THE DAILY TEXAN Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900 Tuesday, September 11, 2012@thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan Editor’s Note: In preparation for our facelift, we regret to inform you The Daily Texan’s website will be down until late afternoon today. We apologize for any inconvenience. INSIDE 4 opinion A medical school in the Valley is a boon for Texas. 5 news Learn how UT Athletics is encouraging good attendance from AISD employees. 6 sports Kenny Vaccaro sounds off on the noise in DKR and heading on the road for the first time. 10 life&arts “The library will be closing...” sometime after you read our interview with the Voice of the PCL. 9/11 Memorial Events Austin Fire Department 7:30 a.m. Memorial services will be held at Buford Tower on West Ceaser Chavez and Colorado Streets. 10 a.m. Firefighters will climb a drill tower on 517 South Pleasant Valley Road to replicate emergency responders climbing up the World Trade Center. Manchaca Patriot Day Ceremony Noon The guest speaker is Warren Weilder, Austin Fire Department battalion chief at 12921 Lowden Lane. TODAY Future of Data Analytics lecture Niklas Elmqvist of Purdue University’s School of Electrical and Computer engineering will be giving a talk called “Analytics Anywhere, Anytime: Supporting Ubiquitous Sensemaking” at the UT Administration Building’s Large Conference Room (UTA 5.522) at 3:15 p.m. “The Yellow Birds” The launch of UT alumnus Kevin Power’s fictional novel inspired by his service in the Iraq war will be celebrated at Lambert’s Downtown Barbecue from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. RSVP at texasmonthly.com/rsvp/ kevinpowers. Emily + And’s Film Club Screenings of queer, transgressive, feminist, avant-garde, boring and amazing cinematic achievements in conjunction with Roysdon’s exhibition at the Art Building’s (ART) Visual Arts Center will exhibit from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Ex-Green Beret Boyer inspires teammates SPORTS PAGE 6 Tango club helps students step up their game LIFE&ARTS PAGE 10 FOOTBALL COLUMN Aggies curiously claim extra championships By Christian Corona Sports Editor When he heard Texas A&M had retroactively claimed national titles from the 1919 and 1927 seasons, junior guard Mason Walters did what many people did when they heard the news — he laughed. “Oh, so like before Prohibition?” Walters joked. “I’m just going to wish A&M luck in UNIVERSITY | 9/11 the SEC, and I hope they do well. I’m going to read up on that because I haven’t seen it yet. I don’t have an opinion.” Walters is actually half right. e rst of those retroactively claimed national championships actually came during a season that happened before the Prohibition era, which lasted from 1920 to 1933 in the United States — proving how laughable the notion of retroactively claiming national titles actually is. By claiming those national titles, the Aggies proved why Texas and everyone else in the Big 12 is better without them. Using A&M’s method of crediting itself with every national title that any organization has ever given it credit for, Texas could more than double the number of championships it has. 1939 1919 1927 1963 1969 1970 2005 1914 1941 1968 1977 1981 University of Texas at Austin Texas A&M University CURRENT POTENTIAL NATIONAL TITLES: UP FOR GRABS? Before Texas A&M retroactively claimed national titles from 1919 and 1927, it had recognized just one championship, from 1939. Texas, who has won four titles, could retroactively claim five more. A&M continues on page 8 Graphic by Natasha Smith | Daily Texan Staff Impact felt 11 years later Attack on twin towers continues to inuence academia, enrollment By David Maly More than a decade aer the world-changing 9/11 attacks, the UT community continues to see the devastation of that day seriously affect its campus, down to the classes the University oers. With the horror and destruction of 9/11 also came analyses by Americans of how to combat a new threat. Questions were asked, studies conducted and conclusions drawn. omas Palaima, classics professor and Middle Eastern studies expert, said it was discovered that the U.S. government, a government that spends more money on military defense than any other nation in the world, was ill-equipped to deal with con icts in the Middle East. “One of the problems with 9/11 was that one found out that we did not even have, even in the specialized areas of the government and the military, the number of experts in Middle Eastern culture and languages that we should,” Palaima said. He said in response to the lack of qualied military personnel, UT and many other universities across the country soon began to adjust their curricula, increasing the size and strength of their Middle Eastern studies programs. He said the increased focus on the Middle East did not spill over to interest in other cultural studies programs. “It would be good if we applied the same concern Illustration by Collin Zelinksi | Daily Texan Staff across the board in other artal resources have shied and a subsequent unbalanced shi eas, and I just don’t see that,” ultimately decreased. Should in academics. Palaima said. the U.S. come into conict Kristen Brustad, depart- Palaima said he believes the with certain other parts of the ment chair of Middle Eastern focus on Middle Eastern stud-world, Palaima said the U.S. studies and associate profesies has actually decreased the could end up in a situation sor of Arabic, said she has overall size of ethnic studies similar to that aer 9/11, with programs nationwide, as to-a lack of expert personnel and 9/11 continues on page 2 Muslim group holds campus blood drive By Sebastian Herrera In an attempt to give back to the public and spread a peaceful image of Islam, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Student Organization held a blood drive Monday on the eve of the 11th anniversary of 9/11. e organization invited students to donate blood on campus and learn about the organization’s eorts to correct stereotypes about the Muslim community. e blood drive took place on Speedway near the McCombs School of Business and Gregory Gymnasium. e organization has been hosting blood drives since last year in an attempt to honor 9/11 victims by giving blood to save lives. Ahmadiyya Muslim Student Organization President Usama Malik said this campaign is a peaceful and intellectual way to spread the message of Islam. “Muslims for Life is a campaign that was started by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA last year on the 10th anniversary of the tragic Sept. 11 attacks,” Malik said. “is campaign was founded with the objective of promoting the true, peaceful message of Islam, condemning terrorism and saving lives.” Since its inception in 1889, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has expanded across BLOOD continues on page 2 For additional 9/11-related stories: World & Nation page 3 ‘No politicians to speak at ground zero’ | Sports page 6 ‘From battlefied to gridiron’ NATIONAL Minnesota cites same-sex study By David Maly A UT associate professor’s controversial research is again stirring debate, this time in Minnesota, where it is being used to defend a proposed ban on gay marriage. Minnesota for Marriage, an anti-gay marriage advocacy organization, has taken the highly criticized gay parenting study produced by UT associate sociology professor Mark Regnerus and made it a focal point in its campaign for the proposed ban’s passage. e proposed ban comes in the form of an amendment to the Minnesota constitution and is set to appear on the state’s Nov. 6 ballot. e proposed ammendment states that “Only a union of one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Minnesota.” Although same-sex marriage is not currently recognized under Minnesota state law, supporters of the amendment say it will make it harder to legalize in the future. A video published by the Minnesota organization cites statistics from Regnerus’ study stating that children raised by gay parents are at a signicant disadvantage when compared to those raised by heterosexual parents, for multiple reasons. “ey are 10 times more likely to have been touched sexually by an adult, four times more likely to have been forced to have sex Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to provide that only a union of one man and ‘ ‘‘ one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Minnesota? Minnesota Same-Sex Marriage Amendment that will appear on the Nov. 6 ballot against their will, 30 percent less likely to identify themselves as being heterosexual, three times more likely to have had an aair, four times STUDY continues on page 2 CAMPUS Suspect pulls re alarms in 8 buildings on campus Zachary Strain | Daily Texan Staff Austin Fire Lieutenant Brooks Frederick, UT Fire Prevention Safety Specialist II Roosevelt Easley and Safety Specialist I Francisco Gutierrez exchange information after fire alarms were set off in 8 UT buildings Monday afternoon. Check out this blog post for bit.ly/Qal9Dv photos of suspect. ALARMS continues on page 2 the United States, with student and non-student organizations located from Orlando, Fla., to Seattle, Wash. Its 1-year-old Muslims for Life campaign has encouraged its local chapters, including the one here at UT, to hold blood drives. With the Ahmadiyya Muslim Student Organization collecting 28 pints of blood and receiving help from 33 volunteers in the last drive, Malik said he and his fellow club members feel con dent that the drive helps spread their message. Andrea Lloyd, marketing manager of  e Blood Center of Central Texas, which helped coordinate the event, said the blood center is enthusiastic about any time it can partner with student organizations that help their community. “We are supportive of their desire to give back to the community in the form of blood donation,” Lloyd said. A er giving blood Monday, economics junior Julie Weltman said she agrees with the organization’s goals and motivations for hosting the blood drive. “I think it is great that they are reaching out and helping people while trying to get a better [reputation] for the Muslim community. I don’t think it’s fair that we judge the Muslim community, and so I think what they are doing is a good act and worth noting.” For those who haven’t attended, the next drive is set for next Monday, Sept. 17 from noon to 5 p.m. at the same location. 2 News Tuesday, September 11, 2012 breckenridge www.ubski.com 1-800-ski-wild • 1-800-754-9453 college ski & board week Vail • Beaver Creek • Keystone • Arapahoe Basin 20 Mountains. 5 Resorts. 1 Price. plus t/s From only THE DAILY TEXAN Volume 113, Issue 20 Main Telephone: (512) 471-4591 Editor: Susannah Jacob (512) 232-2212 editor@dailytexanonline.com Managing Editor: Aleksander Chan (512) 232-2217 managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.com News Offi ce: (512) 232-2207 news@dailytexanonline.com Multimedia Offi ce: (512) 471-7835 dailytexanmultimedia@gmail. com Sports Offi ce: (512) 232-2210 sports@dailytexanonline.com Life & Arts Offi ce: (512) 232-2209 dailytexan@gmail.com Retail Advertising: (512) 471-1865 joanw@mail.utexas.edu Classifi ed Advertising: (512) 471-5244 classifi eds@dailytexanonline. com CONTACT US COPYRIGHT Copyright 2012 Texas Student Media. 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Ryan Sanchez Associate Web Editors, Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Helen Fernandez, Omar Longoria Editorial Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Doug Warren Date of Publication Space Deadline Camera-ready Art Due 11 a.m. Monday Tuesday Friday 9/11 continues from page 1 ALARMS continues from page 1 UT Police Department said witnesses reported a suspect pulling fire alarms across campus Monday afternoon, which resulted in eight on-campus building evacuations. According to interviews with witnesses, UTPD spokesperson Cindy Posey said the suspect is either white or Hispanic and is in his 30s. She said he was wearing a white T-shirt with writing on it, bluejean shorts, a religious necklace and a black hat with red trim. Posey also said he is around 5-feet- 5-inches tall, weighs 180 pounds and has short black hair. Posey said no emergencies were confirmed, but as of Monday night UTPD was not ready to confirm that all the alarms were false. Monday evening, The Daily Texan obtained security camera photos of the suspect from UTPD. The photos are available for viewing online. Posey said students are encouraged to call the police if they see someone matching the suspect’s description or the security camera photos. BLOOD continues from page 1 STUDY continues from page 1 Pearce Murphy | Daily Texan Staff Freshmen Stephen Armstrong and Sergio Rodriguez participate in the blood drive hosted by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Student Organization on Speedway on Monday afternoon. MONDAY MORNING’S MEMORIAL Pearce Murphy | Daily Texan Staff Army ROTC cadets take part in a memorial for UT student Bradford Killen on Monday morning. Killen died in June while on a Maymester study abroad trip in the Czech Republic. seen growth in her department because of 9/11. “ e number of Arabic majors went up fairly dramatically over these last ten years,” she said. “We now have the largest graduate program in the country in terms of Arabic studies. It used to be only the large universities had an Arabic program, but now, it is small colleges and community colleges as well, and now a number of our graduates are teaching in those schools.” According to statistics from UT’s o ce of institutional research, the number of students enrolled in the Middle Eastern studies department at UT increased by 97.67 percent, when comparing 2002 fall enrollment with fall enrollment from 2011.  at included a 52 percent increase in the number of undergraduates, bringing the number of students from 25 to 38.  ere was an 80 percent increase in the number of students pursuing a master’s degree, from 10 to 18. And there was a 262.5 percent increase in the number of Ph.D. candidates, from 8 to 29.  e same statistics for the departments of Slavic and Eurasian studies and Spanish and Portuguese show a 37.04 percent decline, from 27 to 17, and a 40 percent decline, from 440 to 264, in total Spanish and Portuguese enrollment respectively. Palaima said a replicate situation took place in the U.S. following the Cold War, where Russian studies were escalated as U.S.-Soviet con ict grew. “It is a very similar situation,” Palaima said. Brustad said, luckily, one thing that has not seemed to change at UT is the tolerant atmosphere for Middle Eastern students. “Recently, I would say not at UT, but at the climate at large, I hear a lot more negative rhetoric in the public discourse at large,” Brustad said. “Former students of mine from before I came to UT, where I taught before, who now work for the government have even been attacked because they are Muslim or Arabic.” Mai Khattab, a member of UT’s Arab student association, said she has seen that acceptance while at UT for the last two years. “For us, as Arabs here at UT, we are treated just like any other group,” Khattab said. “We have never had anyone be o ensive and treat us badly or anything.” more likely to currently be on public assistance and nearly four times more likely to have been on welfare while growing up,” the video stated.  e academic community has criticized Regnerus’ study since its release in June because of the research methods used.  e study compares the children of heterosexual couples with children who, for the most part, were not raised by same-sex couples in a committed relationship. For example, the child of a “lesbian mother” could be used as a test subject in the study if the mother had been in a relationship with another woman at any point a er having a child, regardless of the length of the relationship and the role of the other woman in raising the child. Social Science Research, the journal that originally published Regnerus’ study, ordered a member of its editorial board, Darren Sherkat, a sociology professor at Southern Illinois University, to conduct an audit of the study. Sherkat and other opponents of the study say they believe it was created with a political agenda in order to raise public support for antigay marriage initiatives. “ e entire purpose of the Regnerus study was to manipulate public opinion against civil rights for sexual minorities,” Sherkat said. Richard Bellamy, UT law student and member of OUTlaw, the gay, lesbian, transgender, queer and bisexual law school alliance organization, said he hopes he will see more response from the UT community in the near future as the study is increasingly used for political means. “ e University of Texas is a diverse community of students and faculty that have the power to counteract the potential impact on marriage equality and show the country that the University is not as out-of-touch as this makes it seem,” Bellamy said. “We can mitigate the impact of this study on equality and UT’s reputation by getting out there to develop support for equality in Minnesota, since apparently the administration is content with how things are.”  e University announced last month it would not conduct an investigation into Regnerus’ study, as there was no evidence of scienti c misconduct. — Mai Khattab UT Arab student association member For us, as Arabs here at UT, we are treated just like any other group. ‘‘ FOR WEB EXCLUSIVE STORIES VIDEOS PHOTO GALLERIES & MORE @dailytexanonline.com TENNIS IS NEVER FUN ALONE Photo credit: John T. Dennis By Bobby Blanchard Work for us The Daily Texan will be holding tryouts for all departments from Aug. 29 to Sept. 12. Come by our offices in HSM building at 2500 Whitis Ave to pick up an application. UT students from all majors are encouraged to apply. World & Nation Riley Brands, Wire Editor3Tuesday, September 11, 2012 NEWS BRIEFLY Rebel deserter frees hostage in Colombia BOGOTA, Colombia — A deserter from Colombia’s National Liberation Army has led an Ecuadoran hostage to freedom. Colombian rebel groups have often used kidnappings to finance their operations through ransoms or to hold captives as bargaining chips. The rebel, whose name was not released, led Orlando Sigifredo Ibarra Sarmiento to troops in southwestern Colombia, the navy said in a communique Monday. Libyan ex-officials face charges TRIPOLI, Libya — Two former senior Libyan officials are on trial accused of squandering $2.7 billion in public money meant to compensate families of those killed in the Lockerbie bombing. The 1988 bombing was one of the deadliest attacks on an airliner in modern history, killing all 259 people on board and 11 on the ground. Defendant Abdul-Ati al- Obeidi was the regime’s foreign minister while Mohammed Zaway served as head of the national legislature under Moammar Gadhafi. The two officials denied the charges. London holds parade to mark end of Games LONDON — Royal Air Force jets streaked through the sky above Buckingham Palace, leaving a red, white and blue trail of smoke as gold, silver and bronze medals gleamed below. For the final extravaganza in an extraordinary summer in London, an estimated 1 million flag-waving Britons toasted the sporting heroes who have reawakened a re- cession-hit nation. A party a decade in the making was coming to an end. And the athletes could hardly believe it as the parade of floats that had weaved through the cheering streets pulled up in front of Queen Elizabeth II’s residence. “Every street you passed, you could see the masses disappearing into the horizon — phenomenal,” said six-time Olympic champion cyclist Chris Hoy. “Eventually it has to come to an end and that’s the hard part. There is a tinge of sadness ... I will never be able to top this.” South African labor unrest spreads MARIKANA, South Africa — Chanting miners wielding machetes, clubs and spears marched from shaft to shaft of South Africa’s beleaguered Lonmin platinum mine Monday, trying to intimidate the few workers who reported for duty in the fourth week of a crippling strike whose impact has already included dozens of miners killed by police. London-registered Lon- min PLC had hoped many more miners would come to work since a peace accord was signed last week with three major unions. But it was rejected by a breakaway union and nonunion strikers. Meanwhile, labor unrest spread in the country, with an illegal strike by more than 10,000 workers halting operations at the west section of Gold Fields International’s KDC gold mine. — Compiled from Associated Press Reports No politicians to speak at ground zero By Jenifer Peltz Associated Press NEW YORK — The Sept. 11 anniversary ceremony at ground zero has been stripped of politicians this year. But can it ever be stripped of politics? For the first time, elected officials won’t speak Tuesday at an occasion that has allowed them a solemn turn in the spotlight. The change was made in the name of sidelining politics, but some have rapped it as a political move in itself. It’s a sign of the entrenched sensitivity of the politics of Sept. 11, even after a decade of commemorating the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people. From the first anniversary in 2002, the date has been limned with questions about how — or even whether — to try to separate the Sept. 11 that is about personal loss from the 9/11 that reverberates through public life. The answers are complicated for Debra Burlingame, whose brother Charles was the pilot of the hijacked plane that crashed into the Pentagon. “It is the one day, out of 365 days a year, where, when we invoke the term ‘9/11,’ we mean the people who died and the events that happened,” rather than the political and cultural layers the phrase has accumulated, said Burlingame, who’s on the board of the organization that announced the change in plans this year. “So I think the idea that it’s even controversial that politicians wouldn’t be speaking is really rather remarkable.” Officeholders from the mayor to presidents have been heard at the New York ceremony, reading texts ranging from parts of the DeclarationofIndependence and the Gettysburg Address to poems by John Donne and Langston Hughes. But in July, the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum announced that this year’s version would in clude only relatives reading victims’ names. The point, memorial President Joe Daniels said, was “honoring the victims and their families in a way free of politics” in an election year. Some victims’ relatives and commentators praised the decision. “It is time” to extricate Sept. 11 from politics, the Boston Globe wrote in an editorial. But others said keeping politicians off the rostrum smacked of ... politics. The move came amid friction between the memorial foundation and the governors of New York and New Jersey over progress on the memorial museum. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, have signaled their displeasure by calling on federal officials to give the memorial a financial and technical hand. Some victims’ relatives see THROUGH JANUARY 6 21st and Guadalupe Streets The University of Texas Campus Free admission, donations welcome www.hrc.utexas.edu 512-471-8944 Drawn from Norman Bel Geddes’s extensive archive housed at the Harry Ransom Center, the exhibition explores this innovative designer’s futuristic and streamlined concepts and his impact on modern American society. Follow us at http://twitter.com/ransomcenter and become a fan at www.facebook.com/ransomcenter. Allan Tannenbaum |Associated Press In this Sept. 11, 2011 file photo, former U.S. President George W. Bush addresses those attending the 10th anniversary commemora- tion of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. the no-politicians anniversary Riches. His firefighter son aided victims’ families and ceremony as retaliation.and namesake was killed people sickened by working “Banning the governors of responding to the burning at ground zero. New York and New Jersey World Trade Center. With politicians excluded, from speaking is the ultimate To Riches, political lead-“the 9/11 families are hav political decision,” said one ers’ presence shows a na-ing to turn their backs on relatives’ group, led by re-tion’s respect and recognizes the people who helped us so tired Deputy Fire Chief Jim their role in passing laws that much,” he said. www.ppdi.com • 462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study information Current Research Opportunities 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. 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Fri. 12 Oct. through Sun. 14 Oct. Opinion Editor-in-Chief Susannah Jacob4Tuesday, September 11, 2012 Viewpoint Medical schools are a boon to Texas On Aug. 17, UT System Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa unveiled plans to establish a medical school in the Rio Grande Valley. That announcement was news to most Texans, but Valley residents and politicians knew the news followed years of their lobbying and planning. The “medical school blueprint,” which explains how the Valley school will operate, does not specifically indicate how it will be funded. Instead, the purpose of the blueprint is to signal in no uncertain terms the UT System’s intention to establish a permanent medical presence in the Valley. On May 3, the regents announced plans to open a new medical school in Austin. And while it may seem unwise to invest in two medical schools costing hundreds of millions of dollars each at a time when every other news story about higher education focuses on its skyrocketing cost or plunging operating funds, the two schools are smart investments in the future of UT and this state. Texas’ relatively low unemployment figures have attracted people in search of jobs from across the country. While the shiny new apartment towers rising up just blocks away from campus in downtown are a testament to Austin’s ability to attract a highly skilled, relatively wealthy workforce, the state’s fastest growing region is the less affluent Lower Rio Grande Valley, where average incomes are only slightly more than half of the state’s average income. According to State Senator Eddie Lucio, Jr., a politician from Brownsville who has been working to establish a medical school in the Lower Valley region for years, residents in his senatorial district suffer from higher rates of diabetes, cancer and obesity than other Texans. Due to lack of access to advanced medical facilities, and the region’s endemic poverty, many Valley residents’ medical conditions go untreated or under-treated. The establishment of a medical school in the Valley will help to improve the situation not only by providing a place for Valley residents to seek treatment, but also by graduating physicians and surgeons who will practice in the area. According to the Texas Medical Association, the state reports a ratio of only 157 doctors per 100,000 residents, far below the 220 doctors per 100,000 reported for the nation. Texas’ ratio is not likely to improve as more people move to the state. Many of those new Texans are taking low-wage jobs that do not provide health insurance. Without the ability to train more doctors and keep them in the regions of the state where the need for their services is most urgent, Texas could fall even further behind in national health rankings. Because doctors tend to stay in the communities where they complete their residency programs, the addition of a medical school will mean a welcome influx of physicians to the Valley region. While Austin enjoys a robust health care infrastructure compared to the Valley’s, the city and UT students will still benefit from the development of a leading medical school and associated research hospital. The school will not only increase access to health care for residents of the Central Texas region who travel to Austin for advanced medical treatment, but will also replace the aging and overtaxed facilities at University Medical Center – Brackenridge. Ad- gallery ‘ ‘‘Despite the cost, medical schools in Austin and in the Valley will improve the health and competitiveness of the state. ditionally, among the fifteen highest-ranked universities in the country, UT Austin is only one of four without an associated medical school in the same city. The addition of such a facility would build on the university’s existing relationship with the Dell Pediatric Research Institute, and would serve to strengthen UT’s already highly ranked nursing, pharmacy, biology and education programs. As students interested in boosting the prestige of our degrees and as Texans concerned with the future competitiveness and well-being of our fellow Texans, we all ought to champion efforts to establish the schools. The support of the Board of Regents is an important step forward, but several questions remain to be answered, particularly regarding how the schools will be funded. Austin voters will face this question in the Nov. 6 elections when they will decide whether or not to approve a multi-million dollar bond issue to help to fund a medical school and research hospital in Austin. Despite the cost, medical schools in Austin and the Valley will improve the health and competitiveness of the state. Write for the Texan Your Name Here DailyTexan Columnist The Daily Texan Editorial Board is currently accepting applications for columnists and cartoonists through Thursday, September 13. We’re looking for talented writers and artists to provide as much diversity of opinion as possible. Anyone and everyone is encouraged to apply. Writing for the Texan is a great way to get your voice heard. Our columnists’ and reporters’ work is often syndicated nationwide, and every issue of the Texan is a historical document archived at the Center for American History. A copy of the Texan runs across UT President William Powers’ desk each day, and the opinions on this page have great potential to affect University policy. It’s no rare occurrence for Texan staff members to receive feedback from local or state officials, or to be contacted by a reader whose life was changed by an article. In such instances, the power of writing for the Texan becomes real, motivating our staffers to provide the best public service possible. If interested, please come to the Texan office at 25th and Whitis streets to complete an application form and sign up for an interview time. If you have any additional questions, please contact Susannah Jacob at (512) 471-5084 or editor@dailytexanonline.com. firing line Snooty & snobbish I had to read today’s editorial several times, jumping around from one paragraph to another, to make sure that what was rolling before my eyes was correct. Really, I couldn’t and still can’t believe it all — what the new College of Communication building has done to you and to the much beloved The Daily Texan at the Belo Center where they don’t want any trash? I am retired U.T. staff and have long been a loyal fan of The Daily Texan. Without it, students would surely have far less in so many ways, no matter what others around here think. There is nothing like having a hard copy in one’s hands. Life evolves each day. There is such thing as evolution and we are in the midst of one of those transition zones from one world to another, though I can’t really fathom a world that is pure cyber that one can not touch. We need as many places and opportunities where we can publish, show and print our work — all of this is called communication. I was and am shocked that the new folks and colleagues have treated you in such a fashion which seems kind of snooty & snobbish. It’s not a warm gesture of welcome, but it seems that this is the path that many are taking here in Austin and around our country. Some of those who think and act this way seem to be taking one giant leap that direction; they are forgetting some of their roots or those of others. I can say that many places were a tad friendlier and more diplomatic in the past. In the meanwhile, I am glad that you have taken a good, firm stand, and your title is right or ‘spot’ on ‘da target. Please keep your loyal, ardent and dedicated groupie reader and fans posted and up to date. John Christian UT Dobie-Paisano Fellow, 1976 Cutting James Hill’s legacy short PickingupacopyoftheDailyTexantoday,Iwaspleasantlysurprised to see a story on former UT vice president James Hill. I was furtherpleasedthatthestorycoveredthelegacyMr.Hillimparted at the university, which particularly resonates within the African American student population. Yet when I turn to page two, instead of seeing a continuation of the story, I am met with an advertisement of Planet K. Mind you, every otherstory continuationwaspresent. Apparently,Mr. Hill’s accomplishments were not deemed important enough to merit the same courtesy. How utterly tacky and, quite frankly, completely disrespectful. While I am hopeful this was an honest mistake on the part of the staff, I cannot help but feel that The Daily Texan is slipping into old habits. After the paper landed in hot water for the insensitive Trayvon Martin cartoon published last spring, the staff made a pledge to be more aware of matters that reflect the diversity of this institution. This mishap is not a step in the right direction. Luckily, this mistake will not minimize the accomplishments of Mr. Hill, nor tarnish the legacy he leaves behind. It does, however, tarnish my opinion of and faith in this newspaper. Alyssa Howard Junior, psychology and English The tools of our trade I don’t think it would be a stretch to categorize the lack of news boxes [in front of the Belo building] as completely unacceptable. The Belo Center is, after all, the new home of one of the best journalism programs in the country and I think decision-makers in the College of Communication and the dean’s office need to strongly consider the type of message being sent to aspiring journalists (print journalists, in particular) who view the school as their guide to the future of journalism. I do understand the desire for a sleek, aesthetically pleasing building and plaza that is beautiful, functional, and worthy of the college’s prestigious programs (after all, who can resist the draw of color-coordinated trash cans?) — but at some point, common sense must prevail. I’m fully aware that there are news boxes across the street and around nearby corners, but I doubt that chemistry students have to leave the classroom and cross the street to get beakers for class experiments, or that students in the music building must trek elsewhere for a music stand or practice room. The journalism students in the College of Communication deserve the same easy access to the tools of their trade, as do the faculty, staff, and students working and learning in the new Belo Center. I also completely understand the college’s desire to implement a policy forbidding fliers and other materials from being posted around the plaza. I’ve been on the unfortunate end of this policy before when trying to display banners for the Magazine Club. But while I respect the need for structured rules, I think there is a huge difference between peppering Belo with fliers seeking roommates and placing a newsstand in front of the building. Torrie Hardcastle Editor-In-Chief, Orange Magazine Senior, journalism and radio-television-film LEGALESE Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer ofthe article. They are not necessarily those of the UT administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees. EDITORIAL TWITTER Follow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@DTeditorial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns. SUBMIT A FIRING LINE E-mail your Firing Lines to firingline@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be more than 100and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. RECYCLE Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it. Austin Independent School District employees with the best attendance records will get free tickets to UT athletic events after the district begins a new initiative aimed at improving faculty attendance rates. The University, working in conjunction with AISD, will reward employees who demonstrate consistent attendance with ticket vouchers to UT sporting events, officials announced Monday. The Attendance Incentive Program will kick off Friday night, when AISD employees and their families are invited to watch the Texas Longhorns soccer team play Fresno State at the Mike A. Myers Track and Soccer Stadium at no charge. The incentive program is part of a new effort to promote higher faculty attendance rates in the AISD system’s 124 schools. Over the course of the school year, UT will distribute approximately 15,000 ticket vouchers through the program, AISD Superintendent Meria Carstarphen said. Of the 15,000 tickets, approximately 12,000 will be redeemable for soccer games. The rest will be designated for basketball, baseball, softball and volleyball. None have been allocated for football. Carstarphen said AISD’s current overall employee attendance rate hovers between 90 percent and 95 percent across all divisions. She said her goal is 98 percent attendance for the district’s 12,000 employees. She said the motivations behind the initiative are both educational and financial. “When you match student attendance with staff attendance, there is far more instructional contact time between those two groups, and that is what really makes a difference for the student,” Carstarphen said. Outside the classroom, the district also stands to benefit financially from increased teacher attendance. Michael Houser, AISD chief human capital officer, said the district spent approximately $8 million to hire substitute teachers last year. The attendance initiative also ties in to a larger AISD goal: improving faculty health and wellness. Tracy Diggs Lunoff, AISD administrative supervisor of Student Health Services, said she hopes employees will understand the link between improved fitness and higher attendance rates. “The hope is that incentives will inspire people to make healthier choices, which will ultimately allow for greater productivity,” Lunoff said. UT athletic directors De- Loss Dodds and Chris Plonsky said they are thrilled to work with AISD on the attendance initiative. “We are part of a larger community, and we are constantly looking for ways to connect back to Austin,” Plonsky said. “With all of the events we hold each year, this just seemed like such an easy way for us to provide a connection and incentive to [the AISD] staff.” Dodds said the partnership between the University and AISD would bring benefits to both institutions. “We are in the same business, the kid business,” Dodds said. “We want to be as helpful as we can in this project. I think it is a good one. And if it is good for them, it is good for us.” Presented by TEXAS STUDENT MEDIA visit us at WWW.UTEXAS.EDU/TSM The Daily Texan • TSTV • KVRX • Texas Travesty • Cactus Yearbook Carter Goss Broadcast Manager & Sponsorships P 512.475.6721 E cartergoss@austin.utexas.edu CONTACT US FOR MORE INFORMATION September 1 Wyoming September 8 New Mexico October 6 West Virginia October 20 Baylor November 10 Iowa State November 24 TCU are every homegame! COME AND ENJOY A GOOD ‘OL TIME FREE FOOD AND DRINKS parking & transportation services presents OVER 150 BIKES . $3 START BIDS . BMX . ROAD . CRUISE . MOUNTAIN 5Th Floor of Trinity Garage, corner of Trinity & MLK | All Bikes Sold As Is—NO Refunds Bike Viewing Begins at 5:00pm | Auction Begins at 5:30pm Preview Bikes at www.utexas.edu/parking/bike/auction.html Tuesday, September 11, 2012 News 5 City By Jordan Rudner Nathan Goldsmith | Daily Texan Staff Austin Independent School District Superintendent Meria Carstarphen speaks Monday about the Attendance Incentive Program to reward exemplary faculty attendance with UT sports tickets. AISD aims to raise teacher attendance Sports Christian Corona, Sports Editor6Tuesday, September 11, 2012 FootbaLL | 9/11 From battlefield to gridiron Pu Ying Huang | Daily Texan Staff After serving in the Army’s Green Berets and receiving a bronze star for heroic achivement, 31-year-old Nate Boyer is now the starting short snapper for Texas despite never playing high school football. Boyer decided to join the Army after the events of 9/11 and now serves as an inspiration for his Texas teammates. by Lauren giudice Nate Boyer was living in Los Angeles Sept. 11, 2001, when he got a call from his mom early in the morning. She told him to turn on the television. What he saw on the screen changed his life forever. As the tragedy unfolded, he knew what he had to do. He made the decision to join the U. S. Army. “I thought about it when I was in high school and I’d always respected those guys and thought it was just a real cool thing,” Boyer said. “I didn’t do it initially coming out of high school and then 9/11 happened a couple years later and it just got me thinking that way again.” He spent five years on active duty and was a part of the Army’s Green Berets Special Forces Unit, training in Georgia and North Carolina. Boyer, now 31 years old and a snapper on the Texas football team, doesn’t talk about his time in the military. He spent time in Iraq and other countries in that area and was awarded a bronze star for heroic achievement. Boyer said this time of the year is always difficult for him because it brings back memories of the tragedy that occurred 11 years ago. “9/11 is the reason a lot of the guys came in, and it’s the reason a lot of the guys stayed in,” Boyer said. “It’s the reason we’re overseas at all right now and it’s the reason a lot of guys that we’re going to remember forever laid down their lives.” He has now taken the work ethic and discipline he learned in the Army and applied it to football. Not only is he a walk-on for the Longhorns, but before he tried out bIg 12 NotEbook Willy Low | Associated Press Oklahoma State quarterback Wes Lunt hands off to running back Joseph Randle, during Cowboys’ 59-38 loss to Arizona. This came only a week after their record-setting 84-0 win. Cowboys upset by Wildcats by Peter Sblendorio No. 18 Oklahoma State became the first of the ranked Big 12 teams to lose Saturday, falling to Arizona 59-38. Coming off an 84-0 win against an inferior Savannah State in week one, the Cowboys failed their first true test of the year in allowing the Wildcats to compile 501 offensive yards and to score at least 10 points in every quarter. The Cowboys were plagued by turnovers too as quarterback Wes Lunt threw three interceptions, one of which was returned for a score, and running back Joseph Randle lost a fumble. Arizona running back Ka’Deem Carey found the end zone four times and totaled 154 yards from scrimmage to lead the way for the Wildcats. The Cowboys did not lose until their 11th game of 201112 in what was the only loss of their Big 12 Conference championship season. Patterson now winningest coach in tCU history Gary Patterson won his 110th contest as TCU’s head coach with the Horned Frogs’ 56-0 win over Grambling State Saturday, passing Dutch Meyer as the winningest coach in school history. In the midst of his 12th season with the Horned Frogs, TCU continues on page 7 for Texas he had never played organized football. Last Saturday was a monumental day for Boyer. He had his first start for the Longhorns as the snapper for extra points and field goals. Though Boyer could have chosen a university with a less competitive program, he decided on Texas for reasons similar to why he joined the Special Forces. “I wanted to be in the Army and serve my country but I wanted to do that with the best guys around me in the best possible situation,” Boyer said. “I’m going to learn more from guys that are the best at what they do. I put myself around them and I’ll be the best that I could possibly be.” He decided to pick up snapping because he thought that would be the best way he could help the team. The Army’s constant repetition during training and its emphasis on excellence has helped him become a better football player and a better snapper. “I started snapping last fall and it was just repetition,” BOYER continues on page 7 FootbaLL Vaccaro pumped up by road atmospheres by Chris Hummer After two games in the comfy confines of Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium, Texas will be heading on the road for the first time this season, and it won’t be an easy test. The Longhorns are stepping into SEC country to play Ole Miss, and the crowd will be loud and hostile. However, it’s the kind of environment that senior safety Kenny Vaccaro not only enjoys, but embraces. He revels in the fact that 60,000 people will cheer against him, so much so that he prefers playing at away games over suiting up at home. “I like without a doubt playing on the road better than playing at home,” Vaccaro said. “It’s way louder and gets me way [more excited]. No offense to our fans, but [DKR] is not loud.” VACCARO continues on page 7 Lawrence Peart | Daily Texan file photo Senior safety Kenny Vaccaro is excited to head on the road to face the Ole Miss Rebels in what is sure to be a hostile enviorment. NHL UT Students react to possibility of NHL lockout by Jonathan Cramer For the second time in eight years, there may not be an NHL season. The National Hockey League, considered one of the four elite professional sports leagues in the country along with the NFL, NBA and MLB, is on the brink of yet another player lockout. In a sports landscape suddenly ripe with collective bargaining troubles, the NHL is the only league that has recent precedent for losing a substantial number of games. The NBA encountered a lockout this past season, but each team still played a 66game schedule — only 16 less than a full year after a deal was struck. The NFL dealt with a lockout of its own last summer but only lost one game in total, the preseason Hall of Fame game. Hockey, on the other hand, locked out for the entire 200405 season. Another missed season could be devastating to the sport. But the question is, would the loss of hockey be felt by the student body here at the University of Texas? The first place to look for students who would be affected is the UT hockey team. “I would care a lot,” said Chintan Prakash, a biology junior from Houston who recently joined the team as a winger. Prakash, who lived in Montreal for six years of his childhood, watches “a lot of hockey; 90 percent of [the Montreal Canadiens] games.” An NHL lockout would hurt him. But how many other students would be as perturbed as Prakash if there were no hockey this year? Jonathan Espinoza, a journalism sophomore from Long Island, N.Y., says although he’ll occasionally watch the New York Rangers play, he is “not invested” in following the NHL. Espinoza admits that he “didn’t know until right now” that there was an impending lockout in the NHL. SIDELINE NFL RaVENS bENgaLS RaIDERS CHaRgERS TWEET OF THE DAY “I can’t see how people tweet every minute of the day, I know they have something better to do.” Malcom brown @malcombrown_90 LoNgHoRNS IN tHE NFL Justin tucker 3/3 Field Goals, 5/5 extra points SPoRtS bRIEFLY NFL puts in place 5-game plan for replacment refs According to ESPN, the NFL has made a schedule for the replacement referees spanning over the first five weeks of the season. Replacement officals were used in Week 1 of NFL action, and with no progress in negotiations with the NFL Referees Association, they could be officiating for the near future. The NFL locked out the NFL Referee asscoiation — which includes over 120 on-field-officals — in mid- June as the two groups were at odds over salaries and benefits. There were no major issues with the replacment officals’ work in Week 1, but with no end to the lockout in the foreseeable future, they will have to learn on the fly. — Chris Hummer Murray wins his first career major His considerable lead, and a chance at history, slipping away, Andy Murray dug deep for stamina and mental strength, outlasting Novak Djokovic in a thrilling five- set, nearly five-hour U.S. Open final Monday. It had been 76 years since a British man won a Grand Slam singles championship and, at least for Murray, it was well worth the wait. Ending Great Britain’s long drought, and snapping his own four-final skid in majors, Murray finally pulled through with everything at stake on a Grand Slam stage, shrugging off defending champion Djokovic’s comeback bid to win 7-6 (10), 7-5, 2-6, 3-6, 6-2. “Relief is probably the best word I would use to describe how I’m feeling just now,” Murray said, adding: “You do think: Is it ever going to happen?” —Associated Press CADRUNS ONLINEFORFREE! ADRUNS ONLINEFORFREE! Tuesday, September 11, 2012 sports 7 VACCARO continues from page 6 Largest Stadiums by Capacity 1 Toughest college stadiums to play in Beaver Stadium (Penn State) 107,282 1 Ohio Stadium (Ohio State) 102,329 Texas’ home stadium may not register very bathed in burnt orange and crimson, with the two 2 Michigan Stadium (University of Michigan) 106,201 2 Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (Florida) 88,548 high on the decibel level but according to Vaccaro, sides split down the 50yard line. 3 Ohio Stadium (Ohio State) 102,329 3 Tiger Stadium (LSU) 92,400 Texas A&M’s Kyle Field is an incredible place to play, in part because all The Longhorns expect the atmosphere at Vaught-Hemingway Sta4 Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium (University of Texas) 100,119 4 Jordan-Hare Stadium (Auburn) 92,138 fans — not just the studium, surrounded by The 5 Spartan Stadium (Michigan State) 75,005 dents — spend the whole Grove, the mecca of col5 Neyland Stadium (University of Tennessee) 100,011 game on their feet. lege football tailgating, to 6 Sun Life Stadium (Miami) 76,100 “Kyle Field is loud, be as loud as any they’ll 6 Rose Bowl (UCLA) 95,000 man,” Vaccaro said. “Kyle experience all season. 7 Folsom Field (Colorado) 53,613 Field gets wild.” “It is exciting,” defen-7 L.A. Memorial Coliseum (USC) 93,607 Vaccaro added that the sive end Jackson Jeffcoat 8 Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar 60,000 annual Texas vs. Okla-said. “It gets you pumped 8 Sanford Stadium (University of Georgia) 92,746 Stadium (West Virginia) homa game has an amaz-up when you have other ing atmosphere. During teams booing you and all 9 Tiger Stadium (LSU) 92,400 9 Kinnick Stadium (Iowa) 70,585 the Red River Rivalry, the that. It’s a lot of fun. It Cotton Bowl is stuffed to presents a big challenge, 10 Bryant-Denny Stadium 92,138 10 Kyle Field (Texas A&M) 83,002 capacity with 92,000 fans and it’s fun to do.” (University of Alabama) Self-serve, 24/7 on the Web at www.DailyTexanOnline.com wordadsonly ADVERTISING TERMS There are no refunds or credits. In the event of errors made in advertisement, notice must be given by 10 am the first day of publication, as the publishers are responsible for only ONE incorrect insertion. 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Click On Surveys. BECOME A TEACHER!! Get your education, training and experience now! Hiring energetic teachers at all locations. One year+ experience preferred. Flexible schedules, great perks! Apply online. STOP GETTING record for most passes with-souri struggled in their SEC deout an incompletion. buts, as both fell to ranked con- TCU Texas Tech’s Seth Doege tied ference opponents Saturday. continues from page 6 a career high with five touch-The Aggies started strong down passes against Texas in their first game since leav- Patterson improved his record State, and he threw for 319 ing the Big 12, leading No. 24 to 110-30 since joining the yards on 25-for-32 passing. Florida 17-10 at halftime and team. He has only failed to Dual-threat Collin Klein holding the Gators to just one reach a bowl once in his tenure threwfor210yardsandatouch-touchdown and 13 points as head coach, and he is 7-4 all-down and ran for 71 yards and through three quarters. The time in bowl games with TCU. three scores in Kansas State’s offense sputtered in the sec “It is really kind of amazing blowout 52-13 win over Miami, ond half however, failing to to be here, going into a new and Texas’ David Ash went 16-score in the third or fourth conference, having the oppor-for-22 for 221 yards and two quarter, and Florida scored tunity to play in a new stadium touchdowns while also scoring on a 12-yard Mike Gillislee and passing a legend like Dutch on a 49-yard run. run early in the fourth to go Meyer,” Patterson said. TheOklahomaSoonerswere up for good. led in part by Heisman hopeful Missouri was also shut Quarterbacks star in Landry Jones, who went for down in its first taste of SEC offensive outbursts 252 yards and a pair of scores, action, with No. 7 Georgia A number of Big 12 quar-and Oklahoma State’s Lunt stomping the Tigers, 41-20. terbacks put up gaudy num-threw for 436 yards and four The Tigers too led at halfbers in the second week of the touchdowns but was ultimately time, 10-9, before allowing collegiate season. beleaguered by three picks. the Bulldogs to go off for 15 TCU’s quarterbacks points in the third quarter Casey Pachall and Trevone Former Big 12 members fall and 17 in the fourth in what Boykin combined to go 17-in SEC debuts turned out to be a lopsided for-17, which set an FBS Both Texas A&M and Mis-victory for Georgia. Source: Yahoo! watching the national didn’t know about Boyer’s championship game [in military background, he BOYER 2010] he said ‘I want to go would still be a leader on continues from page 6 there and play.’” the team. Defensive end Jackson “He just genuinely cares Boyer said. “I remember Jeffcoat said Boyer is like a for people,” Hopkins said. when I was training and big brother to the team. “He’s an older guy who learning to shoot a pistol, it “He’s the definition of knows the system. He came was just you dry fire it for a tough guy. He came in in as a walk-on and he just hours before they even let here and didn’t complain busts his tail and works you shoot a round. Then about anything,” Jeffcoat harder than a lot of guys on once you shoot a round, it’s said. “Football is noth-this team.” one at a time, everything’s ing compared to war and Boyer made it his goal to real slow and just perfect being out there in actual join the military and then practice, perfect reps and it combat, using guns and all the Texas football team. Al- was the same thing for me that. His situation was life though experience wasn’t in snapping.” or death.” on his side for either en- Head coach Mack Brown Boyer understands the deavor, his success taught said Boyer’s teammates importance of teamwork him a valuable lesson. have a lot of respect for more than most. Brown “I know that it’s poshim and look up to him. said Boyer has told the sible that you can literally Brown admires his resolve team how important trust do anything in this life if and says his maturity has is with teammates, just like you believe in yourself helped the team. it is with fellow soldiers and work harder than ev “I think it was prob-whose lives depend on erybody else around you,” ably 9/11 that made him each other. Boyer said. “Definitely my want to go to the ser-Offensive lineman Trey time in the military helped vice,” Brown said. “I think Hopkins said even if he with that belief.” pet & appliances, vaulted ceilings, wood floors downstairs, fireplace, ceiling fans, basic cable, w/d connections, 1 car garage, huge oak trees, backyard gazebo, 2 community pools/club houses. No pets. Available Sept 2012 contact; eberhartlane512@ yahoo.com or 512-771-0094 Treasure Hunting Make a Few Bucks Find a Tutor and More... 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Texas men’s athletics director DeLoss Dodds said the Longhorns are not considering claiming additional national championships, although a team spokesman said that the idea has been explored. Dodds said he was unaware of Texas A&M laying claim to the 1919 and 1927 titles. Texas won all eight of its games in 1914, marking one of seven seasons where the Longhorns went undefeated without claiming a national title, all of them between 1893 and 1923. They lost one game in each of the 1941, 1968, 1977 and 1981 seasons, although Texas went 10-1 in its 1970 national title campaign. That was the only championship Texas has claimed that wasn’t recognized by the Associated Press. The Longhorns lost to Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl that year, 24-11, a similar way they ended the 1977 season. Under first-year head coach Fred Akers, Texas won all 11 of its regular season contests before falling to the Fighting Irish, 38-10, in the 1977 Cotton Bowl. Texas claimed a national title in 1970 but not 1977. In their defense, the Aggies are playing in a new conference. Eight of the other 13 teams in the SEC have won national titles before, collectively capturing 38 championships, including all of the last six. The ability to tell top-notch high school football players that they have won three national championships instead of one is sure to bring more blue-chip recruits to College Station, right? “Obviously you want to go to a winning program,” senior safety Kenny Vaccaro said. “I think it’s nice to go with teams that are winning them a little more recently, in your generation. But nothing against [Texas A&M].” Ironically, the Aggies head coach in 1919 and 1927 — Dana X. Bible — is the same man that served as the Longhorns head coach when Texas won an unclaimed national title in 1941. “They didn’t even wear helmets back then,” Vaccaro said. Texas A&M added “1997” and “2010” under the display on the northwest wall of Kyle Field showing which years it won Big 12 titles, although the Aggies are reportedly planning on changing it to reflect Big 12 South Division championships. The Aggies won nine regular season games in 1997, going 6-2 in Big 12 play, the best mark of any team in the South Division. They lost to Nebraska, 54-15, in the conference title game that year as the Huskers went on to win their fifth national championship. Texas A&M also won six of eight games against conference opponents in 2010, finishing in a three-way tie with Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. The Sooners, who were ranked higher and boasted a better record, represented the Big 12 South in the conference title game, beating Nebraska, 23-20. By the same logic, Texas could award itself a 2008 Big 12 South crown. A crushing, last-second-loss in Lubbock that season kept the Longhorns from putting together an undefeated regular season and put them in a three-way tie with Texas Tech and Oklahoma in the Big 12 South. Again, the Sooners got the nod to play in the conference title game, destroying Missouri, 62-21, before falling to Florida in the BCS National Championship. But the Longhorns employ better logic than that. They realize how petty it would be to retroactively claim championships of any kind. Blue-chip recruits know that if they want to play for the best college football team in the Lone Star State, they’ll head to Texas, not Texas A&M. A&M continues from page 1 The UT-A&M rivalry is heating up this season as pranksters leave their mark on an A&M billboard, even though the two teams will not be playing each other this year. Over the weekend, vandals marked a Texas A&M billboard in North Austin, writing “UT” across its surface, placing an “X” over a depicted A&M jersey and painting over an Aggie logo. All of the marks were made in burnt orange, and the perpetrators left behind most of the materials used in the vandalism. No charges have been pressed as a result of the incident. Alan Reeder, the Austin general manager for Lamar Advertising Company, the company that owns the billboard, and a 1984 UT alumnus, said the company chose not to press charges because the contract on the billboard was set to run out Sunday, and a new billboard was going to go up anyway. Despite the strange timing of the vandalism and the sloppiness of the tagging, it is unclear whether the culprits had inside information about the sign’s lease. According to a spokesperson for Lamar Advertising, the date of the contract’s end was “not at all” public information. Aggie billboard vandalized, company won’t press charges by David Maly amelia Mcbrayer | Daily Texan Staff A Texas A&M billboard in North Austin was vandalized with orange paint over the weekend. 9 Tuesday, September 11, 2012 SUDOKUFORYOU OKU YOU Today’s solution will appear here tomorrow 9 7 6 8 4 5 3 2 1 2 3 5 7 1 6 9 8 4 8 4 1 2 3 9 7 6 5 1 6 3 4 9 2 8 5 7 7 8 4 6 5 3 1 9 2 5 9 2 1 8 7 4 3 6 4 5 7 3 6 8 2 1 9 6 1 8 9 2 4 5 7 3 3 2 9 5 7 1 6 4 8 5 4 7 8 1 2 7 3 8 1 5 2 1 8 4 2 6 5 4 8 6 6 4 2 7 1 8 1 5 9 WINES· SPIRITS · FINER FOODS (512) 366-8260 ·specsonline.com CHEERS TO SAVINGS!®Benefits. Edited by Will Shortz No. 0807 1 p.m. Executive Committee 12:30 p.m. Board Meeting 1 p.m. College of Communications (CMA) LBJ Room #5.160 2600 Whitis Avenue We encourage any community member who has any kind of temporary or permanent disability to contact Texas Student Media beforehand so that appropriate accommodations can be made. Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees Meeting Friday, February 3, 2012 Executive Committee 12:30 p.m. Board Meeting Friday, September 14, 2012 Board Meeting1 p.m. The Union, Santa RitaRoom 3.502 Austin, TX 78712 Visitors Welcome We encourage any community member who has any kind oftemporary or permanent disabilityto contact Texas Student Media beforehand so that appropriateaccomodations can be made. is now accepting applications! Texas sTudenT Television POSITIONDEADLINEOperations Director Sep 11 2012 Assistant Webmaster Sep 11 2012 TEXASSTUDENTTV.COMInterested? Here’s what you do: A resume is required with each application. You can pick up and turn in applications at the business office on the 3rd floor of the HSM. Applica- tions are due on September 11th, and the business office closes at 5 pm. Contact manager@texasstudenttv.com if you have any questions. 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Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. Life & Arts Kelsey McKinney, Life & Arts Editor10Tuesday, September 11, 2012 CAMPUS By Rene Castro Skirts are swaying and hips are moving as the UT Argentine Tango Club kicks off its classes for the fall semester. Held Monday evenings, the club gives students the opportunity to learn and practice this sensual and popular dance with other students in a relaxed environment. Whether it is to build coordination, get some exercise or meet new people, many students are catching what co-director Abraham Taicher calls “The Tango Bug.” Taicher was drawn to Argentine tango after a summer trip to Buenos Aires. “I wanted to try something cultural,” Taicher said. He became discouraged, however, when he came back to the States and found he was the youngest in his tango class. Taicher then found a group of students who already knew how to dance tango, and he picked up the hobby immediately. “I want to create the situation I found,” said Taicher on learning to dance with other students. Rather than focusing on showmanship as in choreographed tango, or on competition as in ballroom tango, Argentine tango focuses more on connecting with one’s partner and improvisation while dancing. “The focus is not on [movement] vocabulary, but on connection. [Tango] allows you to express yourself in real time,” Taicher said. Students who attend one of the Tango Club’s meetings learn new skills for one hour of class and then utilize what they’ve learned for one hour of “practica.” Students don’t need to worry about bringing a partner since it is typical to dance with someone new for every “Tanda” — or set of songs. Shy types need not worry. Taicher said, “Most people that go are shy. A lot of them are engineering or science majors.” Since there is a structure of social etiquette that includes how to ask someone to dance and how to be gracious after the dance, those who may deal awkwardly with social situations will conquer the dance floor. Austin is home to a flourishing tango scene, with many “milongas,” tango parties, happening all across the city every day of the week. A list of all tango events happening in Austin can be found at tangoaustin.org. The UT Argentine Tango Club prepares students for the more formal milongas where, even though everyone is supportive, people Photos by Fanny Trang | Daily Texan Staff Avi Taicher, a PhD candidate in computational and applied mathematics, and his dancing partner Nicole Shutter, a first-year geosciences student, instruct the Argentine tango classes at the Texas Union every Monday at 6 p.m. The membership fee for students and staff is $25. are expected to know how to dance. “The Tango club is working toward bridging the UT and Austin tango community,” said theatre and dance sophomore Laura Rogers. She has been dancing tango since she was 10. “My mom didn’t have a baby sitter, so I went with her to her tango classes.” Another benefit to learning tango on campus is cost. Students and faculty only have to pay $25 dues for a semester of classes rather than paying upwards of $100 for the same amount of instruction. Apart from exercise and enjoyment, tango is also a great way to manage stress. A study done by Rosa Pinniger of the University of New England in Australia found that Argentine tango is effective in treating depression and functions as a stress manager much like meditation. “In learning tango movements you have to focus your attention and be completely in the present moment,” Pinniger said. “If people can experience freedom from their negative thoughts for just the three minutes of a tango dance, they’ll realize that such freedom is possible.” With these kinds of benefits, it is no wonder that some students put down their pencils and put on their dancing shoes when they need a break from their course work. “I love it, I can’t explain it any other way,” Rogers said. WHAT: UT Argentine Tango Club WHERE: UNB Ballroom or UNB Quadrangle Room WHEN: September 17 / Every Monday 6pm HOW MUCH: First class always free. $25 for semester WEBSITE: tangoinorange.org “Once you get started, you get roped in and you can’t get out.” The UT Argentine Tango Club meets every Monday at 6 p.m. for classes followed by “Practica” at 7 p.m. The first two classes of the semester are free and attending a class for the first time is free anytime of the year. The membership fee for students and staff is $25, and the general public membership fee is $45 for the semester. CAMPUS Sasan Rezaie, the man behind the PCL’s voice attracts voice of the Perry- Casteñeda Library, was born and raised in Iran before obtaining his math ‘ ‘‘ ematics degree fame, admiration By Eli Watson at UT. Sasan Rezaie may be an “Somebody kept unfamiliar name to many, but Rezaie has literally be-telling me so many come the voice of the Perry- Casteñeda Library. “The Aggie jokes that I de checkout desk will close at cided on Austin. Plus, 11:45 p.m.” Yes, Rezaie is that guy. However, do not be Austin had sent their fooled by his grave demean- letter of acceptance or. In person, Rezaie is one of the kindest individuals before A&M did.” one could ever meet. Nathan Goldsmith Hidden behind small-— Sasan Rezaieframed glasses, Rezaie’s eyes PCL Assistant Daily Texan Staff are steady and attentive. At the mention of his UT Rezaie moved to Austin in and when cars drove freely bring him back. There were PCL, he likes to indulge in As for the future, Rezaie celebrity status, his smile 1980 — he became a work-through campus. His eyes lit students who even went to Persian and Chinese cuisine. would like to retire some- widens in both disbelief study student the following up: “On Sept. 10, I will have the library to inquire about “Alborz Persian Cuisine and day and volunteer at or- and flattery. And regardless year, attending class during been here for 32 years.” The Rezaie’s whereabouts, only to First Chinese BBQ are res-ganizations such as Meals of his “salt-and-pepper” the day and working at the epiphany hits him hard and realize that Rezaie never left taurants I enjoy,” Rezaie On Wheels and the Capital hair, Rezaie has a youthful undergraduate library (now he begins to laugh, pointing the PCL — he was just tak-said. He also likes playing Area Food Bank of Texas. “I vigor that only adds to his the FAC) at night. “I started at his salt-and-pepper hair. ing a break from announc-chess and reading novels by know there are a lot of peocharming persona. at the UGL in September of Granted, he has had ing. “I had a lot of complaints author and U.S. talk radio ple in need,” Rezaie says. Born and raised in Iran, 1981,” Rezaie said. “I just en-some bad experiences. His once the voice changed for a host Clark Howard. “So I would like to volun- Rezaie and his family relocat-joyedworkingtheresomuch voice becomes solemn as few days,” Rezaie said. “They However, Rezaie’s free teer some of my time and ed to San Antonio during his that I stayed and worked at he remembers a student would come in [to the PCL] time will be cut short when help out.” adolescence. Rezaie would the same place until we were who visited him regularly and ask what happened to the the PCL starts operating Until then, Rezaie will later attend Texas State Uni-transferred to the PCL.” but died in the early 1990s. old voice, and when they real-24 hours a day, five days a continue to do what he versity for the basics before Rezaie has since become He has also witnessed some ized it was me, they would ask week in October. Although does best: Reaching out obtaining his mathematics one of the PCL’s library as-wild moments. During one when I would be returning.” Rezaie will no longer be to students through his degree at UT. “I had Texas sistants, making announce-of his midnight shifts at the Realizing that PCL pa-able to say, “The library announcements and pro- A&M as one choice and UT-ments and helping take care PCL, Rezaie saw a group of trons anticipated his sched-will close at 2 a.m.,” he still viding his services for Austin as another,” Rezaie of the building. students streaking at the uled announcements, Rezaie plans on making his famous any and all who enter the said in the Information and Rezaie has seen UT library entrance. would inevitably reclaim his announcements. “Once we PCL. “He’s been with the Research Help area of the change significantly since He has also seen how announcer throne. “After become 24 hours, I’ll have library since I was in mid- PCL. “Somebody kept tell-his arrival in the early ‘80s. important he is to the UT studying for a while, hearing to say, ‘The library will re-dle school and has always ing me so many Aggie jokes He reminisced about when community. When another his voice is entertaining,” ju-main open continuously,’ or been unbelievably relithat I decided on Austin. he could park right outside announcer replaced Rezaie nior Helen Tau said. “When something like that,” Rezaie able,” said PCL circulation Plus, Austin had sent their the PCL when Fred Ak-toward the end of last semes-you hear his voice, you in-said. “The change does not desk manager and super- letter of acceptance before ers was head coach of the ter, some students created stantly become happy.” bother me, and I think the visor Margaret Alvarado. A&M did.” Longhorns football team a Facebook page hoping to When Rezaie is not at the students will like it.” “He’s an absolute rock.”