Just when the Longhorns looked like they had turned the corner, TCU rolled into Austin and stuffed them like a turkey. The Longhorns disposed of Texas Tech and Iowa State with ease. They headed into the Thanksgiving tussle against TCU with chances to win the Big 12 and earn a BCS bowl berth. But Texas blew those chances with an embarrass- ing 20-13 loss to the Horned Frogs on Thursday night. “We missed a great op- portunity tonight to get back in the mix for some things,” head coach Mack Brown said. “I thought the kids played hard. I was proud they hung in there. I was proud they fought ‘till the end. Disap- pointed that we played so poorly on offense.” TCU has a redshirt freshman under center that was preparing to play tail- back before being named the starting quarterback and one senior starter on defense. The Horned Frogs, who had not won a game in regulation in more than a month entering last week, had no business leaving town with a win. But, thanks to a sluggish Texas offense and bafflingly conservative playcalling, that’s exactly what they did. Now, unless TCU pulls off another upset next week over Oklahoma, the Long- horns are likely Cotton Bowl- bound, regardless of whether they beat Kansas State in Manhattan this Saturday. As for the upset the Horned Frogs reeled off this past week, they had plenty of help. After impressive perfor- mances in the last two weeks, November 26, 2012@thedailytexanfacebook.com/dailytexanThe Daily TexanServing the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900dailytexanonline.com The Record: Peeking under South Congress’ Big Top. LIFE & ARTSPAGE 10Volleyball drops season finale to Iowa State. SPORTSPAGE 6INSIDEOPINIONThe Board of Regents aims to control private donations without biting the hand that feeds the University. 4NEWSA UT alumnus remembered for his work on the F-16 fighter jet died at 80.5SPORTSTexas drops senior game to TCU in a tough loss. 6LIFE & ARTSWith the Whisper app, UT students are spilling their secrets. 10TODAYToday in history — Brandon Hodge, owner of Big Top Candy ShopLIFE & ARTS PAGE 10We go for a total visual overstimulation, kind of like the circus really. Quote to note‘‘ Holiday editorial receives criticismAn editorial by journal- ism professor Robert Jensen criticizing the celebration of Thanksgiving stirred crit- ics during the holiday break, prompting a stream of email and editorial responses. In an editorial “No Thanks for Thanksgiving,” repub- lished on alternet.org, Jensen discusses the history of the holi- day, calling the actions of Eng- lish settlers genocide. “Simply put: Thanksgiving is the day when the dominant white culture (and, sadly, most of the rest of the non-white but non-indigenous popula- tion) celebrates the beginning of a genocide that was, in fact, blessed by the men we hold up as our heroic founding fathers,” Jensen’s editorial stated. The editorial goes on to compare the values of some of the founding fathers to those of Nazis. In an interview with The Daily Texan, Jensen said he has published several other editori- als on the topic since 2005, but this republishing of a 2007 ar- ticle on the day before Thanks- giving has received more atten- tion than in the past. Jensen said since Wednesday, he has re- ceived roughly 300 emails responding to the edito- rial and almost all have criticized the piece. He said the emails range from raw anger with insults and profanity to criticisms of his understanding of the holi- day’s history. He said many sup- port traditional Thanksgiving By David MalyRobert Jensen UT journalism professorPast inmate uses story to rally support, awareness UNIVERSITYSYSTEMWORLDEven in his role oversee- ing one of the nation’s largest university systems, UT System Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa is first and foremost a physician. Since his appointment as chancellor in 2009, Cigar- roa has taken on his duties in what he described as a medical approach — leveraging tech- nology, taking calculated risks and changing course when things don’t work out. “I think it’s worthwhile tak- ing a little risk in higher educa- tion if it’s for the right reasons,” Cigarroa said. “Sometimes we’re so risk-adverse that in fact we’re a little paralyzed. If I was nervous every time I made an incision, I don’t think I’d be a good surgeon.” He said his medical ap- proach is essential to his Framework for Advancing Excellence, a nine-pillar action plan of System priorities that has guided almost all actions voted on by the UT System Board of Regents since it was approved in August 2011. The framework’s mission has led to four-year graduation initiatives, developing relation- ships with technology-based corporations to improve ad- vising and online learning and setting forth the foundation for two new medical schools in Austin and South Texas. Cigarroa said the framework, which aligns the goals of the regents, the system administra- tion and the institution presi- dents, was a priority when he began his tenure as chancellor. The framework has gar- nered national attention, and Cigarroa was invited to discuss the pillars of the framework with other higher education UT System SurgeonMarisa Vasquez | Daily Texan Staff UT System chancellor Francisco Cigarroa designed a framework of goals to improve higher education that has developed four- year graduation initiatives, relationships with technology-based corporations and two new medical schools in Texas. A past inmate of the Ira- nian prison where former doctorate student Omid Kokabee is serving a 10- year sentence sat down with The Daily Texan to explain what life in the prison is like. Dr. Kamiar Alaei, who served more than two years as a political prisoner, said that alongside a lack of safe- ty, space and basic human rights, poor health care is a major problem at Evin Pris- on in Iran, located in Evin, a northwestern section of Tehran. Alaei said Kokabee faces the dangers normally associated with U.S. prisons, including violence, sexual assault and theft, in addition to these conditions. Alaei said most prisoners have access to basic health care, but because Kokabee is a political prisoner, he faces harsher conditions. Though a prison doctor recently diagnosed Koka- bee with kidney stones, he hasn’t received the inpa- tient care the doctor rec- ommended and has lost six kilograms, roughly 13.2 pounds, as a result. Alaei, an HIV/AIDS re- searcher, served time in solitary confinement and By David MalyBy Alexa UraLoss to TCU dashes BCS hopesAndrew Torrey | Daily Texan Staff Case McCoy is brought down by TCU’s Devonte Fields during Texas’ 23-10 loss last Thursday. The Longhorns fell to 8-3 on the year. SURE Walk moves headquarters to PCLSURE Walk, a free Stu- dent Government service that aims to protect stu- dents walking during late hours, moved its headquar- ters to the Perry-Castañeda Library in hopes of bet- ter serving students and increasing its visibility. The agency provides vol- unteers to escort students, faculty and staff walking to or from campus between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. A male and a female volunteer from trusted student organizations provide the walks. “Our goal is no one walks alone at night,” SURE Walk director Ben Johnson said. “It’s about creating a movement of students helping students.” Johnson said the agency decided to move to a visible location at the entrance of the PCL after it saw in- creased foot traffic when it started operating on a 24/5 schedule in October. Travis Willmann, spokesperson for the PCL, said the li- brary saw an 11.8 percent increase from 223,115 visi- tors in October last year to 249,585 visitors in October this year. “We have a lot of incoming freshamn that weren’t used By Bobby BlanchardFOOTBALLCAMPUSBy Christian CoronaSports Editor SURE WalkStudents, faculty or staff can call 512-232-925510 p.m. to 2 a.m., Monday - ThursdaySURE Walk asks that callers are ready to provide their name and a start and end location. WALK continues on page 2BCS continues on page 7KOKABEE continues on page 5CIGARROA continues on page 2CRITICS continues on page 2Get Sexy, Get ConsentGet Sexy. Get Consent. examines how we negotiate sex and consent, boundaries and safety through trained student facilitators who act out scenes and monologues and improvise conversations with audience members about negotiating sex. The program starts at 7 p.m. in the Winship Drama Building lobby. In 1941President Franklin D. Roosevelt establishes the modern Thanksgiving holiday as the fourth Thursday in November. SPORTSTexas women’s basketball looks impressive in victory over Central Connecticut. 6Chancellor Cigarroa’s medical approach contributes to advancement of University to using the library in high school to study, and it may have taken all this publicity with 24/5 to make students realize this was a place where they could come and do a lot of studying,” Willmann said. Normally, Willmann said, visits to the PCL usu- ally increase 1-4 percent annually. Because PCL was 24/5 for only half of Oc- tober, Willmann said he expects visits to increase between 20 and 25 percent in November. Johnson said because of this increase in foot traffic at the PCL, he hopes more students will learn about SURE Walk. “The goal is for more students to see SURE Walk when they leave the library,” Johnson said. “A lot of students have ap- proached the desk.” Last year, SURE Walk was located in the Student Activ- ity Center and before that it was in the Flawn Academic Center. Johnson said a lot of people did not see or hear about SURE Walk in these locations so they did not know what it was. “Our biggest hope is people will find out what SURE Walk is,” Johnson said. “We’ve been do- ing a big publicity push this semester.” Johnson said SURE Walk averages five requests a night, but he hopes to increase to 10 or 12 each night next semes- ter. He said since moving to the PCL, the agency has seen a small increase in number of walks requested. Wills Brown, vice presi- dent of UT’s Student Gov- ernment, said SURE Walk will stay in the PCL next semester, when the library will no longer be 24/5, un- til mid-semester. Brown said SURE Walk stops working at 2 a.m., the time the library normally closes before 24/5 starts again. Student MediaBoard of Operating Trustees MeetingFriday, February 3, 2012Executive Committee 12:30 p.m. Board Meeting1 p.m. College of Communications (CMA) LBJ Room #5.1602600 Whitis AvenueVisitors WelcomeWe 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. Texas Student MediaBoard of Operating Trustees MeetingFriday, February 3, 2012Executive Committee 12:30 p.m. Board Meeting1 p.m. College of Communications (CMA) LBJ Room #5.1602600 Whitis AvenueVisitors WelcomeWe 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. Friday, November 30th, 2012Executive Committee Meeting10:30 a.m. Board Meeting1 p.m. Santa-Rita SuiteTexas Union Room #3.502Austin, TX 78712Visitors WelcomeWe encourage any community member who has any kind of temporary or permanent disability to contact Texas Student Media News2Monday, November 26, 2012The Daily TexanVolume 113, Issue 72 Main Telephone: (512) 471-4591Editor: Susannah Jacob(512) 232-2212editor@dailytexanonline.comManaging Editor: Aleksander Chan(512) 232-2217managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.comNews Office: (512) 232-2207news@dailytexanonline.comMultimedia Office: (512) 471-7835dailytexanmultimedia@gmail.comSports Office: (512) 232-2210sports@dailytexanonline.comLife & Arts Office: (512) 232-2209dailytexan@gmail.comRetail Advertising: (512) 471-1865joanw@mail.utexas.eduClassified Advertising: (512) 471-5244classifieds@dailytexanonline.comCONTACT USTOMORROW’S WEATHERHighLow6644Monster trucks in Transylvania. COPYRIGHTCopyright 2012 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. 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. FRAMES | FEAtuREd photo Haipai Han | Daily Texan StaffThree kayakers take a rest from rowing under the Congress Avenue bridge Sunday afternoon. celebrations, because they fo- cus on sharing and thankful- ness and believe the holiday can be celebrated separately from what he referred to as “the beginning of a genocide.” Jensen said, however, Thanksgiving cannot be separated from its historical context. Since its republication this year, Jensen’s editorial has been critiqued through edi- torials on several online news outlets, including examiner. com, wizbangblog.com and cnsnews.com. Dan Gainor published an editorial on Jensen’s piece Thursday on CNS News, a conservative on- line news source. In it, Gainor claims that Jensen is “bashing” America with his editorial. In an interview with The Daily Texan, Gainor said he sees Jensen’s editorial as inaccurate. “That’s so monsterously wrong in so many different ways,” Gainor said. “It at- tempts to apply 20th century thought circumstances and morality to the American Revolutionary War,” refer- ring to Jensen’s comparison of some of the founding fa- thers to Nazis. Jensen said he was prompted to write the edito- rial partly by discomfort he felt celebrating Thanksgiv- ing, something he felt others could relate to. “I wrote that piece, in part, for people that were struggling with the same practical problems that I was,” Jensen said. He said he also wanted to give those who did not feel such discomfort insight into the historical context of the holiday. “The purpose is to put in front of those folks an argu- ment that they can ponder,” Jensen said. Jensen has published other works in the past challenging American actions through- out history, including a 2001 editorial he wrote for the Houston Chronicle titled “U.S. just as guilty of commit- ting own violent acts.” The 9/11 attacks were “no more despicable as the mas- sive acts of terrorism — the deliberate killing of civil- ians for political purposes — that the U.S. government has committed during my lifetime,” Jensen stated in the 2001 editorial. He said the 2001 article was the last time he received so much criticism for one of his editorials. Jensen has published doz- ens of editorials on American politics in between. “I believe that there are a lot of issues this country needs to come to terms with quickly,” Jensen said. officials at the White House this past year. While the framework has received criticism for imple- menting micromanagement and lacking quantitative mea- sures, Cigarroa said he likes to be innovative and try new things, and keeping up with a changing model of higher education is one of the most energizing parts of his job. One framework goal yet to be completed is the imple- mentation of performance- based compensation plans for presidents of the System’s nine academic institutions. “It’ll be interesting be- cause we’re one of the first university systems to try to this beyond health institutions,” Cigarroa said. The metrics of the plan for each president will be dis- cussed at the upcoming re- gents’ meeting in December. The presidents will be able to earn bonuses of up to 10 per- cent of their salaries based on those performance measures. With the upcoming legisla- tive session, Cigarroa’s third as chancellor, he said the System is supportive of two educa- tional initiatives — outcome- based funding and four-year fixed tuition rates. Both initiatives have already been filed as legislative bills by Rep. Dan Branch, R-Dallas. The System will push for metrics that fall in line with each insti- tution and its demographics to provide tuition options rather than regulations, Cigarroa said. Cigarroa said he origi- nally planned on returning to surgery full time after his tenure as president of the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio for almost nine years, when the position as chancellor opened up. “The real ‘ah-ha’ moment was when I realized education saves lives,” Cigarroa said. Cigarroa is on call every third weekend and does liver and kidney transplants in San Antonio. Cigarroa and four of his nine siblings all practice medi- cine. The Cigarroa Heart & Vascular Institute is housed in one of Laredo’s two hospitals, and cardiologist listings in the local phone book include the offices of Carlos and Ricardo Cigarroa. His father Joaquin Cigarroa still practices cardiol- ogy in Laredo at the age of 88. “You will never separate the love for medicine from a Cigarroa,” the chancellor said. “It’s in our genome.” CIGARROAcontinues from page 1CRITICScontinues from page 1WALKcontinues from page 1Texan AdDeadlinesThe Daily Texan Mail Subscription RatesOne Semester (Fall or Spring) $60.00Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) 120.00Summer Session 40.00One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) 150.00To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Media', P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TSM Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. 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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 aca- demic 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. News contributions will be accepted by tele- phone (471-4591), or at the editorial office (Texas Student Media Building 2.122). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. classified display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. Entire contents copyright 2012 Texas Student Media. Permanent StaffEditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Susannah JacobAssociate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drew Finke, Pete Stroud, Edgar WaltersManaging Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Aleksander ChanAssociate Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Trey Scott Digital Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hayley FickNews Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matt StottlemyreAssociate News Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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Andrew Messamore, Megan StricklandCopy Desk Chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kristine ReynaAssociate Copy Desk Chiefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Riley Brands, Sherry Hu, Luis San Miguel, Sara ReinschEditorial Copy Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nile MillerDesign Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nicole Collins Senior Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pu Ying Huang, Omar Longoria, Jack MittsSpecial Projects Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Natasha SmithPhoto Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lawrence PeartAssociate Photo Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Elisabeth Dillon, Andrew TorreySenior Photographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pu Ying Huang, Zachary Strain, Fanny Trang, Marisa VasquezMultimedia Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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Helen Fernandez, Shane Miller, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hannah Smothers, Alex Williams, Laura WrightSports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christian CoronaSenior Sports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lauren Giudice, Chris Hummer, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sara Beth Purdy, Rachel Thompson, Wes MaulsbyComics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ao MengAssociate Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Riki TsujiWeb Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ghayde GhraowiAssociate Web Editor, Social Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ryan SanchezAssociate Web Editors, Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Helen Fernandez, Omar LongoriaAdministrative Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Albert ChengEditorial Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Doug WarrenIssue StaffMultimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maria Arrellaga, HaiPei Han, Ricky LlamasSports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Garrett Callahan, Matt Warden Life&Arts Writer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bobby Blanchard, Lindsey Cherner, Stuart Railey, Elizabeth WilliamsCopy Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bobby Blanchard, Jori Epstein, Andrew HuygenComic Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ploy Buraparte, Alyssa Creagh, Kaz Frankiewitz, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Shaun Lane, Lindsay Rojas, Denny TaylorIllustrators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Holly HanselWeb Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tyler ReinhartMonday .............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) J2 closes Monday for DHFS changes Jester Second Floor dining hall will close starting Mon- day while the Division of Housing and Food Services makes changes. According to a news re- lease by the division, J2 will close for “adjustments” to the dining hall intended to improve the dining at- mosphere. No expected completion date is listed. While J2 is closed, students will have access to “Grab n’ Go” meals, including lunch and dinner options such as deli-sliced ham sandwiches and spicy breaded chicken sandwiches. Changes to the pizza and burger lines began Nov. 5, according to the re- lease. Items from those lines were moved to the VIP line in the interim. J2, located above Jester City Limits in Jester Resi- dence Hall, serves meals buffet style and accepts Dine In Dollars. Students living in campus residence halls get $1,400 in Dine In Dollars for the school year to spend at dining halls. The Kinsolving Dining Center, which also accepts Dine In Dollars, will remain open. J2 also underwent ren- ovations two years ago between Nov. 8 2010 and January 2011. Renova- tions included adding a private dining room, an open entry and changes to serving lines. According to the re- lease, while the division realizes “this is a teeny weeny bit inconvenient,” it will enhance dining experiences for students who frequent J2 while on campus. — Allie KolechtaNEWS BRIEFLY KAMPALA, Uganda — Congolese officials are in talks Sunday with representatives of M23, the rebel group that last week took control of the east- ern Congo city of Goma, ac- cording to Ugandan officials. Ugandan Defence Min- ister Crispus Kiyonga said that he is mediating discus- sions to help both sides reach a settlement that would end a violent rebellion that has sucked in Uganda and Rwan- da, which both face charges of backing the rebels. M23 President Jean- Marie Runiga is leading the rebels in the talks, according to Rene Abandi, M23’s head of external relations. Abandi, who is now based in the Ugandan capital Kam- pala, said M23 representatives met with Congolese President Joseph Kabila in a tense, two- hour meeting that was also at- tended by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni. “He tried to accuse us and we also tried to accuse him,” Abandi said of the meeting with Kabila on Saturday. “It was a meeting to have a common understanding of the principle of negotiation. (Kabila) said he’s ready to negotiate directly with us.” But some Congolese of- ficials in the capital Kinshasa have said there will be no talks with the rebels unless they quit Goma. A regional summit of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region in Kampala — attended by both Kabila and Museveni — on Saturday called on the rebels to leave Goma and urged Kabila to listen to the “legitimate grievances” of M23. Despite the regional leaders’ demands for the rebel forces to withdraw from Goma, M23 soldiers were visibly in con- trol of the city Sunday. M23 also still held Sake, a contested town 25 kilometers (15 miles) west of Goma. The Congolese army attacked the town Satur- day, but M23 retained control. M23 President Runiga said that withdrawal from Goma was “under consideration” and, while M23 did not op- pose the idea “in principle,” no decision had been taken yet, according to M23 spokesman Lt. Col. Vianney Kazarama, speaking to the Associated Press. Runiga is still in Kam- pala and no official response to the demands from the re- gional summit is expected be- fore his return to Congo, said Kazarama in Goma. “We are waiting to hear from Runiga when he will be back from Kampala,” said Kazarama. “Since May we have asked to meet with President Kabila,” said Amani Kabasha, M23’s deputy spokesman. “At least now there has been contact. The door is open for talks to find the durable peace that eastern Congo needs.” Government troops remain in Minova, 25 kilometers (15 miles) south of Sake, follow- ing a failed attack on M23 last Thursday. Unruly Congo army soldiers had looted resi- dents for the third night run- ning, according to a United Nations official in the town who insisted upon anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the press. U.N. peacekeepers patrolled Mi- nova throughout the night to protect civilians from the ram- paging government troops. In Minova, Congo Gen. Francois Olenga, who was recently named head of the Congolese army, held meet- ings with area commanders . “The country is in danger. We cannot defend our coun- try with traitors,” said Olen- ga to The Associated Press. Pickup trucks packed with Congolese army soldiers armed with automatic rifles and rocket propelled gre- nades sped through Minova to regroup at the local soccer stadium. Army soldiers were also walking in the streets, looking for food. Some army soldiers were selling ciga- rettes on the side of the road. NEW YORK — If you make it convenient for shoppers, they will come. It’s estimated that U.S. shoppers hit stores and websites at record numbers over the four-day Thanks- giving weekend, according to a survey released by the National Retail Federation on Sunday. They were at- tracted by retailers’ efforts to make shopping easier, including opening stores on Thanksgiving evening, updating mobile shopping applications for smart- phones and tablets, and expanding shipping and layaway options. All told, a record 247 million shoppers visited stores and websites over the four-day weekend starting Thanksgiving, up 9.2 per- cent of last year, according to a survey of 4,000 shop- pers that was conducted by research firm BIGin- sight for the trade group. Americans spent more too: The average holiday shop- per spent $423 over the entire weekend, up from $398. Total spending over the four-day weekend to- taled $59.1 billion, up 12.8 percent from 2011. The results appear to show that retailers efforts to make shopping effort- less for U.S. consumers during the holiday shop- ping season worked. Re- tailers upped the ante in order to give Americans more reasons to shop at time when some of them are fearful about the weak job market and the po- tential that a wave of tax increases and budget cuts known as the “fiscal cliff” will take effect if Congress fails to reach a budget deal by January. Retailers, which can make up to 40 percent of their online revenue in November and December, were hoping Americans would respond to incen- tives like the Thanksgiv- ing openings, which en- abled them to kick off the season earlier than ever. The National Retail Federation estimates that overall sales in November and December will rise 4.1 percent this year to $586.1 billion. That’s more than a percentage point lower than the growth in each of the past two years, and the smallest increase since 2009, when sales were nearly flat. KERRVILLE BUS COMPANY“friendly service since 1929” Welcome to tickets from $1* and free Wi-Fi! Book today atKerrville’s daily bus service to and from Texas, Missouri and Louisiana now available for booking on megabus.com* plus 50¢ booking fee megabus.comstay connectedKristine Reyna, Wire Editor World & Nation3Monday, November 26, 2012NEWS BRIEFLYCongo, M23 negotiate in UgandaConsumer holidaybreaks retail recordBy Anne D’InnocenzioAssociated PressBy Pete Jones& Rodney MuhumuzaAssociated PressBeth Nakamura | Associated PressHundreds of shoppers enter J.C. Penney in the Washington Square Mall at 6 a.m. in Tigard, Ore., Friday. This year major chains from Target to Toys R Us opened on Thanksgiving itself, instead of the Friday after, turning the traditional busiest shopping day of the year into a two-day affair. Jerome Delay | Associated PressAn internally displaced Congolese man listens to the radio Saturday. Regional leaders meeting in Uganda on Saturday called for an end to the advance by M23 rebels toward Congo’s capital, and also urged the Congolese government to sit down with rebel leaders as residents fled some towns for fear of more fighting between the rebels and army. Missile defense systemsuccessfully testedJERUSALEM — Israel suc- cessfully tested its newest mis- sile defense system Sunday, the military said, a step toward making the third leg of what Israel calls its “multilayer mis- sile defense” operational. The “David’s Sling” sys- tem is designed to stop mid- range missiles. It success- fully passed its test, shooting down its first missile in a drill Sunday in southern Israel, the military said. The system is designed to intercept projectiles with ranges of up to 300 kilome- ters (180 miles). Marriage benefits brought to high courtSAN FRANCISCO — Within weeks of her wed- ding, Karen Golinski applied to add her spouse to her employer-sponsored health care plan. Her ordinarily routine re- quest still is being debated more than four years later, and by the likes of former at- torneys general, a slew of sen- ators, the Obama administra- tion and possibly this week, the U.S. Supreme Court. Because Golinski is mar- ried to another woman and works for the U.S. govern- ment, her claim for benefits has morphed into a multi- layered legal challenge to a 1996 law that prohibits the federal government from recognizing unions like hers. The high court has sched- uled a closed-door confer- ence for Friday to review Golinski’s case and four oth- ers that also seek to overturn the Defense of Marriage Act overwhelmingly approved by Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton. Italy votes center-left amid recessionROME — Italians voted in a primary for a center-left candidate to run in spring general elections that will in large part determine how Italy tries to fix its troubled finances and emerge from a grinding recession. Exit polls and preliminary results cited late Sunday by Italian media indicated that none of the five candidates won a 50 percent major- ity, meaning a runoff will be held Dec. 2 between the top two finishers: Pier Lu- igi Bersani, the 61-year-old leader of the main center- left Democratic Party, and Matteo Renzi, the 37-year- old mayor of Florence. Some analysts had predict- ed a low turnout, thanks to a series of party finance scan- dals that have soured Italians on their political class. But some voting stations stayed open well beyond the official closing time to allow everyone on line to cast their ballots. Mexico finds bodies near U.S. borderCIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexi- co — Chihuahua state pros- ecutor’s office for missing people said 11 male bodies were found in Ejido Jesus Carranza, near the U.S. bor- der. The area of sand dunes is a popular spot for picnickers from Juarez. Officials say they appar- ently were buried two years ago at the height of battles between drug gangs seek- ing to control routes across the border. Prosecutors also said Sun- day that officials had found eight bodies tossed along a road near Rosales. The agen- cy said the men apparently were kidnapped on Friday and were discovered on Sat- urday. It said they had been shot in the head after being tortured. Some had been burned, beaten and had eyes carved out. —Compiled from Associated Press reports in-Chief Susannah JacobOpinion4Monday, November 26, 2012LEGALESEOpinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the arti- cle. They are not necessarily those of the UT adminis- tration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Me- dia Board of Operating Trustees. EDITORIAL TWITTERFollow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@DTeditorial) and receive updates on our latest edi- torials and columns. SUBMIT A FIRING LINEE-mail your Firing Lines to firingline@dailytexanon- line.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. RECYCLEPlease 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. Regents rein in foundation fundingWhat to Watch: GALLERYNovember 26 - 30Every Monday, we provide a list of opinion- worthy events to expect during the coming week. 123The Humanities Institute hosts Dr. Elaine Scarry for a talk and discussion this Wednesday about “How beauty presses individuals to be concerned with social justice.” The event is free and open to the public and takes place from 7-9 p.m. in Avaya Auditorium 2.302. This Thursday, UT professor Dale Klein, associate direc- tor of the Energy Institute, will lead a discussion titled “The Road Forward for Nuclear in the U.S. and Internationally.” Klein is the former chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Com- mission. The Energy Institute came under fire this summer when its associate director, UT geology professor Charles “Chip” Groat, led a study that found no evidence that hy- draulic fracturing contaminates groundwater while he was serving as a director and stockholder of a company that engages in hydraulic fracturing. The event is free and takes place from 5:15-6:15 p.m. in MEZ 1.306, but arrive at 5 p.m., when cookies will be served. On Thursday, the H.J. Lutcher Stark Center will host a special symposium titled “Basketball and American Culture from” 1-4:30 p.m. in the Etta Harbin Alumni Center Ball- room. The keynote speaker for the symposium will be Hall of Fame NBA player and former U.S. Senator Bill Bradley. Sen. Bradley will speak about ethics, values and basketball in a lecture titled “Values of the Game” from 1-2 p.m. Other speakers will follow. The event is free and open to the pub- lic. “And Then Came Tango,” an interactive play about a pair of male penguins raising a chick, opens this Friday at the Oscar G. Brockett Theatre in the Winship Drama Building at 7 p.m. The play generated discussion when Austin In- dependent School District officials canceled its elementary school performance amid questions of age appropriateness. For more information and tickets, call 512-471-5793. Transparency, when it comes to University governance, invariably represents a step forward. The end of email privacyThe UT System Board of Regents took nearly one year to review and address disclosures about loans to the faculty from a foundation established to support the UT School of Law. In December 2011, those disclosures forced the resignation of former UT School of Law Dean Larry Sager. The time the regents devoted to the issue ap- pears well spent and, in the best possible outcome, their efforts could lead to more and welcomed transparency about UT faculty compensation. According to a report released the week be- fore Thanksgiving drafted by UT System Vice Chancellor and General Counsel Barry Burg- dorf, in 2009 the University administration, due to budgeting limits, denied Sager a raise he had requested. Burgdorf’s report states that Sager then approached Robert Grable, then president of the UT Law School Foundation, about receiv- ing a $500,000 forgivable loan. Subsequently, the foundation’s executive committee, which over- sees the organization’s $111 million endowment, approved Sager’s loan. The foundation’s execu- tive board also approved a slew of others loans to law school faculty members. Sager, who is still a faculty member of the law school, said through a spokesman in a statement issued following Burg- dorf’s report that he did not deliberately try to avoid University oversight. But Burgdorf’s report concludes that flaws existed in the approval and reporting of loans from the foundation to the law school faculty members. So far, the regents in their response to Burg- dorf’s review have been careful not to insult the foundation while simultaneously endorsing Burgdorf’s conclusions, which the Office of the Attorney General also supported. In a carefully crafted statement issued on Nov. 13, the regents wrote, “We express gratitude to the Law School Foundation which has been co- operative and helpful throughout this process. It plays a significant role in supporting the goals of the UT School of Law.” After a Nov. 15 meeting, Board of Regents Chairman Gene Powell issued a written statement that said, “Let me first ac- knowledge the importance of the extraordinary support provided by UT affiliated foundations and the many additional foundations and non- profit corporations, as well as the work of count- less volunteers working with these entities. We are grateful to the individuals who participate on these important boards and who contribute their time and generous financial support to advance the missions of UT institutions.” But Powell’s statement also added that Chan- cellor Francisco Cigarroa has asked UT admin- istrators “to identify and cease any impermissible direct payments, benefits, or reimbursements to UT employees for their work on behalf of UT from external sources and to assure that exter- nal support is not provided in the form of gifts targeted to specific individuals.” Powell also an- nounced the establishment of an advisory task force on the relationship of UT System institu- tions to UT-affiliated foundations, which will be chaired by Regent Brenda Pejovich, who will be joined by Regents Bobby Stillwell and Wallace Hall, and, among others, UT and Attorney Gen- eral representatives. With the regents, the University administra- tion and the AG’s office now somewhat focused on how and when deans may pass out goodies from foundations to faculty members, we believe transparency — apparently long-needed — will enter into the equation. Transparency, when it comes to University governance, invariably rep- resents a step forward. VIEWPOINT The U.S. Senate will soon vote on a law that would gravely undermine Americans’ priva- cy and give expanded, unbridled surveillance authority over people’s emails to more than 22 government agencies. Sen. Patrick Leahy, the influential Dem- ocratic chair of the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, has capitulated to law enforcement agencies, including the U.S. Justice Depart- ment, and is sponsoring a bill that authorizes widespread warrantless access to Americans’ emails, as well as files on Google Docs, di- rect messages on Twitter and so on, without a search warrant. It also would give the FBI and Homeland Security more authority, in some circumstances, to gain full access to In- ternet accounts without notifying either the owner or a judge. Leahy’s bill would only require the fed- eral agencies to issue a subpoena, not obtain a search warrant signed by a judge based on probable cause. It also would permit state and local law enforcement to access Ameri- cans’ correspondence stored on systems not offered to the public, including university networks, without warrants. Even in situations that would still require a search warrant, the proposed law would excuse law enforcement officers from ob- taining a warrant (and being challenged lat- er in court) if they claim an “emergency” sit- uation. Not only that, but a provider would have to notify law enforcement in advance of any plans to tell its customers they’ve been the target of a warrant, order, or subpoena. The agency then could order the provider to de- lay notification of customers whose accounts have been accessed from 3-10 business days or, in some cases, up to 360 days. Agencies that would receive civil sub- poena authority for electronic communica- tions include the Federal Reserve, the Feder- al Trade Commission, the Federal Maritime Commission, the Postal Regulatory Com- mission, the National Labor Relations Board, the Occupational Safety and Health Admin- istration, the Securities and Exchange Com- mission, and the Mine Enforcement Safe- ty and Health Review Commission. There is no good legal reason why agencies like these need blanket access to people’s personal in- formation with a mere subpoena, rather than a warrant. One might expect better of Leahy given his liberal credentials, but his performance has been quite disappointing. In fact, he had a hand in making the USA PATRIOT Act bill less protective of civil liberties. Nor has the Obama administration been helpful in this regard — quite to the contrary. Expec- tations of law enforcement types might not be as high in terms of protecting civil liber- ties, but they should not be as unsatisfactory as they are with proponents of constitution- al freedoms. The revelations about how the FBI pe- rused former CIA Director David Petraeus’ emails without a warrant should alarm us all as people who have less power and prestige than he did. If the Fourth Amendment is to have any meaning, it is that police must obtain a search warrant, backed by probable cause, before reading Americans’ emails or other commu- nications. If we are to preserve our constitu- tional protection from warrantless searches that are not reviewed by the courts, we need to let our U.S. senators from Texas hear from us immediately and resoundingly. We cannot allow the government to under- mine our rights bit by bit, even in the name of national security, which too often is the justi- fication the government so casually uses. As Ben Franklin said, “Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little tempo- rary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safe- ty.” Ramirez is Chairman and CEO of the In- ternational Bank of Commerce-Zapata and Harrington serves as director of the Texas Civ- il Rights Project and an adjunct professor at the UT School of Law. We cannot allow the government to undermine our rights bit by bit, even in the name of national security. Renato Ramirez and Jim HarringtonGuest Columnists4 UT alumnus and former Daily Texan staff member Vernon Lee, who was in- strumental in the marketing of the F-16 fighter jet, died Monday at the age of 80 fol- lowing a short illness and complications from surgery. Lee worked for 43 years at General Dynamics in Fort Worth, which became Lockheed Martin, an engi- neering firm that worked with the U.S. military to create the F-16 fighter jet. The F-16 would become key in military forces around the world because production was relatively easy and low cost. Lee was director of the F-16 programs for Israel and Greece, two of the biggest buyers of the F-16, which is still being produced. Lee’s daughter, Megan Endres, said her father was excellent in engineering and business, inspiring her to go into the business field her- self. Endres is an associate professor of management at Eastern Michigan Univer- sity in Ypsilanti, Michigan. “A lot of people said he was their best negotiator,” Endres said. Lee was born Aug. 11, 1932 in San Antonio and graduated from Brack- enridge High School. He graduated from UT in 1957 with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in aeronautical en- gineering. While at UT, Lee worked as a photographer for The Daily Texan and the Cactus Yearbook. Lee was also a devout Longhorn football fan while at UT and remained one his entire life, creating a friendly rivalry with his wife Carol, a Texas Christian University graduate. Lee later went back to UT in the 1960s and received a doctorate degree in aero- space engineering. During his career, Lee also worked as an engineer and dealt with space sys- tems, aircraft performance and aerothermodynamics engineering. He was the vice president in charge of the FSX program in Japan, a program that helped Japan develop the F-2 fighter jet. He retired from Lockheed Martin in 1998. Lee’s son, Vernon Lee Jr., said his father was talented in many ways. “Everyone [me and my sister] talked to always said he was very smart and he was a great listener,” Ver- non Lee Jr. said. “I think those are two of his key at- tributes and very gentle. So, it’s an interesting combina- tion, to be able to get things done and still have people say that you are gentle and you listen well.” He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Carol Ann Lee; two sons, Vernon Lee Jr. and Kenneth Lee; a daugh- ter, Megan Endres and six grandchildren. Funeral and burial ser- vices for Vernon Lee were held over the weekend in Fort Worth. Student Media Board of Operating Trusteeshas openings for student board positions. TEXASSTUDENTMEDIA*College of Communications, Place 2 (unexpired term: 06/12-05/14) *At-Large, Place 5 (unexpired term: 06/11-05/13) This board oversees the largest student media program in the United States. Your job as a board member? • Adopt annual budget • Review monthly income and expenses • Select KVRX station manager, TSTV station manager, Texas Travesty and Cactus yearbook editors, The Daily Texan managing editor • Certify candidates seeking election to TSM board and for The Daily Texan editor• Review major purchase requests • Time commitment? About five hours per month (one meeting, reading before meeting, committee work). Pick up an application at the Hearst Student Media building (HSM), 25th and Whitis Ave, Room 3.304, or print a application from our website: http://www.utexas.edu/tsm/board/ Deadline is 4pm on Tuesday, November 27, 2012Drop off applications at HSM or email admin@texasstudentmedia.comAgeCompensationRequirementsTimelineMen19 to 55Up to $1300Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18.1and 303 Nights In-HouseMen and Women 18 to 45Call for detailsHealthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 20 and 30Thu. 13 Dec. through Mon. 17 Dec. Thu. 3 Jan. through Mon. 7 Jan. Outpatient Visit: 9 Jan. Men and Women18 to 55Up to $2700Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18 and 29.9Thu. 13 Dec. through Sun. 16 Dec. Thu. 20 Dec. through Sun. 23 Dec. Thu. 3 Jan. through Sun. 6 Jan. Outpatient Visit: 11 Jan. Current Research Opportunitieswww.ppdi.com • 462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study information Age Compensation Requirements Timeline Better clinic. Better medicine. Better world. Everybody counts on having safe, effective medicine for anything from the common cold to heart disease. But making sure medications are safe is a complex and careful process. At PPD, we count on healthy volunteers to help evaluate medications being developed – maybe like you. You must meet certain requirements to qualify, including a free medical exam and screening tests. We have research studies available in many different lengths, and you’ll find current studies listed here weekly. PPD has been conducting research studies in Austin for more than 25 years. Call today to find out more. Current Research Opportunitieswww.ppdi.com • 462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study information Age Compensation Requirements Timeline Better clinic. Better medicine. Better world. Everybody counts on having safe, effective medicine for anything from the common cold to heart disease. But making sure medications are safe is a complex and careful process. At PPD, we count on healthy volunteers to help evaluate medications being developed – maybe like you. You must meet certain requirements to qualify, including a free medical exam and screening tests. We have research studies available in many different lengths, and you’ll find current studies listed here weekly. PPD has been conducting research studies in Austin for more than 25 years. Call today to find out more. NewsMonday, November 26, 20125a special unit for political prisoners while he was at Evin prison. Kokabee be- gan his sentence in solitary confinement and was then transferred to the same special unit, where he is currently jailed. Alaei described his time in solitary confinement. “The solitary is six-feet- by-four-feet,” Alaei said. “There is light 24 hours a day, limited access to re- strooms and no access to fresh air. You are blind- folded with no access to an attorney, no access to fam- ily visits and you are under interrogation for hours and days and weeks.” He said inmates in solitary confinement must follow a special procedure when they want to use the restroom. “There was a piece of paper that they gave to us, that we could throw out,” Alaei said. “If by any chance the prison staff passed by, which might not have been for several hours, they would see that and we could go to the restroom.” Alaei said inmates in the political prisoner unit wake up at 6 a.m. each day, go outside to the jail yard and stay there until 10 p.m. when they go to sleep. He said the prison yard, roughly 3,600 square feet, holds roughly 200 people. Alaei also said the cells each contain roughly 30 prisoners but only 15 beds. Kokabee has been jailed in Iran since he was ar- rested in February 2011 while visiting family. Charged with conspiring with foreign countries in plots against the Iranian government, Kokabee was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Recently, he was sentenced to an additional 91 days without trial for earning illegal money after other inmates paid him to teach them English, Span- ish, French and physics. Alaei said Kokabee has only been able to visit face-to-face with his fam- ily once since he was im- prisoned, and he is not able to safely complain about the situation. “At anytime, for no rea- son, they may send [pris- oners] back to solitary, if they just complain, if they just say, ‘Well I want to meet with my family,’” Alaei said. He said execution is anoth- er possibility for prisoners at Evin. According to Amnesty International’s 2011 report on human rights, Iran is sec- ond to China in total number of executions. Alaei said Kokabee’s best chance at freedom is for the international com- munity to pressure the Iranian government. Alaei and his brother Dr. Arash Alaei were both sentenced to prison terms in Iran in 2008 but were released af- ter international academic institutions pressured the Iranian government. The Alaei brothers are planning an international day of protest to advocate for justice for Kokabee to supplement physics profes- sor Herbert Berk’s petition to the Iranian government for a fair retrail for Koka- bee. Thus far, the petition has gained 590 signatures. UT has not taken an official stance on Kokabee’s situation. By David MalyUT alumnus remembered for work on F-16 fighter jetLEGACYVernon Lee 1932-2012Photo courtesy of the Kokabee familyOmid Kokabee, former UT doctorate student, is currently serving a 10-year sentence at Evin Prison in Iran. Former Evin prisoner Dr. Kamiar Alaei recalls his time at the prison. Texas lawmakers are con- sidering possible changes to the Texas Public Informa- tion Act, including how to reduce frivolous requests and whether or not the act hurts government contractors. Texas has one of the best open records laws in the country, but Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst asked the Senate Open Government Committee to take a look at possible changes when the Leg- islature meets next year. Need- less to say, changing the law that requires the government to make its records public al- ways makes open government advocates, such as journalists, a little nervous. Sen. Rodney Ellis, a Hous- ton Democrat, chairs the com- mittee and on Monday it will hear testimony on reducing the number of “burdensome or frivolous” requests, how new technologies are creat- ing public information, how long information should be re- tained and how the law impacts government contractors. The touchiest issue will cer- tainly be what to do about so- called burdensome and frivo- lous requests. The act already allows government agencies to charge requestors for staff time to fulfill long, complicat- ed requests, but state agencies apparently don’t think that’s enough of a deterrent. Law- makers will consider charging even more or allowing agen- cies to reject a request. How governments pro- duce and store documents, spreadsheets and databases has changed a lot in the last 10 years, and so have the ways journalists have requested that information. For instance, a journalist may ask for a functioning data- base from a government agency in digital form. In others states a person may request a digital mirror of an entire disc drive, say from a governor’s computer, and the office must turn it over. In Texas, state officials and agencies often only supply non- searchable scans of paper docu- ments, making it difficult to analyze the information. With agencies creating huge databases subject to a public information request, lawmakers have an opportunity to require govern- ment employees to turn over in- formation in its most accessible format. Without that require- ment, public information offi- cers can make the information they turn over as difficult as pos- sible to use, violating the spirit of open government. Lawmakers will study how long government agencies and offices must hold on to public records, such as emails. When- ever a public controversy arises, one of the first things journalists request are the official emails of the government workers in- volved in order to see what was happening behind the scenes. Texas law requires only elect- ed officials and top executives to retain their correspondence for a year. Their staff, however, can delete their emails after a single week. This opportunity to avoid public scrutiny is obvi- ous and too frequently used. Another worrying develop- ment is whether lawmakers will consider exempting from the law information about the private companies that do business with the state and local government. When someone requests in- formation about a government contractor, those businesses often worry that some of their financial information or trade secrets will leak out. Often- times, the government agency must send a letter to the com- pany asking whether it wants to exercise its right to privacy, something that requires a law- yer’s time to review and answer. Many of these companies would prefer to have key pro- visions of their contracts and corporate financial informa- tion kept secret, something they will certainly lobby for in the next session. The hearing on Monday is strictly to gather testimony, and so far no lawmakers have intro- duced a bill to amend the Pub- lic Information Act. But the tes- timony heard on Monday will likely influence what bills may look like when the Legislature returns in January. Senate to rethink public accessBy Chris TomlinsonAssociated PressKOKABEE continues from page 1Access the petition asking for a fair trial for Omid Kokabee bit.ly/dt_petition The No. 3 Longhorns were one game away from an un- defeated conference season but came up short against No. 18 Iowa State 3-2 to end the regular season. Texas will enter the postseason with a 23-4 record and 15-1 Big 12 record with a Big 12 title. Despite the loss, the Long- horns’ postseason stock was not affected. On Sunday, Tex- as was seeded third overall in the NCAA Tournament and will host Colgate University in game one Thursday. With a win, the Longhorns will face either North Carolina State or Texas A&M in game two Friday. Junior Bailey Webster pro- duced 28 kills, a career-high, while hitting .446. Fresh- man Andie Malloy led the Cyclones with 19 kills while hitting .372. The Cylcones got off to a fast start. The lead stayed close until back-to-back kills by Molly McCage and Web- ster ended the set in favor of the Longhorns 25-23. To avenge the first set, the Cyclones came out fighting in set two posting a 16-12 lead. The Longhorns were not able to get much momentum as several service errors lead to a 19-25 win for Iowa State. The Cyclones took a 12-4 lead in set three, but Texas was able to fight back to close the gap to one. A 3-1 rally by the Cyclones closed out set three for the 21-25 ISU victory. The Longhorns dominated the fourth set and came out with a 25-15 win to even the match at 2-2. Webster closed out the set with five straight kills for the Longhorns in a 5-1 scoring run. In set five, Iowa State quick- ly went up 11-6. The Long- horns were able to fight back, but an error by Webster ended the set 13-15 and the match. Colgate @ No. 3 TexasDate: ThursdayTime: 7 p.m. Location: Gregory GymNCAA ROUND 1Texas drops last match, ready for postseasonBy Sara Beth PurdyBailey Webster Junior outside hitter6 SPTSGET HELPPERSONAL TRAININGwww.utrecsports.orgMOTIVATIONSTARTS HEREChristian Corona, Sports Editor Sports6Monday, November 26, 2012SIDELINEFOOTBALLTCU hands UT crushing lossElisabeth Dillon | Daily Texan StaffSenior TCU linebacker Kenny Cain sacks quarterback David Ash on Thanskgiving Day. Ash threw two inerceptions and committed one fumble in the 20-13 loss to the Horned Frogs. David Ash reverted to his 2011 form and Case McCoy failed to engineer another last-minute Thanksgiving Day comeback, leading to a BCS-shattering loss to TCU this past Thursday. Ash threw a pair of intercep- tions, fumbled once and com- pleted less than 50 percent of his passes. That performance, coupled with a dominant showing on the ground by the Horned Frogs — they rushed for 217 yards — and a last minute pick was more than enough to spur the Horned Frogs to a 20-13 victory. “Four turnovers to one, you’re going to get beat most of the time,” head coach Mack Brown said. “In fact, it’s about 100 percent.” On the first drive of the game, Ash led Texas down- field, but then, on a first- down play from TCU’s 30- yard line, Ash made his first By Chris Hummer why texas lost stock downquarter by quarter by the numberswhat’s nextTurnovers doom the offense on Thanksgiving DayThis loss falls on UT’s offense and its turnovers. Texas had four turnovers, three interceptions and one fumble. David Ash’s two interceptions were both in the red zone and his fumble led to a field goal by the Horned Frogs. Of the four times the Longhorns were in the red zone, they scored one touchdown and two field goals. Johnathan Gray was Texas’ leading rusher. He had 12 rushes for 38 yards in the first half and just three carries for nine yards in the second half. First: After a promising opening drive, Ash threw an inter- ception in the red zone. TCU’s Matthew Tucker took advan- tage of the possession and scored a two-yard touchdown. Nick Jordan hit a 25-yard field goal. Second: Ash threw another interception and lost a fumble. Case McCoy replaced him. TCU’s Jaden Oberkrom hit a field goal to give the Horned Frogs a 14-3 halftime lead. Third: Both Jordan and Oberkrom hit field goals as the Horned Frogs led 17-6. Fourth: TCU was held to a field goal in the fourth. Jeremy Hills scored on an 8-yard touchdown. Texas’ comeback at- tempt was ended when McCoy threw an interception to Sam Carter with less than two minutes left in the game. 4:1: The turnover ratio. Tex- as’ four turnovers kept them off the scoreboard, especially since Ash’s interceptions were both in the red zone. McCoy’s inter- ception destroyed any chances of a last minute comeback. 217: TCU’s rushing yards. Texas’ run defense seemed to be improving over the last few weeks. But the Horned Frogs, led by Tucker’s two touchdowns, dominated the line of scrimmage. David Ash: Kansas seemed to be so far away. Since then, he bounced back to have strong performances and beat Texas Tech and Iowa State. But his three turnovers were a huge contributor to why Texas lost to TCU. He went 10-for-21 for 104-yards and consistently under- threw his passes. Run defense: During Texas’ wins over Kansas, Texas Tech and TCU, it seemed that the run defense’s problems had ended. But the Horned Frogs completely relied on the run to defeat the Longhorns. They ran the ball on 47 of 58 offensive plays for 217 yards, both of their touch- downs coming on the ground. This loss put Texas out of the BCS Bowl and Big 12 pictures. The team will head to Manhat- tan to face No. 7 Kansas State. Though the Wild- cats lost to Baylor, this game will be one of Tex- as’ toughest matchups this season. —Lauren GiudiceAndrew Torrey | Daily Texan StaffJohnathan Gray led the Texas offense on Thanksgiving. Gray rushed for only 47 yards in the loss to TCU. Longhorns dominate in winWOMEN’S BASKETBALLVOLLEYBALLBy Garrett CallahanFROGS continues on page 7NFLNBABCS Rankings: 1. Notre Dame2. Alabama3. Georgia4. Florida5. Oregon6. Kansas State11. Oklahoma18. Texas23. Oklahoma StateSPURS F/2OTRAPTORS REDSKINSCOWBOYS TEXANSLIONS Cobbs, Hills outfor end of seasonTexas Head Athletic Trainer for Football Kenny Boyd announced this weekend that junior Linebacker Demarco Cobbs and Senior run- ning back Jeremy Hills, who were both injured against TCU on Thanks- giving, will be out for the rest of the season. Cobbs injured his right knee early in the second quar- ter and will be evaluated over the comming weeks to determine if surgery is needed, but will not return for the Long- horns. Hills fractured his right fibula on an 8-yard touchdown run with three minutes left in the game. Hills will not need surgery. Quarterback David Ash (ribs), wide receiv- er Marquise Goodwin (thumb), and defen- sive end Alex Okafor (ankle) are all question- able for the game against Kansas State. Kansas State set for 7 p.m. kickoffABC announced late Saturday that the Long- horns will kickoff at 7:00 PM against the Kansas State Wildcats in Manhat- tan for their final regular season game on Dec. 1. Kansas State is currently first in the Big 12 with a conference record of 7-1 and a season record of 10-1. A win against the Longhorns on Saturday will mean a Big 12 Title and a guaranteed trip to the Fiesta Bowl. —Sara Beth Purdy SPORTS BRIEFLYIt’s a game of energy and Texas controlled it all. In their fourth game of the season, the Longhorns beat the Central Con- necticut Blue Devils to stay undefeated. The 94-58 win marked the first time they began a season 4-0 since 2010. Once again, sophomore Nneka Enemkpali was the star of the game. She reg- istered her fourth straight double-double, tallying 21 points and 10 rebounds, be- coming the first Longhorn since Tiffany Jackson in 2006 to accomplish the feat. “I just go out there and play each game like it’s a new game,” Enemkpali said. “I go out there and have fun with my teammates. I don’t really think about the past. Just move forward with each game.” Chassidy Fussell led the Longhorns with 22 points while also recording a sea- son-high four steals. Imani McGee-Stafford swatted a season-high nine blocks, which was the most for the Longhorns since Ashley Gayle recorded 10 in 2010. Texas came out of the gate flying. By the first media timeout, the Long- horns had built up a dou- ble-digit lead, outscoring their opponent 32-4 in the paint. At halftime they were up 51-25, thanks in part to Fussell’s 12 point first half. The second half came just as easy for the home team. Texas shot 64 per- cent while holding the Blue Devils to just 34. Six of Mc- Gee-Stafford’s nine blocks came after halftime to limit Central Connecticut on the defensive end. Head coach Karen As- ton was completely satis- fied with her team’s perfor- mance in the game against Central Connecticut. Com- ing out to start the game fast is a concept she has tried to push since she first came to Austin last spring. “I thought our energy level in the first half was ter- rific,” Aston said. “We talk a lot as a team about get- ting out of the gates quick and setting a tone at the beginning of the game. In particular our starting lineup is really beginning to understand what the first four minutes of the game are like.” Texas was 3-1 in its first four games last year, win- ning by only a small margin in some of those wins. “Just the inside-out game makes it so much easier on the guards and the posts really, because if they double the post they’re go- ing to kick it back out and if they double the guards we’re going to throw it in,” Fussell said. “So just the inside-out game is work- ing best for us.” Texas now looks forward to its next opponent on Friday. UT will face Texas A&M-Corpus Christi here in Austin. As they look to start 5-0, the Longhorns are focusing on continuing their strong start right out of the game and explosive leads. Nneka EnemkpaliSophomore forward“Crazy how they modeled James Bond’s smoothness and skill with the ladies after me.” Dean Melchionni@UncleDream717TOP TWEET First Half: The Longhorns came out scoring from everywhere on their way to 51 first-half points. This total was the most Texas has scored in the opening stanza since posting 51 against UTPA in 2010. Texas continued its low-post dominance by controlling the paint en route to 32 points down low to Central Connecticut’s four. Chas- sidy Fussell buoyed the scoring charge with 12 points while Imani McGee-Stafford controlled the paint on defense with three blocks. Second Half: Texas didn’t slow up in the second half, shoot- ing 64 percent from the field while holding Central Connecticut to only 34 percent. Texas’ five second-half 3-pointers sealed the deal. McGee-Stafford continued her defensive dominance in the half, recording six more blocks to finish the game with nine. David Ash was hesitant and inaccurate. He committed three first-half turnovers as Texas went into halftime trailing 14-3. Despite showing flashes of brilliance in the first two quarters, freshman running back Johnathan Gray inexplicably didn’t touch the ball after Texas’ first series of the second half. Sophomore Malcolm Brown didn’t touch the ball at all. “Some of that was per- sonal ... we were going to throw the ball obviously more because we needed to get something going,” co-offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin said. “Just trying to get some rhythm and that was part of it: to throw the ball on early downs to help ourselves in the run game.” TCU left Texas bruised and beaten, adding multi- ple injuries to severe insult. Running back Jeremy Hills and linebacker Demarco Cobbs are out for the rest of the year. Ash (ribs), Mar- quise Goodwin (thumb) and Alex Okafor(ankle) are banged up too. But what hurts even more is the harsh reality that Texas could very well go 8-5 for the second straight year. Unless the Longhorns triumph in Manhattan this week — something they haven’t done in a decade — or win a bowl game, that’s what will happen. For a program that showed so many signs of significant improvement, it would be a horrible disappointment. TERMS There are no refunds or credits. 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Mike Davis broke open on a post pattern over the middle of the field, but Ash underthrew him, re- sulting in an interception. The throw wasn’t far be- hind Davis, but the small mistake epitomized Ash’s and the Longhorns’ day. TCU capitalized. The Horned Frogs worked a physical and persistent 94- yard drive, their longest of the season, completing a fourth-down conversion by pounding away at the Long- horns up the middle. The Longhorns were in the red zone on their next drive, but a dropped pass by Ryan Roberson, on what would have been a first-down conversion, forced the Long- horns to settle for a field goal. It wasn’t a turnover, but it might as well have been. Though the Longhorns moved the ball well, they were able to produce only a single touchdown in four trips to the red zone. “Crucial mistakes in the red zone that really hurt us in the long run and killed morale a little bit,” offensive lineman Trey Hopkins said. “It just put us in bad spots.” Ash’s biggest mistake of the game came on a late second quarter drive with Texas down, 7-3. After Johnathan Gray was stuffed on first down, Ash looked for Mike Davis streak- ing across the middle. But he didn’t see safety Elisha Ola- bode jumping the route and was intercepted again. The play earned Ash a seat on the sidelines for the rest of the quarter, as McCoy entered to finish the half. “It kills you when you throw interceptions,” Brown said. “It really kills you in the red zone.” Ash returned, but only led Texas to three points over the next 20 minutes. With 10 min- utes left, McCoy entered the game and provided a spark. He led the Longhorns on their only touchdown drive, capped off by Jeremy Hills’ eight-yard rushing score. “Case had a little bit more drive [than David],” Gray said. “He got the guys going and told us ‘Hey, the game’s not over, we can still make plays.’” The defense forced a quick three-and-out on TCU’s next possession, giving Texas and McCoy a second straight op- portunity to make a magical comeback — McCoy led the Longhorns on a last minute drive to beat Texas A&M last Thanksgiving. McCoy scrambled for 13 yards on the first play of Texas’ last drive. On the next play, the gunslinger scrambled right, left and then right again. Mc- Coy lobbed the ball deep downfield into a sea of mostly purple and white, throwing his first interception of the year. It was Texas’ fourth turn- over of the night, and an anti- climactic end to what would’ve been a legendary moment. “Case came in and had that fire in his eyes,” Hopkins said. “I definitely thought we were going to pull that one out.” The loss put a sour taste on senior night and elimi- nated any possibility of a BCS Bowl for Texas. “The loss leaves a really bad taste in our mouths,” guard Mason Walters said. “We’re doing a lot of things right now that are good during the week. We just need to show up on game day.” The Longhorns’ trip to Maui wasn’t a total bust. Texas was able to fend off a short-handed Mississippi State team this past Wednes- day, earning a 69-55 win over the Bulldogs. Sheldon McClellan led Texas with 19 points off the bench and freshman center Cameron Ridley nearly recorded his first career double-double with eight points and a season- high 12 rebounds. Ridley also added five blocks and three steals, rounding out a productive night for the big man. Texas led for much of the game, going up by as much as 18 points in the first half, and finished shooting 50 percent from the field as a team. The Longhorns con- nected on more than half of their three-point attempts, but did struggle to make free throws, as evidenced by their 7-of-16 showing from the line. Despite showing signs of progress against an ailing Bulldog squad, some habits were a little harder for the Horns to kick. Following a disturbing trend in the early goings of this season, the Longhorns turned the ball over 22 times against Mississippi State. Sophomore guard Julien Lewis, who con- tributed 15 points to the Longhorns’ total, had eight turnovers himself com- pared to just two assists. However, freshman point guard Javan Felix was able to get in a rhythm, dish- ing out seven assists and turning the ball over only twice. With no signs of sus- pended point guard Myck Kabongo coming back any time soon, Felix will have to continue to be judicious with the ball in order for Texas to improve. Texas may have won an- other messy game, but the Longhorns did an admi- rable job defensively, allow- ing the Bulldogs to make just a third of their shots as a team. Roquez Johnson led the way for the Bulldogs with 18 points, six rebounds and six steals, but there was little to show from the rest of the team. Despite its 3-2 record, Texas has held its oppo- nents to 33 percent shoot- ing through five games. By Nick CremonaMEN’S BASKETBALLHorns beat Bulldogs in MauiFROGScontinues from page 6BCScontinues from page 1Sheldon McClellan Sophomore guardwhy texas wongame breakdownstock upEnemkpali and McGee-Stafford solid for TexasWOMEN’S BASKETBALLTexas scored points from every spot on the court on its way to a 94-58 victory over Central Connecticut. The Long- horns eclipsed the 90-point mark for the first time since December of 2011. Another dominating performance in the paint fueled the charge as the women outscored their opponents 42-12 in the low post. Head coach Karen Aston’s style of transition basketball was also successfully realized as the team scored 18 fast-break points while holding Central Connecticut to only two points in transition. Nneka En- emkpali recorded her fourth straight double-double of the season, finishing the game with 21 points and 10 rebounds. what’s nextThe Longhorns have showcased their offensive effi- ciency inside and outside on their way to a 4-0 start this season. The squad will return to get back to the practice floor for five days before its next battle against Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Nov. 30. —Matt WardenMcGee-Stafford saw her stock skyrocket after her 13 point, seven rebound and nine block performance. The nine blocks were the most recorded by a Longhorn since Ashley Gayle racked up 10 on December 28, 2010. After a double-double in her last game, the freshman showcased her prowess and potential on the defensive end to reveal herself as a player to watch for the rest of Texas’ season. With the frenzy of Black Friday deals and Cyber Monday zeal, it can be difficult to divert our at- tention to more charitable endeavors during the early parts of the holiday season. The UT Police Department is offering an opportunity with its annual toy col- lection program, Orange Santa, to help facilitate do- nations small and large for families in need. Using collection bins placed across campus, UTPD aims to gather hun- dreds of toys that are un- opened and unwrapped. Contributions made to all 30 collection stations, in- cluding parking garages, guard stations, Perry- Castañeda Library and the main building, will be dis- tributed to the children of students and faculty who are eligible. Gifted items are recom- mended for all ages under 17. Small electronics, jew- elry, sports equipment, in- struments and board games are among the many sug- gested contributions. Mon- etary donations may also be made through Orange Santa’s website or a check made out to the University of Texas. Throughout the years, the Orange Santa program has garnered a large number of benefactors around UT’s campus and Austin alike. From the University Co-op to the Walmart Foundation, 18 different charitable or- ganizations are chipping in by providing financial assis- tance to the event. Working alongside the Hispanic Fac- ulty and Staff Association, UTPD is able to provide a full-course meal to fami- lies in need, Darrell Hal- stead, an officer at UTPD who has participated in the program for several years now, said. “The best part of the whole thing is the look that the kids get in their eyes when we roll a brand new bike over to them,” Halstead said. “It’s fun to watch them become giddy and run around because they know they’re getting early Christmas presents.” Cash donations, toys and food will be made available to families in need at the Holiday Store, which will be set up in Bellmont Hall between Dec. 8 and 10. Al- though the deadline to ap- ply for participation in the Orange Santa program has passed, volunteers are still wanted at the Holiday Store between Dec. 6 and Dec. 10 to help assist shoppers and wrap gifts. Students inter- ested in getting involved may contact Kathy Fries, the volunteer organizer be- hind this concerted effort. “[Orange Santa] is one of the many things we do here to try and give back to the community a little bit. It gives people a chance to see the police department in a different light and per- sonally, being able to give back is why I love my job,” Halstead said. This upcoming Saturday will be the last opportunity for fans to gain free access to a UT sporting event by donating a gift to the Or- ange Santa toy drive. The UT men’s basketball team will take on UT Arlington in the Frank Erwin Cen- ter, although the time of the game has yet to be an- nounced. General dona- tions for the toy drive will conclude Dec. 7.8 Deliberate with Ease We rest our case. Making the decision to attend law school is huge. Finding the right fit makes everything easier. Our program offers: • an exceptional faculty • the best advocacy program in the nation• an award-winning legal research and writing program• a broad and flexible curriculum that includes extensive clinical skills programs• consistently affordable tuition rates • a helpful and knowledgeable staff• a downtown location in proximity to major law firms and corporations for enhanced job opportunities Deadline for fall 2013 admission is February 15, 2013 SOuth texaS COllege OF law/hOuStOn 713-646-1810 www.stcl.edu Houston’s Oldest Law SchoolUT2012loungerev.& Arts8Monday, November 26, 2012UTPD’s ‘Orange Santa’ collects toysBy Stuart RaileyTo add insult to the sexist injury, Beck and Parke ro- manticize a sexual encounter between 17-year-old Emme- line and George, a 30-year- old man she met before Da- vid. In some states, such a scenario is statutory rape, but Beck and Harriet describe the scene with phrases like “it was good to feel his breath on my neck” and “it was good to be paired with [George].” “Paired” is the word Beck and Parke use to refer to sex, which is never used a single time in the novel. The book has some rel- evance to Austin — maybe. In the afterword, Beck says that, on an unspecified date, Austin’s City Coun- cil unanimously adopted Agenda 21-friendly initia- tives. What these initia- tives are, or what they did, he does not specify or say. Beck is as sparse with de- tail in his afterword as he is throughout the rest of the book. “Agenda 21” paints a colorless, dull world with flat, stereotypical characters and the occasional offensive and sexist theme. Its conclu- sion resolves nothing and leaves readers with more questions than answers. and reply with whispers of their own. Whispers can be tagged with a location and organized by how close they were whispered to you. Whisper has found popu- larity on large college cam- puses throughout the country, such as Pennsylvania State University, Arizona State University and University of Florida. Whisper is not the first confessional social me- dia platform created for col- lege students. The Confes- sionals are forums created for students at colleges such as Oberlin College, Mount Holyoke College and Am- herst College. These forums were created as places to speak honestly and seek advice while remaining anonymous. Anonymity is key while using Whisper. Users can change the name they post their whispers under as many times as they please and even copy other whis- perers’ user names. The staff monitoring the Whisper feed deletes any posts that contain personal information such as full names, phone numbers or email addresses, Khush- boo Parmar, a UT Whisper representative, said. “We try to moderate as far as privacy goes,” Parmar said. “When we see some- thing that has someone’s personal information, we try to get that gone ASAP.” The anonymity of the app allows users to confess their deepest secrets, hopes, dreams and failures without having to identify themselves. Confess- ing these thoughts through Whisper provides relief and a sense of comfort without ex- posing users to judgment by their peers, Parmar said. “It’s to let them know that they’re not alone,” Parmar said. “To know that just be- cause you’re struggling, and it seems like everyone else is do- ing so great, that there’s some- one around you that’s feeling just the way you’re feeling.” While the app is intended to be a candid confessional for students, the feed is some- times flooded with mild statements similar to Face- book status updates — think something along the lines of “I’m so happy to be a Long- horn!” on a picture of the UT tower glowing orange. Whisperers often question the authenticity of some of the posts and worry that the app is being used as tepid social media rather than an unabashed, juicy confession- al. When asked via Whisper what whisperers thought of the app, one user said they “Don’t know if what I’m reading is a truth or a lie.” Another user found the app to be “annoying yet addictive.” But amidst these concerns there are still users that find the app to be an outlet to ex- press true inner feelings. A whisperer stated that, thanks to the app, “I think there’s a lot of horny, lonely, confused, de- pressed, angry, and did I men- tion horny people out there.” The use of an app like Whisper during college provides students with a new way to learn about themselves, Heyward said. “Very often the way we form opinions about our- selves is based on how we view ourselves in compari- son to our peers,” Heyward said. “We are now living in a time where people don’t form opinions about their peers through physical interaction but through curated profiles on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. People only put good things on those plat- forms, so everyone thinks ev- eryone else’s lives are perfect.” Whether Whisper is be- ing used as a place to seek support for an unrequited love or confess that, yes, you really do urinate in the shower, the app may be helping students feel a great- er connection to their peers. One whisperer summed this feeling up simply: “It makes me feel like maybe I’m not as different from everyone around me as I think.” WHISPER continues from page 10Hodge said. “These candy companies are just busi- nesses, right? But when something is no longer available it’s messing with someone’s childhood, mess- ing with their memories.” During Big Top’s first year, Hodge noticed a renaissance of sorts of bacon being used in candy. This gave Hodge the encouragement to take the risk of coating strips of bacon in chocolate. Oddly, he said the fattiness of the bacon melds with the choc- olate, creating a savory yet salty treat. Hodge believes every candy Big Top sells has a place in someone’s heart, and for that reason, he al- ways buys everything he can get his hands on. It’s important, he said, that the customers have every- thing they could want and continue to feel as young at heart as Hodge still feels. “I see it everyday at Big Top, customers coming in, seeing the looks on their faces when they realize something they thought they had lost isn’t gone anymore,” Hodge said. “[Candy] is history.” CAMPUSAgenda 21Authors: Glenn Beck and Harriet ParkeGenre: dystopian sci-fiPublisher: Threshold EditionsPages: 304UTPD’s Orange Santa Toy DriveWhere: UT Campus Collection StationsWhen: Nov. 26 - Dec. 7What’s needed: Unopened toys for children under 17 years of age. BIG TOP continues from page 10FUTURE continues from page 10Illustration by Holly Hansel | Daily Texan StaffPhoto courtesy of Whisper daily texan comicsCOMICS 1 Acad. or univ. 4 Starring role 8 Bieber with the 2010 hit “Baby” 14 Lyricist Gershwin15 Olympic event with electrified equipment16 Presume17 Lean-___ (temporary shelters) 18 Squeezing tool19 Not checked for speed20 It’s measured by polls23 Height: Prefix24 Home of the San Diego Padres27 Tank engine of children’s fiction30 “Never mind” 31 Some jeans33 Hurt35 Be fond of38 Dog’s bark39 Conqueror of the Incas44 Pro’s opposite45 Mexican snack46 Some cameras, for short47 Frankie Valli’s “___ Take My Eyes Off You” 49 Alphabetically first state: Abbr. 51 Seaport SE of Roma55 Traveler to Cathay59 Supply-and- demand subj. 60 Sting operative … or a hint to 20-, 24-, 39- and 55-Across63 Make obsolete66 Portent67 Actress Thurman68 Flies69 Festooned with bathroom tissue, informally70 Campus in Troy, N.Y. 71 Leather worker72 Sailors73 ___ Andreas faultDOWN 1 Decide against making any changes 2 Catcher’s stance 3 Company that makes Scrabble 4 Jeans maker Strauss 5 Awesome, in slang 6 Fable writer 7 Get worse, as losses 8 Month after mayo 9 Slangy request for a high-five10 Kind of cord or column11 Male turkey12 Suffix with expert13 Beatty of “Charlie Wilson’s War” 16 Frito-Lay product once sold in a 100% compostable bag21 The salesman in “Death of a Salesman” 22 Author Calvino25 Rump26 Deborah of “The King and I” 28 Bank holding: Abbr. 29 Sunni rival32 California’s second-busiest airport, after LAX34 Fugitives36 Pottery oven37 Poet Pound39 Media monitoring grp. 40 Move aimlessly41 26-Down’s role in “The King and I” 42 1950s TV innovation43 “___ our agreement …” 48 Whom “Dewey Defeats” in a classic Chicago Tribune headline50 “Little Women” author52 Takes place53 See 58-Down54 Hurting56 Bill worth 100 smackers57 More peculiar58 With 53-Down, Willy Wonka employee61 Swerve62 Finales63 Kellogg’s Cracklin’ ___ Bran64 The Cavaliers of the A.C.C. 65 Its atomic symbol is SnPuzzle by Joel FaglianoFor answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. 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. ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758596061626364656667686970717273DUMMYBAGSCAMSANYDAYNOWTONICWHOSHOTJRLYNCHNIPBRUISEARMSPERMAMTOOMOAOAFPEWBAWLQUOVADISMARATPUTTINONTHERITZLITESSTOODPATAVERASHPEIYERICIERANNESARFTHELOTUNHRIOTSRADIOCODEENORMSKINDIVERAGLEYENSENADAThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Monday, November 26, 2012Edited by Will ShortzNo. 1022ComicsMonday, November 26, 20129Today’s solution will appear here tomorrowArrr matey. This scurrvy beast is today’s answerrrrrr. SUDOKUFORYOUSUDOKUFORYOU t1 3 2 4 5 8 7 9 64 8 6 7 9 1 5 2 37 5 4 8 6 3 2 7 95 1 4 8 6 3 2 7 96 2 7 5 4 9 8 3 13 9 8 1 7 2 4 6 59 7 5 6 1 4 3 8 22 4 3 9 8 5 6 1 78 6 1 2 3 7 9 5 41 1 2 3 6 8 2 3 4 64 9 88 9 7 5 2 16 1 7 4 7 3 2 8 6 9 7 2 The Record is a biweekly segment dedicated to featuring the people and traditions that make The University of Texas such a distinct place. Behind the sideshow cur- tain, the fruity mixture of taffy lingers in the air and the sounds of prewar music fill the room. All the while, cus- tomers experience fantastical moments upon realizing the candy of their childhood, in- deed, still exists. “We go for a total visual overstimulation, kind of like the circus really,” Brandon Hodge, 37-year-old owner of Big Top Candy Shop, said. “Everything is intentional.” Hodge was inspired by a tiny bulk candy shop he vis- ited in San Francisco to open a candy shop of his own on South Congress. From painting the gold and red stripes on the walls, and converting the instru- ments on display, to hand- placing the posters, Hodge was deeply involved with the store’s creation. He said it was important to him that the store has a childlike in- nocence behind the “side- show curtain.” “I don’t feel I’ve matured much since about 17,” Hodge said. “I think there’s some- thing about this city that keeps you young and just the fact that I’m surrounded by toys and candy all day.” Prior to opening Big Top in 2007, Hodge worked at local toy store Lone Star Illusions while he attended UT. This opportu- nity, he said, helped him gain invaluable business experience and ignited his passion for the toys of his youth once again. Hodge hoped that by open- ing a candy store in the same vicinity as Monkey See, Mon- key Do, the neighboring toy store that opened in 2005, foot traffic would bring cus- tomers to both stores. “We had a customer come in who was 82-years-old and he said, ‘I used to buy one Good News bar a week, every week; and I haven’t seen one of these in 20 years,’” Hodge said. “He told us he would be in here every week after that.” Built around Hodge’s fascination with the circus and his childhood dream of running away to play in the circus band, Big Top has an undeniable three-ring ambi- ance. All of Big Top’s prices end in seven, for no particu- lar reason. As far as hours are concerned, they’re open until they close. Blakesley King, a 23-year- old employee who has worked at Big Top for four years, came to Austin without a job when she walked by Big Top to get some truffels. “I instantly smelled like sug- ar for about a week,” King said as she scooped strawberry ice cream. “Sometimes my boy- friend will give me a hug and tell me I still smell like sugar.” Despite being a shopkeeper at Big Top, Hodge insists he never really ate that much candy. However, he managed to keep up with the trends in the candy industry. “I would buy a pack of base- ball cards, not because I col- lected baseball cards, not that I cared one whit about baseball, but I knew that it had that re- ally crappy, chalky gum in it,” Hodge said. “Even though you could buy a pack of Juicy Fruit or a pack of Big Red, there was something about the crumbly, odd texture. It was like chewing on linoleum tile or something, but I appreciated it.” In addition to baseball card gum, Hodge has always liked Blow Pops, recalling how during his childhood he would take a hammer to the lollipop just to reach the bubblegum center. Hodge also recalls As- tro Pops and Sixlets being some of his favorite candies to enjoy, especially during the summer. Luckily for Big Top, Hodge believes there has been a reviv- al in the retro, nostalgic candy from his childhood and has made a conscious effort to have these sweets in his store. “I always make the joke that it’s people’s childhoods at stake, because it’s true,” McKinney, Life & Arts Editor Life & Arts10Monday, November 26, 2012Illustration by Andrea Macias-Jimenez | Daily Texan StaffBrandon Hodge’s Big Top Candy Shop, located at 1706 South Congress Ave., is heavily inspired by circus culture. In addition to innumerable varieties of candy, many of them regional, the walls of the shop are lined with vintage side-show posters and intricate steampunk gadgets made by the owner. By Lindsey ChernerBOOK REVIEW | ‘AGENDA 21’ Photo courtesy of Glenn BeckGlenn Beck addresses a crowd of con- servative sup- porters in Dallas, Texas earlier this year in October. Beck’s latest novel, “Agenda 21,” is about a dystopian future where the United States is under a dictatorship. Glenn Beck’s “Agenda 21” is set in an undated but futuristic totalitarian United States. Unfortunate- ly, the book offers nothing new to the dystopian genre and is cliched. The novel is authored by well-known conserva- tive talk show host Glenn Beck and registered nurse Harriet Parke. It is titled after the United Nation’s Agenda 21, an action plan that was created for future urban development that aims to be sustainable. Tea Party and Republican Par- ty members have criticized Agenda 21 as entrenching upon property rights. Beck and Parke take their criti- cism of the United Nations to an extreme, arguing that Agenda 21 will result in the complete collapse of democracy and freedom and will create a dictator- ship-ruled society similar to George Orwell’s “1984.” Unlike Orwell’s “1984,” the world presented to readers in Agenda 21 is boring and flat. The nar- ration follows the life of a young woman in two dif- ferent confinement camps, or “compounds,” that are identical to each other. The Central Authority rules the lives of the people in the Republic, where people live in undecorated, gray “living spaces,” work dull jobs and eat “food cubes” as their only reward. Citizens’ lives are monitored by the Au- thority Figures, Enforcers and Gatekeepers. It is clear Beck and Parke did not stretch any imagi- native muscles. The details they give their readers are stale and sparse. “Agenda 21” does not have Orwell’s imagination or his brilliance. The only new technologies Beck and Parke bring to the world are energy-garnering treadmills and bikes that cit- izens use every day to make energy for the Republic. This pales in comparison to the horrifying torture meth- ods Orwell described in terrifying detail. The most disappointing aspect of the novel is its main character, a young woman named Emmeline. Her nar- rative voice belongs to a 12-year-old even though she is 17. In a style eerily simi- lar to the anti-feminist Bella Swan of “Twilight,” Emme- line depends on the adults and men in her life for nearly everything. She quickly falls for the attractive David, a gatekeeper who is actually a good guy and is nothing more than a handsome, strong shoulder to cry on. By Bobby BlanchardSCIENCE & TECHNOLOGYiPhone users whispersecrets with new appMost people would not dream of confessing their crushes in a Facebook status or tweeting about their latest sexual escapades, but they are more than happy to whisper about them. The Whisper iPhone app allows students to anonymously confess what’s really been on their minds. “We developed Whisper as a reaction to the current social networking options,” Michael Heyward, one of the app’s developers, said. “Platforms like Facebook and Twitter are great, but they aren’t necessar- ily always authentic. People use social networking to show others a perfect version of themselves. We wanted to de- velop a platform that allowed people to communicate in a uniquely authentic manner and be who they really are.” In addition to posting secrets anonymously, users can also “ME2!” others’ posts, which is akin to “liking” on Facebook, By Elizabeth WilliamsPhoto courtesy of WhisperWith the Whisper app, users post revealing messages anonymously. Glenn Beck’s dystopian future lacks depthFUTURE continues on page 8BIG TOP continues on page 8‘‘“I don’t feel I’ve matured much since about 17. I think there’s something about this city that keeps you young and just the fact that I’m surrounded by toys and candy all day.” — Brandon Hodges, owner of Big Top Candy ShopWHISPER continues on page 8