Faculty members will cast their votes March 25 to help decide the future of a pro- posed fall break. Fifty-nine faculty members have petitioned the proposal since the Faculty Council passed it in January. The pro- posal would interrupt class schedules for courses that have required weekly labs. The proposed break would give students a Monday and Tuesday off near the end of October, while starting the semester two days earlier. Currently, the University has 12 full weeks of school for labs in the fall. If the fall break is implemented, professors would have to include labs during the first week of class to keep the same number. Diane Bailey, assistant professor and chairwoman of the Faculty Council Cal- endar Committee, said the vote would require at least 15 percent of the general faculty members present at the meet- ing, which is 366 of the vot- ing members. If the number is not met, the proposal will go back to the Faculty Coun- cil instead of moving on. “In that event, the Faculty Council must allow all the peo- ple who protested to speak at its meeting, then [the council] would make a decision and that vote would be final,” Bailey said. If the necessary amount of voting members are pres- ent, the proposal will need a majority of the votes to pass, continuing on to UT Presi- dent William Powers Jr. Kornel Rady, government and communication studies sophomore and Student Gov- ernment representative, has been lobbying faculty mem- bers to gain support for the break. Rady said he is trying to reach every faculty mem- ber to remind them of the meeting and to be present to vote on the proposal. “There was very little notice It may not be a matter of if Texas will play Texas A&M again, but when. Men’s athletics director DeLoss Dodds said he be- lieves the Longhorns and Aggies will eventually renew their rivalry, but that a period of time to allow animosities to subside would be needed. “I think we’ll play some- time,” Dodds said. “I don’t know when it will happen or how it will happen, but I’m sure it will happen.” In their last meeting, the Longhorns beat the Ag- gies, 27-25, at Kyle Field on Thanksgiving Day in 2011 af- ter Justin Tucker hit a game- winning 40-yard field goal as time expired. That was the 118th and final time the two rivals squared off before Texas A&M left the Big 12 for the SEC. “They left,” Dodds said. “They’re the ones that decid- ed not to play us. We get to decide when we play again. I think that’s fair. If you did a survey of our fans about play- ing A&M, they don’t want to. It’s overwhelming. I know. I hear it. Our fans are impor- tant to us. I think there’s got to be a period where things get different. I think there’s too many hard feelings.” ACC allianceThe college football land- scape has shifted recently, es- pecially in the Big 12, which The Perry-Castañeda Li- brary’s 24/5 schedule will continue indefinitely, cement- ing its status as a home-away- from-home for students. Keeping the PCL open 24 hours, five days per week, will cost $40,000 more per year. Last semester, the PCL re- ceived funds from the Student Services Budget Committee, Office of the Provost, Division of Student Affairs and Texas Exes, but those organizations had only committed to fund- ing the extended hours for the 2012-2013 academic year. UT Athletics has histori- cally given funds to the li- brary system and decided to increase its planned donation this year to enable the extend- ed hours, Natalie England, intercollegiate athletic com- munications manager, said. Student government president Thor Lund and vice president Wills Brown, whose terms finish at the end of the month, campaigned on increasing the PCL’s hours. Lund, who presided with Brown at a celebration event launching PCL 24/5 for the rest of the spring Monday night, said he and Brown are happy to obtain the financial commitment from UT Ath- letics and have their main campaign promise realized. “It was just last year that Wills and I were stand- ing outside the PCL with 1Tuesday, March 19, 2013@thedailytexanfacebook.com/dailytexanThe Daily TexanServing the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900dailytexanonline.com Texas tussles with Houston on the road. SPORTSPAGE 7The Daily Texan talks with The Hush Sound. LIFE&ARTSPAGE 12INSIDENEWSHappiness is more of a choice than we think, according to marketing professor Raj Raghunathan. PAGE 5Rainey Street could see even more changes after an amendment to the city code. PAGE 6SPORTSJaylen Bond decides to transfer after two seasons with the Texas basketball program. PAGE 7Jackson Jeffcoat takes after his father but he doesn’t let that define who he is as a football player. PAGE 7Head coach Karen Aston had her hands full with a group of young players, and she’s hoping they can bounce back next season. PAGE 9LIFE&ARTSWith his new album dropping today, we examine Justin Timber- lake’s evolution from child prodigy to pop star. PAGE 12“Mundo Cruel,” a col- lection of nine short stories, manages to be satirical, heartwarming and heartbreaking in just 96 pages. PAGE 12UNIVERSITYATHLETICSReferencing “instability on campus,” President William Powers Jr. said the search pro- cess for the new provost will occur on a smaller scale than normal and will likely not include a pool of candidates from outside the University. Powers, who addressed Fac- ulty Council on Monday, said the search for a new provost will include communication with faculty but will ultimately be a more expedited process than typical. Steven Leslie, executive vice president and current provost, announced last month he will be stepping down at the end of August. Tensions between Powers and the UT System Board of Regents, which have been ongoing since 2011, have increased in recent months and were on display during the most recent board meet- ing. The regents subjected Powers to a lengthy period of intense questioning unchar- acteristic of board meetings. “Given what we’ve been through and what we are going through, it will be very hard to get [a candi- date] from off of the cam- pus,” Powers said. “It’s not an impossibility, but it would be very hard ... The process of going about looking for a provost with a full, natural search or normal committee will be difficult to do.” Powers said the inter- nal search for a provost will look for potential candidates among current and former deans and department chairs, Provost likely internal hireBy Jordan RudnerTwo days before the 10th anniversary of the start of the Iraq War, a conflict that re- sulted in the deaths of 4,488 U.S. soldiers and thousands of civilians, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice re- affirmed her support for the war and the ouster of former President Saddam Hussein. “I would have overthrown Saddam Hussein again,” Rice said to a packed house at the Lady Bird Johnson Auditorium on Monday. The war began March 20, 2003, following the United States’ and United Kingdom’s allegations that Iraq pos- sessed weapons of mass de- struction and posed a threat to international security. A survey conducted later by the Iraq Survey Group found Iraq did not possess WMDs Jorge Corona | Daily Texan StaffFormer Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gives a lecture at the LBJ School of Public Affairs on Monday evening. In a Q & A session after the lecture Rice reaffirmed her support of the Iraq invasion leading to the oust of Saddam Hussein.Rice has no regrets Former Secretary of State reaffirms Iraq War support on anniversaryBy Joshua FechterCAMPUSRICE continues on page 2DODDS continues on page 8HUNT continues on page 2PCL continues on page 2FALL continues on page 2Dodds says Texas, A&M will one day meet againBy Christian CoronaCAMPUSUNIVERSITYPCL to be 24/5 permanentlyFaculty to let vote fall on idea of new break By Klarissa FitzpatrickBy Christine AyalaDeLoss Dodds Men’s athletics directorCharlie PearceDaily Texan StaffStudent Government President Thor Lund, University Library Director Fred Heath and Vice President Wills Brown announce the indefinite continuation of the PCL’s 24/5 schedule. Q-and-A with condoleezza RiceThe former Secretary of State granted an exclusive interview to The Daily Texan. OPINION p.4What is today’s reason to party? SEE COMICS PAGE 11ONLINESign up today! dailytexanonline. comRick Barnes remains upbeat as Texas settles for CBI. See the interview atbit.ly_rickbarnesVIEWPOINTThe Bev Kearney episode shows UT’s student-staff relation- ship policy demands transparency. Con- sensual student-staff relationships, a reality on our campus, have consequences too far-reaching to be dealt with haphazardly. PAGE 4 2Something’s HappeningNOW!TSTV24SEVEN LIVE MARATHONMarch 24th - 30thCHANNELS: Antenna 29.1 • Dorms 15 • Cable 16ONLINE: TexasStudentTV.comFor More Info: Manager@TexasStudentTV.comor Marketing@TexasStudentTV.com News2Tuesday, March 19, 2013Main Telephone: (512) 471-4591Editor: Susannah Jacob(512) 232-2212editor@dailytexanonline.comManaging Editor: Trey Scott(512) 232-2217managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.comNews Office: (512) 232-2207news@dailytexanonline.comMultimedia Office: (512) 471-7835dailytexanmultimedia@ gmail.comSports Office: (512) 232-2210sports@dailytexanonline.comLife & Arts Office: (512) 232-2209dtlifeandarts@gmail.comRetail Advertising: (512) 471-1865joanw@mail.utexas.eduClassified Advertising: (512) 471-5244classifieds@ dailytexanonline.comCONTACT USTOMORROW’S WEATHERHighLow7653Spit out your bracket picks. COPYRIGHTCopyright 2013 Texas Student Media. All articles, photographs and graphics, both in the print and online editions, are the property of Texas Student Media and may not be reproduced or republished in part or in whole without written permission. 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. Volume 113, Issue 122Marshall Nolen | Daily Texan StaffChrista Assad, a San Francisco-based ceramic artist, demonstrates the difficult technique of bending saw blades to add a uniform, alternative texture to a clay pot. FRAMES | FEAtuREd photo cardboard signs that said ‘24-hour PCL,’” Lund said. Brown said the donation has a deeper significance than simply fulfilling a goal he and Lund had set for themselves. “It’s exciting, but it’s not about me or Thor,” Brown said. “It’s about the students and what makes them happy.” Patrick Marsh, petroleum engineering senior and baseball player, attended the event on behalf of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee to show his sup- port of the extended hours. “With practices and games, having a library open at odd hours can only benefit us,” Marsh said. Electrical engineering freshman Abhi Kallur said he has already logged plenty of hours in the PCL — “as much as a freshman can” — and is happy to learn the hours had been extended indefinitely. “Usually I can say most people study past 2 a.m.,” Kallur said. “It kind of gives you that extra motivation to keep going.” Pre-pharmacy freshman Johana Campos said she is happy the extended hours mean she no longer has to walk home at 2 a.m. “I live really far, and I’m always scared,” Campos said. “I would probably take a nap and keep studying.” given out to the faculty and I believe that it will affect turn- out negatively and I hope the quorum will be met,” Rady said. “Getting out the vote is my number one priority at this time. If the effort is suc- cessful we can definitely out- weigh the opposition.” Rady said even if the proposal does not gain majority support, students will continue pushing for a similar break. “If it fails, we plan on go- ing back to the Academic Calendar Committee and reforming the proposal to better fit those who are against the current pro- posal,” Rady said. The meeting will be held at 3:15 p.m. in the Student Activity Center audito- rium 1.402. Wills Brown, Student Government vice president, said students should encourage their professors to vote during the special meeting. “I urge all students who want a fall break to come out to the SAC to show your support,” Brown said. “Let the student voice be heard. I’m excit- ed to see where this goes.” among others. He said he will make extensive efforts to communicate with faculty. “[Faculty members] and I have talked about how we’d like to go forward with this, and about how we can ex- pedite the search and make it a little bit more nimble,” Powers said. Powers also updated the faculty council on the state legislature’s higher education budgeting efforts, and said he is optimistic legislators will restore a portion of the cuts made to the University during the previous session. “I’d say the legislative efforts are going around a B+, maybe an A-,” Powers said. “It’s going pretty well down there.” Martha Hilley, council chairwoman and music professor, announced that the UT System would likely not be contesting a state push for outcomes-based funding. Hilley said Barry McBee, vice chancellor for governmental regulations, told the UT System Faculty Advisory Council of the decision earlier this month. “[McBee] said it was just not worth the political fight to be against it,” Hilley said. “He said it was better if the System just quietly folded on this issue.” Steve Mintz, executive director of the Institute for Transformational Learn- ing, spoke to the council about the future of massive open online courses and said he was excited about the changing landscape of higher education. The Uni- versity will be launching its first open courses in the fall. “I am not here to abolish tenure, not here to replace flesh and blood teaching with screen time ... [but] we are in a moment of re- invention,” Mintz said. “We need to seize this fleeting opportunity and take advantage of it.” The faculty council also unanimously passed a resolution encouraging the Board of Regents to work with the legislature and ultimately institute domestic partner benefits for UT employees. The UT System Faculty Advisory Council recently passed a similar motion. HUNTcontinues from page 1FALLcontinues from page 1PCLcontinues from page 1RICEcontinues from page 1at the time of invasion, but in- tended to resume its weapons programs if the United Na- tions lifted its sanctions. As National Security Advi- sor to President George W. Bush and later Secretary of State, Rice oversaw the war ef- fort with other Cabinet officials including her predecessor Co- lin Powell and Secretary of De- fense Donald Rumsfeld. Part of her task included engaging in a media cam- paign to advocate the need for war with Iraq. “The problem here is that there will always be some un- certainty about how quickly he can acquire nuclear weap- ons. But, we don’t want the smoking gun to be a mush- room cloud,” Rice told CNN in a 2003 interview. The conflict formally end- ed on Dec. 15, 2011, and re- maining U.S. troops left the country three days later. Rice said Monday that Hussein was a “cancer in the Middle East” that needed to be removed from the region, despite the lack of discovered WMDs and the deaths that resulted from the conflict. “It is absolutely the case that the loss of lives will never be brought back and any of us who had a part in that deci- sion will have to live with the lost and maimed lives,” Rice said. “But, nothing of value ever comes without sacrifice and I believe that Iraq has a chance. It may not make it, but it has a chance to be a state that will not seek weapons of mass destruction, will not invade its neighbors, will be a friend of the United States and will have democratic institutions that may, over time, mature.” Rice said if given the op- portunity, the administration would have sought to under- stand tribal relations more thoroughly earlier and would have begun reconstruction from the country’s borders and worked inward toward Baghdad, not vice versa. Bobby Inman, Lyndon B. Johnson Centennial Chair in National Policy at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, said that history would view the conflict as “one of the great fiascos.” “Unlike its approach to- ward Germany and Japan af- ter World War II, the United States did not properly plan for how it would reconstruct Iraq’s government and economy after toppling Hussein’s government in a way that would transform the country into a successful democracy,” Inman said, add- ing, “when you do not look at the historical record and un- derstand it, you are destined to make big mistakes.” — Wills Brown, Student Government vice presidentIt’s exciting, but it’s not about me or Thor. It’s about the students and what makes them happy. Texan AdDeadlinesThe Daily Texan Mail Subscription RatesOne Semester (Fall or Spring) $60.00Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) 120.00Summer Session 40.00One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) 150.00To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 471-5083. 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David Leffler, Wes MaulsbyColumnist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James NicholsonPage Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alyssa Kang, Luis San MiguelCopy Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mark Birkenstock, Jori Epstein, Lauren Lowe, Lexiyee SmithComic Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cody Bubenik, Ploy Buraparate, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Marty Eischeid, Dannielle LaMonte, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Forrest Lybrand, Amanda Nguyen, Samuel Vanicek, Colin ZelinksiMonday .............Wednesday, 12 p.m. Tuesday.................Thursday, 12 p.m. Wednesday................Friday, 12 p.m. Thursday.................Monday, 12 p.m. Friday......................Tuesday, 12 p.m. Classified Word Ads 11 a.m. (Last Business Day Prior to Publication) NICOSIA, Cyprus — A plan to seize up to 10 per- cent of savings accounts in Cyprus to help pay for a €15.8 billion ($20.4 bil- lion) financial bailout was met with fury Monday, and the government shut down banks until later this week while lawmak- ers wrangled over how to keep the island nation from bankruptcy. Although the euro and stock prices of European banks fell, global finan- cial markets largely re- mained calm, and there was little sense that bank account holders elsewhere across the continent faced similar risk. Political leaders in Cy- prus scrambled to devise a new plan that would not be so burdensome for people with less than €100,000 ($129,290) in the bank. The authorities delayed a parliamentary vote on the seizure of €5.8 billion ($7.5 billion) and ordered banks to remain shut until Thurs- day while they try to mod- ify the deal, which must be approved by other euro- zone governments. Once a deal is in place, they will be ready to lend Cyprus €10 billion ($13 billion) in rescue loans. A rejection of the pack- age could see the country go bankrupt and possi- bly drop out of the euro currency — an outcome that would be even more damaging to financial markets’ confidence. Even while playing down the chance of fresh market turmoil, experts warned that the surprise move broke an important taboo against making depositors pay for Europe’s bailouts. “It’s a precedent for all European countries. Their money in every bank is not safe,” said lawyer Si- mos Angelides at an angry protest outside parliament in Cyprus’ capital, Nico- sia, where people chanted, “Thieves, thieves!” Eurozone finance min- isters held a telephone conference Monday night, and concluded that small depositors should not be hit as hard as others. They said the Cypriot authori- ties will stagger the deposit seizures more, but they remained firm in demand- ing that the overall sum of money raised by the sei- zures remain the same. In the short term, there was little sign of a new ex- plosion in the European financial crisis. Stock mar- kets dropped in early hours but stabilized by the close. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 62.05 points, or 0.4 percent, to 14,452.06 Monday. The euro fell 0.6 percent — a bad day, but hardly a token of impending doom. W&N 3Riley Brands, Wire Editor World & Nation3Tuesday, March 19, 2013NEWS BRIEFLYClinton vows support for gay marriage in new videoBy Charles BabingtonAssociated PressBy David McHugh & Menelaos HadjicostisAssociated PressPetros Karadjias | Associated PressProtesters hold up their hands as they protest outside the parliament in Nicosia, Cyprus on Monday. A vote on a bailout pack- age for Cyprus that includes an immediate tax on all savings accounts has been postponed until Tuesday evening. Cyprus delays savings tax voteThief returns money from 1980s burglary HASTINGS, Mich. — A burglar expressing guilt about stealing $800 from a western Michigan store three decades ago has repaid the money, plus some interest. The writer admitted break- ing into the Middle Mart on Michigan 37 in Thornapple Township north of Mid- dleville about 30 years ago. In an unsigned letter packed with emotion and spelling errors, the writer asks for “help in locating a man” to whom the writer owes the money. The $1,200, while it in- cludes some interest, falls short of making up for the loss in the dollar’s purchasing power over the intervening years. The stolen $800 would be worth about $1,800 today, based on changes in the con- sumer price index. Pair accused of plot against Joss StoneLONDON — Prosecu- tors said Monday two men accused of plotting to rob and kill soul singer Joss Stone planned to decapitate her, then dump her body in a river. The suspects, Junior Brad- shaw and Kevin Liverpool, were arrested in June 2011, close to the singer’s house af- ter suspicious neighbors re- ported them to police. They never reached her house. The motive for the plot was not clear, but prosecutor Simon Morgan said the men may have targeted Stone for her money or because they disliked her links with the royal family. —Compiled from Associated Press reportsWASHINGTON — Hill- ary Rodham Clinton’s embrace of gay marriage Monday signals she may be seriously weighing a 2016 presidential run and trying to avoid the type of late-to- the-party caution that hurt her first bid. Her chief Democratic ri- vals endorsed same-sex mar- riage as much as seven years ago, and it’s widely popu- lar with Democratic and independent voters. By supporting gay mar- riage a full two years before the next presidential primary warms up, Clinton may ren- der the issue largely settled among Democrats, should she decide to run. For those who lived “through the long years of the civil rights and women’s rights movements, the speed with which more and more people have come to em- brace the dignity and equal- ity of LGBT Americans has been breathtaking and in- spiring,” Clinton said in a six-minute video, referring to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons. In the video, released by the gay rights advocacy group Human Rights Cam- paign, Clinton says gays and lesbians are “full and equal citizens and deserve the rights of citizenship.” “That includes marriage,” she said, adding she backs gay marriage both “person- ally and as a matter of policy and law.” On the eve of the 10th anniversary of the Iraq War, during a visit to campus yesterday, former Secretary of State Condo- leezza Rice stopped by a UT class, gave a speech to a packed auditorium and granted an exclusive interview to The Daily Texan. In the interview, which took place in the residential apart- ment on the 10th floor of the LBJ Library in a room that remains apparently unchanged since President Lyndon Baines Johnson and his wife furnished it, Rice addressed questions about race- conscious college admissions, immigration policy and the re- sponsibility of public officials to be candid and honest. As the national security adviser and then secretary of state under former President George W. Bush, Rice was instru- mental in the decision to pursue the Iraq War, which became for Bush, as the Vietnam War had for Johnson, unpopular. Throughout her visit, Rice faced questions from students, many of whom were not yet teenagers when that war began, about how we should understand the events of the last 10 years, the Iraq War’s consequences and our country’s capacity to overcome them. “Today’s headlines and history’s judgment are rarely the same,” Rice told her auditorium audience twice. In February, the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington announced that Rice would serve on a commission on immi- gration alongside other Republicans and Democrats, includ- ing former San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros. Asked what she believes U.S. immigration policy should be, Rice listed three kinds of people she would seek to help: First, individu- als who can participate in the “knowledge-based revolution in Palo Alto and Austin”; second, agricultural workers who “come here to make a better wage” and to the benefit of the industries they work in; and third, the “11 million people in the shadows,” who she believes should be offered a “path to citizenship.” As secretary of state, Rice says she gained a differ- ent perspective on the attitudes of those seeking entrance to this country. “Understand: America has a universal narrative, one not based on nationality, religion or ethnicity,” she said explaining the ability of an immigrant to become American is specific to this country. “It’s not where you come from, but where you’re going.” Asked about the UT v. Fisher case, Rice said she “[has] always been an advocate of soft affirmative action,” and believes “diversity adds to the learning environment” and that schools should be al- lowed to “consider race as one of many factors.” During the Bush administration, the U.S. Justice Department filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court urging it to declare two race-conscious poli- cies at the University of Michigan unconstitutional in the Grutter case, a pivotal precedent for arguments on both sides of in the pending Fisher v. UT case. According to news accounts at the time, then-National Security Adviser Rice said she opposed the specific methods used by Michigan but recognized the need to take race into account. In the broader sense, Rice said she believes “It’s hard to tell who is going to be successful in college” and wishes schools would seek out not simply applicants who have the highest grades and SAT scores, but those “who have overcome a lot.” She believes schools should pay closer attention to economic circumstances of applicants and cites one of her biggest worries, today’s develop- ing gulf in the quality of K-12 education. Asked to contend with the prevailing belief that young people are not only disenchanted and disengaged with politics, but un- likely to pursue public office, Rice said, “Remember that a de- mocracy is only as good as its citizens,” adding that running for office was not the only way to serve the country. Amid ongoing speculation she may be a 2016 presidential contender, she seemed to take herself out of the running. “I’m never going to run for of- fice,” noting she doesn’t have the temperament or DNA for it. Does young people’s confidence in their government depend on leaders’ candidness? Is telling the truth an important value in a democracy? “Number one, you always have to tell the American people the truth,” Rice said, adding, “Sometimes the lead- ers think they’re telling the truth ... That happened with us with weapons of mass destruction [when] we thought they were there when they weren’t.” It happened with Obama in Benghazi, she said, referring to the initial misinformation about the terrorist attack at the Libyan consulate. “Some- times you have bad information.” 4A OpinionEditor-in-Chief Susannah JacobOpinion4Tuesday, March 19, 2013Relationship policy needs transparencyQ&A: Rice talks race-conscious admissions, the Iraq War and her lack of ambition for elected officeLEGALESE | Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the article or cartoonist. They are not nec- essarily 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 should be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. The Texan does not run all submissions. 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 (@DTedito- rial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns. GALLERYDrones’ sci-fi glow masks complicationsJames NicholsonDaily Texan ColumnistBusiness InsiderBev Kearney, former UT women’s track and field head coach, has filed an Equal Employment Oppor- tunity Commission and Texas Workforce Commis- sion discrimination charge against the University. Kearney, the most successful coach in UT athletics history, was the first African-American to serve as a head coach at UT. After admitting to having “an inti- mate consensual relationship” with a female student- athlete on her team in 2002, she resigned on Jan. 5, as the University was preparing to begin her termina- tion process. Although the University appears to have disciplined Kearney in a manner consistent with its own policy, the allegations highlight a lack of transparency in the University’s handling of student-staff relationships. Kearney’s attorney, Derek Howard, told the Aus- tin American-Statesman that the complaint will ref- erence UT football’s co-offensive coordinator Major Applewhite, a white male who admitted to an inap- propriate consensual relationship with a female stu- dent trainer in 2009. Applewhite was discovered to have disclosed his relationship promptly and had his salary frozen as a result, after an open records re- quest by the Texan brought UT Athletics documen- tation to light. Howard said he filed the gender and race dis- crimination complaint on Kearney’s behalf Tuesday March 12. The TWC does not recognize discrimina- tion on the basis of sexual orientation as a type of employment discrimination. The EEOC and TWC will have 180 days to investigate the allegations, after which time Howard said he will file a lawsuit against the University, regardless of any decisions reached by the agencies. The University, pursuant to its Handbook of Operating Procedures’ nondis- crimination policy, does prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Race, gender and sexual orientation are not the only significant differences between the facts of the Kearney and Applewhite cases. Whereas Applewhite quickly informed his supervisor of his “inappropriate conduct,” Kearney failed to disclose her relationship, which under University policy left her “subject to dis- ciplinary action, up to and including termination.” In January, Howard told the Texan that the Univer- sity doesn’t cite Kearney’s “failure to report the rela- tionship as the reason for firing her.” Instead, Howard said, “It’s because she had the relationship, period.” Indeed, Patti Ohlendorf, UT’s vice president for legal affairs, cited a rationale absent from the University’s Handbook of Operating Procedures for Kearney’s discipline: “In the case of a head coach and a student- athlete on his or her team, the University’s position is that that cannot be condoned in any event.” Howard claims to know of at least 10 other in- stances of inappropriate relationships at UT. It re- mains to be seen whether Kearney was a victim of workplace discrimination. We hope that isn’t the case. But, allegations of discrimination aside, the University’s implementation of its policy is inad- equate at best. The University risks the appearance of discriminatory and arbitrary enforcement if its policy is not made more transparent and realistic. Consensual student-staff relationships, a reality on our campus, have consequences too far-reaching to be dealt with haphazardly. Names like “Predator” and “Reaper” make drones seem like either nightmarish weapons of death controlled by unseen hands, or awesome tools of destruction to strike fear into our enemies, depending on what side of the ar- gument you are on. But are drones infallible? Do they live up to their hype? An engineering team at UT led by Aerospace Engineering pro- fessor Todd Humphreys revealed a glaring Achilles’ heel in drone navigation systems last June that could deconstruct their presumed near-mythical invulnerability. As it turns out, drones do not use some esoteric location-map- ping technique accessible only to the brightest aerospace and com- puter engineers; they use GPS — not much more sophisticated than the GPS in your smartphone — which receives radio signals from satellites in orbit around Earth and uses them to triangu- late position. GPS receivers are vulnerable to manipulation by a technique called “spoofing.” Spoofing requires a transmit- ter no wider than your average desk top to send radio signals that are calibrated to match satel- lite signals in shape, though with slightly elevated intensity. Once the GPS receiver on the drone gets the new stronger signal, it will give this fake signal priority over its original signal, allowing the team with the spoofing de- vice to trick the drone into going off course. It is easy to see the initial impli- cations of such a device. If terror- ists or unscrupulous individuals were able to use spoofing to their advantage, drones would likely be rendered nearly useless, like blind airline pilots trying to make a landing. Worse yet, with adept ma- neuvering they could be used as blunt weapons, flying into aircraft and buildings on the ground. However, spoofing has lim- ited effectiveness on U.S. mili- tary drones deployed overseas. Whereas your average American uses a free-form GPS system, the U.S. military uses a complex sys- tem of encryption to protect its drones. Thus it is unlikely that any terrorist group or crimi- nal organization could get their hands on enough resources to successfully spoof those systems. Individual governments, on the other hand, do have the resources to take down a U.S. military drone in the right circumstances, and it is believed that Iran used a large ar- ray of spoofing signals to capture a Sentinel stealth drone on Dec. 4, 2011. If a country puts enough resources into it, even the most ad- vanced drones in the world can be rendered useless by spoofing. Drones employed by the high- est echelons of the U.S. military and the CIA overseas are one thing, but those are not the only drones used in the US. Around 10 drones fly from Corpus Chris- ti along the U.S.-Mexico border year-round, operated by the U.S. Customs and Border Protec- tion agency. According to Hum- phreys, they probably do not em- ploy the GPS encryption system used by their cousins overseas. As a result, they’re open targets for spoofing. Spoofing devices are not easy to make; the one used by UT took three Ph.D.s three years and $1,000 to build. But it’s getting easier. Through software-defined radio, Humphreys says that the difficul- ties in creating a spoofing device will become “a coding issue, not a radio issue.” As the technology spreads, it will be less about tech- nical pitfalls than an individual coder’s ability to work the system. At the moment, however, the U.S. drone program is state-of- the-art, and its issues are moral rather than technical. As the United Nations investigates the legality and civilian casualties incurred by drone strikes, and a previously classified Justice De- partment memo detailing the U.S. government’s defense of the drone program was leaked to the public, it seems like the drone program is becoming as much of a problem as it is an asset. Though drones might seem like the weapons of the future, we need to consider seriously whether their benefits outweigh their moral, legal and technical hurdles. Nicholson is an archaeology freshman from San Antonio. VIEWPOINTSusannah JacobDaily Texan Editor-in-chief NEWS 5a real world job to jump-start a real world careerThe largest college media agency in the nation, Texas Student Media, is looking for a few goal-drivencollege students to work in our Advertising department! We have the following positions available: • Account Executive • Advertising InternBenefits: • Full training• Flexible schedule• Fun environment• Located on campus• Paid position available TEXASSTUDENTMEDIA 1 FEBRUARY 23, 2011an advertising special edition of The Daily TexanINSIDE> SAVE SPACE and DECORATE using these tips pg. 3-4> SPICE UP your new pantry with four simple ingredients pg. 9> YOUR GO-TO GUIDE for today’s Housing Fair pg. 10-11Email your resume to: advertise@texasstudentmedia.com and call (512) 471-1865 for more informationDo you have what it takes? Apply today! 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. AgeCompensationRequirementsTimelineMen and Women18 to 55 Up to $2000Healthy & Non-SmokingBMI between 19 and 29Fri. 22 Mar. through Mon. 25 Mar. Fri. 29 Mar. through Mon. 1 Apr. Men and Women18 to 45 Call for DetailsHealthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18.5 and 29.9Weigh between 121 and 220 lbs. Fri. 22 Mar. through Mon. 25 Mar. Outpatient Visit: 31 Mar. Men and Women18 to 45 Call for DetailsHealthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18.5 and 29.9Weigh between 121 and 220 lbs. Fri. 29 Mar. through Mon. 1 Apr. Outpatient Visit: 6 Apr. Men and Women18 to 45 Call for DetailsHealthy & Non-Smoking BMI between 18.5 and 29.9Weigh between 121 and 220 lbs. Fri. 5 Apr. through Mon. 8 Apr. Outpatient Visit: 13 Apr. Men and Women18 to 55 Up to $2000Healthy & Non-SmokingBMI between 19 and 29Fri. 5 Apr. through Mon. 8 Apr. Fri. 12 Apr. through Mon. 15 Apr. NewsTuesday, March 19, 20135How to be happy, explainedCAMPUSCAMPUSAs students deal with mountains of homework and long work hours, as- sociate marketing professor Raj Raghunathan claims many people simply do not choose happiness. Raghunathan focused on how to maintain happi- ness at the AT&T Executive Education and Conference Center on Monday after- noon in his lecture titled “If You’re So Smart, Why Aren’t You Happy?” While audience members enjoyed a healthy lunch — a component to happiness — Raghunathan discussed concrete research on the de- terminants of living a happy and fulfilling life. “There’s a fine line be- tween chasing happiness and finding it,” Raghuna- than said. “The important thing is to prioritize happi- ness and not chase it. You have to pursue what gives meaning to your life and when do you do that, happi- ness is a byproduct.” Raghunathan advised au- dience members to engage in activities that produce “flow moments,” in which time seems to stop, self conscious- ness is non-existent and all focus is directed toward that activity. Other habits in- cluded exposing oneself to happiness-inducing stimuli, finding one’s passion and practicing gratitude. “We focus so much on our need for connectivity and we forget that other people perhaps have the same need,” Raghunathan said. “But when we are craving it, it shows that I need something else to complete me.” Claire Moore, host and work-life balance and well- ness manager, said Raghu- nathan’s lecture is part of a speaker series that invites UT students and faculty to learn more about living a healthier lifestyle. “We cover wellness in a holistic sense,” Moore said. “Emotion is one of our categories and we wanted [Raghunathan] to speak because we wanted him to share his healthy habits so that people can have a bet- ter quality of life.” Business freshman Sarah Walters said she was in- terested in Raghunathan’s thinking because he pre- sented a new perspective. “Money and how well your business does is the definition of success, es- pecially at the business school, but he looks at the philosophical aspect and ac- knowledges that there’s oth- er ways to define [success],” Walters said. Jane Bost, associate direc- tor at the Counseling and Mental Health Center, said finding happiness is a process. “It’s about having a sense of meaning and purpose in one’s life, and that’s a lot of what college students are try- ing to figure out,” Bost said. Raghunathan acknowledged his plan might not work for everybody. “This is for the people who are smart and suc- cessful,” Raghunathan said. “I believe if they fol- low this it can help, but it’s a positive decision that they have to make.” Panelists debate meritsof Medicaid expansionHealthcare policy in Texas will change after the pas- sage of the Affordable Care Act, and panelists Monday focused on uncovering the future of those policies and Medicaid’s place in Texas. The panel included Anne Dunkelberg, from the left- leaning Center for Public Policy Priorities and Ar- lene Wohlgemuth, from the right-leaning Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Center for Health Care Policy. Wil- liam Sage, law professor and vice provost for health af- fairs, moderated the talk. “What we’re looking for as advocates is something that will establish a sys- tematic way to affordable healthcare that will be avail- able to all levels,” Dunkel- berg said. “To make any of that work — be affordable, effective — you got to have a system of getting healthcare cost under control.” Dunkelberg said as of 2011 there were 6.1 million unin- sured Texans, a majority of them working-age adults. She said expanding Medicaid would bring $24.1 billion in federal money to Texans and insure 1.5 million more people by 2017, though three million Texans would still be uninsured. Wohlgemuth said Medic- aid needed reform, not ex- pansion. Wohlgemuth said with the Affordable Care Act, younger and healthier people and small employers in Austin will see an increase of 162 percent in insurance premiums by 2014. On the other hand, older and sicker individuals in Austin will see a decrease of 32 percent in premiums. “I think we have to look very seriously at actual ex- perience rather than projec- tions,” Wohlgemuth said. Wohlgemuth made refer- ence to two Medicaid expan- sion examples in Arizona and Maine, both of which failed to decrease the per- centage of uninsured and ended up costing hundreds of millions of dollars more than expected. “We can do better,” Wohlgemuth said. We can do better for the Medicaid patient. We can do better for the taxpayer.” Wohlgemuth advocated a system where people make their own decisions about what to pay for in healthcare. She said that this will make people more aware of how much healthcare costs. “The individual in charge of spending the money is go- ing to be the best consumer,” Wohlgemuth said. Both Dunkelberg and Wohl- gemuth agreed that overall there needs to be more trans- parency for healthcare costs. Ben DeMarsh, a second- year law student, attended the panel on Monday. DeMarsh is also a member of the Health Law and Bioethics Society, one of the four School of Law clubs that helped host the event. “There’s bipartisan sup- port for greater transparency and cost,” DeMarsh said. “There’s a need for more con- sumer-driven medical care.” By Mark CarrionBy Alexandra DubinskyGuillermo Hernandez MartinezDaily Texan StaffRaj Raghunathan, an associate professor of marketing admin- istration, delivers a lecture on how to find happi- ness Monday afternoon at the AT&T Executive Education and Conference Center. The lec- ture was titled “If You’re So Smart, Why Aren’t You Happy?” and is part of a speaker series aimed at helping students and faculty to lead a healthier life. — Raj Raghunathan, associate marketing professorYou have to pursue what gives mean- ing to your life and when do you do that, happiness is a byproduct. 6 NEWS www.law.ou.edu | admissions@law.ou.edu | (405) 325-47264IDEAL LOCATIONOU Law is ideally located for Texas residents. The campus is less than a two-hour drive from the Texas border. 4TOP RANKEDOU Law is nationally ranked in the top 15 percent of “Best Law Schools” and as a top 15 “Best Value” by National Jurist magazine. 4HIGH JOB PLACEMENT OU Law surpassed the national job placement rate for law schools. In addition, the number of employers participating in this spring’s On-Campus Interview program has more than tripled over last year. 4WORLD EXPERIENCEStudents gain real-world legal experience through local, regional and national internships and externships, specifically for OU Law students. Global opportunities include the International Human Rights Clinic in 10 countries, Oxford Summer Program in England and Chinese Law Summer Program in Beijing. OU LAWRanked as a top 15 “Best Value” Scan this QR code to email appfee@ law.ou.edu for an application fee waiver. Priority processing for applications received within two weeks of this ad. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution. www.ou.edu/eooApply today and we will waive your application fee! News6Tuesday, March 19, 2013CITYCAMPUSUT professors analyze views on surveillanceRainey Street faces major changes Randolph Lewis, associate professor in American Stud- ies, works to understand the real vulnerabilities shaping the anti-surveillance brava- do of political media figures such as Alex Jones and Ken- tucky Sen. Rand Paul. The department of anthro- pology presented a talk Mon- day afternoon at the Student Activities Center led by Lew- is and anthropology assistant professor Craig Campbell, regarding Jones and Paul. Part of Campbell’s research involves studying photogra- phy as surveillance, especial- ly in Soviet archives where Russians photographed and documented the indigenous peoples of Siberia beginning in the late 1800s. “Even though Soviet com- munism claimed to be anti- colonial, it was in many ways extending a colonial project in Siberia,” Campbell said. “Pro- duction of photographs in a socialist colonial context is part of a violent scopic regime that objectifies, scrutinizes and ultimately disempowers those people it photographs.” Campbell said surveillance as an extension and articula- tion of state power has been central to most theories of ethnographic and expedi- tionary photography, espe- cially in the colonial context. Lewis said concerns about surveillance looking into our intimate sphere is com- ing from Texas, where Paul, a first-term U.S. senator, grew up. Lewis said Paul is an ally of Jones, who is a kind of dystopi- an, anti-totalitarian and liberty extremist who has produced more than 30 DVDs on politi- cal topics and garnered nearly three million listeners at his peak on 60 different radio sta- tions in the country. “I see them as Texas-based, gun-toting, whole-foods war- riors,” Lewis said. “There’s a lot of military bravado and luster. They’re very passionate about the second amendment and they see themselves as rugged individualists.” Lewis said their concerns re- garding public exposure issues are part of a broader worldview in which they are really worried about purifying water, adopting silver as currency, nutrition sup- plements and non-genetically modified food. He said Jones and his followers accuse the TSA of hiring pedophiles who have been defrocked to run the scanner machines at airports. Jones publicly speaks about the potential for domestic use of drones. Lewis says Jones is worried about drones that can take any random protester out of the street, and their abilities to look into people’s intimate spheres is a major violation. “These are guys that are easy to dismiss,” Lewis said. “I would say Alex Jones is one of the most important political media figures in the country that most people have never heard of. His circle of Texas libertarians is maybe the most important zone of resistance to surveillance culture right now outside of [American Civil Liberties Union] and other more sober enterprises.” Graduate student Paul Gansky said he thinks TSA is kind of part and parcel of a larger culture of fear around airplanes in general. “There’s only going to be a certain kind of group that will be flying,” Gansky said, “and I think its just really odd that this is the technology that is freak- ing people out and it’s not other forms of surveillance that have been going on for a long time.” The rapidly-developing Rainey Street may undergo an even more drastic face- lift because of an amend- ment that would allow developers in the area to re- locate historical buildings to other parts of the city in lieu of demolishing them. The city code currently allows relocation of histori- cal buildings to other parts of the Rainey Street subdis- trict, but not to other parts of the city. The code amend- ment, which was initiated by the Planning Commission, would extend this area to “location[s] within the city limits as determined appro- priate by the Historic Land- mark Commission,” accord- ing to the draft ordinance. Steve Sadowsky, histori- cal preservation officer in the Historical Preservation Office, said the amendment would simply expand the process for relocated buildings as a way to encourage developers not to demolish the buildings. “The code change is just to make relocation an easier process,” Sadowsky said. “Ba- sically what the code change would do is the [area] in which the houses could be relocated will be expanded. We’d much rather see reloca- tion than demolition.” Rainey Street is part of an area in southeast Aus- tin known as one of the first Mexican-American neigh- borhoods in the city, said Juan Oyervides, board chairman for the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center, or MACC. Oyervides spoke before City Council at their March 7 meeting, and said he suggested the coun- cil take more time to con- sider a comprehensive plan for the area before allowing developers to begin taking historical buildings out of the neighborhood. “The MACC and the Rain- ey Street neighborhood are inextricably linked, and I just don’t sense any direction for that neighborhood,” Oyer- vides said at the council meet- ing. “What I would like to sug- gest is some direction, and an organized effort to come up with a plan — maybe get some time to work on this and get the community involved.” Paul Saldaña, a supporter of preserving Latino culture in the area, also spoke at the meeting. He said the low numbers of historical Latino sites should make the council cautious to begin developing the area right away. He also urged the council to take time to make a plan for preserving the culture of the neighbor- hood before taking action. “I certainly respect the rights of the property own- ers on Rainey Street, but this area has much more signifi- cance other than just to the Rainey Street area,” Saldaña said at the meeting. Margaret Hereford, histori- cal preservation graduate stu- dent, said although it is better to relocate a building than demolish it, the original site of a building itself is a major con- tributor to its historical value. “Having a high rise next to the other buildings says something about the his- toric integrity of that site,” Hereford said. “I know that my friends that have noth- ing to do with architecture or preservation love going to Rainey Street because it is different — it doesn’t feel like the rest of the big city.” By Hannah Jane DeCiutiisBy Matt HartCharlie PearceDaily Texan StaffThe Blackheart, located on historic Rainey Street, is a part of an area down- town known to be one of the first Mexican- American neigh- borhoods in the city. — Steve Sadowsky, officer in the Historical Preservation OfficeBasically what the code change would do is the [area] in which the houses could be relocated will be expanded. WIZARDSBOBCATS Editor’s note: Senior de- fensive end Jackson Jeffcoat is the first of five “Players to Watch” who will be featured leading up to the Orange- White scrimmage Mar. 30. The second, senior wide re- ceiver Mike Davis, will be featured Thursday. While Jackson Jeffcoat’s father, Jim, has two Super Bowl rings from his play- ing days with the Dallas Cowboys and over 100 sacks in 15 NFL seasons, he’s not pressuring his son to do the same. “There’s always going to be people saying, ‘Oh well, this guy’s the son of an NFL player, he should be doing this, he should be doing that,’” Jeffcoat said last fall. “My dad’s been helpful with that. He said, ‘You can only be yourself. Don’t try to be who I am, take your own path and do what you do.’” In his first three seasons at Texas, the path the de- fensive end began to carve for himself had many con- sidering him among the top defensive players on the team. As a highly-touted freshman recruit, Jeffcoat was thrust into collegiate play early on, starting two games in his first year and playing in six more. He shined in his starting role as a sophomore, rack- ing up 71 tackles and eight sacks, and was placed on the Ted Hendricks Defen- sive End of the Year Award watch list in July 2012. He injured his pectoral muscle and underwent surgery in January 2012. Jeffcoat’s junior year kicked off with a promising start. He started the first six games of the season and racked up four sacks and 11 tackles for loss. But in Oklahoma’s 63-21 stomp- ing of Texas, he suffered a season-ending right pec- toral muscle rupture that required surgery. Jeffcoat underwent success- ful surgery on Oct. 19, and despite the injury, his impact on the team could hardly be ignored. He was still second on the team in tackles for loss and sacks and tied for second on the team in forced fumbles. Five months later, “Action Jackson” is back. Perhaps not in full effect, but head coach Mack Brown seems confident about Jeffcoat’s recovery. “Jackson Jeffcoat looks very good,” Brown said. “I think he will be limited, but he will be able to do a lot of drills. We’ll just keep him out of contact throughout the spring.” Brown also said Jeff- coat is an obvious lead- er on the team head- ing into next season. “You have to think that up front, Jackson is going to be a leader,” Brown said. “Because he’s played a lot. He’s got to stay healthy.” Staying healthy will be a major focal point in Jeffcoat’s senior season, particularly for a Texas team that is now without Alex Okafor, who led the team in sacks, and also leading tackler Kenny Vaccaro — both like- ly early picks in next month’s NFL draft. Defensive coordina- tor Manny Diaz said his group of defensive ends are making steady progress in spring practice, but need the influence of Jeffcoat as a player and a leader. “What we have now is depth, competi- tion and numbers, but we are still a ways away,” Diaz said. “We need to get Jack- son Jef- fcoat back in the mix to help lead these guys.” Amid the news that the men’s basketball team was not even invited to the NIT, the NCAA Tourna- ment’s ugly stepsister, Longhorn fans are hav- ing a hard time remaining clear-eyed. Like its hoops counter- parts, the Texas baseball team will travel to the Uni- versity of Houston to face the Cougars this week. The Longhorns, who play Houston on Tuesday, typi- cally have a powerhouse baseball program that compensates for any sort of shortcoming by the basketball team. This year’s baseball team, unfortunately, has also given fans little to cheer about. The Long- horns concluded a lack- luster beginning to Big 12 play on Sunday with a 4-2 SPTS 7Christian Corona, Sports Editor Sports7Tuesday, March 19, 2013NBASIDELINEPLAYERSTO WATCHLights, camera, JacksonBy Rachel ThompsonMEN’S BASKETBALLTuesdays belong to Chad Hollingsworth, one of the most consistent Longhorn pitchers this season. The Waco native will start his fourth game for Texas (12- 7, 1-2), a road contest against the University of Houston on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Coming into this year, Hollingsworth’s arrival was one of the most antici- pated on a relatively green Texas pitching staff. While a senior at Robinson High school, the 6-foot-2-inch right-hander accumulated 139 strikeouts and finished with a 0.50 ERA. His first start as a Long- horn came against the University of Texas at Ar- lington last month. Hol- lingsworth went five in- nings in his collegiate debut and captured the win for the Longhorns while surrendering only one run on four hits. “The pitching is the most outstanding thing of the game so far,” Texas head coach Augie Garrido told the Longhorn Net- work during a televised interview in the middle of Hollingworth’s first start. So far this season, Hol- lingsworth has compiled a 3-0 record on the mound, the only Texas starting pitcher without a loss. In By Sara Beth PurdyHorns head to Houston to face CougarsBASEBALLUT hitting falls short of forecast for season Texas @ HoustonDate: TuesdayTime: 6:30 p.m. By David LefflerStat GuyTexas sophomore forward Jaylen Bond announced his intentions to transfer Monday. He will not play in the College Basketball Invitational. The Philadelphia product averaged 2.8 points and 3.2 rebounds in 11.1 minutes per game this season. He missed 11 of the Longhorns’ first 12 games with a left foot injury and played more than 15 min- utes only six times this year. “While this was a dif- ficult decision to make, I feel it is the right one for me at this time,” Bond said. “I want to thank ev- eryone who played a part in allowing me the privi- lege to attend The Univer- sity of Texas. This starts with the coaching staff, my fellow teammates and the educational staff who have helped me during the past two years. They have taught me a lot, and I am very grateful for the oppor- tunity to have been part of this program.” Bond becomes the second player to transfer from Texas in as many seasons. Point guard Sterling Gibbs trans- ferred to Seton Hall after one year with the Longhorns. After scoring 3.4 points and grabbing 4.6 rebounds in 15.4 minutes per game and starting five times as a fresh- man last year, Bond started only twice this season. “It wouldn’t be right for me to continue playing in the postseason and take minutes away from my teammates who are returning,” Bond said. “Once again, I would like to thank everyone who has sup- ported me while I was here.” Bond bounces after two-year stint with LonghornsBy Christian CoronaLONGHORNS IN THE NBA LaMarcus Aldridge32 Points, 14 ReboundsMAVERICKSHAWKS HEATCELTICS TRAILBLAZERS76ERS PACERSCAVALIERS Tristan Thompson20 Points, 11 Rebounds“Workout for the cowboys Wednesday.. Uh ohh” Kenny Vaccaro@KennyVaccaro4TOP TWEETJacksonJeffcoat Defensive endLawrence Peart | Daily Texan Staff Sophomore Jaylen Bond (5) has decided to transfer from Texas after limited playing time in two seasons with the Longhorns. NCAA TOURNAMENT2ND ROUNDSCHEDULEFriday, March 22Frank Erwin Center1:10 CST - Game 1: No. 2 Miami vs. No. 15 Pacific30 Min after end of Game 1 - Game 2: No.7 Illinois vs. No. 10 Colorado6:27 CST - Game 3: No. 3 Florida vs. No. 14 Northwest- ern State30 Min after end of Game 3 - Game 4: No. 6 UCLA vs. No.11 Minnesota — Mack Brown Head coach“I think he will be limited, but he will be able to do a lot of drills. We’ll just keep him out of contact throughout the spring. COOGS continues on page 8BATS continues on page 8NETSPISTONS Elisabeth DillonDaily Texan file photoJunior first baseman Alex Silver runs the bases in a 6-1 win over UT-Pan American on March 5. Silver and the Longhorns will play a one-game road series against Houston on Tuesday evening. FOOTBALL 8 SPTSATTENTION FACULTY AND STUDENTSNOMINATIONS SOUGHTRoy Crane Award for Outstanding Creative Achievement in the Visual ArtsSpring 2013The 2013 Roy Crane Award in the Arts is given to a student at UT Austin for unique, creative effort in the visual arts. An undergraduate or graduate student may compete for the award. The committee, which selects the winner, will give no weight to any entrant’s grade point average or other academic achievement. There are two $3,000 awards. To compete for the award, a student must be nominated by a faculty member of The University of Texas at Austin. The award must be for one’s creative effort while a student at UT Austin. The deadline for nominations isApril 8, 2013 5pm. For nomination form and submission guidelines visit: http://www.utexas.edu/provost/initiatives/ undergraduate_awards/crane/ ATTENTION FACULTY AND STUDENTS NOMINATIONS SOUGHT Roy Crane Award for Outstanding Creative Achievement in the Visual Arts Spring 2013 2013 Roy Crane Award in the Arts is given to a student at UT Austin unique, creative effort in the visual arts. An undergraduate or graduate student may compete for the award. The committee, which selects the winner, will give no weight to any entrant’s grade point average or other academic achievement. There are two $3,000 awards. compete for the award, a student must be nominated by a faculty member of The University of Texas at Austin. The award must be for one’s creative effort while a student at UT Austin. The deadline for nominations is April 8, 2013 5pm. For nomination form and submission guidelines visit http://www.utexas.edu/provost/initiatives/undergraduate_awards/crane/ TEXAS STUDENT MEDIABOARD OF OPERATING TRUSTEES TSM IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR STUDENT MANAGER & EDITOR POSITIONS. HSM BLDGBusiness Office APPLICATIONDROP OFF: POSITIONAPPLICATION DEADLINETERMKVRX Station Manager2/22/13June ‘13 - May ‘14TSTV Station Manager2/22/13June ‘13 - May ‘14Travesty Editor4/5/13June ‘13 - May ‘14Cactus Yearbook Editor4/5/13June ‘13 - May ‘14The Daily Texan Managing Editor (Summer)4/5/13June ‘13 - August ‘13The Daily TexanManaging Editor (Fall)4/5/13August ‘13 - December ‘13 Download the Application and visit our website for more information: www.utexas.edu/tsm Questions? Contact us at: admin@texasstudentmedia.com TEXASSTUDENTMEDIAThe Daily Texan • Cactus Yearbook • Texas Student Television • Texas Travesty • KVRX 91.7 FMsports8Tuesday, March 19, 2013lost Colorado to the Pac-12, Nebraska to the Big 10 and Texas A&M and Missouri to the SEC over the last two years. But the Big 12 is now pursuing an alliance with the ACC that would facilitate both conferences to sched- ule games against each other every year and allow them to share TV revenue. Could this alliance serve to, not only benefit the Big 12 and ACC, but also to stabilize this college football landscape? “If you walk through it, the Pac-12 truthfully has no place to go to pick up teams, except the Big 12,” Dodds said. “The SEC and the Big 10 can pick up teams, but it’s only probably the ACC teams, maybe the Big East. So they’re the conference that could be under attack. And the alliance between the Big 12 and the ACC, I think, strengthens them. I think that the Notre Dames of the world, it would unite them a little bit, toughen them a little bit. Then I think it would be less likely that anyone could pick one of their schools up.” Tougher roadDespite its recent struggles, Texas can still claim the last national championship won by a non-SEC team. The SEC has captured each of the last seven national titles, with Alabama winning three of the last four. But now that the Big 12 has 10 teams, each of them plays the other nine every year. The conference cham- pion, when the Big 12 had 12 teams, was decided by a conference title game. With the Big 12 down to 10 schools, there is no longer a conference championship and that’s just how Dodds likes it. “I think if you get to 12, you’d probably have to do it because you don’t play everybody,” Dodds said. “I think when you play every- body, having a championship game is a real advantage to the team that lost. Let’s say you play the nine games and you beat Oklahoma and then you have the championship game and you play Okla- homa. That gives Oklahoma an edge. If you’ve got 12, you might have played them, but they’ll be coming from the other division.” Two years ago, previ- ously unbeaten Oklahoma State was ranked No. 2 and seemed poised to represent the Big 12 in the national title game. But the Cowboys were upset by Iowa State in Ames in double overtime and they had to settle for a Fiesta Bowl victory over Stanford. Last season, it was Kan- sas State that would have reached the BCS National Championship if it had run the table. Instead, the Wild- cats were crushed by Baylor in Waco, 52-24 last Novem- ber and eventually fell to Or- egon in the Fiesta Bowl. “It’s hard to get out of it,” Dodds said of the Big 12’s round-robin schedule. “But if you get out of it, you’re straight into the national championship. If you can go straight through our confer- ence, it’s a direct line to the national championship. In the SEC, Alabama hadn’t played Georgia for four years. So there’s maybe some advantages to it. They play some non-conference games late in the season that soften their schedule. The Big 12 is a tougher road to get there than the SEC because of their scheduling abilities.” Many SEC teams schedule games against weak non- conference opponents late in the regular season to give themselves a break from the rigorous slate against SEC foes. Dodds said that some- thing similar could happen in the Big 12. “Our TV partner would like to see us play conference games early,” Dodds said. “So there’s some windows in our package that are really weak because they’re playing all non-conference games. So they want us to play a confer- ence game up there, which would put a non-conference game down there, which is what our network wants.” 17 innings of work Holling- sworth has built up a 2.65 ERA allowing seven runs off of 14 hits. He has held oppos- ing batters to an average of .233 and has nine strikeouts on the season. Despite being the young- est on the mound in the Tex- as starting corps, Holling- sworth has insisted that he does not succumb to nerves and can rely on his defense to help him out. “I’ve always been a pretty level-headed guy, so I don’t really get nervous,” Holling- sworth said. “Our defense is going to come out there and work every day. I got in some jams but our defense picked it up and got me out of them.” The Longhorns lost two of three games against Texas Tech in their first series in Big 12 play. The Longhorns’ hitting struggled through- out the weekend in what turned out to be a com- petition between the two talented pitching staffs. Junior Mark Payton current- ly leads the Texas offense with a .409 batting average. The right fielder has scored nine runs on 27 hits and has a team-high 15 RBIs. Junior Erich Weiss has also been solid for the Long- horns with a .348 batting aver- age, 11 runs and 12 RBIs. Weiss, Payton and fresh- man C.J Hinojosa — the 3-4-5 hitters in the Long- horns’ lineup — have con- sistently provided most of the Longhorns’ power at the plate, although fresh- man Ben Johnson has maintained a .348 batting average and his resume includes two home runs since he entered the line- up two weeks ago. The Longhorns will face Houston on Tuesday night. The Cougars are 16-4 on the season and are rid- ing a five-game win streak which includes two wins against Baylor. loss to Texas Tech, leav- ing them at 12-7 on the season and full of ques- tion marks. Although they were supposed to over- come last year’s disap- pointing season, many of the same problems Texas had in 2012 still plagues it this year. This especially applies to the hitting de- partment, which has been the Longhorns’ Achilles heel the past two seasons. Fans hoped hitting coach Tommy Nicholson would provide a remedy for Texas’ issues at the plate, but the Longhorns show no such progress. In fact, they have regressed as a team and the offensive void puts more pressure on a young pitch- ing staff — one that has performed very well but cannot carry the team all season. If Nicholson and head coach Augie Gar- rido do not come up with a solution before confer- ence play is in full swing, they will most likely join their basketball counter- parts in missing out on the NCAA Tournament. 166: The Longhorns’ national rank in team bat- ting average as of last week, which is lower than all but two Big 12 teams. Texas is currently hitting .258, a five-point drop from last year’s .263 batting average. Although more than half the season still remains, it is obvious that hiring Nich- olson as the new hitting coach has done little to im- prove Texas’ offense up to this point. 70: The number of runs Texas has scored this year, averaging out to roughly 3.7 a game. Just as with batting averages, the Long- horns are worse in run scoring than they were last year, when they scored 86 runs through 19 games. Much of this can be at- tributed to this year’s club’s inability to get extra-base hits, as the entire team only has 33. 29: The number of stolen bases Texas has this year out of 35 total attempts, good for an 82 percent success rate. The Long- horns clearly have speed and Garrido would be wise to exploit that in order to maximize the team’s scor- ing opportunities. 27: The Longhorns’ na- tional rank in team ERA as of last week, highest among all Big 12 teams. Texas pitchers are giv- ing opposing hitters all they can handle, register- ing a 2.51 team ERA and striking out nearly three hitters to every one they walk. However, it is hard to win games when the offense scores fewer than four runs per game. Con- sequently, this impressive effort by the Longhorn pitching staff has been overshadowed by the team’s offensive struggles. BATS continues from page 7COOGS continues from page 7DODDS continues from page 1BOSTON — LeBron James made the go-ahead jumper with 10.5 seconds left to lead the Miami Heat to their 23rd consecutive victory, the second-longest streak in NBA history, with a 105-103 win over the Boston Celtics on Monday night. The Heat surpassed the 22 straight that Houston won in 2007-08 and trail only the 33 in a row won by the 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers. James scored 37 with 12 assists as the Heat won in Boston in the regular sea- son for the first time in 11 tries, despite a career-high 43 points from Jeff Green. The Celtics were without Kevin Garnett, who has the flu and a left thigh strain. Paul Pierce had 17 points, eight rebounds and eight assists for the Celt- ics. But he missed a three- pointer with three seconds left that could have given Boston the win. Mario Chalmers scored 21 points for Miami, which has not lost since Feb. 1. The Heat had not won in Boston since the New Big Three was formed — including the Celt- ics’ double-overtime victory on Jan. 27, when Ray Allen returned with his new team. That was the day Rajon Rondo was diagnosed with an ACL tear that ended his season. This time, it was Garnett who sat out, though coach Doc Rivers said he would have played if the thigh injury had not been compounded by the flu. Boston led by as many as 17 in the first half, but it was 103-all when Miami got the ball with 33 seconds left. James dribbled down the shot clock before putting up a jumper from the right wing to take the lead. Green drove into the lane for Boston, but he was stuffed by Shane Battier; the ball went out of bounds and, after replay, was given to the Celtics with 7.1 seconds remaining. Courtney Lee found Pierce for an open three-pointer, but it bounced long off the rim and Dwyane Wade, who scored 16, tipped the rebound to the cor- ner and then grabbed it. The game came exactly five years — to the day — af- ter Boston ended Houston’s 22-game winning streak. Green had 14 points in the first quarter, when the Celt- ics scored the last 17 points to open a 31-19 lead. Bos- ton led by as many as 17 in the second, but Miami went on a 15-6 run just before the half to make it a six-point game and then scored the first eight points in the third quarter to take the lead. — Associated PressNBAHeat win 23rd straight game behind James’ key performancecheck outONLINEstoriesvideosphoto galleriesdailytexanonline.com Needless to say, the Longhorns had less than a superb season. But that doesn’t mean some good can’t come out of it. The young Texas team had a few setbacks early in the year, mainly due to its inexperience. But while its results might not have shown it, the team grew up as the season progressed. Karen Aston, in her first season as head coach at Texas, was handed a team with seven underclassmen and only three seniors, one of which ended up retiring early in the sea- son. In their last game of the year, three of her five starters were freshmen. “This is such a young bas- ketball team with people in positions that they haven’t been in before,” Aston said in the midst of a nine-game losing streak. “We take steps forward, and then we take steps back.” A positive to take away from this bitter season is how these young Longhorns grew up. “I don’t think there is a measuring amount for how much they have grown,” As- ton said. “We went through several situations this year that you wouldn’t really wish upon any team. They buck- led down and started play- ing for each other, more as a team, and bought into the way that we do things.” Aston also has some strong recruits coming in for next season with Brianna Taylor, Kelsey Lang, Nekia Jones and Lilley VanderZee already hav- ing signed their national letters of intent for next year. VanderZee, a 6-foot-4-inch post, was the District 7-4A Offensive Player of the Year in her senior season at Granbury High School. Taylor, who av- eraged 10.4 points per game, is the No. 46 ranked player in the country at her position, according to HoopGurlz. Aston will have a lot to work with next season with these new star recruits and all but two of her play- ers returning. The athletes who filled up most of the box score will all be coming back for at least one more season, giving the Long- horns a strong chance of making the postseason. “I’m really proud of the team,” Aston said. “The big- gest thing I take from this is the character of the people that we have returning. I think that the fact that we are returning so many peo- ple is really a positive.” CLASSIFIEDSADVERTISING 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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PPD Study OpportunitiesPPD conducts medically supervised research studies to help evaluate new investigational medications. PPD has been con- ducting research studies in Austin for more than 25 years. The qualifications for each study are listed below. You must be available to remain in our facility for all dates listed for a study to be eligible. Call today for more information. 462-0492 • ppdi.comtext “ppd” to 48121 to receive study informationDonors average $150 per specimen. Apply on-linewww.123Donate.comSeeks College-Educated Men18–39 to Participate in aSix-Month Donor Programkeep an eye out for thesuperTUESDAYCOUPONSevery weekclip REMEMBER! you saw it in the TexanREMEMBER! you saw it in the Texanvisit dailytexanonline.com March 19, 20139Eleven days ago, Texas was eliminated in the first round of the Big 12 tournament by Kansas State and its regular season came to an end. A rough season that featured a nine-game losing streak, in- cluding seven straight losses to begin conference play, is over. Now the Longhorns have to pick up the pieces and rebuild for next season. Texas only won one road game in conference play and finished tied for eighth in the Big 12 with Kansas State. It didn’t beat a single team that finished in the top five of the conference. Two of its five conference wins came against TCU, which only won two conference games. The Longhorns were last in the conference in three-point field goal percentage. That was a heavy contributor to them finishing ninth in the confer- ence for scoring offense, only ahead of TCU. Texas was a solid rebounding team that finished second in the Big 12 in offensive and defensive re- bounding to Baylor and Iowa State, respectively. It also shot just under 40 percent from the field, which shouldn’t translate to ninth in scoring in the Big 12. What this does translate to is Texas’ turnover margin. It was last in the Big 12 by a significant margin, averaging a nightmarish 20.5 turnovers per game. Texas’ frontcourt held up well in the Big 12, but its back- court will have to pick up its production. Junior guard Chassidy Fussell led the team in scoring, but she will need to work with the rest of the back- court to increase the team’s three point shooting percent- age, as well as significantly cut- ting the turnovers down. All in all, there are not a whole lot of positives to take away from this season. The schedule shows a lot of losses and some of the statistics are just as ugly. So with the 2012-2013 basketball season over, it’s time for Texas to begin looking forward. Texas only played with two seniors this season, so the bulk of the team will be returning. Its three freshmen were among some of the best in the nation coming out of high school ac- cording to ESPN’s recruiting rankings. Texas will be bring- ing in another Top 100 player in the backcourt next season, which could help fix some problems there. Conference heavyweight Baylor will be replacing four seniors heading into next season, including Brittney Griner. Without that obsta- cle, the conference will be a lot more open, considering that the second place team this year had six conference losses. With players return- ing to an open field next sea- son, there are some things to look forward to for Texas, that should help to get rid of the foul taste this season left. Backcourt blues hold Horns backWOMEN’S BASKETBALLBy Wes MaulsbyDaily Texan Columnist9 SPTSTexas learns lesson, preps for next yearBy Garrett CallahanWeiss, fresh- the Long- con- most of at fresh- has batting resume runs line- face night. on rid- streak wins Shelby TauberDaily Texan file photoFreshman point guard Empress Davenport and the Longhorns endured a tough season, but will hope to rebuild from their young core for next season. — Karen AstonHead coach“We went through several situations this year that you wouldn’t really wish upon any team.” who they suspect is gay. Written like a playscript, “So Many” only presents the dialogue between the two mothers. With sharp and cruel comments, Ne- grón paints the intolerance powerfully and painfully. Some stories are a com- bination of the sad and funny. “Botella” is about a hustler who continually has bad luck. When one of his clients dies, he is con- cerned he will be blamed for the murder. So he tries to erase his presence with a bottle of bleach. But when one of his for- mer clients catches him with the bottle of bleach, the hustler murders him. The story produces a few chuckles, but the hustler’s cycle of dependency on his clients weaves a de- pressing story. There are times in the book, however, when Ne- grón gets repetitive. Some of the voices in the nine stories are similar to each other. “La Edwin” and “Ju- nito” are both monologues told through a phone call, and the style and voice of these two stories are alike. Although each story is well-written and enjoy- able, the similarity in voic- es causes some staleness in the narrative structure of the book. This is one the book’s few weak points. Negrón’s prose through- out is simple and intelli- gent. The stories are easy to read, but they carry deep meaning about life for the gay community in a poor neighborhood. With his short stories, Ne- grón criticizes some of the overly sexualized aspects of the gay community while simultaneously at- tacking intolerance and praising acceptance. Negrón’s short collection is brief in length but vast in quality. “Mundo Cruel” is perfect for a quick read on a slow, uneventful day. 10 COUPS/L&A9/25/123/25/13 Campus area salon 3025 Guadalupe (Next to Wheatsville Co-op and Changos) 512-476-4267M-F 8-9 | SaT 8-7 | SuN 12-6No appointment Needed. roCk the Cut and roCk this deal! 26 area salons to serve you & your Family! Coupon valid only at participating locations. Not valid with any other offer. No cash value. One coupon valid per customer. please present coupon prior to payment of service. ©2013 Supercuts Inc. printed u.S.a. expires: 07/15/2013 dylTxn$ 995supercuts.comany hairCut(Reg. $10.95-$13.95) 1 FREE APPLICATION WITH COUPON. Luxury Residences Combined With Shops, Health Clubs & Restaurants. • Gated Garage Parking Included• Movie Theater Coming This Summer• Washer & Dryer Included• Located Steps Away From The City Park And UT Shuttle Stop• Located Minutes From Downtownwww.Triangleaustin.com4600 West GuadalupeCall Now To Reserve Your Home: 512.450.1500PRE-LEASING FOR FALL 2013!! ELECTRICRUN.COMMarch 30, 2013at the travis county expo centerNight time 5k with 1 millioN watts of light aNd souNduse discouNt code: loNghoRNs2 foR 10% offcode expiRes 3/8SUPERTEXAS STUDENT MEDIAThe Daily Texan • TSTV • KVRX • The Cactus • The Texas TravestyPRINT COUPONS ONLINE AT: http://www.dailytexanonline.net/coupons/ TUESDAY COUPONSLife & Arts10Tuesday, March 19, 2013MARNIE STERNAlbum: The Chronicles Of MarniaLabel: Kill Rock StarsSongs to Download: “You Don’t Turn Down” ALPHA REVAlbum: BloomLabel: Kirtland RecordsSongs to Download: “Lonely Man,” “Sing Loud,” “I Will Come” WALK OFF THE EARTHAlbum: R.E.V.O LPLabel: Columbia RecordsSongs to Download: “Summer Vibe,” “Some- body That I Used To Know” “MUNDO CRUEL” Author: Luis NegrónType: Short story collectionPublisher: Seven Stories Pressown among the nation’s biggest popstars. Even when he took a five-year hiatus from music after bringing sexy back with Future Sex/LoveSounds in 2006, Timberlake remained on the stage of American popular culture with his “Saturday Night Live” ap- pearances and movie roles in “Friends With Benefits” and “Model Behavior.” For Timberlake, the scandal is always un- der wraps. He hasn’t been caught driving with his child on his lap like Spears, and he hasn’t come out of the closet like fellow *NSYNC member Lance Bass. Yet, at Saturday’s show, Timberlake tried to seduce us with typical bad boy behaviors. As it is in his “SNL” skits with Andy Samberg, Tim- berlake’s bad-boy antics are always in jest. After referencing the drugs that he was presumably on at his Myspace show, Tim- berlake went on to say “I’m just ... serious,” with a wink back into the crowd. We could claim that Timberlake is just transi- tioning with the release of his new album The 20/20 Experience, and he really did have that option. After five years, Timberlake could have produced any album he wanted. He could have stretched into hip-hop, jazz or even river-dancing. But he didn’t. The 20/20 Experi- ence falls in easily with all of his previous work. He played songs from every album at the show on Saturday, and while he rapped in the mid- dle of “Cry Me A River,” the transitions were seamless. At midnight, Timberlake stood backlit at the micro- phone. “Is it St. Pattie’s Day yet?” he purred. The crowd cheered, and Timberlake ap- peared blazer removed in a black tuxedo t-shirt holding a pint of dark beer that he promptly downed in one gulp. At the end, when the stage went black except for a single spotlight and Tim- berlake whispered into the microphone “I’m mother- fuckin’ bringin’ sexy back,” it was his wedding ring that cast a massive reflec- tion back into the crowd. ALBUMS continues from page 12hopefully work the formula out, and is rumored to have plans to release a second volume of The 20/20 Experience later this year. Regardless, the album solidifies Timber- lake and Timbaland’s continued domination of the mod- ern pop scene. “And I’ll be here till the colors fade/And I’ll be here till your dying day,” sings Casey McPherson on Bloom’s lead single “Sing Loud,” ensuring us that he will never stop making music. Austin’s own Alpha Rev lists 13 former members, but McPherson’s determination results in the band’s third alt-rock release. Caught somewhere between an unhurried Coldplay and a less mainstream Of Mon- sters & Men, Bloom is an atmospheric, well-produced re- cord that Austinites can be proud of. Marnie Stern’s The Chronicles Of Marnia builds on her guitar virtuosity (she was named 87th best guitarist of all time by Spin Magazine). Her multitasking ability helps her shred on the guitar while singing at the same time, emphasizing rhythm and harmony. The shrill, chaotic en- ergy may be off-putting at first, and the ubiquitous tap- ping gets a little repetitive, but it serves as a good change of pace from radio rock. Walk Off The Earth seeks to capitalize following their viral video cover of Gotye ft. Kimbra’s “Somebody That I Used To Know,” in which all five members played the same guitar (which is included on the album). The R.E.V.O. LP also features all four songs from the R.E.V.O. EP, released in 2012. The band proves their musical talent without the use of visual parlor tricks, in a diverse album that shows untapped commercial potential. IMAGE continues from page 12MUNDO continues from page 12then our schedules sort of aligned last fall, so we went on a tour. We decided that if the tour was fun, we could record new music. Now we’re just taking it one step at a time. DT: How have you grown the past few years and how has it affected your music? Morgan: I think overall we are just better com- municators - personally, emotionally, musically - and so things that we maybe would misunder- stand each other about before are much easier to understand now. Morris: I think because we were so young when we started off, we didn’t know what it was like to be people, we only knew what it was like to be people in a band…The other proj- ects weren’t every minute of your life, [so] I think it allowed us to grow into people, learn about respon- sibilities, not have someone coddling us and taking care of everything for us. DT: How would you de- scribe the sound of your new music and how is it different from your past records? Morris: Our band has so many different sounds that we like because we all like such different mu- sic and everybody brings something different to the table…When I brought ‘Not A Stranger’ [a new song]…I built it all in log- ic. There weren’t any real instruments. I brought it to the band and we tried it a bunch of different ways and settled on how it came out in the recording. DT: You guys always bring something different to the table with your music, and that is something I believe people appreciate. Morris: I love The Strokes, but they kind of have a thing. Some bands just find this thing and they stick with this one thing. We’ve never really even un- derstood what we are. Morgan: Thankfully other people somehow do, because we certainly don’t know what we’re doing. Whichever idea we’re most excited about is the one we’ll work on. It always happens that way and I think that’s why it winds up being eclec- tic because our tastes are changing all the time. DT: Will there be a new EP or album out in 2013? Morris: The first two songs are coming out in about a week…the other two are coming out on an album that we will record with no timetable right now, but when it’s done it will be done. ‘Like’ The Hush Sound’s Facebook page to stay up- dated on their upcoming song release. HUSH continues from page 12Our band has so many different sounds that we like because we all like such different music and everybody brings something different to the table. — Bob Morris, Hush Sound guitarist and vocalistcheck outONLINEstoriesvideosphoto galleriesdailytexanonline.com COMICS 11 WINES · SPIRITS · FINER FOODS(512) 366-8260 · specsonline.comCHEERS TO SAVINGS!® HIGH FIVES FORPRICES.LowAcross 1 Rocky outcrop 5 ___ Ness 9 Self-mover’s rental14 “Bloody” 15 Ship-to-ship call16 Irritable17 “Picnic” playwright William18 Circumstance’s partner19 Earns20 1991 film that earned John Singleton a Best Director nomination23 NBC fixture since ’7524 In addition25 U.S.N. rank26 Train alternative29 What a blind man mistakes for a snake, in a fable33 Twisty turn34 “Gloria in Excelsis ___” 35 Shoppe sign word36 Begins to pursue vigorously39 Wander (about) 40 Part of a shirt that may develop a hole41 Callers of strikes and balls42 Prefix with cycle or city43 Night before44 Test at a football tryout48 Cook in oil49 ___ Arbor, Mich. 50 Lend a hand51 Nosh54 Singer of the 1975 #1 hit “Before the Next Teardrop Falls” 57 Like some bears60 Lucy’s husband or son61 Shrek, e.g. 62 San Antonio landmark, with “the” 63 Mont Blanc, par exemple64 Artery’s counterpart65 Keep for another three weeks, say, as a library book66 Like some batteries67 “I hate to break up ___” Down 1 Nursery sights 2 Went long, as a sentence 3 Sweater or sock pattern 4 “Man!” 5 Portable computers 6 “Call on me! Call on me!” 7 Accompany, with “with” 8 Like Olivia Newton-John’s last name 9 Absolute maximum10 Focus of a phrenologist11 Seek answers12 Beehive State native13 Fleur-de-___ 21 Mushroom cloud producer, in brief22 No longer fooled by26 Onion, for one27 Cancel28 Twist, as facts30 Absolute minimum31 Legendary firefighter Red32 Actors’ parts36 In a ___ (indignant) 37 Roman god of love38 Surprisingly agile for one’s age39 Pop’s pop40 Dodge42 Daly of “Cagney & Lacey” 43 Spiritually uplifted45 Peter of Peter, Paul and Mary46 Place for pampering47 Yard separators52 Nest that may be found on a 1-Across53 Singer Terence ___ D’Arby54 Stardom55 Edit out56 Kind of lox57 Standard for the course58 Bullring “Bravo!” 59 Office computer linkup, for shortpuzzle by dan schoenholzFor 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 PUZZLE12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758596061626364656667SCRUBBALLAGHAARENAOBOEGRIMTIPSYLUCABRASIUSEODDROOFSRCABUILDINGFYINOLALYINIFSLEASCAMTIAARTISTICABILITYBEAPERUJAIELKISLEMOWSTIEJESSICABIELSCIONATMLEISHAREACABBLENDHEROCALLEERIEEDENTREEROSESThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Release Tuesday, March 19, 2013Edited by Will ShortzNo. 0212CrosswordComicsTuesday, March 19, 201311 Today’s solution will appear here tomorrowArrr matey. This scurrvy beast is today’s answerrrrrr. Crop it out, or it’ll be the the shes for ya! t2 5 1 9 3 6 7 4 87 3 4 5 1 8 6 9 28 6 9 4 2 7 3 1 54 1 3 7 9 5 8 2 66 2 5 8 4 1 9 3 79 8 7 2 6 3 4 5 13 7 2 6 5 9 1 8 45 9 8 1 7 4 2 6 31 4 6 3 8 2 5 7 93 7 2 1 5 4 9 8 66 5 8 9 2 3 4 7 14 9 1 8 6 7 5 2 31 3 5 2 9 8 7 6 42 8 4 6 7 5 3 1 99 6 7 4 3 1 8 5 27 4 6 5 1 9 2 3 89 1 3 7 4 2 6 9 55 2 9 3 8 6 1 4 7 3 6 7 4 8 8 6 2 1 4 1 3 5 5 8 4 1 9 2 4 5 1 7 5 8 4 1 2 3 3 8 SUDOKUFORYOUSUDOKUFORYOU 12 L&AKelsey McKinney, Life & Arts Editor Life & Arts12Tuesday, March 19, 2013In just 96 pages, Luis Negrón is satirical, heart- warming, heartbreaking and laugh-out-loud funny. His collection of short fic- tional stories, “Mundo Cru- el”, is gay fiction at its best. “Mundo Cruel” focuses on Santurce, a small, poor community in the San Juan district of Puerto Rico. It was originally published in Spanish in 2010, and the English translation was re- leased last week. The col- lection is Negrón’s first. Throughout the nine short stories, Negrón uses a wide variety of different storytelling techniques. Some are straight dialogue and some are narratives. Some are told in first per- son, and others in third. Negrón’s stories do not just have a diversity of mood, they also have a diversity of style. Many of the nine sto- ries in “Mundo Cruel” are comical and satirical. “For Guayama” is about a man’s tireless efforts to track down a friend to borrow money to stuff his recently deceased dog. The man ends up accidentally caught in a smuggling scam — the business he used to stuff his dog filled her with fake social security cards and passports. The unfortu- nate, but darkly humorous, story is recounted in a se- ries of short letters. Other stories take a sad- der tone, and illustrate the intolerance many in the LGBTQ community face. “So Many” is about neigh- boring mothers who meet to gossip and complain about a neighborhood boy No matter how much he tries, Justin Timberlake will never be a bad boy. But he sure gave it his best try at the final Myspace Secret Show during South By Southwest on Saturday. Timberlake’s show featured two versions of himself: boy-next-door Justin, and sex symbol Timberlake. The Mickey Mouse Club gave Timberlake a whole- some start to the entertain- ment industry, but unlike some of his fellow mous- keteers, he has maintained a relatively good-guy per- sona. While Christina Agu- ilera became X-tina and performed her “Dirrty” mu- sic video in a bikini, Tim- berlake frosted his tips and joined a boy band. As the ramen-haired frontman of *NSYNC, Tim- berlake’s career skyrock- eted. No Strings Attached, when released in 2000, be- came the fastest-selling al- bum of all time, and — of course — he had America’s sweetheart on his denim- suited arm. His relationship with Britney Spears in the early 2000’s was caked in reas- surances that they were not having sex and that they were good kids. When they broke up, Spears released the horrible In the Zone and then, well, ended up with Kevin Federline. Timber- lake, meanwhile, released “Cry Me A River,” where he sort of seeks revenge, but mostly pouts. Sure, there was that Su- perbowl halftime fiasco in 2004 where Timberlake played a key role in reveal- ing Janet Jackson’s breast to most of America. This is one of the only real claims Jus- tin has to bad boy fame, but he denied having any prior knowledge of the event. In fact, while Jackson’s new album tanked, Timberlake was awarded two Grammys for his release of Justified. He issued an on-stage apol- ogy for his bad behavior, and won all of our mothers’ approval back. Since then, his solo career has done well, and our boy from Tennessee has held his Photo courtesy of Frank MicelottaJustin Timberlake performs with a live band at DirecTV’s Super Saturday Night. His new album The 20/20 Experience is highly anticipated after his six-year break. Illustration by John Massingill | Daily Texan StaffMUSICBy Kelsey McKinneyIMAGE continues on page 10JUSTIN TIMBERLAKEAlbum: The 20/20 ExperienceLabel: RCA RecordsSongs to Download: “Suit & Tie,” “Mirrors,” “Tunnel Vision,” “Strawberry Bubblegum” BOOK REVIEW | ‘MUNDO CRUEL’Gay story collection brief but powerfulMUNDO continues on page 10Q-AND-AThe Hush Sound returns from hiatusBy Bobby BlanchardALBUM REVIEW | ‘THE 20/20 EXPERIENCE’Illinois band The Hush Sound is wrapping up a tour. The Daily Texan sat down with Greta Morgan, pianist and vocalist, and Bob Morris, guitartist and vocalist, during South By Southwest to talk about their recent hiatus, up- coming music releases and their plans for the future. The Daily Texan: Tell me about your SXSW experi- ence so far. Bob Morris: We’ve got- ten to play three showcases so far and they’ve all been really fun. The general rule of thumb that we’ve realized is that every single one of our sets will be cut short, so you’ve kinda gotta hurry up and play a lot of songs. DT: Why did you decide to go on hiatus and why did you get back together? Greta Morgan: We were all driving ourselves crazy… and I think there was just more pressure on us than we knew how to appropri- ately deal with. In 2008 we were on tour for almost 10 months out of the year, and when I could finally come home and cook a meal for myself, I was like, ‘What a thrill, wow.’ So we worked on other projects, went on other adventures and By Shane MillerBy Chelsea PurgahnChelsea Purgahn | Daily Texan StaffFrom left to right, Greta Morgan, Darren Wilson, Bob Morris and Chris Faller are members of the Illinois indie band The Hush Sound. The band is making new music with eclectic sounds after an extended hiatus. First he was a child star, then the breakout singer of a multi- platinum boy band, then a solo artist, actor and entrepreneur. Now, in 2013, we find the 32-year-old Justin Timber- lake in an R&B/pop stage, and his album The 20/20 Experience is only his third in 11 years. Though he was still at the forefront of the public consciousness, he returns to the music scene six years after FutureSex/ LoveSounds with longtime producer/collaborator Timbaland at his side. The album begins with an orchestral crescendo in “Pusher Love Girl,” dis- playing a more mature start than “Señorita” off of 2002’s Justified. Through a played- out metaphor, Timberlake likens his loving affections to a drug addiction. For the first five minutes, he cre- ates soulful harmonies and solos over himself before a bridge leads to a much more rhythmic section. Because of the song’s dis- tinct parts, it could be split in two, establishing a trend that continues for the en- tirety of the album. Much like Kendrick Lamar’s good kid, m.A.A.d city, sound- scapes and vocal interludes are frequently used to com- bine two songs into one. The first single, platinum “Suit & Tie,” was released Jan. 14 and topped the charts within hours. Tim- berlake’s soothing falsetto makes up for one of Jay-Z’s worst rap verses to date. “Tunnel Vision” focuses Timberlake’s vision on a female, probably his wife, Jessica Biel, and features some of the album’s best production, with Timbal- and using vocal percussion similar to “Cry Me a River.” The ending instrumentals highlight why Timbaland is one of the best producers — the music could stand alone without Timberlake’s vocal melodies and inversions. As the title suggests, the album’s main lyrical themes revolve around optics and perception, like the second single “Mirrors.” The song’s chorus outshines the rest of the album — it is lengthy, tender and infectious. The album ends with a relaxing ballad “Blue Ocean Floor,” consisting mainly of backmasked syn- thesizers and the orches- tral melody introduced on “Pusher Love Girl,” prov- ing that what goes around comes around. It’s not all incredible, though. With an average length of seven minutes, the 10 songs are full of mu- sical twists and turns. The biggest question being: is the length necessary? Some songs like “Strawberry Bubblegum” have a less- than-subtle bridge, and what comes after it doesn’t add anything spectacular. Even the best track, “Mir- rors,” falls prey to this problem, with a drawn out a cappella bridge that re- peats the cheesy line “You are the love of my life.” The radio edits will undoubted- ly shave off the excess min- utes of many of the songs. It’s the record of a pop artist attempting to re- define himself through a triumphant return against grandiose expectations. It plays a little overly ambi- tious, but Timberlake will Pop star’s image remains ‘good’ through changesTimberlake focuses musical visionALBUMS continues on page 10HUSH continues on page 10