced you to stop, other- wise you would hit them. There was no dialogue, they were just writing tickets [and] then letting people go.” Kasischke thought police could have used the oppor- tunity to educate bicyclists about the importance of following traffic laws. “These police were just left and pulling people right and writing tickets and not educating any- body,” Kasischke said. “When he pulled me over, he asked me why I thought I was pulled over, and I’ve been riding a bike for years — I knew it was for going through the stop sign. But, with the girl next to me, there was no effort to ex- plain it to her.” Kasischke thought it was a “strange coincidence” that APD oicers conducted the initiative on Bike to UT Day. spokeswoman Cindy Posey said campus police were not aware of the APD operation. UTPD NEWS Friday, May 2, 2014 -30- Editor’s note: A -30- column is a chance for departing per- manent staf to say farewell and relect on their time spent in he Daily Texan’s basement oice. he term comes from the old typesetting mark (-30-) to denote the end of a line. By Shabab Siddiqui @shabab_siddiqui Whoever irst had the idea that a bunch of kids should be running a full-ledged news organization was a complete moron. I was neither ready enough for nor qualiied enough for every job I did at the Texan. But like every other not- ready-enough, not-qualiied- enough predecessor, I pre- tended I belonged. Here are eight things I learned through my years at the Texan: 1. For every success a person has, there are a dozen people who won’t ever get credit for helping make it happen. We usually save our high ives and hugs for the people who make the big gestures, sometimes forgetting the ones whose per- sistence, critique and unsolic- ited feedback make us better every day. 2. Find the perfect PITA. PITA in this case stands for “Pain in the A**.” he right PITA is respectful and cares deeply but tends to score radically diferently on the Meyers-Briggs test. A PITA challenges the group during meetings, makes decisions more diicult and refuses to let anyone get complacent. TICKETS continues from page 1 bicyclists,” Harvey said. Kent Kasischke, a visit- ing psychology student re- searcher, received a ticket while biking to campus this morning near the in- tersection of 29th Street and Speedway. 4A OPINION LAURA WRIGHT, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TexanEditorial Friday, May 2, 2014 4 -30- ISSUES TO WATCH: WALLACE HALL Lessons on UT learned from he Daily Texan By Laura Wright @wrightlauras Editor-in-Chief he pages of the Texan are proof that some- one, somewhere cares and has cared about the day-to-day of University life for over a centu- ry. As former Daily Texan Editor Willie Mor- ris wrote in 1955, “he Daily Texan is bigger than any one man. We will protect it and its traditions with our personal reputation. You will be jostled, cajoled, embarrassed. Yet, through our telescope of ideas, you will see your life here in much nobler focus.” Morris was speaking of the Texan, but he might well have been speaking of the Uni- versity, which inds itself at the precipice of change much in the same way the paper does now. Heavily dependent on its print product for revenue, the Texan has struggled to adapt to a digital world without chang- ing both its business model and its mission. Heavily dependent on tuition dollars and state funding, the University is loundering to igure out where online courses and anti- quated degrees it into the changing model of higher education. his year, ater a series of tense Texas Stu- dent Media board meetings and more than a few iery editorials, the Texan found a (tem- porary) answer to the question of its future when President William Powers Jr. secured transitional funding for the paper’s move to the Moody School of Communication and, presumably, a few years down the line, the Texan’s adoption of a new business plan. he promise of the money quelled quite a few concerns, but it should have raised more. If the solution to the paper’s inability to adapt was to ind a generous benefactor in the tower, what will be UT’s solution to insui- cient funds when tuition can’t be raised any higher? he folks at the Capitol may not be as generous to the University as Powers was with us, and given our state’s aversion to taxes, they The Daily Texan is bigger than any one man. We will protect it and its traditions with our personal repu- tation. You will be jostled, cajoled, embarrassed. Yet, through our telescope of ideas, you will see your life here in much nobler focus. —Willie Morris, Daily Texan Editor, 1955-1956 Conversations about the future of UT are often raised in the con- text of “hows”: how we might get students to graduate in four years, how we might get them into the right class, how we might make their degree most valuable. But if the Texan’s history is any indica- tion, now is the time for whys and whats: Why do we teach students in the classroom? may not have so much to give. I raise these questions here because I think what happened at the Texan bears remember- ing as the University charts its course in the decades to come. For instance, 10 years ago, questions began to enter the conversation about the Texan’s future — questions like how we might keep our print product in the face of fading revenue or how we might retain a staf as large as generous decades had accus- tomed us to. hose at the Texan then should have been asking why the paper existed in the irst place. Had they, I’m sure the answer would have been that he Daily Texan ex- ists “to educate and inform” — the model of delivery notwithstanding. And yet, 10 years later, we are just exiting a burdensome argu- ment about print. So what does this have to do with higher education? Conversations about the future of UT are oten raised in the context of “how’s”: how we might get students to graduate in four years, how we might get them into the right class, how we might make their degree most valuable. But if the Texan’s history is any indication, now is the time for why’s and what’s: Why do we teach students in the classroom? Why do we charge what we charge for tuition? Why are we here, learning and striving? What is the meaning of being a “University of the irst class,” as the state constitution requires us to be? he answers may not be in line with what we think of as a University education. If that’s the case, its better we ind out now, so that we can start working toward changing our ideas of what it means to attend UT. he University, like the Daily Texan, is bigger than anyone man, and it is our job as Longhorns to chart a course that serves not our own understand- ing of a University education but our belief in its higher purpose. -30- Wright is the outgoing editor-in-chief of he Daily Texan. She started at the Texan in sum- mer 2012 and previously served as a life & arts senior writer and an opinion columnist. ISSUES TO WATCH: SHARED SERVICES On Jan. 29 last year, UT President William Powers Jr. gave a speech called “Smarter Sys- tems for a Greater UT” in which he introduced the UT Shared Services plan — an initiative to help the University operate more eiciently. Based on the report, the University could improve its business practices and increase campus-wide eiciency by eliminating about 500 jobs and consolidating its non-faculty administrative services. Implementing the report’s recommendations could yield net savings of about $30 to $40 million in perpetuity and a gross total savings over 12 years of $280 to $320 million according to the Shared Services Steering Committee’s indings. Numerous administrators on campus, including Powers and Chief Financial Oicer Kevin Hegarty, see the plan as a necessary consequence of the Uni- versity’s declining general revenue, which has shrunk to about 13 percent of UT’s budget. Many students see the plan as furthering the corporatization of education, leading to student protests around campus, including a “sit in” outside Powers’ oice last Wednesday aternoon. Shared Services not only has the potential to radically change the University’s operations, but it also has the potential to radicalize the students. Whichever one occurs, the issue is worth your attention. Shared Services not only has the potential to radically change the University’s operations, but it also has the potential to radi- calize the students. ISSUES TO WATCH: CHARLIE STRONG his fall, UT head football coach Charlie Strong will enter his irst season at the helm of the Longhorns. hen, his strict new policies for student athletes will be put to the test on the ield. Historically, incoming UT coaches haven’t performed well in their irst seasons, but Strong has been proactive in setting a rhythm for the team since he took over for Mack Brown in January. A solid start would do a lot for fan morale, given that the Brown era went out with a whimper — a discontent, disgruntled whimper coming from the stands. Strong came to Texas ready to make his mark. He quickly set his own standard for the team, which included having athletes eat, sleep and study together, while serving up punishment for breaking his rules with extra time on the practice ield. Of course, there’s another issue to consider as this story unfolds, which is that regardless of whether he’s made history on the ield, Strong has made history at UT as the school’s irst black head football coach. Given that Bev Kearney, the only other black head coach the school has ever had, is currently suing UT for discrimination on the basis of her race and gender, what the UT community makes of Strong’s race, and his performance on the ield, is surely an issue to watch. With the May 12 meeting of the House Select Committee on Transparency in State Agency Operations quickly approaching, students would do well to watch what could be the inal chapter in the saga of Wallace Hall. he embattled member of the UT System Board of Re- gents is being investigated by the committee for possible misconduct related to his making massive numbers of open records requests in an alleged attempt to oust UT-Austin President William Powers Jr., and articles of impeachment may soon be on the table. he matter has also been turned over to the Travis County District Attorney Oice’s Public Integrity Unit for an investigation into potential criminal conduct. All of this drama has been distracting, damaging and expensive — his records requests may have cost the University upwards of $1 million — and with possible mounting pressure from both prosecutors and the legislative committee investigating him, the end may inally be near. All of this drama [with Regent Hall] has been distracting, damag- ing and expensive ... and with possible mounting pressure from both prosecutors and the legislative committee investigating him, the end may inally be near. -30- Arrests of young people deserve more attention By Eric Nikolaides @eric_KTurner Associate Editor In February, the UT community was col- lectively outraged when Austin police ar- rested a young woman ater she jaywalked near campus. Amanda Jo Stephen — a pe- tite 24-year-old with blonde pigtails who its the very “deinition of non-threatening,” as Texas Monthly put it — was jogging with earphones in, and couldn’t hear the oi- cers when they yelled at her to stop. An of- icer then startled Stephen by grabbing her arm, and before long she was pinned to the ground and in handcufs. Four other of- icers quickly arrived on the scene, shoved the young woman into the back of a cop car and hauled her of to the Travis County Jail, where she was booked for “failure to identi- fy” and “failure to obey a pedestrian control device.” he public outcry over Stephen’s arrest was swit and severe, and APD chief Art Acevedo’s response to the controversy was widely criticized. But while many people were surprised and shocked by what hap- pened, I wasn’t. In many ways, I am Amanda Jo Stephen. I am a 22-year-old UT student with (hope- fully) a bright future ahead of me and no criminal record behind me — that is, until I was arrested last September for “interference with public duties.” And, just as in Stephen’s case, I committed no arrestable ofense un- til my interaction with the police. I was at an apartment party in a small Texas college town, celebrating my girlfriend’s 21st birth- day, when the cops came knocking at the door to investigate a noise complaint. At the time, I had just inished a summer internship with the ACLU, so I had Fourth Amendment search-and-seizure rights fresh on my mind: I refused to let the cops in without a search warrant. And, as you might expect, the oi- cers did not take too kindly to a smug lecture from a pain-in-the-ass wannabe law student. hings quickly escalated into a shouting match, and, before I knew it, I too found my- self in the back of a cop car and on my way to jail. All that’s to say, this isn’t just about what happened to Stephen; her arrest for giving the cops a hard time was hardly an isolated incident. Admittedly, I was a jerk to those cops. I’m not trying to condone disrespecting the po- lice, as it’s clear that Stephen was doing — the video of the Stephen incident showed her kicking, screaming and dropping f-bombs as the oicers struggled to place her under ar- rest. Some people are even suggesting that Stephen deliberately jaywalked in front of the cops in protest of an APD “pedestrian enforcement” sting, and Acevedo claimed that she “did the limp routine” just to be dif- icult. But, while we need to treat police of- icers with respect — at least I learned a valu- able lesson through the ordeal — we should be skeptical of these kinds of arrests. Her In many ways, I am Amanda Jo Stephen. I am a 22-year-old UT student with (hopefully) a bright fu- ture ahead of me, and no criminal record behind me — that is, until I was arrested last September for ‘interference with public duties.’ The criminal justice system is entirely overburdened by low-level misdemeanor cases, so we need to be careful with what scarce resourc- es we have; arresting young people for “contempt of cop” hardly consti- tutes a good use of those resources. story and mine are both poignant instances of young people thrown into the criminal justice system simply because they took an attitude when interacting with a police oi- cer. And as both stories seem to illustrate, if you piss of a cop, you could likely ind your- self in jail, facing misdemeanor charges that will follow you for the rest of your life. Although the media oten reports on these types of arrests, there is seldom any cover- age of the subsequent process of bonding out of jail, facing prosecution, plea-bargaining, paying ines, being on probation and then dealing with the consequences of having a criminal record — no matter how minor — for life. Local newspapers covered my in- cident, and, despite my case being disposed — and my record soon to be wiped clean — those articles will be online and freely available to any potential employers for all of google-able eternity. A low-level misdemeanor like “failure to identify” or “interference with public du- ties” can cost thousands of dollars and take a huge toll on a young person and her fam- ily through court costs, ines, attorney fees and lost job opportunities, among the many other disadvantages that come with having a criminal record. Is it right to do this to some- one who hasn’t truly committed a crime oth- er than disrespecting an oicer? According to Acevedo, Stephen was ar- rested and charged not because she jay- walked, but because she refused to identify herself or cooperate with the oicer who detained her for crossing the street against the light. And, while there is a statue on the books that makes it a crime to refuse to give your name to a cop if you’re under ar- rest, we need to think long and hard about spending resources on this type of policing. Oicers should have — and indeed do have — discretion in making arrests, and they should exercise it to enforce more than just the strict “letter of the law.” Is it necessary to toss young people like Stephen or myself into an arguably broken judicial system that is already fraught with problems? he crimi- nal justice system is entirely overburdened by low-level misdemeanor cases, so we need to be careful with what scarce resources we have; arresting young people for “contempt of cop” hardly constitutes a good use of those resources. Ultimately, controversies like these only hurt relations between police and the pub- lic whom oicers are sworn to protect. And as Austin continues to grow — according to Forbes, it is the fastest-growing city in America — crime and safety will continue to be a pressing concern. APD needs to focus its eforts in the right places, not on protect- ing oicers’ egos by arresting disrespectful jaywalkers. Police should learn from the public outcry over what happened in Febru- ary and work to foster a better relationship with the public — which includes exercis- ing the discretion to not arrest young people without due cause. -30- Nikolaides started at the Texan in the spring of 2013. He spent two semesters working as an opinion columnist and served this semester as an associate editor. 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. SUBMIT A FIRING LINE | E-mail your Firing Lines to editor@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. 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. -30- Friday, May 2, 2014 5 Associate news editor bids farewell to family NEWS 5 By Pete Stroud @PeteStroud he second best thing that happened to me in college was when my cheap, battered old laptop died on me last fall. For two months, while the campus computer guys tried and failed to save the thing, the Texan was basically my home. For two months, I wrote all my editorials, ed- ited all the opinion pages, did all my homework and even relaxed with the occasional Netlix show ater script set — all on the oice computers. I thought it would be the worst inconvenience ever, but I couldn’t have been more wrong. Because for those two months, I was the irst one in and the last one out of the of- ice every single day. I got to be around for all the jokes, all the late edits, all the last-minute scrambles and all the mo- ments when you see your clos- est friends for who they really are and fall in love with them. and most of the days that came ater, I got to hear Jack’s laugh boom across the basement like a happy thunderclap. I got to share music with lampoon Russian Chelsea, politics with Brett, start ledgling punk bands with Josh and Albert and trade in- sult ater good-natured insult with Charlie. I got to sit at the “cool end of the table” during budget meetings with Hannah, Sar- ah-Grace, Kelsey, Lauren and Alec, trying to silently make each other burst out laughing while we waited for Elisabeth and Shabab to ask what we had running the next day. I got to wile away long nights of editing with Drew, Kayla, Edgar, Susannah, Nile, Laura, Riley, Anthony, Amanda, Toni, Jacob and Jordan, trying to seem like a knowledgeable practitio- ner of the English language while woling down Pluck- ers wings like a basement- dwelling caveman. Every day for two months And I got to take a million smoke breaks with Pu, shar- ing a million jokes, a mil- lion grievances and a million dreams like a couple of old souls, despite never actually smoking a single cigarette. Because I started working here my irst week ater mov- ing to Austin, my entire UT experience has been centered around the Texan. I’ve almost never had to leave the oice to go hang out with friends when I inished working — everybody was here already. I’m proud of everything I’ve done in my two years here, but perhaps it’s appro- priate that most of the things I wrote or edited never had my name on them. Because the things I really want to remember about the Texan aren’t, say, that one edito- rial I wrote or that one lead I helped that reporter with that one time. I want to remember the people. I want to remember the family. I want to remem- ber the home. -30- @thedailytexan Follow us for news, updates and more. Campus Events + Entertainment CONGRATULATIONS E+E GRADUATES! THANK YOU FOR YOUR HARD WORK AND MAKING THIS SEMESTER A SUCCESS. Tim Fu ACC Elizabeth Melendez SHOW Melissa Herman EXEC BOARD Justina Moloney SHOW Marc Bachan EXEC BOARD Alyssa Boyle CAT Ladarius Campbell AACC Clarissa Cardona SHOW Catherine Cerdedo DS Chetas Charavda ACC, REC Bailey Curwick SHOW Olivia DeBeck CAT Trey Edmond CAT Edward Sigfried Hinderer CAT Brad Hinson SHOW Qasim Johnson AACC Tyler Kosmak CAT Diane Le ACC Eric Lucha HDLNRS Reid O’Conor EXEC BOARD Julianne Plantes CAT Jillian Sauls CAT Stanley Thai SHOW Meg Thompson CAT Jayme Trevino DS Grace Worm CAT STAY TUNED NEXT SEMESTER FOR Back to School Bash: Wednesday, August 27, 2014 34th Annual Madrigal Dinner: Thursday - Saturday, November 20-22, 2014 For more information, contact E+E at 512.475.6630 or visit utcee.org. VISIT US utcee.org facebook.com/utexascee @utexascee KEEP UP WITH OUR EVENT SCHEDULE @ UTCEE.ORG! Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff Over four semesters at the Texan, Pete Stroud has served as an associate opinion editor, an associate news editor and as that one guy who was always walking over to annoy the photo department. MASTERS OF SCIENCE IN BIOTECHNOLOGY PURSUE YOUR DESTINY ON OUR DIME. FULL SCHOLARSHIPS AND GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE! The Biotechnology Graduate Program at UT Health Northeast provides students with marketable skills and qualifications for work in the global biotechnology industry, as well as the academic foundation necessary to pursue further medical and professional studies. Learn state-of-the-art techniques such as single-molecule imaging using high- tech instrumentation such as super-resolution microscopy… and more! Now accepting applications for the 2014 fall semester! Apply now at www.uthct.edu/biotech The UT Health Northeast M.S. Degree Program in Biotechnology | Tyler, Texas 6 6 NEWS Sam Ortega / Daily Texan Staff Pu Ying Huang has worked as a senior for multiple semesters in photo and design, served as associated photo editor and the photo editor and will be the summer managing editor. Former multimedia editor, senior photographer remembers Texan By Pu Ying Huang @puyinghuang If I had known when I took those first steps down into the Texan that I would spend the next three years living in a poorly lit basement, often littered with discarded remnants of food and the constant blabbering of newspaper lingo, I would wish that maybe I had tripped and fallen down those stairs and took that as a sign to stay the hell away! I knew nothing about journalism, photography or design except that I maybe liked it. It is here where I learned to twiddle my way around InDesign and Photoshop. I learned to photograph strangers and manage a group of kids (and a 40-plus-year- old…), to scramble across campus and Austin, and to cover news assignments. To my mentors when I was starting — Andrew, Ryan, Mary, Tamir, Dani- Lawrence, elle, Fanny, there was homas — something in each of you I admired and strived to be. hank you for your guid- ance and letting a freshman hang with you guys. To my close friends (you know who you are) who accom- panied me on smoke breaks late at night to keep me sane as we discussed the only certainty of the future — that there are no certainties, and we must simply keep propelling forward. hank you for the encouragement and support. To the future staffers at the Texan, you will learn many things and you will mess up many things. Pass whatever you learn to the next generation because there is no better feel- ing than knowing you’ve impacted someone’s life — no matter how big or small. I’ll ramble about spe- cific memories that come to mind. Sushi trash — delicious not really. Burnt softbox. Bill Cosby. Naked reporter dancing on table at staff party. SXSW badge thief. Heart racing during best of, worst of. You’re I’m my Meredith and your Christina. Leaving for West at 11 p.m. That one night with seniors in the studio. Why won’t you look at me in the eyes? Office crush. SXSW mad- ness. DCI love, what’s a tech? Pujon is beautiful. Ice luge coolness. Photo’s favorite naked senior. Maaarlaaa. Falling in love in Kansas. Rain sleeve suf- focating my face. Mythical hard drives with photos for blackmail. Puma. My shampoo is still in the basement shower. It is in the basement that I found a community, my friends and a whole lot of my identity. There’s no doubt in my mind that, a couple years later, I will pass by this place and find that the photo kids are still the weirdest, comics staff- ers are the only ones with souls, and sports is still struggling to figure out why they work with such strange people. I did not trip down those stairs that day. I ventured on and never looked back. I will surely miss it. -30- Friday, May 2, 2014 -30- Special ventures co-editor pays tribute to Texan mentors, friends By Bobby Blanchard @bobbycblanchard So here’s to Alexa Hart, who recruited me to join The Daily Texan. I may not have ended up here without her. Here’s to Nick Hadjigeorge, who taught me that it’s “more than” and never “over” — no matter what the AP Style Guide says now. Here’s to Lena Price, whom I still worship as the wise managing editor that guided me through my irst semester. Here’s to Matthew Stottlemyre and Elyana Bar- rera, who kept coming back whenever the Texan called. Here’s to Susannah Ja- cob, Trey Scott, Laura Wright and Shabab Sid- diqui, who fearlessly led the Texan during dark days and guided us toward the light. Here’s to Pu Ying Huang, Elisabeth Dillon and Riley Brands, who I know will fill those enor- mous shoes. to Here’s the Friends of The Daily Texan, who organized swiftly when we needed them most. I hope I can join their ranks some- day. Here’s to Dave Player, who fights for the Texan as hard as anyone I know and doesn’t get half the thanks he deserves. Here’s to Samantha Kat- sounas, who was a great friend even ater she let the Texan. Here’s to Jordan Rudner, who went from skipping with me across the street to running a newsroom as good as the pros. Here’s to Chris Hummer and Jack Mitts, who made special ventures so special this last semester. Here’s to Natasha Smith and Nicole Collins, who told me that it was okay. Here’s to advisors Doug Warren, Michael Whitney and Michael Brick. We would all be lost without them. Here’s to Christine Aya- la, for being my other half during the summer and keeping me sane. Here’s to Jacob Kerr, who always made me laugh. Here’s to Megan Strick- land, whom I miss the most. Here’s to Audrey White, who is kind, bold and the person we should all aspire to be. Here’s to Alexa Ura, who is the journalist we should all aspire to be. Here’s to the Texan’s fu- ture, Madlin Mekelburg, Nicole Cobler, Anthony Green, Amanda Voeller, Elly Dearman and the many others who have just started at the Texan but have already done great things. And here’s to ev- eryone else who made the Texan time at my so memorable. I am dedicating my good- bye to the staff because they made the Texan what it was for me. They made it a home. It was a place where I slept, ate, cried and laughed. The Texan was where I lived. I will never be able to properly thank this newspaper for every- thing it’s been for me. So, in the meantime, here’s to you — he Daily Texan. -30- Journalism junior Bobby Blanchard has worked in 10 positions at The Daily Texan in eight semesters. Here, he sits on top of the news box outside the Belo Center for New Media, which was built following public outcry when Blanchard reported the communications school wouldn’t allow a Texan news box outside of the building. Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff John Massingill / Daily Texan Staff @thedailytexan Follow us for news, updates and more. 7 Videographer proud of making place for department in Texan By Jackie Kuenstler @jaquerose91 he Daily Texan and I have had a tumultuous re- lationship. I had ups and downs between being giddy with pride at a beautiful video I had produced to be- ing irrationally angry and frustrated when it felt like no one else on staf appreci- ated that video. I oten felt like video was considered by everyone but me to be the ugly stepchild of he Daily Texan. Like we were doing some things that weren’t half bad, but we were every- one’s last priority. So I took it upon myself and my staf to prove them wrong. Being the department head over the video staff was one of the most diffi- cult things I’ve ever done. Managing people is hard, and it’s not something I enjoyed doing, but I strove to improve the department and make our presence known. My favorite parts of working at the Texan were when I was mak- ing my own videos, not I’ve been able to create great content in which I’m interested, I’ve made solid friends and built a solid little family. overseeing everyone elses’. I don’t Looking back, know why some of the things I made freshman year were published, but it sure made me good at my job now. There isn’t a class in this entire college that gave me that opportunity. Ater I took time of from the Texan to study abroad, I came back to a transformed paper. Before I let, there were walls everywhere, and the video department was cooped up in a separate room from the rest of the staf. When I returned, there was almost an entirely new video and photo staf, the walls were torn down, both physically and metaphori- cally, and I began to truly feel comfortable in my posi- tion. he work at the Texan was both hard and inspiring, but the people there really —Jackie Kuenstler Journalism senior made it home. My senior year at UT and my last year at the Texan has been what I wished my early years were. I’ve been able to create great content in which interested, I’ve made I’m solid friends and built a sol- id little family. I’ve watched other people do my old job better than I ever could, and I’m very grateful to be here and witness that. he video department has grown tre- mendously in size, quality and recognition since I was in charge, and I’m happy to be leaving it in its current state. I know it will only go up from here. We’ve come so far from our roots of being cooped in a tiny, dark room in the corner, separated from everyone else. I’m proud to call he Daily Texan my job — and my home. -30- -30- Friday, May 2, 2014 NEWS 7 Alec Wyman joined The Daily Texan as a staff videographer in fall 2012 and became the multimedia editor in fall 2013. In the photo above, he’s shown in his natural environment among the primitive tools of his craft. Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff Multimedia editor remembers couch, friends, time in oice By Alec Wyman @alecwyman The Daily Texan was given to me. I applied to be a staff videographer on a whim per the recom- mendation of longtime friend Demi Adejuyigbe. He had explained the in- access, festival credible notable work experience and warm office environ- ment. He hadn’t explained how to find a story, col- laborate with reporters or how exactly a video de- partment fits into a news- paper — a question I still cannot answer. The Daily Texan also gave back. It gave me a truly talented, hard-work- ing group of videogra- phers and the opportunity to facilitate their growth as filmmakers and journal- ists. Instead of thinking back on how I failed to get more than one person to cover the state prima- ries, my mind will drift first to how quickly Dan and Carlo jumped at the opportunity to drive to Fort Hood. Before I re- member the time I threw my back out in the photo pit at Childish Gambino’s concert, I’ll remember the undying love that Brenda showered on me at every available moment. Finally, I don’t think I’ll ever for- get Bryce’s unprecedented ability to make any type of video in an insane amount of time or Jackie’s instinc- tive drive to work on sto- ries that truly matter. To Shabab Siddiqui and Elisabeth Dillon, thank you for your constant sup- port and for dealing with my obnoxious outbursts at budget. To John Massingill, it is impossible to quantify the joy you have brought into my life. To all depart- ment heads, fall and spring, thanks for putting up with how frequently I pestered you and your reporters. To Michael Brick, you have been an invaluable source of wisdom and guidance during my tenure as multi- media editor. To Charlie, Sam, Pu and Chelsea, I appreciate your immense dedication to the multimedia department over the years and that you always encouraged photo staf to shoot beautifully composed videos for me. To all of my videographers, it is diicult for me to express how proud you have all made me over the past year. I am a better person for hav- ing known and worked with you all. To the multimedia couch, you are a beacon of hope; may your light shine on and provide blissful naps for multimedia staf into the distant future. I don’t have any more words. My writing skills have never matched up to those of the absurdly tal- ented staff of this news- paper. So I will be leaving this beloved, sunlight- stealing basement with this: he Daily Texan was given to me. I’ll be taking it with me for the rest of my life. -30- Advertisement Has your college education prepared you for your life ahead? Jackie Kuenstler joined The Daily Texan her freshman year and has since held positions of department head and senior videographer. Sam Ortega / Daily Texan Staff understands that our desire to make this world a better place needs to be grounded in inancial sustainability and our mind-body connection. The Sansori Bridge Year and Young Creatives programs offer learning through direct experience in a mixed age setting. The Bridge Year program is for adults relaunching their career and looking for meaning- ful work, college seniors seeking a clear sense of their career or life path, and high school seniors looking to gain a better sense of self and their future in an environment that combines business training and ways to make positive contributions to the world. 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Through technology students are connected with their peers in other parts of the world, and cross cultural exchange is an integral part of their educational experience. The program is for 1st through 8th grades and the mixed age setting provides space for ac- celerated learning, group leadership, and compas- sionate connections. In the words of a Sansori applicant seeking ways to integrate mindful living with inancial sus- tainability, “I want to take a Bridge Year because I don’t feel that my tradi- tional education has really prepared me to exist in the world in a mindful way. Essentially, I want to take a year to learn about the world and also to learn about myself.” What are you getting out of your undergradu- ate experience? Are you ready for the transition to life-after-college? The Sansori Bridge Year al- lows you the space to discover and build your life and career path, at a price you can afford. Are you one of the over 38 million stu- dents who inanced their education through taking on debt? Did your investment prepare you for your life ahead? Are you leaving college with a clear sense of not only what you love to do but also how to connect that with a meaningful career? If you could design your educational experience, would it involve taking more exams and writing papers or doing things you love and making a positive contribution to your com- munity? Sansori is a global education company that 8 Friday, May 2, 2014 Fall 2013 Nov. 13 FISHER V. TEXAS Attorneys for the Uni- versity and rejected UT applicant Abigail Fisher argued over the Univer- sity’s race-conscious ad- missions policy in front of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Fisher originally sued the University in 2008, claiming she was discriminated against during the admissions process because she was white. The Fifth Cir- cuit has not yet issued its decision in the case. Illustration by Mike Todd / Daily Texan Staff Sept. 7 — ODD MANNY OUT Texas was blown out by BYU, 40- 21, giving up 550 yards rushing in the game. One day later, Mack Brown ired defensive coordinator Manny Diaz and replaced him with Greg Robinson. Sept. 25 — FORK STABBING Chenxi Deng, a student from China, lew to Austin to stalk his former girlfriend, UT graduate stu- dent Li You. Deng confronted You in the Engineering Science Build- ing, and, when You threatened to call the police, Deng stabbed her in the nose with a metal fork. Deng, who was charged with ag- gravated assault, did not show up for his court date after spending ive days in jail, and Travis County attorneys said they suspect he may be in China. Aug. 22 — BLEACH BOMB In August, government senior Bryan Davis claimed he was the victim of a “bleach bomb” thrown from a University Towers apart- ment balcony. Though a UTPD investigation of the balloon frag- ments and Davis’ clothing concluded that the balloon was likely illed with water and found no evidence of bleach, the incident still sparked debate and prompted one rally in Davis’ support. Oct. 1 DELOSS DODDS RETIRES DeLoss Dodds announces he will retire as athletic director in 2014. The Longhorns won 14 national championships in Dodds’ 32 years as athletic director. YEAR IN REVIEW Friday, May 2, 2014 9 Jan. 28 — INCLEMENT WEATHER Over the irst three months of the spring semester, classes were canceled or delayed six times beacsue of of “winter weather.” On Jan. 28, the University released three separate decisions regarding closures in fewer than eight hours — a mis- hap for which administrators later apologized. Pu Ying Huang / Daily Texan ile photo March 13 — SXSW CRASH More than 20 people were injured and four people were killed after 21-year-old Rashad Owens drove his car into a crowded area down- town during South By Southwest festivities. Police charged Owens, whose court date is June 3, with one count of capital murder and 24 counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Crash fatalities included 18-year-old DeAndre Ta- tum, 26-year-old Sandy Le, 27-year- old Jamie West and 35-year-old Steven Craenmehr. Dec. 19 — VOLLEYBALL LOSES IN FINAL FOUR The top-ranked Texas volley- ball team was defeated by No. 12 Wisconsin in the semiinals of the NCAA Championships. The 2013 Longhorns inished the season at 27-3 with a per- fect 16-0 record in the Big 12, the irst time in the history of the program that the team went un- defeated in conference play. Dec. 14 — BROWN STEPS DOWN Mack Brown stepped down as Texas’ head football coach. Brown had 158 wins at Texas, the second most all-time, and led the Longhorns to two national title game appearances, winning one in 2005. Dec. 12 — REGENT TENSION Ongoing tensions between President William Powers Jr. and members of the UT System Board of Regents contin- ued to dominate the news cycle this year. In July 2013, the House Select Committee on Trans- parency in State Agency Operations began investigating Regent Wallace Hall, who was accused of conducting a “witch-hunt” to oust Powers. On May 12, they will meet and vote on whether to recommend Hall's impeachment. At a tense meeting in December, Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa recommended Powers remain president of UT following four hours of discussion in executive session — a meeting some people speculated would end in Pow- ers' termination. Notes taken during an executive session meeting earlier in the year indicated Cigarroa had previ- ously asked Powers to resign. Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan ile photo Nov. 8-10 — FUN FUN FUN FEST Since it began in 2006, Fun Fun Fun Fest has grown from a small festival made up mostly of underground metal and hip-hop acts to an ACL competitor. 2013 was the fes- tival's biggest year yet, bringing in headlin- ers such as MGMT, M.I.A. and Snoop Dogg. Nov. 5 — STEVE PATTERSON Texas hired Steve Patterson to replace DeLoss Dodds as its seventh athletic director. Patterson had previously served as the athletic director at Arizona State. Oct. 28 — TEXAS MEMORIAL MUSEUM The Daily Texan reported the Texas Memorial Museum would lose nearly $400,000 out of a $600,000 budget for the 2014-2015 school year. The on-cam- pus museum, which will celebrate its 75th birthday next year, will also experience a staff reduction from 11 employees to three: one security guard, one gift shop operator and one other employee. Feb. 20 — JOGGER ARRESTED On Feb. 20, Austin po- lice arrested 24-year-old Amanda Jo Stephen after she crossed an intersec- tion at 24th and San An- tonio streets during a red light. Stephen, whose arrest caught national attention, was charged with “failure to identify” and “failure to obey a pedestrian control device” and was released later the same day. Jan. 6 — CHARLIE STRONG HIRED Texas hired Charlie Strong to replace Mack Brown as head football coach. Strong had previ- ously served as the head coach at Louisville. Oct. 3-5 and 10-12 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS The 2013 Austin City Limits Music Festival marked several irsts for the annual event. This the fest expanded from one to two weekends, both of which sold out, thou- and welcomed sands of guests to see headliners such as The Cure, Kings of Leon and Atoms for Peace. It was also the irst year ACL has ever had to call off a day of the festival. Heavy rain on the second Saturday night looded Zilker Park, leaving it underwater and unusable for the inal day of the fest. Elisabeth Dillon / Daily Texan ile photo Pu Ying Huang / Daily Texan ile photo Feb. 11 — CHANCELLOR RESIGNS UT System Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa announced he would step down as chancellor to return to medicine full- time. Once his successor is named, Cigarroa will become head of the pediatric transplant surgery at the UT Health Science Center-San Antonio. In a press conference the day of the announcement, Cigarroa said his resignation was unrelated to the current tension surrounding the Board of Regents. According to board chairman Paul Foster, the new chancellor will be selected over the summer. Feb. 1 BASKETBALL UPSETS KANSAS Freshman Isaiah Taylor and junior Jonathan Holmes led the Longhorns with 23 and 22 points, respectively. March 25 GARRIDO IS WIN- NINGEST COACH Texas baseball coach Augie Garrido won his 1,894th game, mak- ing him the all-time winningest coach in NCAA baseball history. Shelby Tauber / Daily Texan ile photo April 8-10 — CIVIL RIGHTS SUMMIT In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the LBJ Library hosted a three-day Civil Rights Sum- mit, which addressed modern issues of equality and the role civil rights activists have played throughout history. President Barack Obama and former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Bill Clin- ton and George W. Bush all spoke at the event alongside other civil rights leaders. Feb. 27 — SG ELECTIONS After two hours of voting and two hours of technical delays, Kori Rady and Taylor Strickland were elected Student Government president and vice president, respectively. Rady, govern- ment and corporate communications senior, and corporate communications junior Strickland defeated government senior Kenton Wilson and Caroline Carter, marketing and international re- lations and global studies senior, with 51.9 per- cent of the vote. Rady and Strickland were sworn in April 1. March 22 HORNS LOSE IN ROUND OF 32 The Longhorn basketball season comes to an end as Texas is defeat- ed by the Michigan Wolverines in the Round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament. Sam Ortega / Daily Texan ile photo April 23 — SHARED SERVICES PROTEST Eighteen students were arrested after protesting the University’s Shared Services program outside President William Powers Jr.’s ofice. Shared Services is a plan to centralize University human resources, inance, procurement and information technology services. The plan calls for the elimi- nation of 500 positions through attrition and retirement, though, some faculty members claim it will lead to widespread layoffs. The Shared Services Steering Committee began hearing recommendations for a pilot program in January, and University administrators will start imple- menting the program in the College of Education and the Ofice of the Provost over the summer, according to UT spokesman Kevin Almasy. Shelby Tauber / Daily Texan ile photo Spring 2014 Zachary Strain / Daily Texan ile photo Multimedia Photo Video Comics Jarrid Denman / Daily Texan ile photo Undeclared freshman Rodney Bravo studies outside of the LBJ building. Three girls play in a mist machine at the State Fair on Oct. 15. Shelby Tauber / Daily Texan ile photo Zachary Strain / Daily Texan ile photo Just woke up from a coma? Are you OK? Don’t worry. Daily Texan Multimedia has you covered. Our expert multimedia staff put together a video just for you. Cody Bubenik / Daily Texan Staff Bethany Wong / Daily Texan Staff 10 SIDELINE NBA PlAYOFFS PACERS HAWKS THUNDER GRIZZLIES NHL PLAYOFFS CANADIENS BRUINS SPORTS BRIEFLY Cleveland Browns sign Vince Young he have Browns signed free agent quar- terback Vince Young, who hasn’t played in an NFL regular-season game since 2011. Young was given a try- out this week at Browns’ three-day minicamp and showed enough to earn a deal. The team also signed quarterback Ty- ler Thigpen. The 30-year-old Young made two Pro Bowls during his five seasons with Tennessee, which drafted him with the No. 3 overall pick in 2006. Young last played for Philadelphia and is 31- 19 as an NFL starter. He spent parts of the past two preseasons with Buffalo and Green 6-foot-5, Bay. 229-pounder will move into a backup role be- hind Brian Hoyer, who is expected to begin next season as Cleve- land’s starter. The The Browns are like- ly to use a high draft pick on a quarterback next week. higpen started 11 games for Kansas City in 2008. —Associated Press TOP TWEET Earl Thomas @ Earl_Thomas “Congrats to Vince Young on signing with the Browns. Happy for you Fam! Hook’em Horns.” 10 SPTS STEFAN SCRAFIELD, SPORTS EDITOR / @texansports Friday, May 2, 2014 Mountaineers next up for Longhorns BASEBALL By Matt Warden @TheMattWarden5 Coming of a resilient vic- tory on Tuesday night, the Longhorns’ main concern is moving up the conference standings this weekend. No. 19 Texas (33-13, 10-8 Big 12) will head to Mor- gantown, West Virginia, for a three-game slate with West Virginia (24-16, 7-7 Big 12) this weekend. The two Longhorns dropped of three games in their last conference series against Oklahoma State, dropping them to fourth place in the conference. Texas has had a hard time scoring runs in its last six Big 12 matchups, total- ing just eight compared to a combined 18 for its op- ponents. West Virginia sits two spots below the Long- horns with a .500 confer- ence record and will likely be hungry to move up with the Big 12 tournament looming. On paper, the Mountain- eers have a solid ofensive at- tack that could challenge the Texas pitching staf, which has done the best it could in the last few conference series. West Virginia batters are hit- ting a combined .290 at the plate while averaging just over ive runs per game. Despite ive losses in their last six conference games, the Texas pitching staf still holds a Big 12 leading 2.22 SOFTBALL Senior outielder Brejae Washing- ton recently be- came the all-time Texas leader in hits, notching her 246th to pass former Longhorn Lexy Bennett. Washington leads the team with 66 hits. Helen Fernandez Daily Texan Staff Daulton Venglar / Daily Texan Staff Sophomore outielder Ben Johnson has carried the Texas offense in the last few series and is currently second on the team with a .294 batting average and irst on the team with ive home runs this season. ERA while also giving up just under two runs a game. Op- posing hitters are batting just .222 combined against the Longhorns’ staf. left fielder Sophomore Ben Johnson is coming off of a 2-for-4 perfor- mance against Prairie View A&M and has posted a combined five hits in his last three games. His .294 average is second best on the team, which is hitting a combined .257. he Mountaineers will en- ter the game with momen- tum in the Big 12, as they have won ive of their last six conference games. Dur- ing that span, they scored 41 runs and allowed just 17 runs. need a big showing from senior center fielder Mark Payton, who still leads the team with a .335 batting average and leads the Big 12 in on-base percentage (.474) and walks (40), and ranks third in triples (5). Payton was recently named one of 10 finalists for the Senior Class Award. As always, Texas will Ater this weekend’s series, Texas will face of against Texas State on May 13 before playing in its inal conference series May 16-18 against Kansas State. he Longhorns have plen- ty of work to do to improve their spot in the Big 12, but a solid series at West Virginia could give them momentum before the Big 12 tournament on May 21. Washington’s speed, bunting ability have made her a star Texas athletes primed for tough competition SUMMER PREVIEWS By Jacob Martella @ViewFromTheBox When Brejae Washington stepped to the plate Sunday against Oklahoma State, ev- eryone knew what was com- ing next. he corners came in and the pitcher tried to pin- point her pitches to make it diicult for Washington. But in spite of these moves, the senior center ielder, as she has done her entire career, laid down the perfect bunt and used her quick speed to reach irst base safely for her 246th career hit, pushing her past Lexy Bennett for the most hits in a Texas career. “I’m really honored to come out and be able to do that,” Washington said. Bunting and speed are two of the things Washington has become known for during her time at Texas. Even when she was being recruited, head coach Connie Clark said they saw that great speed. “We just felt like she was going to be a diference- maker and do that immedi- ately,” Clark said. When Washington ar- rived in Austin, however, she tried to get away from the speed game and be a power hitter. But as much as she wanted to hit for power, she and the coaches agreed that she would be better of using her speed to the fullest advantage. “We all had a game plan SOFTBALL page 11 Track and ield he Longhorns stay in Austin this weekend for Sat- urday’s Longhorn Invitation- al at Mike A. Myers Stadium. he meet serves as the inal regular season stepping stone before postseason meets begin in two weeks with the Big 12 Championships in Lubbock. he Texas men suddenly ind themselves in the thick of the competition for a na- tional championship, vault- ing up eight spots in the na- tional rankings to number seven ater last week’s perfor- mances at the Penn Relays. hey will ind some solid competition this Saturday, with 15th ranked Baylor and number No. 21 Kentucky making the trip to Austin. Strong performances this week from young sprinters such as freshman Senoj-Jay Givans and sophomore Zack Bilderback could propel the Longhorns even higher in the rankings. Givans is cur- rently ranked 45th nationally in the 100-meter and may need a better performance than his current time of 10.36 seconds to secure a top-48 spot to advance to Region- als. Bilderback is currently ranked 10th in the 400-me- ter and 29th in the 200, and he will also have a chance to those marks improve this weekend. Stellar performances at last weekend’s Penn Relays vaulted the women’s side to a No. 1 national rank- ing, and earned the 4x400- meter relay team of senior Briana Nelson, sophomore Courtney Okolo, freshman Kendall Baisden and junior Ashley Spencer the Big 12 Track and Field Female Athlete of the Week Award. he team looks to use this weekend’s Longhorn Invita- tional to close out the regular season on a good note, and make minor corrections that will translate at this month’s Big 12 Championships. For seniors like Christy Udoh, this weekend marks the last time competing on the home track. PREVIEWS page 11 “MADE FOR THE BIG SCREEN! WELL CAST WITH SOLID PERFORMANCES.” –Manohla Dargis, THE NEW YORK TIMES “BEAUTIFULLY MADE…A QUIETLY STIRRING JOURNEY INTO AMERICA’S RAVAGED HEARTLAND OF 1864.” –INDIEWIRE SOME VIOLENCE WWW.T H E R E T R I E VA L .C O M Q&A W/ FILMMAKERS & CAST SELECT SHOWS OPENING WEEKEND STARTS FRIDAY 5/2 REGAL ARBOR 8 @ GREAT HILLS 9828 Great Hills Trail • (512) 231-9742 CALL FOR SHOWTIMES SPORTS Friday, May 2, 2014 JUMP 11 -30- Chris Hummer spent seven semesters at the Texan. He has served as a sports reporter, senior sports reporter, sports editor and special ventures co-editor. Shweta Gulati Daily Texan Staff Sports editor majored in Daily Texan By Chris Hummer @chris_hummer I didn’t deserve to be hired at the Texan. Freshman year, I couldn’t string a sentence together, let alone crat a story, but Dan, my irst editor, took a chance on me. I didn’t know it at the time, but that began the most important educa- tion experience of my life. OK, maybe that’s the kind of hyperbole I was quickly taught to suppress. But, really, I cannot express how thankful I am for my time at the Texan. It’s where I’ve learned to ask thoughtful questions, write compelling leads and to attack a story. It’s also where I igured out working until 2 a.m. isn’t always bad; the best days are the busiest, and even the bliss of tryout pizza can wear thin by the second week. I’ve also been incredibly lucky in my time here. In the sports department, I was al- lowed to grow, fail, try new things and, ater I messed up, try again. I started with women’s golf and then moved to sotball. here, I was lucky enough to work with Sara Beth, who was nice enough to show a rookie the ropes. Volleyball came next — Lauren, I think we still don’t know quite enough about that sport. Baseball followed, perhaps my favorite beat. hose players and Augie Garrido are among the nicest you’ll meet, and, Christian, thanks for keeping the laughs lowing at the Disch. Fall 2013 meant football — the biggest challenge of my college career and the most enjoyable. Four stories a week, late nights and some insightful press box obser- vations with Lauren. I took the next semester of for a venture in New York, but it was right back to the Texan in the fall. It was then I blinked and realized I was no longer the baby in the basement — someone crazy had hired me as sports editor. Luckily, I had the best staf anyone could ask for. I’m proud to have worked with each of y’all. his semester has been quite diferent for me, but Bobby, thanks for helping a sports guy navigate the spe- cial ventures world. he Texan has opened more doors for me than I ever could have imagined. But what I’ll always remem- ber about my time are the and incredible, talented dedicated people I’ve crossed paths with in the basement. here are too many to list here, but I want to take a quick moment to say thanks. To all my editors who gave me a chance. To the advisors and managing editors that stayed patient and let me push inch counts — sometimes a lot. And to all the designers, copy editors and photographers who make my stories look amazing each day. here are many people more I could, and should mention, but just know our time chatting or tossing a foam ball meant a lot. Walking away from this place is one of the toughest things I’ll have to do in my life. It may not say it on my degree, but it should. I ma- jored in he Daily Texan at he University of Texas. -30- he basement’s quietest dweller says goodbye PREVIEWS continues from page 10 “his is exciting, but also sad because it’s my last home meet at the University of Texas,” Udoh said. “When the day comes, I’m just going to cherish it, embrace it and remember it.” —Daniel Clay & Grant Gordon Women’s tennis Ater missing out on third-straight Big 12 a the Long- Championship, horns will squeeze into the NCAA tournament. Despite its record, Texas (12-12) enters the tourna- ment as an at-large bid and battle-tested, having en- dured one of the toughest nonconference schedules in the nation. his included a nine-match stretch where the team lost eight contests to top-17 teams. he Longhorns recovered with a six-match winning streak in Big 12 play, but they ended the regular season with two 4-3 losses — against Baylor and Oklahoma State, who also eliminated Texas in the Big 12 Championships. Sophomore Breaunna Ad- dison brings an 18-4 dual match singles record into the tournament. hose four losses came against top-10 oppo- nents, including No. 1 Robin Anderson of UCLA and No. 6 Kristie Ahn of Stanford. With an 8-0 conference record and a No. 21 ranking, Addison will also represent Texas in the 64-player singles draw portion 11 of the NCAA Championships. As a team, Texas still has to get past Houston (21-5), whom the Longhorns defeat- ed 5-0 in February. he Longhorns and Cou- gars will begin the irst round May 9 in College Station. —Chris Caraveo Men’s golf Ater winning their second consecutive Big 12 title, the Longhorns are not looking back. Texas will head to the NCAA Regional Champion- ships to face the qualiiers for the South Central Regionals May 15-17. Texas qualiied for the NCAA Championships with ease at the Fayetteville Re- gional in Fayetteville, Ar- kansas, placing third behind Illinois and Arkansas. Senior Toni Hakula and junior Kramer Hickok are the only two Longhorns who have playof experi- ence with the team, having inished the Regionals last year tied with each other for 18th place. he location for the Re- gional Championship will be announced on he Golf Channel at 9 a.m. Monday. Texas looks to gain its eighth-straight qualiication for the NCAA Champion- ships, taking the team one step closer to gaining a re- peat of Tuesday’s tower light- ing in honor of their Big 12 Conference Championship, only this time for a much bigger prize: another nation- al championship for Texas. —James Grandberry By Matt Warden @TheMattWarden5 Ater three years as a se- cret basement dweller in he Daily Texan, I can say one thing for certain: I actu- ally kind of enjoyed it. For my fellow stafers who don’t know me, and I’m sure there are a lot of you, I’m the big, sometimes angry-look- ing quiet kid around the of- ice every hursday night. As a senior sports stafer for two years now, I spent the major- ity of my basement time lis- tening to music and checking stats, seemingly disengaged from everyone around me. But, the truth is, I was never really disengaged, nor was I unwilling to engage any fellow Texan workers. I just preferred to quietly ob- serve the weirdness. Comics always said the funniest things and photo always did the weirdest things. Life & arts always let the earliest, and news was by far the loudest, es- pecially during their hour- long meetings every night. While I could count on nobody really noticing me unless something needed to be done for the sports page, Matt Warden was a sports writer for the Texan for six semesters. He wrote every- thing from swim- ming previews to baseball features and served as a senior sports writer for three semesters. Sam Ortega / Daily Texan Staff Senior distance runner Marielle Hall is expected to be a key contributor for Texas in the Big 12 Championships. SOFTBALL continues from page 10 this year and that was to use my speed and I can only use that if I put the ball in the dirt,” Washington said. hat move, along with the decision to make Washington the leadof batter, has paid of big time for her. hrough 49 games this season, Washington has 66 hits, four shy of her ca- reer-high of 70 from last year. Since becoming the perma- nent leadof batter on March 22, Washington has reached base 10 times to start the game for the Longhorns, with half of those coming on bunt base hits. “It’s more like a privilege knowing that they trust me to put the ball in play and kind of get the game started,” Washington said. “I know when I get on base it gets [the team] pumped up.” But once Washington gets on base, she becomes even more of a threat. Washing- ton already holds the Texas career record with 128 stolen bases and she set the Texas single season stolen bases re- cord her freshman year with 38 swiped bags — a record she cherishes more than the hit record. “It’s always something that I had my eyes on,” Washing- ton said. “hat was always something that I wanted to own.” Washington also has the chance to break the NCAA all-time triples record, need- ing only one hit to tie the record. And with ive games remaining in the regular sea- son, including three games at home against Kansas this weekend, there’s a good shot she can break that record as well. But Washington’s main fo- cus for now is getting back to the College World Series and getting the opportunity to play in the pros. “I really hope to con- tinue playing professional sotball as long as I can,” Washington said. there are a few things that never failed to happen dur- ing my shits: 1. Copy editors WILL ask me at least one silly question, like “What does 3-for-4 per- formance at the plate mean?” or “You said so-and-so had 10 boards. What does that mean?” But they always asked so nicely that I didn’t mind at all. 2. If Shabab is working that night, he WILL ask me to rewrite at least one head- line. “Try a prepositional phrase,” was my favorite line. 3. From 4-12, I might see my sports editor’s face once. his is not an indictment of any of the editors I have had, as all of them have seeming- ly run a solid ship, but, if it was my night to work desk, they WILL have other stuf to do. In addition to the inter- esting people around the Texan oice during my work days, there were also a few sports to keep me busy. From swimming and diving meets with the SID- who-shall-not-be-named, to baseball with the always entertaining Augie Gar- rido, there were plenty of things to keep me occupied ater classes. Although I didn’t really Jonathan Garza Daily Texan Staff form as many relationships as I probably should have, I can honestly say that I wouldn’t have wanted to be involved with any other group on this campus. he Daily Texan introduced me to the world of a sports writer and much of what I accomplish in the ield of journalism from here on out will be because of the experience I gained with the best newspaper in the country (according to one of those na- tional polls). So to end this with a bang, I will say so long 40 Acres, because I know our adviser loves the phrase. -30- live close LIVE COLLEGE Great location in West Campus — walk to class. New expanded 24-hr fitness center. Upgraded Computer lab with NEW computers. NEW pool furniture • NEW rooftop basketball court. 2 6 - W E S T. C O M 60 0 West 26th St | 512 . 47 7.340 0 12 MUSIC 12 JUMP Friday, May 2, 2014 LIFE&ARTS FILM Film views UT Tower shooting from ground By Vanessa Sliva @VanessaSliva Most ilms about the 1966 UT Tower shooting focus on Charles Whitman, but “Tow- er” shits the perspective to the people on the ground. “Tower” is a documentary directed by Keith Maitland. Maitland has been working on the ilm for the past year and a half, and the inished product is expected to be released in 2016 for the 50th anniversary of the shooting. “I’m inspired by the coura- geous actions of the students,” Maitland said. “here were dozens of students that took great risks to save people’s lives, and many of those indi- viduals haven’t been honored. he ilm is about the strength and ability to overcome that’s in all of us. hese young indi- viduals are just the carriers of that message.” Maitland read Pamela Collof ’s Texas Monthly ar- ticle, 96 Minutes, when it was published in 2006. Ater read- ing it, Maitland wanted to look deeper into the stories of the witnesses, so he met with Collof for lunch and pro- posed his movie idea to her. “What strikes me is the sheer humanity on display said. that day,” Maitland “here were so many people feeling such a range of emo- tions, and I think there’s a simpliied version of the history that focused on the shooter, the oicers and the people most directly im- pacted — either wounded or killed. But an event like this afects the entire community.” Since then, Maitland has interviewed more than 100 witnesses, ranging from fac- ulty and students to police and media that were pres- ent during the time of the shooting. Susan homson, a producer of “Tower,” conduct- ed many of these interviews. “It really helps you see that the shooting had really afected people,” hompson said. “It impacted people across the divisions that day. he thing that I’m so moved by is how heroically people acted ... here were so many people running through the cross ire, and that’s really powerful.” homson runs the ilm’s Indiegogo campaign. Like Kickstarter, is a website used for raising money and awareness for various projects. Indiegogo homson said the project had more than 330 contribu- tors and almost $70,000 was raised in six weeks. For the past few months, “Tower” has been using UT students as interns for the project as a way to research, promote and edit the ilm. Jessica Griin, radio-televi- sion-ilm sophomore, is one of the interns working with the editors of the ilm. “I really like Keith’s ap- proach to the ilm,” Griin said. “In tragedies like these, people tend to focus on the shooter rather than the peo- ple that get to experience it. his documentary gives the audience the opportunity to understand what the civilians and oicers went through.” Griin said she was sur- prised when she realized how little she knew about the shooting. Reactions like these are what the ilm is try- ing to ix. “Most ilmmakers try to tell the story from the top of the Tower down, focusing on the shooter,” Maitland said. “But we’re trying the oppo- site. We want to tell the story from the ground up.” WILLIAMS continues from page 16 the sense of community that’s always present in the basement, the driving senti- ment that we were reporters for a publication that’s not just a learning exercise for ledgling journalists but an essential, thriving compo- nent of the University. I’ll also miss geeking out about “Breaking Bad” with Bobby Blanchard and getting a small ego boost when I read Doug Warren’s critiques. If he Daily Texan was hitting theaters this week- end, I’d give it a glowing review. It’s been an essential part of my college experi- ence and an organization I’m proud to have worked for. Like any great movie, I wish my time at he Daily last forever, Texan could and, now that the credits are about to roll, I just want to rewind to that excel- lent night on my freshman year and watch the whole thing again. -30- MARVEL continues from page 16 Oscorp employee over- whelmed with excitement ater being saved by Spider- Man. Foxx has played meek well before, but here he never moves beyond an im- pression of Stephen Root’s character in “Oice Space.” Ater a workplace accident turns him into supervillain Electro, Foxx takes on a jellyish-esque CGI varnish, and it’s tough for his perfor- mance to register when he looks like the side of a kid- die pool. All in all, Foxx’s character is utterly incon- sequential to the ilm’s plot, but without him, the num- ber of showy action scenes would be sliced in half. he ilm’s soundtrack shamelessly panders, add- inappropriate, ing wholly but popular, songs from Kid Cudi or Phillip Phillips over scenes of Peter investigating his parents’ deaths or doing science experiments. But the single most embarrass- ing moment in the entire THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2 Director: Marc Webb Genre: Action Runtime: 142 minutes ilm — or maybe in ilm history — is the climactic battle in which Electro uses his powers to compose a dubstep version of “he Itsy Bitsy Spider” while he dodg- es Spider-Man’s attacks. his ilm shouldn’t be avoided because it’s bad, but because it’s nothing more than a product – glossy and inofensively engaging. In its desperation to be Mar- vel, Sony forgot to engage its audience, reducing the “Spider-Man” franchise to a, soulless trailer for ilms to come. he solution is sim- ple: Don’t go see this movie. After 22 years, psychadelic rock band Loop decided to reunite and go on a brief tour. The band will headline Austin Psych Fest on Sunday night. Photo courtesy of The Vinyl Factory Rockers reunite, headline at Psych Fest By David Sackllah @dsackllah When musician Robert Hampson inally made the decision to reunite his for- mer psychedelic rock band ater 22 years, it was because he had run out of reasons to say “no.” People had been hassling Hampson for years to reform Loop, the Brit- ish band that put out three critically acclaimed records from 1987-1990, and he al- ways refused. About a year ago, the group had the of- fer to headline the All To- morrow’s Parties Festival in England. Hampson decided to inally give a reunion a shot. “I thought if we’re going to do it, we best do it now,” Hampson said. “I think the overwhelming feeling was just that we can only try it, see how it goes and take it from there.” Loop’s irst show since 1991 took place in Eng- land last November, and the band is currently in the middle of a short U.S. tour that includes an appear- ance at Austin Psych Fest this weekend. Hampson has described the response at shows as genuinely surpris- ing, noting that the crowd is split between older fans and people who couldn’t be old enough to have seen them the irst time around. Hampson said many peo- ple don’t like seeing classic bands reunite, but he’s not trying to force anyone to come out to his shows. “It’s not too much in- volved in nostalgia I think,” Hampson said. “For us, it’s just a way to perform our music to a newer audience.” Hampson spent the last 15 years working on solo involving sound projects composition, so this re- union forced him to pick up his guitar for the irst time in years. He hadn’t forgotten any of the songs, though. “I think when you’ve writ- ten a song, even 24 years down the line, you always remember it,” Hampson said. “As much as you might be a little rusty playing it, it’s always there. It never leaves you.” Loop will close out Austin Psych Fest on Sunday night, serving as one of the head- liners. Within hours of mak- ing the reunion announce- ment, the band was asked to play the festival. “For them, it was a coup to get us so quickly, and we’re in good territory there,” Hamp- son said. “I’m really looking forward to it. It’s going to be a great festival.” While the tour is going well, Hampson said he still doesn’t have an answer for fans who have asked if the reunion will last past the tour dates. “Everybody’s been ask- ing us if we’re going to make a new record, and I honestly can’t answer that because I just don’t know,” Hampson said. “At the mo- ment, we just have to fo- cus on our priority to play these shows and put on good performances.” Ultimately, Hampson said he has enjoyed his time playing with the band again and picking up the guitar for the irst time in years. “At the end of our current commitment, I’ll decide whether we have a possibil- ity at continuing or whether it’s best to leave it and walk it,” Hampson away from said. “I’m not really sure what the future holds yet.” UT Remembers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Friday, May 2, 2014 An annual day of remembrance honoring members of The University of Texas at Austin community who died in the previous year. 8:45-9:30 a.m. Lowering of the Flags Ceremony, Main Mall 2- 3 p.m. UT Remembers Service, Tower Garden Dusk to Dawn The “darkened Tower” lighting configuration will be revealed as the sun sets and be visible through out the night until sunrise on Saturday morning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael F. Adams Edwin B. “Ed” Allaire Luis Alvarado Dusty William Apple George Michael Barczak Gayle H. Barrington Samuel E. Barshop Morland Odae Benningfield, Sr. Tommie Nell Bernal Patrick William Bigelow Cristi Biggs Lloyd W. Birdwell, Jr. Rebecca E. “Becky” Bishop Jack S. Blanton Dorothy K. Blore James E. “Jim” Boggs Christina Bonci Frederick William Botts III Carol Anne Branton Joe W. Bratcher, Jr. David Braybrooke Herman George Bunn, Jr. Janis Lee Carelock Shannon L. Cartmell Carol Louise Chimera Matthew C. Colby Sam Coronado Earl Crawford, Jr. Albert D. Davies Rodolfo G. Davila Raymond E. Davis Natalie de Blois Lorraine L. Dell William “Skip” Doppmann Willie Grace Meuth Duff Raynor L. Duncombe Kyle Patrick Dupuis Lester M. Dyke III Nellie Mae Eichler Beverly Ann Ervin Charles Evans Bob Fannin Herbert Ewald “Happy” Fenske Mary Beth Fleischer James Walter “Jim” Foster Mary Chapman Friou Ruth LaVerne Gallman Shama Gamkhar Clifford Speer Gardner Frank Garvel Mike Gayton Mildred Fromme “Mimi” Gerding Mary Virginia Gielstra Alona Helen Gilbert Neil James Gilligan, Jr. Betty Jo Godfrey Alpha Prince Gonzalez Edward F. Guerra Richard A. “Porky” Haberman Kara Kelley Hallmark John Gary Hansen Dolly D. Harrell Curtis L. Hennig Harvey R. Herbst Olen L. Hudson Timothy David Hurta Janina Hurtado Robert Lee “Bob” Hyde Vera Vivian Foster Irby Tayneshia LaChelle Jefferson Edward C. “Ed” Jonas Don W. Jones James L. “Lan” Jones Robert James “Bob” Kasper Ralph J. “R.J.” Kaufmann James Edward “Jim” Key James Alton Kieke Paul Knox Earl Koile Melodie Elizabeth Krane Gregory B. Krause Anne Langford Wann Langston, Jr. Curtis D. Laughlin Al Rockne Leissner Thomas Leonard Mary Jo Paske Liesmann Billy Joe Lindley, Sr. William Samuel “Bill” Livingston Catherine Belt Jacob MacLaughlin Jennifer Jean Malin Sergio Martinez Ola Marie Maul Kelly R. McAdams Matthew J. McGahee Virginia Ann Alsup Mecredy Petra “Betty” Medina Beryl Buckley Milburn Agnes Lillian Milek Larry Lee Monroe Margaret Elizabeth Morgan Javier Munoz Torres Robert “Bob” Murff Sanford Allen Musgrove William Roland Newton Peter Vuong Ngo, Jr. Kay Dorr Novello Clarence Edward Nygrin Sheila B. Ochner Paul Olefsky Robert Lee Olm Alex Taylor Olmsted Frank R. Ortega Laura K. Padilla Frances Eleanor Page Erin Hailey Park Markert Claude Billy “Bill” Parrott Kenneth G. “Kenny” Payne Phyllis J. “PJ” Payne Gary Pendleton John Henry “Jack” Petesch Joseph Phillips Valerie Louise Phillips Natalie Rachel Preuss Edith Price Wallace J. “Wally” Pryor Josue V. Quintanilla George Rainosek Donna Lee Reber James Lee Reese John R. Respess Magdaleno Cordova Reyes Birl Rhodes Byron Keith Richardson Salina Ann Rios John L. Rishling Marlyn A. Robinson James Gabriel Rodriguez Kathryn T. “Kathy” Rogers William H. “Bill” Rumsey, Jr. John Francis Ryder Oveida Fredric “Fred” Rye, Jr. Louise Sanchez Francis Rudolph Sandberg Billy E. Scenters James Robert “J.R.” Schlesinger James Lee Seago Werner J. Severin David Lewis Shafer Maurice Michael “Mike” Sharlot David L. Sikes Harold C. Simmons Rosalie Ermine Smith Alicia J. Snyder Charles Arthur “Chuck” Sorber Abel Soriano Werner Albert Stauffer Barbara June Stockley Robert S. “Bob” Strauss James L. Street Brian M. Stross Harriet Sullivan Rose Audrey Taylor Florence Etta Temple Blanca G. Tucar Catherine Tull David A. Von Hatten Cecilia Louise Vrana James Virgil Waggoner William H. Wall Morgan Elizabeth “Lizzie” Wallace Reuben Henry Wallace Margaret Louise Warren Sidney Weintraub James C. Werchan Madeline Marie Wermuth K. Carter Wheelock Raymond M. White Catherine Whitworth Beverly E. Williams J Hubert Wilson Philip Richard Wood William A. Worsham Larry Farish York Mario Yzaguirre Alex Qi Zhou Stanislav “Stan” Zimic List of names received through April 30, 2014. -30- Friday, May 2, 2014 JUMP 13 Photo editor graduates from the clubhouse 13 After two semesters as a photographer for the Daily Texan, Charlie Pearce became the photo editor spring 2014. By Charlie Pearce @charliepearce90 is that Journalism not dead. Just ask the group of baggy-eyed misfits who consider a base- ment office more of a clubhouse than a news- room. Ask the kids who understand the experience of chasing a lead is far more valu- able than any professor’s lecture and that seeing your work published and occasionally picked up nationally carries far more weight than any grade on an assign- ment. The experiences we’ve had have provided much more than sleep- less nights and medio- cre grades. My friends at The Daily Texan have taught me that, while platforms will evolve, basic journalistic princi- ples, tenacity and com- mitment still apply. -30- Sam Ortega Daily Texan Staff Photog: ‘Texan gave me a home’ By Shweta Gulati @shwgul In spring 2013, while taking my usual 40 Acres, I saw an ad for tryouts in The Daily Texan. I then found myself leaving the bus to find the obscure Texan office for an application for a staff photographer. The next day, at 9 a.m., I sat intimidated with other tryouts waiting for assign- ments. Wild art seemed like a vague concept to me and no wonder, because it still is. After a failed first tryout attempt, Pu gave me a strong critique and was a great mentor to begin my photojournalism ca- reer. Nevertheless, she did scare me, but, then again, I am not the only one in the Texan to feel that way. Every assignment for the Texan is a memory in itself. Be it laughing behind the lens shooting the Moon- Tower Comedy Fest, sneak- ing to shoot behind the stage at the music festivals, toiling around with the heavy 300 mm lens to shoot sports, couchsuring at a stranger’s in Oklahoma ater place shooting basketball the game or going to Houston to shoot the primaries, only to later see the photo published in New York Times! Yes, this list is endless. I have met amazing people and heard so many stories shooting all of these. Texan gave me a home even though mine was miles away. I remember taking some of he Daily Texan papers that had my photos published to India last sum- mer to show it to my family. hey were proud but still wondered when I would start talking in the same en- thusiastic manner about my computer science courses. It goes without saying that I will miss my fellow peers and friends who had made fun of my accent, taught me so much about culture”, the “American gave me life lessons, made me hear those awful rap songs or with whom I have made unusual travelling plans. I know life ahead will never be the same, but I am sure these basement memories will help me sail through my difficult times. The collaboration between photographers, writers, design, copy, comics etc. to deliver a final product still amazes me, and I feel so proud to have been a part of this hardworking organization in my college life. It is hard to bid good- bye to a place where you have so many memories — where you have learned and grown so much. I don’t know what the future has in store for me, but I know for sure Texan made me discover what I love to do. he basement evolved me from an intimidated tryout to a conident individual. I hope it continues to do so for students yet to work here. -30- Pu Ying Huang / Daily Texan Staff Shweta Gulati was a senior photographer at The Daily Texan this semester. She worked as a staff photographer in spring and fall 2013. Pu Ying Huang / Daily Texan Staff Sam Ortega worked as an associate photo-editor for The Daily Texan this spring. She started with the Texan as a staff photographer in spring 2013 and was a senior photographer in fall 2013. Photo associate editor develops friendships, memories at Texan By Sam Ortega @incubusisstella A wise man recently said to me, “If you try enough doors, one will open.” he basement was that door for me and for three long se- mesters, it remained open, allowing me, to come and go as I pleased, but always reminding me that I did in fact have to come back. I’m in a relationship with the Texan and like with most relationships, there was an initial spark. “If you join the Texan, you’ll probably be staying there until 3 a.m. routinely and you will definitely sleep in the office at least once.” Excellent. That was all I needed. For months, I knew of nothing more than my apparent obses- sion with my job and the less obvious fact that, de- spite things falling apart all around me, I would al- ways have this place. The basement drew me in; I admired the dedica- tion. For years, I’d slowly become nothing short of an apathetic fool. I walked into the Texan, and, for the first time in my life, I was surrounded by a group of like-minded in- dividuals who day in and day out returned to this dungeon of creativity, giv- ing their blood, toil, tears and sweat to this publica- tion. People actually cared — they did. Despite what our readership was or how physically drained we were, we returned every day and against all odds, we kept going. Why? Because that’s what we do. We were digging for stories, finding a voice, persevering because we genuinely cared about the society around us. There was good out there, and this team of absolutely crazy misfits showed me a home — a niche where I would do most of my growing these strange years. through This goes out to Charlie, the photo dad and my rock throughout this whole se- mester. For all those times we told ourselves “no photos today,” while both knowing we cared about this publication too much to throw it under the bus like that. To Pu, oh, my Pu “puma” Huang. hose days when life refused to stop throw- ing obstacles our way — the “pod” was a vessel for our escape and for those perfect moments when the light strikes just right, and con- versation is more than just a casual encounter between two friends. And of course, to my se- niors, you warriors. Shelby, Shweta, Jon and Lauren, I have seen each one of you grow in your own quirky little ways, and I couldn’t be prouder. For as little as I felt I’ve taught you all, you gave back to me more than you’ll ever know, and my heart is overlowing with love for each one of you wickedly talented kids. Relationships can take one of two courses: They either work, or they don’t. For all the time I’ve gladly devoted to the Texan, I had to know when to walk away. I leave here physi- cally exhausted and vis- ibly sick from the stress and work this relationship brought with it. But ask me if I would do it again, and, with no hesitation I will say: in a heartbeat. -30- R E C Y C L E ♲ AFTER READING YOUR COPY 14 Friday, May 2, 2014 COMICS 14 COMICS Crossword Edited by Will Shortz No. 0328 15 17 18 31 38 41 53 61 64 65 ACROSS 1 Those who respond to pickup lines? 8 Drags 15 Central Florida daily 17 Part-time jobs for college students, say 18 Disbelieving, maybe 19 Major-leaguer from Osaka who threw two no-hitters 20 Trap 21 Haddock relatives 23 Constellation described by Ptolemy 25 Part of 56-Across: Abbr. 26 Conductor with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 28 “A Chorus Line” lyricist Ed 31 Iran’s Ayatollah ___ Khamenei 32 Year the Angels won the World Series 34 Brit’s cry of surprise 38 See 16-Down 41 Standard 42 Extreme piques 43 “I’ll ___” 44 Old letter opener: Abbr. 46 Upper regions of space 48 Org. of which Tom Hanks is a member 51 Mauna ___ 52 Shaving brand 53 Slip preventer 56 Terminal announcements, for short 58 Writer William 61 Mobile creator 64 Go mad ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE L I S T O N I N H A L E E L I X I R L I F E O F pi O N T V W E S A Y D U B F U L L A H S F O E O N E A R E R O U T E S D E A R E S T r M O N T H S 2 A W A Y E N D T E A P E A L S E W E D U P A R T E M I S R O A R M D S K E G S I D E 2 M A G N U M pi E L A S T I C B A N I S T E R O R O A V I A P S Y N A A N D A R C S P O T E R N O r M O V I E S A R E N A S C I R C L E K N E E L S 65 Demanded immediate action from 66 Superlatively bouncy DOWN 1 ___ Nostra 2 Aligned, after “in” 3 Relatively low- risk investments 4 Actress for whom a neckline is named 5 ___ 500 6 Unspoiled places 7 Meh 8 First of two pictures 9 Start to color? 10 Range parts: Abbr. 11 Symbols of timidity 12 Modern message 13 Fictional teller of tales 14 Wasn’t alert 16 Hijackers who captured 38-Across 22 “What’s the ___?” 24 First name in ’60s radicalism 26 Old club 27 Flourish 28 Connected people 29 Ready 30 Nothing 33 Eastern European capital of 2 million 35 Screw up 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 16 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 35 36 37 39 44 51 62 42 43 45 46 47 48 49 50 52 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 63 40 66 PUZZLE BY DAVID J. KAHN 36 Sport with automated scoring 37 River of W.W. I 39 Dickens boy 40 Ballpark dingers: Abbr. 45 Positioned well 47 English hat similar to a fedora 48 Where flakes may build up 49 ___ nothing 50 Simple sorts 52 Musical grp. 54 Fires 55 Western setting for artisans 57 They may be heavy or open 59 Bee ___ 60 Formerly, old-style 62 Nautical heading: Abbr. 63 Part of 56-Across: Abbr. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. Prep to the highest degree. MCAT® | LSAT® | GMAT® | GRE® Available: In Person LiveOnline Use promo code DailyTexan$150 to save $150 on classroom prep. PrincetonReview.com | 800-2Review 1 7 8 5 3 9 6 4 2 6 5 4 8 2 7 1 9 3 9 2 3 4 1 6 5 8 7 3 9 6 2 5 4 7 1 8 2 4 1 9 7 8 3 5 6 5 8 7 1 6 3 4 2 9 8 6 9 3 4 1 2 7 5 7 1 2 6 9 5 8 3 4 4 3 5 7 8 2 9 6 1 CLASS/JUMP 15 -30- Friday, May 2, 2014 15 Copy lioness leaves pride behind for new plains By Sara Reinsch @sreinsch91 I’ll always remember ev- erything about working at the Texan. As an issue stafer, I became familiar with working long nights, navigating the Texas Sports website and itting big words into tiny spaces. I dis- covered my love for ixing bro- ken sentences and found my niche at UT. As an associate copy desk chief, I learned where each de- partment was located, became accustomed to being one of the last three people in the of- ice and attended my irst Dai- ly Texan party. I learned that managing was uncomfortable and that Riley was Superman. When I became copy desk chief, I learned that com- fort zones are limiting and that people who are nothing like you are the best kinds of people. I learned that there are times to ight for clarity and style, but that those times aren’t an hour ater deadline. I met three of my favorite friends and almost died with them at 4 a.m. on a snow day on a quest for Kerbey queso. I’m eternally grateful for Shabab and Omar’s endless patience and Elisabeth’s yum- my desserts. Although it drove me crazy, I’m going to miss hearing “What went wrong and what did we do well?” and occasionally just “What HAP- PENED?” at the end of every work night. I’ll miss the talent- ed, inquisitive kittens and the delirium that is tryouts. Brett, Reeana and Kevin: he best part of my job has been watching y’all grow into the copy editors you are today, and I have no doubt that the copy desk will be the best it’s ever been in the coming semesters. I’ll always remember the people I met at the Texan, the memories we made to- gether and the lessons they taught me. Once a copy cat, always a copy cat. -30- Sara Reinsch joined The Daily Texan in fall 2012. Since then, she has worked as a copy editor, associate copy desk chief and copy desk chief. Shweta Gulati / Daily Texan Staff Ploy Buraparate / Daily Texan Staff ADVERTISING TERMS There are no refunds or credits. In the event of errors made in advertisement, notice must be given by 10 am the fi rst day of publication, as the publishers are responsible for only ONE incorrect insertion. In consideration of The Daily Texan’s acceptance of advertising copy for publication, the agency and the advertiser will indemnify and save harmless, Texas Student Media and its offi cers, employees and agents against all loss, liability, damage and expense of whatsoever nature arising out of the copying, print- ing or publishing of its advertisement including without limitation reasonable attorney’s fees resulting from claims of suits for libel, violation of right of privacy, plagiarism and copyright and trademark infringement. All ad copy must be approved by the newspaper which reserves the right to request changes, reject or properly classify an ad. The advertiser, and not the newspaper, is responsible for the truthful content of the ad. Advertising is also subject to credit approval. 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Please call: 512-271-4438 or apply in person at: 2800 IH 35 South, Suite 135 Austin, TX 7870 ! You R saw E B it M in E M the E Texan R visit dailytexanonline.com Style Outside. Innovation Inside. PRESIDIUM PRESIDIUMRE.COM 512.444.0010 16 L&A HANNAH SMOTHERS, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR / @DailyTexanArts Friday, May 2, 2014 16 THEATER REVIEW | ‘WAR HORSE’ -30- Music reporter meets heroes, lives the dream By David Sackllah @dsackllah he only way to begin this properly is by thanking the three women who gave me the outlet to write about mu- sic here for the past year. First, I have to thank Sarah- Grace Sweeney, who hired me and provided me with the op- portunity in the irst place. She took a chance on me and introduced me to this world of wonderful people, and then she took the time to edit my, at times, illegible writing and make it coherent. Secondly, I need to thank Hannah Smothers, who pushed me outside of my comfort zone by encourag- ing me to write reported sto- ries instead of just reviews and interviews. I was able to learn so much about Austin by seeking out and talking to people, and I also was able to get real experience being a journalist. She helped me through my edits and taught me so much that, I would like to think, my writing became stronger from when I started. Lastly, I would like to thank Lauren L’aime, who helped edit my pieces and assisted me with questions over the past semester. She, along with the others, is one of the nicest and most helpful individuals I’ve ever met, and she is going to do an incredible job editing the section in the fall. If I have any good advice worth listening to, it’s to ind a way to do what you love. I made the mistake of waiting until my last year in school to start writing for the paper. In the past year alone, I’ve met so many people at he Daily Tex- an and KVRX, and I wish I had been able to start that earlier. I hope you enjoyed the pieces I wrote over the year and, hope- fully, discovered some new music you liked. I know the person who will be covering music for he Daily Texan next year, and I can guarantee he will do a much better job at this than I ever did. If writing is something you enjoy, I highly encourage you to try out for he Daily Texan. In the past year, I got to have so many amazing ex- periences meet many of my musical heroes through this. I got to talk to members of Phoenix, Savages, Su- perchunk, Bikini Kill, Fu- ture Islands, Fucked Up, Perfect Pussy, he Range, Sleigh Bells, Parquet Courts, Loop, Angel Olsen, Mu- tual Beneit, Mikal Cronin, Potty Mouth, White Lung, Bleached and many more. I even had an email conversa- tion with Lil B in which he gave me his number. It’s been a dream come true, and I’m really grateful for everyone that gave me the chance to do this job. -30- “War Horse” will come to Bass Concert Hall and run next Tuesday through Sunday. Photo courtesy of Brinkhoff/Mogenburg Performance shows less is more By Eleanor Dearman @ellydearman Instead of the usual high- ly designed Broadway stage, “War Horse” will only rely on lighting, actors, a few key props and puppets to depict its story. he theatrical adaptation of “War Horse” will run from May 6-11 at Bass Con- cert Hall. The play follows a boy, Albert, and his horse, Joey. After raising Joey from a foal, Albert is distraught when his father sells the horse to the cavalry dur- ing World War I. The plot follows both Albert and Joey’s experiences during the war. “I think a lot of what the play is about is investigating the efects war has on both sides,” said Caden Douglas, who plays cavalry mem- ber Captain Charles Stew- art. “Coming to the show is a very good lesson on the irst World War, a time period that is fading from our memory because there aren’t any veterans let.” Gene Bartholomew, assis- tant director of communica- tions and Broadway opera- tions for Texas Performing Arts, said he saw the show in New York and decided to bring it to UT. “I saw the show at Lin- coln Center when it was there a few years back,” Bartholomew said. “When I saw the show, I knew it had to come here. For one, it’s a play. It’s nice to have a play in between all of the musicals. hey challenge audiences.” “War Horse”’s success can be attributed to the movie version’s release and to the show’s theatricality. incorporates he show lifelike puppets, ranging from swallows and geese, to life-size horses that can be ridden by the actors. “here is no attempt to hide the puppeteers in the show,” Douglas said. “hey are very present. But I think once the show starts you forget they are there. he nuances, subtlety and speci- icity the puppeteers use to bring these animals to life is incredible.” he puppets are made of intricate wood frames that can be manipulated easily by pulleys and pedals, with pieces of sheer fabric cover- ing the frames. he horses require three puppeteers — one at the head, middle and rear of the horse. With prac- tice, the movements appear almost identical to those of a real horse. he puppeteers rely on horse noises, like whinnies and snorts, to communicate with the actors, audience and each other. “We learn how to blend our voices together to make that work,” said James Dun- for can, head puppeteer Joey. “he lung capacity of a horse is about [the] size of three people and they have the ability to clash their WAR HORSE When: May 6-11 Where: Bass Concert Hall Tickets: Available online or at Bass Concert Hall vocal chords together, so it does take all three of us do- ing it together.” Douglas said the pup- pets, acting and plot com- bine to create a story that touches audiences night after night. “At the beginning of the play I’m always touched that I get to share this story with this group of people,” Douglas said. “By the end of the play when we look out at the audience to see they have experi- what enced, most nights there are a lot of people who are very deeply moved, wheth- er they’re crying or relec- tive. It’s hugely rewarding to make that kind of con- nection with a large group of people.” MOVIE REVIEW | ‘THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2’ -30- Spider-Man sequel is limsy copy of Marvel’s past success By Alex Williams @alexwilliamsdt Two years ater “he Avengers” made over $600 million dollars, audiences are starting to feel the re- percussions. As every stu- dio in Hollywood scrambles to replicate Marvel’s suc- cess, superhero ilms can no longer tell their own sto- ries. he ilms must set up sequels and spin-of fran- chises. But, while Marvel’s weakest ilm, “Iron Man 2,” devoted a small chunk of its runtime to setting up future installments, “he Amaz- ing Spider-Man 2” devotes a small chunk of its runtime to telling a coherent story. Everyone involved with this ilm is capable of do- ing better work, but they’re hamstrung by a palpable, franchise-minded cynicism. Now that the origin sto- ry is out of the way, “he Amazing Spider-Man 2” inds Peter Parker (Andrew Garield) reconnecting with childhood pal Harry Os- born (Dane DeHaan), who has just inherited Oscorp, the shadowy corporation that may have killed Peter’s father. Meanwhile, Peter’s alter-ego, Spider-Man, must contend with a menagerie of new villains and keep love interest Gwen Stacy (Emma Stone) out of the line of ire. Before listing the many things this ilm does wrong, it’s essential to mention the things it gets right. Sony ba- sically wrote director Marc Webb a blank check for this Andrew Garield and Dane DeHaan star in Columbia Pictures’ “The Amazing Spider-Man 2.” Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures ilm, and he does a great job capturing the exhilaration of being Spider-Man, show- ing the web-slinging hero swinging through New York City with seamless, luid vi- sual efects. he ilm’s stron- gest element is the crack- ling chemistry between the real-life couple of Garield and Stone, but even that is bogged down by the script by Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci. “he Amazing Spider- Man 2”’s biggest problem is that the script, which has nothing resembling a central arc. Garield makes for a great Peter Parker, af- fable and snarky, but the ilm saddles him with a dull investigation into his past that bogs the ilm down and fundamentally alters the nature of Peter’s character for no particular reason. he ilm is full of useless plot digressions like this, and there’s no driving force to the narrative, which Among propels its overlowing cast into confrontations with the grace and subtlety of a 6-year-old banging action igures together. sprawling the supporting cast, Paul Gia- matti is totally wasted as a disposable baddie in a hand- ful of scenes. Sally Field does her best with mere minutes of screen time, coming out of nowhere to score the ilm’s strongest emotional beat with a simple, perfectly de- livered monologue. DeHaan is impressive in the rare mo- ments when the ilm allows him to cut loose and be a villain, but he struggles to make an impression when the script demands he play dour and angsty. Jamie Foxx, on the other hand, is far more heavily featured and all the more unlucky for it. Foxx has never been more miscast than as Max Dillon, a meek MARVEL page 12 Jonathan Garza / Daily Texan Staff David Sackllah has worked at The Daily Texan since fall 2013 as a music reporter for the life & arts section. Film writer scripts closing credits By Alex Williams @alexwilliamsdt I remember the exact mo- ment I realized how great it was to work for he Daily Texan. I had been in college for roughly a month and had been assigned to cover Fantastic Fest. For its closing night party, the festival bussed attendees to a ghost town out- side of Austin, and, as I waited in line for knife throwing les- sons while talking to a fellow critic about samurai movies, it came to me: Sublimely awe- some moments like this were why I wanted to write for he Daily Texan. Four years later, I’m say- ing goodbye to the Texan. I’ve gone from lowly issue staf to life & arts associate editor; from a freshman look- ing to write about movies to a certiied critic teetering on the edge of adulthood. I’ve I’ve gone from lowly issue staff to life & arts associate editor; from a fresh- man looking to write about movies to a certiied critic teetering on the edge of adulthood. worked with a dozen diferent editors, and every single one of them has made me a better writer in one way or another. Amber Genuske gave me my irst byline, my irst press badge and was the irst to teach me what constructive criticism really means. Ger- ald Rich showed me how to nurture a beard to its full glory and taught me that ilm festivals are not a time for sleep. Katie Stroh and Aleks Chan pushed me to unleash my inner snark, and Sarah- Grace Sweeney put up with me when I bit of more than I could chew. I also have to thank Hannah Smothers and Lauren L’Amie for giving me more encouragement and support than I could ask for in my last semester. And last, but certainly not least, Kelsey McKinney, for always push- ing me to be a better, more adventurous writer. I’ve also had the privilege of watching Alex Pelham, Colin McLaughlin and Lee Henry grow into strongly opinion- ated ilm reviewers over the last year, and I hope, someday, they’ll be mentioning me in their own farewell columns. More than the free movies and swanky parties, I’ll miss WILLIAMS page 12 Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff Alex Williams has worked at The Daily Texan since fall 2010 and has been a life & arts writer, senior ilm writer, associate life & arts editor and ilm editor.