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New signee Manny Ramirez is making an impact. / PAGE 8SPORTSThe Texas Czech community is trying to hold onto its language despite increasing pressure from English. / PAGE 10LIFE&ARTSCONNECT WITH US• Get the latest news online at dailytexanonline.com• Like The Daily Texan on Facebook to become a part of our online community• Follow @TheDailyTexan on Twitter for breaking news and good reads• Find video paired with many of these articles and more at bit.ly/dtvid• Listen to KVRX at kvrx.com, the home of The Daily Texan’s weekly podcast • Watch Texas Student Television on antenna channel 29.1 or dorm channel 15• Read the Texas Travesty, a student humor publication, at texastravesty.com• Stay prickly! Buy a Cactus yearbook at blogs.utexas.edu/cactusCOVER PHOTOGUILLERMO HERNANDEZ / Daily Texan StaffThe University of Texas has roughly 4,900 trees on campus that are tended to by a team of six arborists, who help the trees combat the drought, construction damages as well as wild animals such as squirrels. 3Opinions edi- are Operating than right Place in Board latest JULY 15, 20133It wasn’t until the plane smacked into the runway that Plan II se- nior Varun Bhatnagar realized something was very wrong. Seated toward the center of Asiana Flight 214, he and his fellow passengers were air- borne for another few seconds before hit- ting the ground a second time and sliding to a halt. Dangling oxygen masks, dust and muffled screams quickly led Bhatnagar to a startling realization: He had just survived a crash-landing. Asiana Flight 214 crash-landed at the San Francisco International Airport in the early morning of July 6, injuring many and killing three. Originating from Shanghai and stop- ping in Seoul, the seemingly routine flight carrying 307 people showed no sign of trou- ble prior to reaching its final destination. But as the plane came in for landing, a shallow angle of descent and low airspeed caused the tail to clip the edge of the tarmac and separate from the fuselage. Bhatnagar, heading home from a month- long internship in Shanghai, was drifting off to sleep right before the impact. “It was a total shock to me,” Bhatnagar said. “Everyone started to panic and we were all rushing out of the plane. The flight atten- dants, yelling in Korean and Chinese, were telling everyone to ‘Get out, get out, get out.’” With barely any time to process what has happening, Bhatnagar escaped through the emergency exit and distanced himself from the plane without an injury. He then turned back to the plane to the see only wreckage en- gulfed in smoke. “I didn’t realize how bad the whole incident was until I got out and saw all the people who were injured and the tail was off the plane,” Bhatnagar said. “I didn’t even realize all that damage had happened when I was inside.” Many of those injured were sitting at the rear end of the plane, which hit the ground first. Emergency responders were soon on the scene, rescuing and treating victims who appeared immobile. After initiating several head counts, Bhatnagar said, the authorities shuttled most of the passengers to the termi- nal for customs and immigration. Despite the chaotic landing, he explained that the ensu- ing safety procedures were “very quick” and “managed well.” Because he participated in the BE Global Internship Program through the University of Texas, Bhatnagar’s status as a passenger aboard Asiana Flight 214 was immediately communicated through several levels of UT administration and faculty, according to Dean Soncia Reagins-Lilly. “We gather information from a large num- ber of sources on a 24/7 basis,” Lilly said. “We operate in the best interest of the students and our goal is to make the UT community feel smaller.” For his parents, however, Bhatnagar opted to take matters into his own hands. “I called them right after the crash, and I’m glad I did because I’d rather them find out through me than through the news,” Bhatna- gar said. “That way, before they heard about the crash, they knew I was OK.” After spending the rest of Saturday answer- ing questions from investigators and sorting out travel options, the exhausted student stayed with an uncle in the San Francisco area. Bhatnagar endured two days of sub- sequent flight cancellations before finally arriving in Austin on July 8. He is now spending time with his fam- ily, and recovering from what he casually described as jet lag. Rahul Bhatnagar, Varun Bhatnagar’s father, couldn’t be happier. “I was very relieved to find out that [my son] was OK, perfectly OK,” Rahul Bhatnagar said. “And when he came back home on Mon- day, I just wanted to hold him and not let go.” INTERNATIONALJORGE CORONA / Daily Texan StaffPlan II sophomore Varun Bhatnagar was on Asiana Flight 214 when it crash-landed on a San Francisco International Airport runway on July 6. Because he was sitting near the center of the plane, he was able to escape the wreck uninjured. By Stuart Railey@stuart_raileyStudent survives plane crash in San Francisco 4 OPINIONLAURA WRIGHT, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, @DTeditorial4MONDAY, JULY 15, 2013VIEWPOINTOn Friday, January 12, after more than nine hours of discussion on the Texas Senate floor, the Texas Legislature passed House Bill 2, an omnibus abortion bill by Rep. Jodie Laubenberg (R-Murphy) that crim- inalizes abortions that occur more than 20 weeks post-fertilization (unless the fetus suffers a “severe fetal abnormality” or the pregnancy poses a “serious risk of substantial and irreversible physical impair- ment of a major bodily function” to the mother) and requires abor- tion facilities to meet the standards required of ambulatory surgical centers. The bill also mandates that doctors who perform abor- tions have admitting privileges at a hospital located within 30 miles of the clinic where the abortion is performed. Planned Parenthood has pre- dicted that the financial burden of meeting these regulations could potentially force all but five abor- tion clinics in the state to close, severly restricting the ability of Tex- as women to recieve safe and legal abortions. The idea that women might seek out abortions, whether or not le- gal and safe options are available, seemed largely lost on Texas legisla- tors, who in their unwillingness to accept a single one of the 47 amend- ments offered in the Senate and the House seemed willfully ignorant of this possibility. We understand the Texas Senate’s desire to challenge Roe v. Wade by passing a law that restricts abor- tions past 20 weeks. We recognize the compellingness of the argu- ment made by Sen. Judith Zaffirini (D-Laredo) for protecting a five- month-old fetus, which she made during the debate when she held up a picture of a fetus that far along. (Zaffirini, though pro-life, voted against the bill on the basis that it would restrict access to women’s healthcare.) But if Texas legislators are go- ing to be moved by arguments as simple and beautiful as the image of a fetus at five months, they should also recognize the simple truth that people will have unprotected sex, and therefore unintended pregnan- cies and the desire for an abortion, whether the state restricts access to the procedure or not, and whether or not that sex offends their own sensibilites. Given these realities, why were amendments that bolstered evi- denced-based sex education and funding for family planning cast aside in party-line votes? If we had to point to one moment in Friday night’s debate, which, for the most part, saw respectful and well-argued perspectives from both sides of the aisle, that sent our stomachs churning (excepting, of course, the descriptions of child rape, incest and pregnancies endan- gering the life of the mother shared by Democratic senators attempt- ing to convince their colleagues to amend, or at less think twice before voting in favor of, the legislation) we would certainly point our fin- gers straight at Sen. Dan Patrick’s (R-Houston) closing comments. Patrick’s speech may have con- fused many viewers of the Senate live stream into thinking they had accidentally switched from viewing the proceedings of the Texas Legis- lature to viewing the proceedings of a “Dan Patrick for Lieutenant Governor” campaign rally. (Patrick announced he would challenge De- whurst for that position on June 27, just before the start of the second special session.) Other members of the Repub- lican caucus, such as Sen. Charles Schwertner (R-Georgetown), and Sen. Jane Nelson (R-Flower- mound), gave closing arguments in support of HB 2 that hinged on deeply personal stories and conced- ed the difficulty of the issue at hand. Both Nelson and Schwertner acknowledged the connection be- tween unwanted pregnancies and abortions and called for both in- creased funding for women’s health care and evidence-based sex educa- tion. In his comments, Schwertner even saw fit to address why he had voted “no” on the many amend- ments offered that night. “You have noticed I didn’t vote for any amendments this evening,” Schwertner said. “I think it’s too important to get this bill passed and get it to the governor’s office… however, I can say I’ve heard the proposals this evening from my Democratic colleagues, which I be- lieve merit further consideration.” Schwertner’s words are not as re- assuring as even a single “yes” vote on one of the many amendments offered would have been. And they hint at the disturbing inability of the Republicans in power to accept even a rape/incest exception to the 20-week ban. But they are still valu- able words, and next to Patrick’s statements, Schwertner’s comments look downright courageous. Patrick’s speech could also, like Schwertner’s and Nelson’s, be char- acterized as “deeply personal”— in that he managed to spend his time at the microphone throwing out deeply insulting, personal insults at both women who have chosen to have abortions and at the many citizens of Texas whose religious beliefs do not match his own. In his speech, Patrick implied that women who chose abortions do so flippantly, because having a child wouldn’t be “convenient” for them. Tired of merely implying that people with different opinions were somehow lesser than him, he went on to explicitly say that supporters of HB 2 were “listening a little more closely” to God than the bill’s op- ponents, just before he referred to God as a “he” and asked “how God would vote.” Patrick’s comments on this divise and difficult issue rang of political opportunism at its worst and re- minded us why Americans outside the state of Texas so often dismiss this wonderful place as prejudiced and backwards. There are universally compelling arguments for banning abortion after 20 weeks. There are also uni- versally compelling arguments for having sex, arguments that the state will have little luck in challenging. Legislators have passed HB 2. Now, they need to confront the is- sues of family planning, sex edu- cation and sexual violence against women, all causes of abortion. Texans still need safe abortions JOHN MASSINGILL \ Daily Texan Staff Texas legislators...should rec- ognize the simple truth that people will have unprotected sex, and therefore unin- tended pregnancies and the desire for abortion, whether the state restricts access to the procedure or not. Tired of merely implying that people with different opin- ions were somehow lesser than him, [Patrick] went on to explicitly say that support- ers of HB 2 were “listening a little more closely” to God than the bill’s opponents. 5AgeCompensationRequirementsTimelineMen and Women18 to 55Up to $2000Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18 and 34Weigh between 110 and 220 lbs. Fri. 26 Jul. through Mon. 29 Jul. Fri. 2 Aug. through Mon. 5 Aug. Outpatient Visit: 12 Aug. Men and Postmenopausal or Surgically Sterile Women18 to 55Up to $4800Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18 and 30Wed. 7 Aug. through Mon. 12 Aug. Thu. 22 Aug. through Mon. 26 Aug. Thu. 5 Sep. through Mon. 9 Sep. Thu. 19 Sep. through Mon. 23 Sep. Outpatient Visit: 4 Oct. Men and Postmenopausal or Surgically Sterile Women18 to 55Up to $1200Healthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 19 and 35Thu. 15 Aug. through Mon. 19 Aug. Outpatient Visit: 23 Aug. Current Research Opportunitieswww.ppdi.com • 462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study information Age Compensation Requirements Timeline Better clinic. Better medicine. Better world. Everybody counts on having safe, effective medicine for anything from the common cold to heart disease. But making sure medications are safe is a complex and careful process. At PPD, we count on healthy volunteers to help evaluate medications being developed – maybe like you. You must meet certain requirements to qualify, including a free medical exam and screening tests. We have research studies available in many different lengths, and you’ll find current studies listed here weekly. PPD has been conducting research studies in Austin for more than 25 years. Call today to find out more. Current Research Opportunitieswww.ppdi.com • 462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study information Age Compensation Requirements Timeline Better clinic. Better medicine. Better world. Everybody counts on having safe, effective medicine for anything from the common cold to heart disease. But making sure medications are safe is a complex and careful process. At PPD, we count on healthy volunteers to help evaluate medications being developed – maybe like you. You must meet certain requirements to qualify, including a free medical exam and screening tests. We have research studies available in many different lengths, and you’ll find current studies listed here weekly. PPD has been conducting research studies in Austin for more than 25 years. Call today to find out more. www.ppdi.com • 512-462-0492 • Text “PPD” to 48121 to receive study informationNEWSMONDAY, JULY 15, 20135Four years ago, UT alum- na Pari Wafayee walked down to her cafeteria in her residence hall to break her Ramadan fast, only to find out campus dining halls op- erated on reduced schedules in the summer. Feeling famished after going without any food or drink from dawn to dusk, Wafayee said she quickly realized the entire month of Ramadan, the holiest time in Islam, would be a challenge because she did not have the money to eat at a restaurant off campus once it was time to break fast. Wafayee’s lucky break came at the Nueces Mosque in West Campus, which has provided free, daily meals to people to break their fast during Ramadan since it was built in 1977. The Nueces Mosque is the oldest mosque in the city of Austin. The mosque provides free food to Muslims and non- Muslims alike who come on the days of Ramadan, al- though it asks larger parties to notify them in advance if they are coming, said Shaykh Mohamed-Umer Esmail, the Imam — or wor- ship leader — at the Nueces Mosque. Mohamed-Umer Esmail said the mosque’s purpose is to help people ful- fill the highest peak of spiri- tuality during Ramadan. He said it does this by relieving people of the work of cook- ing, and by providing a place of comfort for students who are away from their families. The food is fully provid- ed for by donations from alumni, parents and students themselves, and local restau- rants also cater food to the mosque at discounted rates, officials said. “We are here to help the youth rejuvenate their faith,” Mohamed-Umer Esmail said. Mohamed-Umer Esmail said the Ramadan offering complies with the obliga- tions of Imams to provide for other members of their community. Mohamed- Umer Esmail said the host of the itfar, the Arabic name for the meal breaking a Ra- madan fast, receives spiritual rewards for contributions to the community. Sarah Abdelhadi, a bio- chemistry senior and board member at the Nueces Mosque, said the mosque recently began using environmentally friendly din- ner sets that can be washed and reused for iftar. The mosque previously used pa- per and plastic utensils, but this practice is now too waste- ful because there are so many students, Abdelhadi said. Wafayee said she imme- diately felt she was part of a community when she started attending Ramadan meals at the mosque. “The most welcoming experience I had at UT was when I came to the mosque,” Wafayee said. “It is not just the food that brings people here. It is the sense of com- munity, brotherhood, sister- hood and shared experience of the holy month that draws people to this place.” Wafayee said the struggles of daily fasting remind her and other Muslims of the need to show compassion for those who endure hunger — a practice exemplified by the free meals offered at the Nueces Mosque. “In addition to humiliation, self-control, perseverance and will power, fasting teaches you empathy and compassion for the poor as you endure hun- ger, encouraging the spirit of charity.” Wafayee said. “It is a very humbling experience.” RELIGIONJORGE CORONADaily Texan StaffYoung men are served food at the Nueces Mosque in West Campus on July 10 in celebration of the first day of Ramadan. By Rabeea Tahir@rabeeatahir2Mosque provides free meals 6NEWSMONDAY, JULY 15, 2013MONDAY, students while they wait at the crosswalk and housing the famed albino squirrel are roughly 4,900 trees with different stories to tell — and UT is working to docu- ment and measure every last one. UT’s Facilities Services department is cataloging the trees on campus this summer to better understand how to care for them and learn more about their history. The department will culminate its efforts in an online database featuring stories of 25 interesting trees on campus and launch a walking tree tour in spring 2014. Trees play an important role in UT’s environmental and social ecosystems, providing shade, clean air and bringing people together under their leaves. Every year, the University spends thousands of dollars caring for its trees, valued at more than $25 million. But caring for trees is not easy. UT employs a special team of six to battle ongoing campus construction, damage from wild animals and the Texas drought. The team operates from a $2.5 million allotted landscape budget, which pays the salaries of 71 landscapers, and not all the funds go to trees. Landscapers keep trees healthy by pruning and revitalizing the soil. “It’s our duty, not only mine but the people at UT to do right by the trees because it’s been proven they add such an environmental benefit,” said UT arborist and assistant manager of urban forestry James Carse, who is part of the team that will be documenting the trees. TREE PEOPLE In 1923, UT professor William Battle pulled out his shot- gun to protect the live oak trees on 24th Street and Whitis Avenue from demolition. Years later, Carse’s said Battle’s passion set the standard for preserving trees on campus, and his passion for trees lives on in students, faculty and staff. Many have stories on how their lives have been affected by UT’s trees, and not all stories include famous trees like the Battle oaks. English professor Jerome Bump said he and UT profes- sors Joe Jones and Sam Ellison used to eat lunch under a cypress tree along Waller Creek. Since Jones and Ellison died, Bump said it is a powerful place for him. Not all trees with historic tales are as well-known or commemorated with a plaque, however. “I learn something new every day,” Carse said. “Many of the faculty have heard a story about this or that tree or know of a rare species and if they let us know we can bet- ter protect and maintain it, and make sure it is known if a project comes up around it.” Carse said the push for preservation on campus has al- lowed trees to flourish, but his department still works to overcome one furry obstacle — squirrels. SQUIRRELS“I’ve never seen this kind of squirrel problem anywhere and really it’s because everything comes together; We have water and we have a constant food source for these things,” Carse said. The fox squirrels roam from tree to tree on campus and chew on parts of young trees and fresh growth on older trees. These are some of the most important parts of the tree, since they give it the most nutrients. According to Texas Parks and Wildlife, squirrels can breed twice a year with a litter of two or three, typically born in February and July. Live oak trees are the natural home for fox squirrels and provide for their basic needs. Carse said hand-feeding and trash adds to the problem because it only spurs the growing population. “Please don’t feed these wild animals,” Carse said. “They become dependent and you’re actually doing an injustice to them in the long-run.” Texas state law classifies the campus squirrels as small game. Carse said if the squirrels are trapped, they are re- quired to be utilized or killed, meaning UT officials can’t trap or poison to control population. Officials have resorted to sprinkling white and cayenne pepper on popular spots for squirrels to deter them from coming back, but they say it is not very effective. KEEPING TREES ALIVEAside from defending against squirrel damage, the drought and construction, Carse said one of the biggest problems for trees on campus is construction. Although trees are a priority for construction projects, there are some struggles associated with removal and relo- cation. Removals involve cutting off a large portion of tree roots, which shocks trees. And some trees are relocated to smaller spaces and do not have enough room to grow. “If you plant a tree on a restricted area like that, you’re LITTLEFIELD DEADOR CEDAR24th and Whitis streets; in front of The Littlefield houseGeorge Littlefield imported the Himalayan Deador Cedar planted in front of Littlefield house, even bringing Himala- yan soil to ensure its survival. Today the tree has become the state champion for being the biggest of its kind in Texas, although not a very common species. “THE BATTLE OAKS” LIVE OAKS 24th and Whitis streetsThe Battle Oaks are three live oaks William Battle defend- ed from a construction project that would’ve cut them down, standing under them with a shotgun. The native trees are said to be older than the University and some of the few that were not used as fortification wood of the State capitol during the Civil War. The trees now surround a statue of Barbara Jordan. SPREADING ROOTSTrees to be cataloged to understand history, careTop: Christine Ayala@christine_ayala 8DIRECTORY INFORMATION SHOULD BE KEPT CURRENT. Official correspondence is sent to the postal or e-mail address last given to the registrar; if the student has failed to correct this address, he or she will not be relieved of responsibility on the grounds that the correspondence was not delivered. For details about educational records and official communications with the University see General Information, 2012–2013. A Student’s Right To PrivacyThe information below is considered directory information. Under federal law, directory information can be made available to the public. You may restrict access to this information by visiting http://registrar.utexas.edu/restrictmyinfo. Please be aware that if you would like to restrict information from appearing in the printed directory, you must make your changes at this web page by the twelfth class day of the fall semester. If you request that ALL your directory information be restricted NO information about you will be given to anyone, including your family members, except as required by law. Any restriction you make will remain in effect until you revoke it. • name• local and permanent addresses• phone number• e-mail address• public user name (UT EID) • place of birth• dates of attendance• enrollment status• classification• major field(s) of study• expected date of graduation• degrees, awards, and honors received (including selection criteria) • participation in officially recognized activities and sports• weight and height if member of an athletic team• student parking permit information• the most recent previous educational institution attended• job title and dates of employ- ment when employed by the University in a position that requires student statusSARA BETH PURDY, SPORTS EDITOR, @texansports8MONDAY, JULY 15, 2013At the beginning of the summer, freshman Bran- don Stone announced his intention to forego his three remaining years of eligibil- ity for a professional golfing career. Stone is the second golfer in many years to leave Texas as an underclassman, following in the footsteps of former Longhorn Jordan Spieth who turned pro in 2012 after only one season. For the Men’s Golf Fresh- man of the Year, the allure of a professional contract was likely too much to pass up. In addition, Spieth hinted that winning a national cham- pionship as a freshman left him with no more challenges. Though this has become a recent trend for men’s golf, the Texas men’s basketball program is all too famil- iar with the one-and-done phenomenon. For example, Kevin Durant only spent one season at Texas before seeking greener pastures in the NBA. Before Durant, superstars often went directly to the NBA before a rule change prevented 18-year-olds from signing professional con- tracts, effectively changing the face of college basketball. Talented players now go to college for at least a year be- fore cashing in with the NBA. Myck Kabongo became the most recent player to leave Texas early. Even though he is not a “one-and-done” ath- lete, he did leave for the NBA with two years of eligibility. “It’s been my dream for a while and I felt like I was ready,” Durant said in 2007. “I had to take the opportu- nity. I love the game and I thought it was time.” For both basketball and football, the importance of being drafted high is key in the decision of whether to go pro or not, as draft order is coupled with certain guaran- teed salary minimums. “I just don’t want to be a player in the NBA; I want to have an impact,” Durant said. “That was one of the big deci- sions too.” Draft stock is a major fac- tor that affects athletes who contemplate giving up col- lege eligibility. Currently, analysts cite former USC quarterback Matt Barkley as a reason to pay attention to draft stock. Barkley was Early departures more commonLAWRENCE PEART / Daily Texan file photoFormer Longhorn Tristan Thompson dunks against Texas A&M in 2011. Thompson is one of many Texas athletes who have left college early for the benefits of a professional career in the NBA. MiLBSpike Owen is back working with the Round Rock Express for his third year and is currently a field- ing coach. Owen, who set several records and lists in the top 10 of many Texas statistical categories, first worked for the Express from 2002 to 2006 when they were affiliates of the Houston Astros. After his stint in Round Rock, he was the infield coordinator with the Rangers for a few years before rejoining the Ex- press after they switched to the Rangers organization. “Baseball is in my blood and being able to pass along and help these kids and young men try to achieve their goal is very satisfying,” Owen said. Owen played at Texas from 1980 to 1982 and helped lead the Longhorns to the Southwest Confer- ence championship in all three seasons. Owen was the 1981 SWC Player of DONE page 9OWEN page 9By Drew Lieberman@DrewLiebermanBy Sara Beth PurdyDaily Texan Columnist @ sara0bethJordan Spieth wins 2013 PGA TourLonghorn alumnus coaches RR ExpressSIDELINEFormer Longhorn Jordan Spieth won a three person playoff to win the PGA Tour John Deere Classic Sunday evening. With the win, at 19-years old, Spieth is the youngest player in 82 years to win on the PGA Tour. The last under-20 to win on the PGA Tour was Ralph Guldahl in 1931, who won the Santa Monica Open. Spieth defeated David Hearn and Zach Johnson with a two- foot putt and finished on-par on the fifth hole of the playoff round. He earned a spot in the Open Championship which will take place next week. —Sara Beth Purdy 9SPORTSMONDAY, JULY 15, 20139the Year with an on-base percentage of .528, a Texas record which has since been broken, and recording 265 assists from the field, a Texas record which still stands. He helped take the team to the 1981 College World Series where he recorded 10 assists in a 15-8 victory in 13 in- nings over Oklahoma State. “Being able to play there two years in a row in ’81 and ’82. That’s why you go to Texas to have an opportunity to win a National Champi- onship. That was definitely my greatest memory,” Owen said. After back-to-back World Series trips, Owen chose to forgo his senior season, having been drafted sixth overall in 1982. He currently sits second in Texas history in career base-on-balls with 247 and an on-base percent- age at .509. Owen had one of the lon- gest careers in the Majors of any former Longhorn, trav- eling between five different teams in 12 seasons. The Express has grabbed national headlines recently since Manny Ramirez signed a minor league deal with the Texas Rangers earlier this season and was assigned to Round Rock. On July 12, Ramirez had a two-out walk off solo home run to win the game 7-6. “He’s just one of the guys here,” Owen told a reporter at the Kansas City Star after the 7-6 win in Omaha. “And, obviously, saying that, you can’t forget about what he’s done in the game.” Often considered the great- est right-handed hitter of his generation, Ramirez’s career has been unconventional. His antics on and off the field were questionable and his actions simply described as “Manny being Manny.” Ramirez’s career began in Cleveland where he played from 1993 to 2000. Ramirez hit .333 with 44 home runs and 165 RBIs in 1999 and hit .351 in a contract year to land with the Boston Red Sox. It was the Boston years for which Manny is most remembered for, especially for his World Series MVP performance in 2004 to help end the Curse of the Bambi- no and the Red Sox’s 86-year drought without a title. In late July 2008 Ramirez was traded to the Dodgers and hit .396 with 17 home runs in 53 games, helping them reach the National League Championship series. After signing a two- year, $45 million contract, Ramirez was less effective and failed a drug test. In 2010 he landed with the White Sox on waivers and ended up in Tampa Bay in 2011. Ramirez failed another drug test, leading to his re- tirement in 2011. Since then, Ramirez has played in Taiwan, batting .352 with eight home runs and 43 RBIs in 49 games. “I’m in the moment right now, I don’t think ‘Oh, I’m going to go to the Big Leagues.’ None of that,” Ramirez said in a press con- ference when asked what it was like being so close to returning to the Majors. “I think about the moment right now.” Though Ramirez may be content with his role now and grateful for the oppor- tunity, there is little doubt making a Major League comeback was his primary motivation for his signing again at age 41. projected as a top-10 selec- tion after his junior season but after a disappointing se- nior year, he fell to the fourth round, losing potentially millions of what could have been a potential first-round contract the year before. Money is a huge motivat- ing factor. Former Long- horn J’Covan Brown left for the NBA because he wanted to be able to financially sup- port his family. Currently, there is a rule that prevents the one-and- done trend from affecting college football — athletes must be three-years removed from high school before de- claring for the NFL draft. While athletes have the op- portunity to leave after their junior season for the NFL, athletes often complete most, if not all, of their college eligibility in order to increase their draft stock. Current Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Man- ziel may be paving the way for potential college football “one-and-dones” and has contemplated leaving the Aggies after only two years. . “If an opportunity comes to go to the NFL, you have to look at that,” Manziel told ESPN’s Krik Herbstreit. Many analysts admit that while young athletes would benefit the NFL, they are not physically ready to go up against other athletes. High school seniors are no match for players like Baltimore’s Ray Lewis, a linebacker with a 240-pound frame. Baseball seems to be the only major sport that has developed a system that works for most players. Ath- letes can be drafted directly after high school but are given the option of signing with an MLB team or go- ing to college. If they decide to go to college, then they must stay through three years or be 21 to declare for the draft. Even swimming has be- come a potential source of athletes who choose to leave with eligibility remaining. Former Longhorn Kathleen Hersey left with two years of eligibility remaining in order to train with Texas men’s coach Eddie Reese and Longhorn Aquatics. Money and the chance to compete at a higher level has created and developed the culture of forfeiting college eligibility for a professional contract. An NFL agent con- firmed this with Sporting News earlier this year. “The days of players com- ing back for the love of the game or winning a national championship are over,” the agent said. OWENcontinues from page 8DONEcontinues from page 8GUIELLERMO HERNANDEZ MARTINEZ / Daily Texan Staff Former Longhorn Spike Owen currently helps coach the Round Rock Express, the Triple-A affiliate of the Texas Rangers. The Express made headlines with recent signee Manny Ramirez. ne hundred seven- ty-five years ago, La Grange was nothing more than a sleepy way station between Austin and Houston. Situated on the Colorado River roughly 60 miles southeast of Austin, the village and surrounding Fayette County underwent a transformation beginning in the 1850s, when waves of Czech and German immi- grants arrived in the area. The Czech immigrants who settled there held onto their heritage and language, but also emphasized assimila- tion through the learning of English, said Retta Chandler, director of the Texas Czech Heritage and Cultural Center in La Grange. The center, first conceived in 1995, seeks to increase awareness of the Tex- as Czech community through cultural events and exhibits. After moving into shiny new digs adjacent to the Fayette County Fairgrounds in 2009, the center filled the space with books, paintings, photographs and heirlooms donated by the descendants of Czech immigrants. However, while the excitement over the new collection was a good in- dicator of the local interest in Czech heritage, it also belied a less encouraging fact about the state of the community: Texas Czech, the local dialect of Czech, is dying. According to the U.S. Eng- lish Foundation, a Washing- ton, D.C.-based foundation that promotes the adoption of English as the official language of the U.S., 12,805 Texans spoke Czech as of May. How- ever, Chandler understands that number is ever dwindling. “[The Czech language] is almost gone,” Chandler said. “I think my generation is probably the end of it.” Linguists have long ob- served that immigrant languages tend to die out after just a few genera- tions as the younger gen- erations assimilate to the dominant culture. In her 2009 undergraduate thesis on the Czech language in Texas, Pavlína Pintová of Masaryk University in the Czech Republic identifies two causes for the decline of Texas Czech, which she dates to the 1920s: the introduction of Americanization programs in response to World War I and tightened immigration quotas. According to Lida Cope, director of the Texas Czech Legacy Project based here at UT, the decline picked up speed after World War II, when negative feelings to- ward Czech slowly built up to a tipping point at which Czech speakers abruptly switched over to English. To Frank Klinkovsky, an 87-year-old docent at the Czech Heritage Museum Ge- nealogy Center in Temple, this assessment rings painfully true. “[Things are] changing real fast,” Klinkovsky said. “The Czechs don’t speak up for themselves. They [don’t] teach their kids [the language].” Klinkovsky grew up on a farm east of Temple, the son of a Moravian father and a Bohemian mother. As a boy, Klinkovsky spoke Czech to his friends and family, but when he went to school, in a rural two-room schoolhouse, the pressure to learn English was strong, from both teach- ers and parents who didn’t want to hold their children back. English was the only language spoken in school, so to supplement the language he heard at home, he took Czech classes every summer. After high school, Klinkovsky married a lo- cal Czech girl. Her ethnicity wasn’t a mere coincidence. “I was a little bit par- ticular that she was Czech,” Klinkovsky said. “I don’t know why ... because I talked Czech, and I kind of wanted her to.” It wasn’t an easy courtship, however. “It was kind of a hassle,” Klinkovsky said. “One time I was going to go see her ... and I was going down a gravel road ... and I got into some loose gravel on the side of the road. The tail end got sliding side- ways and I over-corrected, and the car rolled over and landed upright on its wheels.” Luckily, Klinkovsky wasn’t severely injured, and the cou- ple went on to be married for 55 years. Somewhat ironical- ly, Klinkovsky’s progeny have followed the pattern of the Texas Czech community and don’t speak Czech beyond a few songs and stock phrases. When Klinkovsky’s great- granddaughter was born three years ago, he had a new oppor- tunity to pass on the language, but limited contact and other priorities made that unfeasible. “I probably should be teaching her some Czech,” Klinkovsky said. “I don’t know ... That would be nice.” Like Klinkovsky, Georgia Kovar, a native speaker of Texas Czech, seems to have resigned herself to the fact that there’s not much hope for saving the language in Texas. “There’s hardly anybody I can talk Czech to anymore,” Kovar said. Although the center has offered Czech class- es in the past, the trends are undeniable. Still, Chandler believes it’s worth trying to save the language. “It’s such an important part of our identity,” Chan- dler said. “It’s something we should be proud of.” 10ELYANA BARRERA, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR, @DTlifeandarts10MONDAY, JULY 15, 2013Czechs struggle to preserve language LANGUAGEBy Riley Brands@ribranO[Things are] changing real fast. The Czechs don’t speak up for themselves. —Frank Klinkovsky, Czech Heritage Museum Genealogy CenterMENGWEN CAO / Daily Texan StaffFrank Klinkovsky, 87-year-old docent at the Czech Heritage Museum Genealogy Center in Temple, is one of the few remaining who can still speak Czech in Temple. For more from Chandler, as well as a conversation in Texas Czech, visit bit.ly/dtvid 11HOUSING RENTAL370 Unf. Apts. NOW PRE-LEAS- ING IN HYDE PARKLocated at 600 E. 53rd, The Elms has 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apart- ments available for Summer or Fall move-in! This 2-story apart- ment community includes a swimming pool, BBQ area, and on-site laundry. 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DailyTexanClassi eds.comkeep an eye out for thesuperTUESDAYCOUPONSevery weekclip DailyTexanClassi eds.comrecycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle 12Across 1 Pleasant 5 Pretentious 9 Old PC monitors13 Radio’s “___ in the Morning” 14 Lerner’s partner in musicals15 Meat cut that may be “tender” 16 Comedian with a mock 1968 presidential campaign18 Detroit product19 Printing units: Abbr. 20 Villain’s look21 Puff piece? 22 “Absolutely!” 23 Money that doesn’t completely satisfy a debt25 ___ and hers27 Bob Schieffer’s network28 Roman god of love30 Manufacture34 Cut off, as a branch37 Tricky task in a driver’s test40 Kindergartner, e.g. 41 Gents’ counterparts42 Furniture chain founded in Sweden43 Floppy feature of a dachshund44 Co. in a 2000 merger that became Verizon45 Event that might have a pillow fight52 Stock market debut, for short55 “La Bohème” or “La Traviata” 56 Psychologist Alfred57 Wrigley Field player58 The “I” in M.I.T.: Abbr. 59 Casino cry … or a hint for 16-, 23-, 37- and 45-Across61 Actor Rogen62 Beethoven dedicatee63 Job for a barber64 “___ does it!” 65 A great deal66 Ward of “CSI: NY” Down 1 A bit cold, as weather 2 Spitting ___ 3 Truncates 4 Mentalist’s skill, briefly 5 Certain IM user 6 Put back to zero, as a tripmeter 7 Insignificant punk 8 Kyoto currency 9 Alleges10 Noir’s counterpart in roulette11 Giant in Greek myth12 Angry bull’s sound14 Moon goddess17 Snakes along the Nile21 Modern lead-in to cafe24 Represent26 Long-term bank offering, briefly28 Residence like 2-B or 7-J: Abbr. 29 ___ Zedong30 Santa ___, Calif. 31 Stoplight color32 Yale grad33 King Kong, notably34 “Whatever!” 35 Number dialed before an area code36 Augusta National org. 38 Andes animal39 Do-it- yourselfer’s purchase43 Coarse, as humor44 Greek street food45 Sang-froid46 Sleep problem47 Remarks not to be taken seriously48 Renaissance painter Veronese49 Own up (to) 50 Like non-oyster months51 Head: Fr. 53 Eliza, to Henry Higgins54 Illinois senator- turned- president59 Collectible frame60 A touchdown is worth six: Abbr. puzzle by zhouqin burnikelFor 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 PUZZLE123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566IPHONEAPPDCUPSMROLYMPIAERNIEPETEACHERSEGERUMSHEIRDATEMITEEDSULLIVANPEONNASTASEERNESPLINTSDEERTRITECOBBGROOVESOPALONLYYOURENELOADEDDICEENNEIBAROASTTEDVALIDCURSEWORDELANDASIANPEARSLAKEBABYDADDYThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Monday, July 15, 2013Edited by Will ShortzNo. 0610CrosswordAcross 1 Mr. Spock’s rank: Abbr. 5 Rosie of “The Jetsons,” for one10 Compressed video format14 Lascivious sort15 Archie’s sitcom wife16 Simon & Garfunkel’s “___ Rock” 17 Some Wall St. traders18 Beef up19 Shoot with Novocain, say20 Highland slopes22 Comb maker23 Puerto Rico y Cuba24 He drove the serpents from Ireland, in legend27 Jethro ___ 28 Sold-out sign29 Medicine- approving org. 32 Painter’s support36 Accustoms38 Diamond Head setting39 ___ of Tranquillity41 Mathematician John who was the subject of “A Beautiful Mind” 42 Marcos of the Philippines45 Britain’s Arthur Wellesley, with “the” 48 Band with the multiplatinum albums “Out of Time” and “Monster” 49 P, to Pythagoras51 K.G.B. concern52 Indian pipe player, maybe57 Uno + cuatro60 Santa ___ winds61 Butcher’s string62 Eastern nurse63 Jeff of the Electric Light Orchestra65 Drain feature66 Comb-over’s locale67 Bird feeder fill68 Malaria symptom69 Checked out70 Critical times of attack71 Count in a weight roomDown 1 Cantankerous folks 2 “How Are Things in Glocca ___?” (1947 hit song) 3 Most populous of the United Arab Emirates 4 Like Cain, toward Abel 5 Actor Stephen 6 Strange birds 7 Lavatory fixture 8 Bewhiskered frolickers 9 However, briefly10 Capital of Belarus11 Simon of Simon & Garfunkel12 Actress Stone of “The Help” 13 Chews the fat21 Double ___ Oreos23 A browser has one25 Mideast grp. 26 Red-hot feeling29 Herr’s honey30 Information ___ 31 1980s U.S. Davis Cup captain32 Evening in Paris33 Checked in, say34 [May I have your attention?] 35 Opus ___ 37 Drawers in drawers40 Companion who’s a knockout43 Early Bond foe44 “Gotcha!” 46 Word before “That’s gotta hurt!” 47 GPS above-the- Equator fig. 50 Approved52 Timetable: Abbr. 53 Nine: Prefix54 No-see-um55 Turn out to be56 Spanish kings57 South Africa has a famous one58 Polite words after “if” 59 “Great” detective of children’s literature63 It may be dropped when one trips64 Hook shapepuzzle by kristian houseFor 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 PUZZLE1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465 666768697071CEDARZIONPHILAMOREIRAERONAPIGINAPOKEEGGYELIEEONDASHESSEETHRUOSOLETOOTATKEANUJIHADSTOWYVESUSASOWSEAREREDEMILIESOUNDS DEFOECARHOPININKATTACHEASSISIGNUTAILRITZPORKBARRELALEEARALDEEREBODSTOBESEWONThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Tuesday, July 9, 2013Edited by Will ShortzNo. 0604Crossword12COMICSMONDAY, JULY 15, 2013