Sixty eight years after the close of World War II, Win- ston Churchill’s granddaugh- ter said she believes his life and leadership skills are still valuable. Celia Sandys, his grand- daughter, spoke in Bass Lec- ture Hall on Monday to tell stories of Churchill as a pri- vate and public figure. Churchill, who was prime minister of Great Britain from 1940-45 and an influential world lead- er during World War II, is well-known for his fa- mous speech, “The Sinews of Peace,” better known as the Iron Curtain Speech, given in Missouri in 1946. In the speech, Churchill acknowledged the divide between capitalist and com- munist countries: “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron cur- tain has descended across the continent.” Sandys said her grandfa- ther’s influence demonstrates the power speeches have in determining public morale. “It was during the second World War that my grand- father’s words really came to their own,” Sandys said. “Their impact was more powerful than any weapons … I believe his principles of leadership are as relevant to- day as they were in 1940 and are an inspiration to any- one in any field who aspires to lead.” Once admitted to UT, transfer students are ab- sorbed into the University’s vast student body. But un- like other student groups, their graduation rates go unrecorded. Registration for transfer students typically occurs weeks after continuing stu- dents pick their classes for the semester, leaving fewer options for those students who register later. Of the roughly 11,000 students admitted to UT for the fall of 2013, nearly 3,000 of them transferred to the University from another post-secondary institution, according to the UT Office of Information Manage- ment and Analysis. “The first semester can be challenging given that new transfer students often regis- ter after continuing students and may be bringing in lots of transfer credit,” said Da- vid Spight, assistant dean for advising at the School of Undergraduate Studies. UT’s four-year gradua- tion rate is unaffected by transfer students. Because the University only mea- sures incoming freshmen, it has no measurement for the time it takes transfer stu- dents to graduate. “Most colleges and uni- versities do not track time to graduation for transfer students,” Spight said. Every transfer student is required to complete at least 60 hours at UT to receive any degree, which some- times results in transfer students taking a number of electives instead of courses that meet a specific degree A U.S. district judge de- termined parts of the state’s most recent abortion restric- tion bill unconstitutional Monday. U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel partially granted a preliminary injunction filed by Planned Parenthood against Texas House Bill No. 2. The bill, which calls for strengthened regulations on abortion, is set to go into ef- fect Tuesday, except for the requirement struck down by Yeakel’s decision, which states doctors performing abortions are required to seek admitting privileges from nearby hospitals. The bill has been the sub- ject of significant controversy since before its passage in July, when it prompted a 13-hour filibuster by then-state Sen. Wendy Davis, D-Fort Worth, who was attempting to block its passage. The bill also re- sulted in protests and counter- protests at the Capitol. Yeakel’s opinion stated the bill’s admitting-privileges requirement is a hindrance to women seeking abortions because it “impose[s] an un- due burden on patients.” Ad- ditionally, Yeakel concluded the bill’s restrictions on med- ication-induced abortion do not place such a burden on patients unless a doctor deems it necessary for the life or health of the mother. The bill did recognize the higher dosage, off-label use of abor- tion drugs is completely safe. UT sociology professor Jo- seph Potter, who conducted research used by Planned Parenthood in its prelimi- nary conjunction, said he was glad the admitting privileges requirement of the bill was struck down. In his research, The Texas Memorial Muse- um will lose nearly $400,000 in University funds and expe- rience a staff reduction from 11 employees to three as a re- sult of budget cuts, which will be implemented on Sept. 1 of next year. The on-campus museum, which will celebrate its 75th anniversary next year, cur- rently operates on an annual budget of $600,000. Without University funding, that bud- get will shrink by more than two-thirds. The Museum will continue to receive $108,000 in state funding and $50,000 from gift shop sales, and raises roughly $50,000 in dona- tions annually, though mu- seum administrators hope that number will increase. The three remaining posi- tions will include a security guard, gift shop operator and one other employee. “I’m still not entirely sure what the best skill-set will be for the remaining staff mem- ber or members to have,” said Edward Theriot, integrative biology professor and mu- seum director. “The security guard’s job will be security, the gift shop operator’s job is going to be the gift shop and it will fall upon that third person to take care of every- thing else that the museum does. That’s the hardest piece the puzzle — to figure out what’s going to be the best solution there.” The Texas Memorial Museum is a part of the Texas Natural Science Cen- ter, an organized research 1UNIVERSITYSTATECampus museum to lose fundingDistrict judge strikes down abortion bill provisionsBy Anthony Green@anthonygrreenJonathan Garza / Daily Texan StaffThe Texas Memorial Museum is set to lose nearly $400,000 in University funds. Because of the lack of funds, the museum plans to layoff a total of nine employees by next September. By Christina Breitbeil@christinabreit Jonathan Garza / Daily Texan StaffCharlie Bunts plays with mini toy action figures at Toy Joy on Monday afternoon. FRAMES featured photo ABORTION page 2UNIVERSITYCAMPUSTransfer students struggle with registrationBy Julia Brouillette@juliakbrouBy Nicole Cobler@nicolecoblerChurchill’s descendant lectures on leadershipSarah MontgomeryDaily Texan StaffJournalism junior Jessica Brown is among the thousands of students forced to register last because of their status as trans- fer students. RATES page 2CHURCHILL page 2MUSEUM page 2Tuesday, October 29, 2013*@thedailytexanfacebook.com/dailytexanServing the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvidSPORTS PAGE 6LIFE&ARTS PAGE 8NEWS PAGE 3City council approves fund- ing for energy companies. PAGE 3Students conduct preven- tative cancer research. PAGE 3NEWSDecision on HB2 offers (small) pro-abortion victory. PAGE 4Sexual harassment in unpaid internships. PAGE 4OPINIONCedric Reed making noise up front for Longhorns. PAGE 6Quandre Diggs standing out as leader of secondary. PAGE 6SPORTSJournalist talks about Ken- nedy assassination. PAGE 8Arcade Fire has fun on new album Reflektor. PAGE 8LIFE&ARTSCalifornia punk band Audacity dishes on their tour mates, new album and more. dailytexanonline.comONLINEREASON TO PARTYPAGE 7 Beyond discussing his accomplishments as a po- litical figure, Sandys also talked about Churchill as a private man and relayed her experience with him as her grandfather. She said she thought Churchill enjoyed being around his grandchildren because they did not see him as a political leader. Psychology freshman Ce- sar Prieto attended Sandys’ lecture because he wanted to learn more about Churchill. “The biggest thing for me about this lecture was seeing how Churchill was not only a great leader but also the type of person we should all aspire to be,” Prieto said. Prieto said he was inter- ested in reading Churchill’s books after attending the lecture. “I think there’s the kind of education you get from books and the kind of edu- cation you get from real life,” Prieto said. “If you mix both of those you get a sense of what the real world is like.” Among students and professors was the young- est audience member and “Churchill-buff,” fourth- grader Coley Cowden and his mother Heidi Cowden. Nine-year-old Coley Cowden chose to report on Churchill for his biog- raphy report at Regents School of Austin last year and has read several of Churchill’s books. “He has a really good style of writing that I en- joy,” Coley Cowden said. “He finds a very good balance of not mak- ing it action-packed but at the same time is interesting.” 2Permanent StaffEditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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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. Jonathan Garza / Daily Texan StaffExhibit designer John Maisano presents the halted design plans for the Texas Memorial Museum’s fourth floor exhibit Monday afternoon. Maisano not only lost his plans, but may also lose his 14-year long employment at the museum because of budget cuts in University funds. Fabian Fernandez / Daily Texan StaffCecilia Sandys, granddaughter of Winston Churchill, speaks about the life of her grandfather and his leadership skills at the LBJ School on Monday afternoon. requirement, Spight said. Journalism junior Jes- sica Brown said she has been forced to take numerous un- necessary electives during her time at UT. “I have to take so many classes that I don’t need, just to get the hours,” Brown said. “The classes I do need fill up so fast, but if I don’t get them … I’ll just be here forever.” Brown enrolled at Austin Community College in 2010 and is expecting to graduate from UT in 2015. Brown said she feels her extended college career can be traced back to her substandard transfer ori- entation experience. “You’re treated differ- ently as a transfer student,” Brown said. “I guess they as- sume that you know [which classes to take] because you’ve been to a college be- fore. If I had known what to do, I might have been done much sooner.” Niki Pham, a prospective transfer student from UT- Arlington hoping to major in nursing, said that she is already expecting a delayed graduation date because of later registration times. “According to the nursing degree plan, I’ll already be behind in prerequisites when I get to UT,” she said. “And since I can’t register with other sophomores, I’m not sure if I’ll be able to catch up.” But the setbacks are worth it, Pham said. “It would be nice if they allowed transfers to register with continuing sophomores … but I’ll take it because I want to be [at UT] more than anything,” Pham said. Shelby Stanfield, vice pro- vost and registrar, said the registration system is set up to manage the system load. “When you have 52,000 students, they can’t all regis- ter at once,” he said. The registration process works well for other trans- fer students, such as biol- ogy sophomore Francie Herriage-Wilson. “I think — given our huge student population — the registration system works as well as it can,” Herriage- Wilson said. “I wasn’t able to get one class I need for my degree because it is in really high demand and fills up so quickly, but it won’t affect when I graduate.” Potter concluded the previous requirement would adversely affect roughly 22,000 women in the state who would no longer be able to get the abor- tions they sought. “I am of course pleased that the admitting privileg- es requirement was struck down, as it would have led to the immediate loss of ser- vices in a great many places around the state,” Potter said. Lauren Bean, spokeswom- an for the Texas Attorney General’s Office, said Texas has already appealed the court’s ruling in the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. “The court upheld part of the law and enjoined part of the law,” Bean said. “As ev- eryone — including the trial court judge — has acknowl- edged, this is a matter that will ultimately be resolved by the appellate courts or the U.S. Supreme Court.” Savanna Faulkner, presi- dent of Texas Students for Life, an anti-abortion orga- nization at UT, said that she wasn’t expecting the bill’s restrictions to be stricken down by the court. “I’m really shocked that parts of the bill were deemed unconstitutional,” Faulkner said. “I know that we will be able to appeal it in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. The bill made higher stan- dards for women and their doctors, so it would be help- ful to women’s health.” The court also ruled that the plaintiffs for the case — Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers — will have their costs of court recovered. Renee Paradis, a lawyer repre- senting several plaintiffs in the case, said she was pleased with the results of the case. “I think it’s a good day for women in Texas,” Paradis said. “It’s really important that the admitting privileges provision was dropped be- cause it ensures meaningful access to abortion services for Texas women.” unit within the College of Natural Sciences. The cen- ter was established to pro- mote research and educa- tional activities surrounding biodiversity. Lee Clippard, College of Natural Sciences spokesman, said the decision to cut the Museum’s funding comes from the College of Natural Sciences dean’s office. “The [museum] has long been an important fixture on the UT campus and is a wonderful resource for our community and visitors to campus,” Clippard said. “Unfortunately, the budget situation at the University and in the College of Natural Sciences is such that we must make difficult decisions.” Natural Sciences Dean Linda Hicke was not avail- able for comment. Theriot, who will also lose his job at the museum, has been tasked with finding al- ternative sources of revenue and deciding the best strat- egy for a museum with dra- matically reduced staff. “I don’t doubt that the decision was made with some anguish and diffi- culty,” Theriot said. “I’m not complaining — my job is to try to find a solution and for the last two weeks that’s what I’ve been out there trying to do. I’ve met with a dozen stakehold- ers within and outside the University. In some ways we’ve been anticipating this [but] I do wish it was com- ing two or three more years down the road where we’d be in a much better position with the things we’re trying to do.” Theriot said a museum program that employs stu- dents may not survive the budget cut. Holly Hansel, a studio art senior and work-study stu- dent for the museum, said eliminating the student do- cent program would be tak- ing away a rare opportunity. “As docents, we lead tours and do a lot of intern-type help and it would be a shame to see the opportunity to be an actual tour leader to be taken away,” Hansel said. Theriot said the muse- um, which receives more than 90,000 visitors every year, had been working towards a more stable in- come involving more out- side funding over the past several years. Hansel, who assisted at the museum’s annual Hal- loween festival last week- end, said the event was bittersweet. The event was one of several the museum hosts throughout the year to educate and connect with the community. “[There] was a great turn- out, we had over 2,000 kids there,” Hansel said. “I’m glad we got to do that but some of the workers were a bit misty- eyed because this may be their last Halloween even at the museum.” John Maisano, museum exhibits designer for nearly 14 years, said he is unsure about what the future holds. “I would love to con- tinue [working] in the mu- seum world of course, but museum jobs are just not easy to come by,” Maisano said. “We’re all just in a re- ally scary place, but I don’t feel like I’m finished here. There’s so much I wanted to do.” MUSEUM continues from page 1ABORTIONcontinues from page 1RATEScontinues from page 1CHURCHILL continues from page 1 Clean energy innovation in Austin will continue with $530,000 in approved funds by Austin City Council for research at the Univer- sity’s Clean Energy Incuba- tor, an organization which helps new clean energy companies expand. The agreement was origi- nally scheduled to come up for a renewal vote on Oct. 1, but it was not on the city council docket until Thursday, Mitchell Jacob- son, co-director of Austin Technology Incubator, said. The funding is disbursed sporadically throughout the year, so there was not a delay in receiving funds, Jacobson said. The funds, which are split into $265,000 per year for two years, will enable the innovation incubator to continue partnering with early-stage clean energy companies to help them raise money and find em- ployees, Jacobson said. The city is not the organi- zation’s only source of fund- ing. According to Michael Webber, Clean Energy Incu- bator co-director and associ- ate mechanical engineering professor, the State Energy Conservation Office and the fees paid by the companies who utilize the incubator also help the Clean Energy Incubator run. The $530,000 is divided into $100,000 for infra- structure and staff salaries, $80,000 funds the South By Southwest Eco Startup Showcase events, $60,000 supports two clean energy companies in the incubator and $25,000 funds research directed by Austin Energy, said Richard Morgan, Green Building and Sustainability manager at Austin Energy. “[The incubator has] a mission to help UT compa- nies and entrepreneurs, but it’s not just for UT,” Webber said. “It’s also for compa- nies in Austin and entre- preneurs in Austin. We help recruit companies to Austin, and that’s why Austin En- ergy and the city of Austin supports us.” Austin Energy has been supporting the incubator since 2006. Webber said the council’s repeated in- vestments in the organiza- tion demonstrate the coun- cil’s focus on clean energy projects. “The city’s not overflow- ing with money, so if they invest money this way, that’s a sign they [support this] in- vestment for the city of Aus- tin,” Webber said. Morgan said the goal of the incubator is not con- ducting research but rather promoting the growth of new energy companies. “By incubating companies, we’re looking for early stage companies that have a tech- nology to commercialize — that might be an efficient light bulb or a better way to produce energy or a cleaner way to treat water or something like that,” Webber said. Omni Water Solutions, a water treatment company that aims to make oil and gas production cleaner, is one of the companies the incubator has worked with, Webber said. Another com- pany is Ideal Power Con- verters, which works on electronic power converters for solar panels and electric car charging. “This research helps Aus- tin Energy and the city of Austin in identifying clean energy technologies that could be of substantial as- sistance to our municipally- owned utility company in the future to save energy or to use it more efficiently,” Jacobson said. Webber said the incubator helps the University achieve success in its commercial- ization efforts. “UT has major priorities for teaching and research, but it also has a priority for commercialization, and we’re part of helping UT ful- fill its mission,” Webber said. “We also help those students who become entrepreneurs find pathways in life that are fulfilling and important and successful, so we like being part of that.” The incubator usually works with companies, which include both UT students as well as alumni and other residents of Aus- tin, for a time period be- tween nine and 24 months, Webber said. “It’s exciting to see com- panies graduate from the in- cubator and raise millions of dollars in funding that they use to hire people, ramp up and sell products around the world,” Webber said. “We like being part of the economic development story in Austin. We like being part of the stu- dent growth story of UT.” A UT graduate student is exploring a method to inhibit tumor growth by re- establishing cell communi- cation between healthy and cancerous cells. Healthy cells communicate with each other and regulate neighboring cells’ growth. To grow rapidly, a cancer cell must sever its connection with other cells. Gap junc- tions, channels in connecting cells’ membranes, facilitate communication between cells. Avinash Gadok, bio- medical engineering graduate student, is examining these junctions in her work. “Tumorous cells stop mak- ing junction proteins,” Jeanne Stachowiak, the faculty spon- sor of Gadok’s research proj- ect, said. “We’re working to de- velop a prosthetic material that can go in and reopen junctions between neighboring cells.” Gadok is 1.5 years into her research project, which involves creating vesicles — membrane-coded par- ticles that contain gap junc- tion proteins — to reopen communications between normal and cancerous cells. “We’ve made our materi- als and now we’re testing its interactions with cells, and we’ve found it’s capable of delivering molecules to cyto- plasms of cells,” Gadok said. Stachowiak said currently, doctors are taking a reac- tionary approach to cancer treatment, removing tumors once they are found. “The major approach doc- tors take is once a tumor is detected, they try surgically removing it or kill the tumor with toxic drugs and radia- tion,” Stachowiak said. Though surgery and ra- diation have been successful in many cases, Stachowiak said modern medicine can be improved by ataking a preventative approach to fighting cancer. “What we’re working on is an alternative way to treat tumors before they become dangerous,” Stachowiak said. “We’re taking a bio- chemical approach, not a surgical one.” Gadok’s research project began with a $25,000 grant from Texas 4000, an organiza- tion that bikes approximately 4,500 miles to Alaska to raise awareness and funding for cancer research. Studio art junior Emmy Laursen, a par- ticipant in Texas 4000, became involved with the organization because of her personal ties to the cause. “My dad was diagnosed when I was 16, and I’ll never forget the day he told me,” Laursen said. “He had stage four cancer for 12 years be- fore he was diagnosed.” Laursen said she is excited to see the money she and her teammates raise leading to progress in cancer research. “To see a tangible result of what we’re fighting so hard to do [has such a large im- pact] not only to me and my teammates, but to everyone that supports us,“ Laursen said. “That’s what makes ev- erything we do worth it.“ good en- said. good mak- packed time is W&N 3Presented by TEXASSTUDENTMEDIAvisit us at WWW.UTEXAS.EDU/TSMThe Daily Texan • TSTV • KVRX • Texas Travesty • Cactus YearbookCarter Goss Broadcast Manager & Sponsorships P 512.475.6721 E cartergoss@austin.utexas.eduFOR MORE INFORMATIONNEXT TAILGATE: Nov. 2ndSPECIAL THANKS TO: LOOK FOR THE DAILY TEXAN TENT AT THE CORNER OF MLK & BRAZOSwww.ppdi.com • 512-462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study informationAgeCompensationRequirementsTimelineWomen18 to 49Up to $2400Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18 and 29.9Fri. 8 Nov. through Sun. 10 Nov. Fri. 15 Nov. through Sun. 17 Nov. Fri. 22 Nov. through Sun. 24 Nov. Outpatient Visit: 6 Dec. Men and Women 18 to 50Call for Compensation DetailsHealthy BMI between 18.5 and 29.9Fri. 15 Nov. through Mon. 18 Nov. Fri. 22 Nov. through Mon. 25 Nov. Outpatient Visits: 19 & 26 Nov. Women18 to 49Up to $3200Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18 and 29.9Fri. 15 Nov. through Sun. 18 Nov. Fri. 22 Nov. through Sun. 25 Nov. Fri. 6 Dec. through Sun. 9 Dec. Fri. 13 Dec. through Sun. 16 Dec. Outpatient Visit: 26 Dec. Men and Postmenopausal or Surgically Sterile Women18 to 55Up to $1200Healthy & Non-SmokingBMI between 19 and 35Tue. 19 Nov. through Thu. 21 Nov. Outpatient Visit: 26 Nov. 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. NEWSTuesday, October 29, 20133CAMPUSAmy Zhang / Daily Texan StaffMotivated by her father’s battle with cancer, studio art junior Emmy Laursen is participating in Texas 4000 to raise money for cancer research. Texas 4000 funded graduate student Avinash Gadok’s research project that looks to inhibit tumor growth. By Leslie Zhang@ylesliezhangBy Amanda Voeller@amandaevoellerStudents expand cancer researchCITYIt’s exciting to see companies graduate from the incubator and raise millions of dollars in funding that they use to hire people, ramp up and sell prod- ucts around the world. —Michael Webber, Clean Energy Incubator co-directorFabian StaffCecilia grandfather Avinash Gadok Biomedical engineering graduate studentIncubator allocates funds for future clean energy projects A new school is in session in San Mateo, Calif. Draper University of Heroes is an unconventional boarding school for young entrepreneurs, and the goal is simple: Take creative innovators and turn them into su- perheroes. Each student accepted into the eight-week program will create a company, which they will then pitch to Silicon Valley venture capitalists. Draper University administers an in- novative, educational curriculum meant to bring out the “superpowers” inside each student. The future superheroes are ushered through an intense experience of surprises and entrepreneurial activities. They speak publicly nearly every day and benefit from world-class mentors and coaches. UT’s very own Professor of Innovation, Bob Metcalfe, visited Draper University to speak and work with students in mid-October. But not everybody is convinced the start- up university will produce the super heroes it claims it will. Cal Newport, author of “How to Win at College” and other student- advice books, said in a blog post on his web- site that Draper is focusing too much on soft skills like networking and idea generation and too little on the technical mastery re- quired for innovation. Students targeted for Draper have big dreams, but they haven’t yet achieved the level of familiarity with their product that a Ph.D. or graduate student de- veloping that product would have. As a global research university, UT has one of the most robust arrays of program options for potential entrepreneurs. But we need to more consciously connect these aca- demic programs to commercialization and entrepreneurial education initiatives, and for that, we could take a lesson from Draper University’s playbook. The key is creating an innovative ecosystem where engineers, creative and business-minded students alike can collaborate to bring ideas to life. Considering the scope of an institution like UT, we have all the ingredients to build such an environment. UT’s academic pro- grams have experienced 25 percent growth in top-five programs in eight years, ac- cording to U.S. News & World Report. The McCombs School of Business has a top-10 graduate entrepreneurship program, accord- ing to the rankings of both Forbes and the Princeton Review. UT marketing material won’t let us forget that the University has al- ready produced many heroic figures, such as Michael Dell and Red McCombs. The goal is to shift gears and accelerate this phenom- enon by connecting our doctorate, masters students, faculty and staff with our biggest dreamers and achievers. As I described in a previous Daily Tex- an column, UT remains unranked by the Princeton Review for undergraduate entre- preneurship programs. Let’s rectify that by building the UT School of Undergraduate Entrepreneurship, which could strive to harbor the same heroic spirit and out-of- the-box curriculum of Draper University. The school would attract our most inno- vative undergraduate entrepreneurs and accept them as they enter their junior and senior years. The University should in- corporate projects from our world-class research enterprises and existing startup programs, such as Texas Venture Labs and the Longhorn Startup Program. Opening a specialized entrance track for incoming students who intend to apply to the entre- preneurship school would increase demand and quality of students. The marriage of the disciplined mastery of our researchers and the ambition and energy of our budding undergraduate entrepreneurs will force a shift in the gears of innovation at UT, and that’s a good thing. A few more fig- ures like Michael Dell and Bill Gates coming from the 40 Acres could be pretty useful. Spiller is a rhetoric and writing senior from Grand Blanc, Mich. College students are no strangers to intern- ships. In our quest to have productive sum- mers, meaningful college experiences and dazzling resumes, many of us have found our- selves interning in a company or organization that we feel suits our interests and our career goals. Some of these internships are paid, but many are not. Recently, the question of rights for unpaid interns has made headlines. Starting with the “Black Swan” lawsuit in June, in which two unpaid production interns who worked on the film filed a lawsuit for compensation and won, unpaid interns have started filing law- suits against their former employers. The main question in these cases was the legality of using unpaid interns for jobs that paid employees would normally do. However, in the case of Phoenix Satellite Television intern Lihuan Wang, who was sexu- ally harassed by her boss, the question of fair- ness takes on a new form. Because Wang was not a paid employee, she was not protected from sexual harassment under law. Although Phoenix investigated the matter and fired her harasser, her harasser was not held legally responsible for his actions. According to an article on the matter by USA Today, Oregon was the only state as of June to protect unpaid interns from sexual harassment by law. The sexual harassment of unpaid interns is not a new phenomenon. In 1994, nursing in- tern Bridget O’Connor was also similarly ha- rassed and brought her case to court. Her case was thrown out, too, on the grounds that she was unpaid, did not receive employee benefits and was therefore not an employee. In 2007, a claim by an intern working in a chiropractor’s office was also dismissed. The list goes on. In these cases, interns receive no protection in their work environment, even though they still view their harassers as employers. Clearly, this news is shocking and frighten- ing for those persons whose only pathway to their chosen field is through unpaid intern- ships. Internships started out as a type of ap- prenticeship in which people were trained for a particular type of job. They were not the norm, but rather used for specialized sectors of an industry. Now, however, internships often take the place of entry-level positions — making getting a job in certain businesses difficult, if not impossible, without internship experience. Another problem with unpaid internships? If they really do act as a stepping stone be- tween college and a full-time job, those who need to support themselves may be unable to participate in this “essential” experience. What does all this mean for college stu- dents? I am graduating from UT in less than two months, so I am venturing into the job market. However, with my liberal arts de- gree, I often feel unprepared for a job in the “real world.” I ask myself at least once a week, “What can you do professionally?” Whether this feeling of unpreparedness is founded or not, it is a feeling that many liberal arts stu- dents have. These sentiments about job-readiness only serve to further the growing number of unpaid internships that may have serious consequences for both those who intern and those who can- not. If we are convinced that our education is not enough to deserve a paying job, we will not get paying jobs. Instead, we will accept unpaid positions, because we feel that is what we de- serve. Yet to be an unpaid intern is to be vulner- able to abuses. In an age when internships are expected of young workers, the fact that interns are unprotected from sexual harassment means that most young workers are unprotected from sexual harassment. In addition, these young in- terns occupy a sort of professional limbo. They do not have job stability and may see their in- ternship as their only path to success. Therefore, interns may be unequipped to deal with and speak out about their harassment, feeling that they will lose their chance to “make it” in their profession if they do. Despite the lawsuits and the increasing awareness about the possible injustices of un- paid internships, there will continue to be un- paid interns who suffer injustices in the name of success, as well as those who are barred from success because they cannot afford to work for free. Until changes are enacted, young people will continue to face huge, if not insurmount- able, hurdles in the form of unpaid internships. Franklin is a Plan II, linguistics and Middle Eastern languages and cultures senior from Sug- ar Land. 4A OPINIONLEGALESE | Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the UT administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees. SUBMIT A FIRING LINE | E-mail your Firing Lines to firingline@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. RECYCLE | Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it. EDITORIAL TWITTER | Follow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@DTeditorial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns. 4LAURA WRIGHT, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TexanEditorialTuesday, October 29, 2013EDITORIALCOLUMNCOLUMNHORNS DOWN: WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE... HB2 decision offers small pro-abortion victoryInternships aren’t a solutionBy Nick SpillerDaily Texan Columnist @Nick_SpillerBy Lauren FranklinDaily Texan Columnist @franklin_lauren[Because] internships are ex- pected of young workers, the fact that interns are unprotected from sexual harassment means that most young workers are unpro- tected from sexual harassment. As of Tuesday, abortions performed after 20 weeks are illegal in the state of Texas. That change comes by way of House Bill 2, the same piece of omnibus abortion legislation that set the Texas Capitol ablaze in a flame of orange and blue-clad protesters this past July. This de- velopment was set to be a clear win for anti- abortion advocates, but a U.S. District Court decision has cast a shadow over that victory. The decision, made less than 24 hours be- fore portions of HB 2 were set to go into ef- fect, blocked one provision of the legislation and partially blocked another in response to a lawsuit brought by a group of plaintiffs that in- cluded Planned Parenthood, the reproductive health organization. The decision by District Judge Lee Yeakel, though hailed by many pro-abortion rights advocates as a victory, will not stop the unchal- lenged portions of HB 2 from going into effect. The state of Texas has already filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which, as the Texas Tribune’s Becca Aaronson reported Monday, “has recently up- held numerous laws that restrict abortion.” Still, despite the decision’s potential imper- manence should it be overturned, the ruling still offered a refreshing outside acknowledge- ment of the actual purpose of the law: to re- strict reproductive freedom. Moreover, the decision made Monday in no way impacts the two most controversial provisions of HB 2: the ban on abortions after 20 weeks — which, as previously mentioned, is effective as of Tuesday — and the require- ment that abortion providers upgrade their facilities to meet the standards of ambulatory surgical centers by September 2014. The latter is expected to force abortion centers across the state to close should they be unable to fund up- grades to their facilities. Neither of these provi- sions was challenged in court by the plaintiffs. Of those provisions that were challenged, however, only one, the requirement that doc- tors have admitting privileges at nearby hos- pitals, was struck down completely. The other, which makes it illegal for doctors to prescribe that women take abortion-inducing drugs outside their doctor’s office — a practice which is against FDA protocol but which al- lows women to go through the painful side ef- fects of the medication in the privacy of their own home — was declared constitutional only in the case that the mother’s life or health is in danger. In other words, if this ruling is upheld, the number of doctors that qualify to perform abortions will not be reduced by HB 2 and doctors may still prescribe abortion-inducing medicines for at-home use if the mother’s life or health is in danger. So yes, the victory for pro-abortion rights advocates is partial and potentially temporary, should a higher court side with the state’s ap- peal. But the decision offers a confirmation of what pro-abortion rights advocates suspected all along: Despite the claims of the bill’s sup- porters that HB 2 was an attempt at improv- ing women’s health, the admitting privileges provision failed the legal “purpose” test. This means that the underlying purpose of the law, in Yeakel’s opinion, was not to improve wom- en’s health, but “to hinder autonomous repro- ductive choice.” And though Yeakel didn’t overturn the pro- vision relating to abortion-inducing medi- cine, he did so on the basis that the state had the right to prefer one medical procedure or protocol over another, not on the basis that the state was protecting women by doing so. In fact, the ruling explicitly stated that the FDA protocol required by HB 2 “is assuredly more imposing and unpleasant for the woman.” The language of the district court’s ruling validates the frustration of those who spent the summer protesting against legislators who claimed that HB2 was “for the good of wom- en.” HB 2 isn’t that great for women, after all, but that doesn’t necessarily make it unconsti- tutional. “No ruling of this court will sway the opin- ion regarding abortion held by anyone,” Yeakel wrote in his opinion. Sure enough, with the ruling out, opinions have yet to change and both sides will continue waging wars over abortion rights. GALLERYSuperheroes as entrepreneurs By way of omission, the NSA on Sunday all but con- firmed allegations that it had spied on the German Prime minister Angela Merkel’s cell phone. In response to a report in a German newspaper claiming that President Obama had been briefed on the surveillance, first alleged by another German source who claimed to be working from Snowden-provided documents, the NSA officially denied allegations of the President’s involvement but conspicuously left out any denial or clarification of the program itself. The White House, in response, seemed a tad confused, stating “it’s not that the NSA or the intelligence community were going rogue or operating out of bounds,” while simultaneously alleging that the President was working “to ensure that the intelligence community is getting the appropriate guidance from policy makers.” Well, which is it? CLASS/COUP 5CLASSIFIEDSADVERTISING TERMS There are no refunds or credits. In the event of errors made in advertisement, notice must be given by 10 am the fi rst day of publication, as the publishers are responsible for only ONE incorrect insertion. 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This Fall II Session (10/28-12/17) 2 people sign up for the price of 1That’s $195 for 8-weeks of language learning! Downtown location! 801 Rio Grande St. 78701www.freestylelanguagecenter.cominfo@freestylelanguagecenter.combarbershop2106 Guadalupe • wootenbarbershop.com • 477-0109Bring this in for 4$offW tenEarly Bird Special8am - 10amMon - Friexpires 10/21/13$2 off after 10am Sign up for the Daily Digest and receive coupons DAILY! Scan this code > JFK continues from 8body. I’m real glad I did it be- cause you haven’t heard any conspiracies about it not be- ing Ruby. DT: Why, 50 years after the event, did you decide to publish a book? HA: Well, I’ve been work- ing all this time. I’ve been running down conspiracy theories, and I’ve done a lot of editing. I just don’t have time to stop. I’ve been all over the world for various occasions, and I’ve covered a lot of other things. It was just time. DT: As the only re- porter still having wit- nessed these events, what responsibilities do you think come with that? HA: To tell the truth, and that’s first and foremost, and it’s costly because all of these conspiracy people hate me. DT: What advice would you give to young journal- ists as they interpret news today? HA: You know, I can’t answer that because I look at news today and I am dis- traught. I see so much that is not news but is opinion, and that is, this new technology that has forced this on us, in a 24-hour news cycle … Technology has over taken us and we haven’t learned exactly how to do it. LIFE&ARTS5Tuesday, October 29, 2013 6SPTS6CHRIS HUMMER, SPORTS EDITOR / @texansportsTuesday, October 29, 2013FOOTBALLReed supplies swats, sacksSIDELINEMLBNFLNHLJunior defensive end Cedric Reed didn’t real- ize how effective he could be at swatting down pass- es before being inserted into the starting lineup this season. In fact, he didn’t even consider the importance of pass breakups until a local NFL player earned national buzz for the same feat. “It just kind of came to me,” Reed said. “I’m from Houston, and I watch the Texans a lot, and J.J. Watt is pretty cool. I didn’t notice it until he started doing it. It’s a game changer, espe- cially on third down. I’m trying to get a lot more.” Through seven games this season, Reed is tied for the team lead with four pass breakups, a statistic normal- ly dominated by defensive backs. While his imposing 6-foot-6-inch, 258-pound frame is ideal for generat- ing breakups, Reed’s im- pact along the defensive line stretches far beyond his ability to get his hands on opposing throws. Reed leads the Longhorns with 42 tackles and is sec- ond on the team with three sacks. Additionally, the ju- nior racked up 7.5 tackles for a loss through his first seven contests while forcing a pair of fumbles. “He’s making a great name for himself, and tack- les hate going against him,” senior safety Adrian Phil- lips said. “He’s a person who can stop the run and get to the quarterback, and really that’s what you look for in a D-end. I think this is a great start for him.” Reed entered the season with the tall task of filling the starting role vacated by Alex Okafor, a fourth round selection by the Arizona Car- dinals in the 2013 NFL Draft. Despite this, senior defensive tackle Chris Whaley said he expected Texas’ defensive line to remain just as strong with Reed in the lineup. “I wasn’t expecting a big drop off,” Whaley said. “I know what kind of player Ced is, and I know what he can do. He’s really step- ping up to the table, and he’s making big contributions to the defensive front.” Regular playing time is not entirely new for Reed, as he filled in last season after defensive end Jack- son Jeffcoat missed the fi- nal six games with a torn pectoral muscle. Reed racked up 46 tackles and 2.5 sacks in 2012, and head coach Mack Brown believes his experience last season eased his transition into the starting lineup this season. “Cedric Reed probably got a break last year when Jeffcoat got hurt because he played more at an early age than a lot of sopho- mores do,” Brown said. “He’s steadily becoming one of the best ends in the country.” Reed believes he has made considerable strides over the past two seasons, and he said his hard work is paying off this year. “I feel I’ve came a long way since my freshman year, especially last year playing last year when Jack- son went down,” Reed said. “I just see things better, I feel more confident out there, and I’m stronger. Ev- erything is coming together for me.” RED SOXCARDINALS SEAHAWKSRAMS PENGUINSHURRICANES BLACKHAWKSWILD Pu Ying Huang / Daily Texan StaffJunior defensive end Cedric Reed has enjoyed a seamless transition into the Longhorns’ starting lineup this season, leading the team with 42 tackles while racking up three sacks and four pass breakups in seven games. By Peter Sblendorio@petersblendorioPu Ying Huang / Daily Texan StaffTexas played much better after a lengthy weather delay on Saturday than it did in September against BYU. Diggs standing tall as leader of dynamic Texas secondary While Andre the Giant stood at 7-foot-4-inches. “Quandre the Giant” — as junior defensive back Quandre Diggs likes to be known — stands at just 5-foot-10-inches. Size difference aside, the defensive back has become one of Texas’ strongest defen- sive players in his three years on the 40 Acres. Whether it’s his ability, work ethic or desire, Diggs earned his reputation because of his at- titude and fearless nature. “Quandre has a passion for the game,” senior cornerback Carrington Byndom said. “He is going to play hard ev- ery snap and every down.” Diggs plays with a con- sistent chip on his shoulder, occasionally using negative attention and criticism as motivation. Diggs likes to prove people wrong. “He’s just a player,” Byn- dom said. “He’s trying to go out there, and he’s trying to prove a point. If you want to say it’s a chip on his shoulder then there it is. I guess you can call it that.” Teammates gravitate toward Diggs’ outspoken personality, which has es- tablished him as an unques- tioned team leader. When Greg Robinson took over the defensive play-calling du- ties from Manny Diaz, head coach Mack Brown and his staff went to Diggs to con- vince the players to buy into the new coach. “He’s one of the guys that [defensive backs coach] Duane [Akina] would bring in and say ‘We need your help. You have a voice on this team,’” Brown said. “‘You and Adrian Phillips are the two they are going to listen to. So here’s what we need, and here’s what we need you to do.’ He has really taken that role and stepped up and have been key to getting this team back on top.” One of Diggs’ role models is his brother Quentin Jam- mer, who was a safety for Texas from 1997-2001 and currently plays for the Den- ver Broncos after 11 years with the San Diego Char- gers. Jammer, who will be in- ducted into the Texas Hall of Honor this Friday, continues to teach Diggs even while he’s in college. “I couldn’t even point out one specific thing be- cause he’s taught me so much,” Diggs said. “He’s a father figure to me even though he’s my brother. Words can’t describe all the things my brother has done for me. I’m thankful to have a brother like him in my life.” The pair are similar in stature and their impact on the field, but Brown said Diggs has a much larger leadership role than his brother did. “Quandre is a much bet- ter communicator than Quentin was,” Brown said. “Quandre talks all the time. He’s very positive and up- beat. Quandre is in the middle of that defense and really leading a lot. Quentin wouldn’t have said much. That’s the biggest difference between them.” Diggs may not be the larg- est Longhorn in stature, but no one on the team would dispute his nickname. The fleet-footed, sharp-tongued junior stands nothing short of a giant. By Garrett Callahan@CallahanGarrettLonghorns improve at weathering the stormLess than two months ago, the Longhorns suffered one of the most embarrassing defeats in program history at the hands of BYU follow- ing a one-hour 47-minute lightning delay. Fast-forward to Saturday’s game in Fort Worth, where Texas overcame a similar lightning delay, lon- ger this time at three hours and six minutes, to maintain its undefeated Big 12 record. The biggest distinction between then and now is de- fense, especially against the run. The Longhorns were throttled in their loss to BYU — the Cougars racked up nearly 700 yards of offense, including a school-record 550 rushing yards. The Long- horns’ tackling was awful, allowing BYU to average 7.6 yards per carry. Things were much different against the Horned Frogs, though. Texas’ defenders tackled well and rallied to the ball, limiting TCU to a season-low 45 yards on the ground. The Cougars were able to control the clock and run 99 offensive plays, but the Horned Frogs held the ball eight minutes fewer than the Longhorns and ran only 63 plays from scrimmage. This is a direct result of an increased emphasis on the running game, as they ran the ball 13 more times against TCU than they did against BYU. Because it was able to stop the run and force TCU to throw the ball, Texas was able to generate consistent pres- sure, recording three sacks, a stat the team failed to record against the Cougars. This trend is reflected in Texas’ offensive numbers too. In their loss to the Cougars, the Longhorns were held to 21 points and struggled to generate explosive plays after a 57-yard touchdown pass to senior wide receiver Mike Davis in the first quar- ter. This was hardly the case against TCU. Senior quarter- back Case McCoy completed four passes of 33 yards or more, including a 65-yard touchdown to sophomore wide receiver Marcus John- son. Although McCoy com- pleted went 9-for-19, he still finished with 228 yards and an average of 12 yards per attempt. In both of these weath- er-delayed games, Texas’ players were forced to en- dure long delays in hostile environments on the road, which can put a team’s fo- cus and resolve to the test. The situations were similar, but the results make it clear: Texas is a much different football team. By David LefflerDaily Texan Columnist @leffler_davidWomen’s golf falls to last after second roundTexas fell to last place af- ter the second round of the Alamo Invitational in San Antonio on Monday. The team ended the day 23-over-par to give it a total score of 599. Sopho- more Tezira Abe, who ended with an even score- card Sunday, struggled on Monday in shooting nine shots over par for with a mark of 81. Freshman Julia Beck provided a positive note for the team, finishing two shots over par, the highest score for the team in round two. Beck recorded three birdies and five bogies for the day. She ranks highest among Longhorns on the overall leader boards, sit- ting in a tie for 43rd and six strokes behind the leader, LSU’s Lindsay Gahm. Oklahoma, Arkansas and LSU battled for first place throughout the sec- ond round, with the Ra- zorbacks moving into the top spot with a total score of 283 for the day. The Longhorns hope to catch up in the third round and final round of the tournament Tuesday. —Shelby HodgesSPORTS BRIEFLYPu Ying Huang / Daily Texan StaffJunior cornerback Quandre Diggs (6) may not be the biggest player on the Longhorns, but his impact has been huge as a leader and playmaker on the Texas defense. Illustration by John Massingill Daily Texan Staff COMICS 7Use promo code DailyTexan$150 to save $150 on classroom prep. MCAT® | LSAT® | GMAT® | GRE® PrincetonReview.com | 800-2ReviewPrep to the highest degree. Available: In Person LiveOnline ACROSS 1 Deposed leader of 1979 5 Suffix meaning “city” in some European place names 9 Shih ___ (diminutive dogs) 13 With 59-Across, where [circled letters] came from15 Like a drive-thru order16 “For ___ jolly good fellow” 17 When repeated, consoling words18 Charge for currency exchange19 Once, old-style20 Child actress who appeared with [circled letters] 23 Biol., e.g. 25 Creator of [circled letters] 26 Palm, as a playing card28 Golf’s Ernie29 Dodge models until 199030 Possible answer to “How’d you hurt yourself?” 33 Site of four sold- out 1972 Elvis Presley concerts, for short36 Swamp growth37 Base runner’s attempt38 Wool lover39 Go astray40 Not so outgoing41 Painter Picasso42 “… or ___ gather” 43 Some Wisconsin farms45 What [circled letters] wanted to do48 Bunch49 Means of escape for [circled letters] 52 It’s cast53 Time to give up? 54 Jazz’s Blake57 Wayward G.I. 58 Therefore59 See 13-Across60 Be inclined (to) 61 Suffix with prank62 ObserverDOWN 1 Lush 2 “Come again?” 3 Had an evening meal 4 Frau’s mate 5 What a gyroscope may provide 6 Forum robes 7 “It’s ___!” (birth announcement) 8 Avon commercial sound 9 One’s wife, informally10 Free-fall effect, briefly11 “Back in the ___” 12 Suffice, foodwise14 With 41-Down, composition of a trail followed by [circled letters] 21 New Deal inits. 22 Cheerleader’s cheer23 Best Original ___ (award for the film with [circled letters]) 24 Rising star27 Spanish hero El ___ 31 Checking charge32 One using an otoscope33 Locale of an 1864 Civil War blockade34 Fifth-century pope with the epithet “the Great” 35 Costume for [circled letters] on Halloween37 They’re “hung out” by professionals38 Scratch40 Anon41 See 14-Down42 Warrior’s aid44 Adams of “The Fighter” 45 Traffic cone46 Late thumb- turning critic47 Stamp collector’s fastener49 “Animal House” house50 Rob of “The West Wing” 51 “Little Latin ___ Lu” (1966 hit) 55 Freezer stock56 Suffix with sloganPUZZLE BY KEVIN CHRISTIANFor 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 PUZZLE1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162BRADDUBSOLIDAIDEDASAOBESESADIEMENSROOMSSLICEANDDICEETCETCIKEMOPTOTSTHETHREERSSIAMELWAYITSTIMETOROLLACHOORUESGOOGOOEYESIMAMENSDINTAMALECOSTUMEBALLSVICEVERSACRAWSEVADEANNSEWERTYLERPAXTITSThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Tuesday, October 29, 2013Edited by Will ShortzNo. 0924Crossword Today’s solution will appear here next issueArrr t8 7 5 2 4 3 6 9 16 8 7 1 8 4 7 1 6 2 9 3 2 8 5 6 9 9 3 4 1 5 5 8 3 13 9 7 1 3 5SUDOKUFORYOUSUDOKUFORYOU Today’s solution will appear here next issueArrr matey. This scurrvy beast is today’s answerrrrrr. Crop it out, or it’ll be the the shes for ya! t8 7 5 2 4 3 6 9 16 4 9 7 1 8 5 2 32 3 1 9 5 6 8 4 74 6 8 2 9 5 7 3 23 1 7 4 8 2 9 5 65 9 2 3 6 7 4 1 89 5 3 6 7 1 2 8 47 2 4 8 3 9 1 6 51 8 6 5 2 4 3 7 98 2 7 5 4 9 6 3 19 6 5 1 3 8 4 2 74 1 3 6 2 7 5 9 87 3 2 8 1 5 9 6 45 4 1 2 9 6 8 7 36 9 8 3 7 4 1 5 22 5 6 4 8 3 7 1 93 8 9 7 5 1 2 4 61 7 4 9 6 2 3 8 5 8 7 1 8 4 7 1 6 2 9 3 2 8 5 6 9 9 3 4 1 5 5 8 3 13 9 7 1 3 5SUDOKUFORYOUSUDOKUFORYOU Today’s solution will appear here next issueArrr matey. This scurrvy beast is today’s answerrrrrr. Crop it out, or it’ll be the the shes for ya! t8 7 5 2 4 3 6 9 16 4 9 7 1 8 5 2 32 2 7 5 4 9 6 3 19 8 7 1 8 4 7 1 6 2 9 3 2 8 5 6 9 9 3 4 1 5 5 8 3 13 9 7 1 3 5SUDOKUFORYOUSUDOKUFORYOUCOMICSTuesday, October 29, 20137 8 L&ASome novels don’t stand still. Rachel Kushner’s second novel, “The Flamethrowers,” moves abruptly but smoothly between several different worlds: from the New York art scene of the 1970s, to Italy, the backdrop of the growth and expansion of the Valera motorcycle company and the fierce political turmoil of the “Years of Lead” in the ’60s and ’70s. At the center of this sprawl is a character referred to as Reno because that’s where she’s from — the reader never learns her real name. Reno travels to New York City to ex- plore her art career and make something of her fascination with motorcycles and speed. She quickly falls in with a per- plexing group of people who insist that life and art do not need to be separated. As Reno meets these in- triguing characters she re- marks, “One was left unsure: if the thing observed was performance or plain life.” Everything in Kushner’s novel balances on a thin line be- tween fact and fiction. The fic- tional Valera company’s history is so convincing that one would really believe that they had used Indian slave labor to harvest rubber in Brazil to make tires for German vehicles in World War II. Reno’s story about Flip Farmer, who set the land speed record in 1965 traveling 522 mph, feels like it is resurrected from some neglected corner of history. But none of it is real. The novel’s characters tell ma- gentic stories that move forward quickly and intensely. The rapid movement of the story is often manifested in actual speed, as Reno races across desert high- ways at 150 mph and remem- bers cutting through the snow on skis, “tracing lines that were already drawn.” But the pace of the story can also be felt in the brisk progression of events and ideas, the scarcely connected collections of thoughts that make up so many of the stories in the book. Kushner’s prose flourishes at every opportunity, though at times, her indulgent descrip- tions can cause the novel to drag. Too many opportunities are taken to point out the sav- age, industrial beauty in a land- scape or a piece of art. At one point Kushner describes a floor as “an interlocking map of vari- ous unmatched linoleum pieces in faded floral reds, resembling a cracked and soiled Matisse.” The novel slows toward the end, losing the rhythm of its seemingly disparate chap- ters that make the beginning so electric. But the effect is only weak by comparison, and the book is anything but underwhelming. The novel’s epigraph is Latin: “Fac ut ardeat,” or “make it burn.” Whether it refers to Mo- lotov cocktail-throwing political dissenters of 1970s Italy, the mo- torcycle battalions of World War I or the hip, avant garde artists of New York, “The Flamethrow- ers” is always burning — issuing hot, magnetic sparks of details that can’t help but set fires of their own. SARAH-GRACE SWEENEY, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR / @DailyTexanArts8Tuesday, October 29, 2013Transatlanticism is Death Cab for Cutie’s saving grace. It is the band’s opus. It is their fin- est collection of songs, cover to cover, laden with melancholy melodies, unbridled emotion and some of the best lyrics that frontman Ben Gibbard ever wrote. Tuesday marks the 10th anniversary of Transatlanticism’s release, and even now, the songs are as emotionally piercing and powerful as they were before. Death Cab for Cutie comes with a stigma: emotional teen- agers, the early high school years, all the feelings of pu- berty everyone was too young to understand. It was the band equivalent of slamming the bedroom door shut when a teenagers’ love wasn’t recip- rocated, and they couldn’t tell if they were going to scream or cry. Transatlanticism covers all of those events and their ac- companying emotions, but it goes further. It was the album where Death Cab stopped being just teenage angst and brought smart instrumenta- tion, effective song structure and an expanded scope of sound. Gibbard became a re- spected writer. The band didn’t just write simple-structured pop songs, it wrote songs that crescendoed when they need- ed to, receded when they didn’t and affected their audience be- cause of it. Is there a song more subtly mind-blowing than “A Lack of Color”? Probably not. Transatlanticism makes its audience think. The album’s opener, “The New Year,” trig- gers a revelatory introspection in its listeners. Gibbard is feeling down, and he takes his listeners with him. The album’s most recognized track, “Title and Registration,” uses elaborate imagery to connect to listeners. In “Tiny Vessels,” Gibbard sings of love for the wrong reasons in a beautifully orchestrated tune, constantly reiterating the most memorable line of the whole album, “You are beautiful, but you don’t mean a thing to me.” In a way, listeners feel like they are growing up with Gib- bard. The snippets of his per- sonal life are universal. The primitive physicality of “We Looked Like Giants,” the des- peration of “Expo ‘86” and the candor of “Passenger Seat” — everyone has been there before but has never heard someone describe it the way Gibbard does. That’s what makes a good al- bum great — its ability to com- municate a message in a way never heard before, to make people think old thoughts in new ways. When listening to Transatlanticism, listeners feel every bit of what Gibbard feels. So critics can hate on the chees- iness of “I Will Follow You Into the Dark,” they can call Gibbard a whining teenager who will never grow up, but they can never touch Transatlanticism because it is and probably will always be Death Cab for Cutie’s finest moment. For a while, Arcade Fire was touted to be the new saviors of rock ’n’ roll by the kind of people who claim that rock ’n’ roll is dead. But even the most ardent Arcade Fire fan can ad- mit it comes off a bit too gran- diose at times. The band can be earnest and hopeful enough to make up for it, though. To be fair, its debut album Funeral was a near perfect re- cord and one of the best in the last 10 years. The band’s follow- ing albums, Neon Bible and The Suburbs, were just as impres- sive. After a couple of years off, Arcade Fire has returned to the mortal realm to deliver Reflek- tor, a complicated and over- blown record loosely based off a Greek tragedy, which achieves greatness at times but does not sustain it throughout. Many will call Reflektor the band’s dance record, and while the record displays a sizable shift in style from the heavily Springsteen-influence of The Suburbs, a dance label isn’t entirely accurate. Featuring a good deal of production from LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy, Reflektor is a throw- back to a different element of ’70s rock, citing David Byrne, David Bowie and Brian Eno. Reflektor finds the band taking more stylistic risks than it ever has before. As a whole, Reflektor is a good album, albeit not the second coming of Funeral that every- one was holding out for. Some of these tracks stack among the best the band has ever written. The title track is a swirling odys- sey of disco and stadium rock featuring backing vocals from David Bowie. It is one of Ar- cade Fire’s most exciting songs. Strong cuts including the as- toundingly beautiful and grand “Afterlife,” are understated and dramatic with a steady groove that finds the band creating a lot of tension. “Here Comes The Night” is more fun than usual. The beat speeds up to an excit- ing dance number, building to a rousing finish before faking out the listener and going back to the steadier, almost reggae-like sound it began with. “Porno” works excellently as a dark and moody post-punk jam and is the only time listeners might think of Win Butler’s de- livery as containing sex appeal. Among these tracks are plenty of forgettable ones that could have been cut, including “You Already Know,” “We Exist” or “Joan of Arc,” which is the only showcase of the sadly under-uti- lized Chassagne on vocal duties. The album is a risk in a stream of otherwise impres- sive records. On Reflektor, the band that always takes itself too seriously learns to cut loose a little bit. Arcade Fire experiments with sound, new tracksDeath Cab’s landmark album surpasses genreBy David Sackllah@dsackllahBy Sam Hays@samingtonhaysFifty years after the assas- sination of John F. Kennedy, four-time Pulitzer Prize fi- nalist Hugh Aynesworth published “November 22, 1963: Witness to History.” As the only reporter to witness JFK’s assassination, Lee Hen- ry Oswald’s arrest and Os- wald’s assassination by Jack Ruby, Aynesworth gives a factual recounting of what he has uncovered after a lifetime of reporting. The Daily Texan in- terviewed Aynesworth at the Texas Book Festival this weekend. Daily Texan: First, can you describe what you witnessed the day of John F. Kennedy’s assassination? Hugh Aynesworth: The day it happened, I wasn’t as- signed to it, but I just thought I had to go see the president. I just walked over close to the depository building, re- ally because the crowds were a little less over that way. I hadn’t been over there but, oh, probably five minutes when the motorcade passed me with the Kennedys. They were so happy. The crowd was, too. But then I heard what I thought was a motor- cycle backfire, but it wasn’t. That was the first shot. And I didn’t know that for three or four seconds, then I heard another shot, then a third in I don’t know how many sec- onds. I probably would have run if I’d had a place to run, but we didn’t know because we didn’t know who was shooting, how many were shooting, where they were shooting from or why. DT: In all of this chaos, what made you instinctively go into report- er’s mode. Can you explain your mindset during both of the assassinations? HA: I really can’t. I was puzzled. I didn’t know what to do. I was a little bit scared, not totally, but I just knew that I had to start inter- viewing people, and it just kicked in. DT: I read that you were the only reporter invited to Ruby’s funer- al. What do you make of that? HA: I gave them some in- formation, Ruby’s lawyers. He got the death penalty in March of ’64. He’d been in jail until January of ’67 when he died, had cancer. I helped the Ruby family, I saw them as they came out of the hos- pital, and they took me with them to help plan the funer- al. They didn’t know how to do it. They didn’t know his birth date. They didn’t know about his army record, or that he had certain benefits. So I helped them with that, and so they said, “You’ll go to the funeral with us, won’t you?” and I had just joined Newsweek magazine and I called the editor and he said, “My god, why aren’t you on the plane already?” Con- spiracy theories were already being formed and I talked the family into letting three news people in to view the ARCADE FIREAlbum: ReflektorLabel: Merge RecordsSongs to Download: “Re- flektor,” “Afterlife” and “Here Comes The Night Time” DEATH CAB FOR CUTIEAlbum: TransatlanticismLabel: BarsukSongs to Download: All of themTHE FLAMETHROWERSAuthor: Rachel KushnerPublisher: ScribnerPrice: $26.99By Dylan Davidson@davidson_dylanQ-AND-ABy Eleanor Dearman@EllyDearman‘The Flamethrowers’ novel proves to be an electric, fast-pace readPhoto courtesy of Cindy BirneHugh Aynesworth recounts working as a journalist and covering the Kennedy assassination 50 years ago. Journalist, witness to JFK assassination recounts experience covering the sceneJFK page 5Photo courtesy of Autumn de WildeDeath Cab for Cutie’s album Transatlanticism turns 10 years old today and still resonates. Photo courtesy of Nasty Little ManArcade Fire’s new album Reflektor takes more risks and has more fun than previous work. ALBUM REVIEW | TRANSATLANTICISMALBUM REVIEW | REFLEKTORBOOK REVIEW | ‘THE FLAMETHROWERS’