@THEDAILYTEXAN | THEDAILYTEXAN.COM FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN COMMUNITY SINCE 1900 4 DAYS LEFT LAST DAY TO SHOW TO SHOW YOUR YOUR VOLUME 118, ISSUE XX SUPPORT SUPPORT SCITECH NEWS OPI NION LIFE& ARTS In the past, Venus may have had conditions similar to Earth, researchers have found. PAGE 8 Vaping started as a healthier alternative to smoking, but became a college trend. PAGE 2 Single-use bag bans go to Texas’ Supreme Court; they should be overturned. PAGE 4 Silk Club promotes femme Asian-American perspectives with new zine. PAGE 5 STATE Campus carry: The legal battle continues Professors appeal lower court’s ruling, send ight to Fifth Circuit By Allyson Waller @allyson_renee7 W ith February’s mass shooting in Parkland, Florida, still fresh on her mind, Jennifer Glass said she sees her legal ight against the state’s campus carry law in a new light. “It really feels like a diferent world,” said Glass, a UT sociology professor. “It felt before like we were doing this rear-guard legal action, and now, I feel like there’s a (wave) front.” Texas’ campus carry law went into efect Au- gust 2016, allowing licensed handgun owners to carry concealed weapons into public univer- sity facilities. A month before the law was en- forced, Glass, along with English professors Mia Carter and Lisa Moore, iled a case in U.S. Dis- trict Court against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, UT President Gregory Fenves and the UT Board of Regents on the grounds that cam- pus carry infringed on their First, Second and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Last summer, federal judge Lee Yeakel dis- missed the case, concluding, “(The) plaintifs present no concrete evidence to substantiate their fears, but instead rest on ‘mere conjecture about possible actions.’” The professors’ lawyers immediately ap- pealed, hoping a higher court would reverse Yeakel’s decision. The case is currently in mo- tion to go before the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “Personally speaking, I’m not surprised by anything that’s happening,” said Moore, who is also a women’s and gender studies professor. “What we’re trying to do is make a contribution to (the) knowledge and information on this issue that can be used for the bigger picture, changing a culture that’s awash in a tidal wave of guns.” Although Glass, Moore and Carter all have diferent expertise, they are all connected in the central belief that guns do not belong in the classroom. “It’s not surprising that teachers all over English professor Lisa Moore, left, sociology profes- sor Jennifer Glass, center, and English professor Mia Carter have iled a case in U.S. District Court against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, UT President Gregory Fenves and the UT Board of Regents. juan igueroa | the daily texan staff the country, from (kindergarten) to (the) uni- versity level, are ighting against guns being in the learning environment,” Carter said. “It’s supposed to be a challenging, analytical (and) dynamic space, and it’s our job to create and protect that space.” Academic Freedom The professors said they made compelling plaintifs to bring forth this lawsuit because of who they are. As the irst openly lesbian faculty member hired by UT, Moore said she has experienced backlash over the years for who she is and the subjects she teaches. Carter said she endures challenges as a woman of color in a position of CARRY page 2 UTPD expands patrols on Robert Dedman after complaints POLICE By Anna Lassmann @annalassmann The UT Police Department increased their traic safe- ty enforcement along Rob- ert Dedman Drive near the School of Law and the Butler School of Music indeinitely Monday. The targeted enforce- ment began after police re- ceived complaints of speed- ing and drivers not yielding to pedestrians. During the irst hour of enforcement, UTPD made 14 traic stops, UTPD spokeswoman Noelle Newton Schrader said. only issue warnings this week, unless during the stop, oicers ind UTPD will the driver has previous vi- olations or does not have car insurance or registra- tion, UTPD Cpl. Jefrey Corf said. Next week, UTPD will begin ticketing if the traic violations persist. “If we’re not getting a change in behavior, then that may be another course of ac- tion to cite them next time,” Corf said. Whereas previously the area of Robert Dedman Drive was part of the general cam- pus patrol, it is now a target- ed enforcement area and will have two to three police cars at anytime. Corf said UTPD wants to educate students, faculty, staf and campus visitors on the 15 mph speed limit on campus and make sure they are aware of pedestrians. “Our enforcement strate- gy at this point is just edu- cation,” Corff said. “If you’re going 15 (mph) and react- ing to somebody walking in front of you, there’s going to be a better chance for you to react and (for) people to be safe. If you’re going 30 or 35 (mph) through cam- pus, it can be a much more dangerous situation.” Trumpet performance junior Rebecca Ortiz said the crosswalk between the Bass Concert Hall and the Butler School of Music is especially dangerous, and said it is good that UTPD is trying to enforce UTPD page 2 The UT Police Department is enforcing speeding violations. After recent complaints, the UTPD has in- creased its enforcement of trafic laws and ordinances. andre fernandez | the daily texan staff UNIVERSITY geo casillas | the daily texan staff How out-of-state and international students can qualify for in-state tuition By Stephanie Adeline @stephadeline On top of classes, home- work and studying, unde- clared freshman Sophia Can- tor has to allocate time during the week to manage her own video editing business, Mod- ern Montage. But she said she knows all her work will pay of when she receives her tuition bill in the fall. Cantor is from St. Louis, Missouri, and currently pays out-of-state tuition. Her busi- ness was created so that she could establish residency in Texas and qualify for in-state tuition next semester. To be classiied as a Texas resident, out-of-state stu- dents must be independent of their parents, live in Texas for 12 consecutive months and establish residency through one of several ways, such as being employed for an av- erage of 20 hours per week or owning and operating a business in Texas. Although many out-of- requirements state undergraduate fresh- men prefer to fulill residen- through cy employment, Cantor said owning her own business is the best way for her to establish residency. Can- tor said she prefers owning her own business because she is in charge of her own working hours. “I wanted to be able to just be a student and have more time for my social life and fo- cus on my work,” Cantor said. “Having my own business really helps (me) to create my own hours, so it was a lot easier and, I think, more fun, because I can do whatever I want.” said Deana Williams, associ- ate director of international admissions, out-of- state students make up 7 to 8 percent of all students in a freshman class. However, the percentage of students going through the process of establishing residency is even smaller, Williams said. “It’s hard when you’re a freshman owning a property, owning a business (or) work- ing 20 hours a week, when you can barely keep up with your classes,” Williams said. International students make up only 2 percent of a freshman class, and most in- ternational students do not qualify for establishing Tex- as residency, Williams said. International students would have to possess an eligible visa to qualify for residen- cy, which does not include the typical F-1 visa most students have. International students may be able to receive in- state tuition through cer- tain tuition waivers, such as a competitive scholarship waiver or a waiver for work- ing as a research assistant or teaching assistant. Chen, Dandi an international student from China, works as a research assistant at the McCombs School of Business and re- ceives a tuition waiver. Chen said while balancing work and class is diicult, being able to pay only a quarter of what she would normally pay for tuition is worth it. “If you don’t get paid enough and you’re not get- ting the reduction and still have this amount of work, I probably wouldn’t have done it,” said Chen, a management information systems and economics junior. “In-state tuition for me is $5,600, but out-of-state (tuition) is al- most $20,000. … That is a huge reduction.” Williams said the difer- ence between an in-state tu- ition waiver and becoming a Texas resident is that a stu- dent who establishes residen- cy will remain a resident every semester, but tuition waivers do not have the same level of security. “If you get your (teach- ing or research assistant position) dropped, you’ll re- vert to out-of-state tuition,” Williams said. “There’s no security in that, the next se- mester, if you don’t have the job or you don’t have schol- arship, you’re not getting in-state (tuition).” FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 UTPD continues from page 1 traic rules. “I think it’s not as safe as other usual crosswalks, just because nobody knows the speed limit on that road,” Ortiz said. “(There are) all those cars parked (by that crosswalk), and you never see when a pedestrian is going to walk right out, and since peo- ple are going more than 15 (mph) and the pedestrian is just going to walk, it can be pretty dangerous.” UTPD will have multiple patrol cars out on Robert Dedman Drive during the morning and evening rush for multiple weeks, hours or even months, until the issues have been resolved, Corf said. I’ve deinitely been in a car that’s about to hit a kid that’s running around not on the crosswalks. I’ve also seen people almost get hit. Brigid Becker, junior “We want to have a couple good days of education, mak- ing an abundance of traic stops, having our presence out there so we’ll have two or three cars out there, at a time with lights on —hopefully, that will get people to slow down as well,” Corf said. “It makes people pay attention.” Vocal performance junior Brigid Becker did not know the on-campus speed limit was 15 mph and said she thinks it is good UTPD is trying to en- force the speed limit more but said pedestrians also need to pay attention. “I think, in general around the school, everyone needs to slow down,” Becker said. “Unfortunately, students like to jaywalk, and I’ve deinitely been in a car that’s about to hit a kid that’s running around not on the crosswalks. I’ve also seen people almost get hit.” 2 This issue of The Daily Texan is valued at $1.25 PERMANENT STAFF Editor-in-Chief Laura Hallas Assoc. Editors Liza Anderson, Jaree Campbell, Cuillin Chastain-Howley, Josie Maclean Senior Columnists Elizabeth Braaten, Laura Doan, Noah Horwitz, Caleb Wong, Ryan Young Forum Editors Vik Shirvaikar, Janhavi Nemawarkar, Liza Anderson Managing Editor Ellie Breed Assoc. Managing Editor Tyler Horka, Forrest Milburn News Editor Catherine Marin Assoc. News Editor Lisa Nhan News Desk Editors Hannah Daniel, London Gibson, Anusha Lalani, Wesley Story, Brittany Wagner Senior Reporters Chase Karacostas, Maria Mendez, Brianna Stone, Allyson Waller Beat Reporters Stephanie Adeline, Katie Balevic, Mason Carroll, Meara Isenberg, Raga Justin, Anna Lassman, Sara Schleede, Tehreem Shahab, Sami Sparber, Brooke Vincent Copy Desk Chief Bella McWhorter Associate Copy Desk Chiefs Kirsten Handler, Taylor Presley, Ryan Steppe Design Editor Sunnie Lee Art Director Rena Li Senior Designers Andrea D’Mello, Clio Harralson, Aaliyah Jen- kins, Paolina Montes Senior Graphic Designers Mingyo Lee, Mallika Gandhi Video Editor Thomas Negrete ISSUE STAFF Columnists Kereece McLean, Rohan Batlanki, Rachel Freeman Comic Artists Ella Williams, Zara Sharaf, Nikole Peña, Jonathan Daniels Copy Editors Madi Schimmel, Vanessa Le, Cuillin Chastain-Howley Designers Cat Hickox, Sarah Tanguma Assoc. Video Editor Audrey Black, Peyton Young Photo Editor Juan Figueroa Assoc. 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Entire contents copyright 2018 Texas Student Media. CARRY continues from page 1 authority. Glass, who teach- es on topics such as abortion and reproductive rights, said students sometimes express anger toward her because of the controversial topics her classes address. “I have had things happen in my classroom because of the nature of the material I teach,” Moore said. “Had there been a gun in a mix, lives would have been lost, (and) it could have been very volatile.” Currently, UT allows pro- fessors to designate their of- ices as gun-free spaces, but not their classrooms. One of the professors’ main arguments is that campus car- ry threatens their academic freedom to have discussions about controversial topics without having to worry about retaliation. They also said they fear the potential danger guns represent for their students, more so than the danger to themselves. “I had so many students saying, ‘I’m not going to talk in class anymore. If my inter- pretation is diferent, I don’t want anyone to get mad at me,’ and that, to me, is a trag- edy,” Carter said. “We’re not afraid of our students; we fear for them.” The Appellate Process The plaintifs have iled their inal appellate brief, so now the two parties must wait. Either the circuit court will base its decisions solely of the plaintifs’ and de- fendants’ appellate briefs or call for oral arguments from the parties’ lawyers, which is likely in a case like this, said D. Todd Smith, an Austin-based civil appel- late lawyer who has argued numerous cases before the Fifth Circuit. “It’s an interesting case because it’s got (three) UT professors on one side and the state on the other side,” Smith said. “So I suspect it will probably be argued, and it can take anywhere from a few months to longer to schedule an argument.” Although Fenves is a de- fendant in the lawsuit, Moore said he is only named because of his oicial role. She said she feels he has supported her right to free speech on the issue. “We understand that the lawsuit represents the feel- ings of many faculty who have expressed concern about the law throughout the process,” University spokesman J.B. Bird said. “That said, they rec- ognize it is the law and has to be followed.” Paxton’s press oice said they could not comment on any pending litigation. “The The organization Students for Concealed Carry, or SCC, wrote a brief opposing the professors’ appeal. Quinn Cox, southwest regional director for SCC and accounting senior, said the plaintifs misstate the intent of campus carry. for a intent was law-abiding, vetted individ- ual, if they are licensed, to be able to carry on a college cam- pus and defend themselves if they so choose,” Cox said. “So if something were to happen at a college campus, they’re not automatically put at a disadvantage.” Cox said if the professors were to get the lower court’s it could ruling be detrimental. reversed, “If it is overturned in the appellate court, it can set a dangerous precedent beyond campus carry as to what the deinition of academic free- dom is,” Cox said. “It isn’t just about campus carry. It has even larger implications.” Establishing Precedence Although they lost at the district level, Carter said their lawyers’ work and the case’s impact solidiies success. “Seeing the (legal writings) that our lawyers brilliantly wrote being taken up across the country and (them) con- sulting with other attorneys on other cases — that’s al- ready a win,” Carter said. Moore she’s not said sure if the court will grant the decision they desire, but she knows the profes- sors will continue to debate campus carry. “Win or lose is not so much the point, as we refuse to have our silence mistaken for assent,” Moore said. “We say no to guns in our classroom, and we’re going to continue to say no with every platform we have available to us.” FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 Vaping brings cloud of concerns CAMPUS traic rules. speed “I think it’s not as safe as other usual crosswalks, just because nobody knows the limit on that road,” Ortiz said. “(There are) all those cars parked (by that crosswalk), and you never see when a pedestrian is going to walk right out, and since peo- ple are going more than 15 (mph) and the pedestrian is just going to walk, it can be pretty dangerous.” Dedman Drive during UTPD will have multiple patrol cars out on Robert the morning and evening rush for multiple weeks, or even months, until the issues have been resolved, hours Corf said. Vaping increases among young adults despite ban from University grounds. By Raga Justin @ragajus W hen philosophy junior Alayna Kingston was 15, she smoked her first cigarette, a Kamel Red. She was soon hooked, cigarette and spiraled into a two-pack- a-day habit. that one Last fall, she turned to vaping to help kick her smoking addiction. “Vaping works great to calm me down,” Kingston said. “But nicotine addic- tion is still a problem — (vaping is) just like any other drug.” While electronic nic- otine systems, such as e-cigarettes and Juuls, were originally in- tended to help wean heavy smokers like Kingston off cigarettes, young adults have increasingly taken to vaping recreationally. delivery than found A National Academy of Medicine study earlier this year that vaping rates were “substantially higher” traditional cigarette use among young adults, as well as a definite link between e-cigarette use and addiction. Vaping continues to be on the rise on campus, according to University experts. UT’s Tobacco-Free Cam- pus policy prohibits all forms of vaping with any said Osalunosse device, Ovienmhada, Tobacco-Free Campus coordinator. Al- though enforcing the policy is supposed to be a com- munity effort, students are often referred to the dean of students by campus ad- ministrators for vaping in public places, she said. “It’s the job of the cam- pus community to active- ly try to educate those around them,” Ovienmha- da said. “We’re not here to be slapping people on the wrist, because we have the understanding that it’s an addiction.” Health education profes- sor Alexandra Loukas, who studies alternative tobac- co products, said potential health risks are a big part of emerging research on vaping, although there is no definitive answer yet. Regulation on any of these products is still nonexistent as well, Loukas said. “I just they’re putting think people should be concerned about in what their body,” Loukas said. “It seems to me that a lot of college kids are concerned about physically active or eating proper- ly, and yet they’re vaping something they don’t even know (about).” being Blake Bartlett, a ra- fresh- dio-television-film man, said he got hooked on vaping in high school and carries his Juul with him around campus. Bartlett said he often vapes while walking in between classes or listening to a lecture. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, look at me, I vape, I’m cool,’” Bartlett said. “It makes me laugh and simultaneously want to vomit when people talk about how much they vape. It’s more of, like, a relaxing thing I do through- out the day.” diane sun | the daily texan staff Many e-cigarette and vape stores are sprinkled near campus. One of them is ATX1 Smoke and Va- por on Guadalupe Street, where glass hookahs line the shelves and cabinets display hundreds of color- ful e-cigs, Juuls and bongs of all sizes. The owner, Tony Dadra, said around 70 to 80 per- cent of his customers are UT students and the rest are typically under the age of 25. “We get a lot of traffic,” Dadra said. “Younger kids who are health-conscious like this stuff.” Bartlett said he wasn’t overly concerned with potential health risks, al- though he said he knew there were probably some identified. waiting to be It could always be worse, Bartlett said. “I’d much rather see a bunch of Juuls around than a bunch of cigarette packs,” Bartlett said. “I feel like the fantasy behind smoking is always going to be a thing, but if we can just make it healthier, then we should be fine.” “We want to have a couple good days of education, mak- ing an abundance of traic stops, having our presence out there so we’ll have two or three cars out there, at a time with lights on —hopefully, that will get people to slow down as well,” Corf said. “It makes people pay attention.” Vocal performance junior Brigid Becker did not know the on-campus speed limit was 15 mph and said she thinks it is good UTPD is trying to en- force the speed limit more but said pedestrians also need to pay attention. “I think, in general around the school, everyone needs to slow down,” Becker said. “Unfortunately, students like to jaywalk, and I’ve deinitely been in a car that’s about to hit a kid that’s running around not on the crosswalks. I’ve also seen people almost get hit.” 3 UNIVERSITY New medieval studies minor comes to COLA By Megan Menchaca @meganmenchaca13 Students looking at next year’s course catalog for the College of Liberal Arts may be surprised to find a new undergraduate minor — me- dieval studies. This fall, the new Medi- eval Studies minor will be added to the list of the 41 current liberal arts under- graduate minors. The minor is composed of 15 hours and will include the study of the art, history and languages of the Middle Ages, which are all classes the college currently offers, said Eliza- beth Scala, medieval studies program advisor. “We’re trying to give the Middle Ages a better name by having people capitalize on their interests in the he- roic narratives and the great fighting scenes that you get in films and shows,” Scala said. “But we’ll also be focus- ing on reading more deep- ly into medieval literature and learning.” UT previously offered a graduate degree in Medieval Studies but canceled it be- cause of a lack of qualified applicants. However, Joan Holladay, director of medi- eval studies, said professors and students still have a strong interest in medieval studies, because of shows like “Game of Thrones.” “Through this minor, we hope people can understand a real historical approach to the Middle Ages and recog- nize that medieval studies can be serious scholarship,” Holladay said. “Lots of people are interested in history right now, so why not let them de- velop a concentration in an area that they might find par- ticularly interesting?” Scala said this minor will be particularly helpful for students outside the College of Liberal Arts and the Col- lege of Fine Arts, because they will be able to take the classes and have it on their transcript as something other than an elective. “We have students who come to courses on the films depicting the Middle Ages and they really love them, but they’re majoring in some- thing science-related,” Scala said. “So (the creation of this minor) seemed like a very smart thing to do for these students, who could take this side interest and have it credentialed.” Vocal performance senior Avery Yebernetsky, who has been interested in medieval studies since he was a child, said he is looking forward to expanding his knowledge in medievalism by pursuing this minor. “I think it’s very important to study the medieval era and see not only where we have evolved from but also what we still have kept in our soci- ety, especially in terms of the aspects of medieval society,” Yebernetsky said. mel westfall | the daily texan staff 4 FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 LAURA HALLAS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF @TEXANOPINION COLUMN COLUMN Course names relect course values By Grace Leake @grace_leake columnist After a yearslong ight, the Texas Board of Education inally approved an elective Mexi- can-American studies course last Friday. Howev- er, concessions were made: The title of the course was changed from Mexican-American studies to “Ethnic Studies: An Overview of Americans of Mexican Descent.” It’s a minor change, but it relects major prob- lems with the board’s understanding of the com- plexities of American culture and the multifaceted identities of Texans. While we should celebrate the new course, we cannot accept its name. The title change was originally proposed by David Bradley, a Republican from Beaumont. He defended his amendment by arguing that, “I don’t subscribe to hyphenated Americanism. … I ind hyphenated Americanism to be divisive.” It seems that Bradley was concerned that by titling the course “Mexican-American studies,” the course somehow became less “American.” Perhaps he felt that, by acknowledging the diver- sity of cultures within the United States, the false notion of homogeneous “Americanism” is threat- ened because the alternative is more complex. But this isn’t the case. Far from being divisive, hy- phenated Americanism — or the inhabitation of multiple identities — is Americanism. Many Americans think of their Americanism in hyphenated terms; our country is so diverse that most of us identify ourselves as the prod- ucts of more cultures than just that of America. The conception of American culture is so broad and nebulous that the existence of one unified “American culture” could even be questioned. That shouldn’t be a problem. Especially in this case, “Americanism” is historically inseparable from Mexican culture. Lauren Quesada, a biology freshman, notes that, “Texas, as an independent republic, had strong inluences from both the Mexican popu- lation and (the) American population that shared the community, permanently infusing Mexican American culture — and Texan culture — is funda- mentally shaped by Mexican culture. This is relected in our country’s language, customs and cuisine. ” culture into the state. … The republic was just as much Mexican as it was American, if not more.” American culture — and Texan culture, to an even higher degree – is fundamentally shaped by Mexican culture. This is relected in our country’s language, customs and cuisine; instead of trying to dismiss or undersell the relationship these two cultures have with each other, we should celebrate and study it. COLUMN The original course name accomplished this; by hyphenating “Mexican” with “American,” the title implicitly acknowledged the importance of both cultures and put them on an equal standing. In contrast, the new title tacks “Mexican descent” on at the very end of the title, efectively diminish- ing its importance by ranking it after “American” culture. It’s telling that three out of the four Latino members on the board opposed this name change. At the very least, this name change demon- strates a lack of respect for the Mexican-American identity, an identity that many Texans inhabit. Marisa Perez-Diaz, a board member and San Antonio Democrat, pointed to this disrespect. “As someone who identiies as Mexican-American, your experience is unlike my experience. … I’m asking you to be inclusive.” There’s still time to acknowledge that importance. Marty Rowley, a Republican from Amaril- lo, noted that we can still change the name. “I don’t feel that strongly about how we named that course. If we leave it in and it is an issue with peo- ple, I’m sure we’ll hear about it. I’m certainly open to input from my constituencies and others as to whether we should make that change.” We should speak out for that change. By giving a Mexican-American studies course a title which equally presents both Mexican and American cultures, we acknowledge the historical reality of the inluence of both cultures and are inclusive of those with complex cultural identities. Grace Leake is a Plan II and business freshman from Austin. Bag ban harms Austin environment and economy cones). Ultimately, multi-use bags, once thrown away, are worse for the environment because they take longer to decompose in landills than do single-use bags. their weight and size makes total waste material greater for multi-use bags than for single-use bags. In a biannual audit of the Texas Disposal Sys- tem in 2015, two years after the ban began, sin- gle-use plastic bags accounted for 35.7 percent of all discarded bags but only 7 percent of total bag weight. Compared to a neighborhood just outside the annette meyer | the daily texan staff Beauty is not deined by size By Kereece McLean @texanopinion columnist Recently Selena Gomez’s body became the topic of discussion when images of her wearing a bathing suit were shot and pub- lished on TMZ for all to criticize. The outlet used their TV time to parade around the photos and vote on which were the least and most flattering. This is fat-shaming. The outward accep- tance of unwarranted criticism or commen- tary of her body, without repercussions, mirrors normal, everyday experiences. Ac- cording to the Oxford English Dictionaries, fat-shaming is causing someone to “feel humiliated by making mocking or critical comments about their size.” According to the Oxford English Dictionary, 94 percent of teenage girls have experienced some form of body shaming. Everyday fat-sham- ing looks like instances of an individual disgust when someone is eating, insinuat- ing that someone should lose weight, or simply using the term fat to mock an indi- vidual. When someone is shamed for their body, it needs to be addressed and treated like any other slur. Otherwise we are only allowing this behavior to continue. The term fat should never be burdened with negative connotations. The use of the word fat should be a standard, rather than the standard “overweight.” Overweight im- plies that there is an ideal weight. Fat is just fat, like thin is just thin. The implication of equating fatness to anything other than normal is a transgressive idea that needs to be checked at any and all occurrences. Be- ing fat is not a problem, its others distaste- ful opinions of fatness that needs to end. The disdain for fat women stems from our beauty industry. The average female model wears a size 0 or 00. This contrast incredibly against the average American women’s size of a 12-14. Proper representa- tion matters because women of all ages are now shoved into the position of having to reflect what the industry displays, and when we cannot meet these beauty standards, we become vulnerable to body-shaming. Fat-shaming is a horrendous act that can lead to sickness in mind and body. It’s re- ported that fat-shaming can lead to over- eating, depression, an increase in inflam- mation and in stress hormone levels. The mere fact that victims of fat-shaming would be at an increased risk of illness reflects the seriousness of the act. Contrary to popular belief, beauty is a one-size-fits-all. No person deserves to be called out, criticized, or mocked for their body. Fat-shaming needs to be called out to decrease future casualties. It’s a disgusting, accepted, social habit that shouldn’t exist. McLean is an English senior from Houston. Not only is the bag ban harmful to the environment, but it is also burdensome on the economy. The review’s assessment con- cluded that the ban cost the Austin economy $633,588.88 annually. This number is cal- culated in costs to the retailer, consumer and waste manage- ment services. The retailer is burdened by stocking the multi-use bags, which are about seven times heavier than single-use bags. For shipping purposes, weight is a huge factor in setting cost, and these heavier bags equate a much heavier cost to keep in stock. Costs afect consumers’ tendency to choose a retailer that do ofer single-use bags. This costs the consumer travel expenses and the retailer po- tential sales. For one speciic HEB in the Plugerville area, the store reported a decrease in sales of $60,000 per week after the ordinance was enact- ed. A study conducted by the city of Austin showed shopping habits among “heavy shoppers” went down 12 percent in the six months following the ban. Par- ticipants cited the inconvenience of bringing their own bag as a top reason why they shopped less. By Rachel Freeman @rachel_frmn columnist Decisions at the Supreme Court of Texas may soon have implications for students. From HEB in the Hancock Center to the Target on campus, sin- gle-use plastic bags could be on their way back to the 40 Acres. Currently, the court is deliberating after hearing testimonies and arguments in the Laredo Mer- chants Association v. The City of Laredo case. This case will decide if the city of Laredo, and by exten- sion all Texas cities, can legally enforce a single-use plastic bag ban. should welcome a Supreme Longhorns Court decision the bag ban. to overturn Removing the Austin ban would be beneicial to students because it negatively afects the environment and economy. A common misconception supporters have about plastic bag bans is that they help the envi- Removing the Austin ban would be beneicial to stu- dents because it negatively affects the environment and economy” ronment. But that’s not actually the case. After the city of Austin passed the bag ban ordinance in 2013, they began an internal review to do a two-year study on the ordinance’s impacts. This review shows the environmental impact of the bag ban is not completely positive — although single-use plastic bags have been eliminated, a heavy gauge plastic bag has largely replaced it. While single-use plastic bags can be made from recycled plastic, the heavier bags are most- ly made of virgin plastic, creating more emis- sions during production. Once distributed, these bags are designed to be used at least 100 times. generally used more Although than single-use bags, many of them still end up thrown away. And when these heavier bags are thrown out, they are In the years since the inter- nal review was released, the city of Austin has stood by its bag ban. However, beyond the legal reasons be- ing discussed in the Supreme Court, there are many “real world” reasons to oppose the ban. In the event the Supreme Court overturns bag bans in Texas, students, even environmentalists, should welcome the possibility of the end to an inefective ban. Freeman is a international relations and global studies junior from Cedar Park. weatherly sawyer | the daily texan staff Austin city limits, this audit showed a similar to- tal weight of plastic bags (0.052 percent of total recycling in Austin, versus 0.055 percent in Bal- COLUMN Legalizing safe needle exchange programs connects communities to services By Elizabeth Braaten @texanopinion senior columnist In October of 2017, Donald Trump declared the opioid epidemic a public health emergen- cy within the United States. Despite this, the administration has failed to provide addi- tional funding beyond the meager $57,000 already available in the Public Health Emer- gency Fund. Public health experts estimate a serious response to effectively alleviating the crisis would cost nearly $183 billion over the course of the next decade. The response from the federal government thus far to the sky- rocketing opioid death rate is sorely lacking. Harm reduction policies, which aim to reduce the harms associated with drug use, are becoming more prominent across the country. Needle exchange programs, which allow drug users to exchange dirty syringes for clean ones at no cost, attempt to fill the gap left by the federal government in making strides to mitigate this public health crisis. Although needle exchange programs are still not legal in Texas, there are around 185 of these programs across the United States. In order to combat the opioid epidemic, which is estimated to kill around 500,000 Amer- icans within the next decade, Texas policy- makers must make the legalization of needle exchange programs a priority during the 2019 legislative session. There’s no community that’s not affected by this — including ours. Allowing drug users to exchange dirty nee- dles for clean ones facilitates direct medical benefits as well as connections to health ser- vices within the community. Needle exchange programs have been shown to reduce infec- tion rates of bloodborne diseases, such as HIV, as users are provided with clean needles to safely inject. These programs also provide essential services geared toward substance abuse treatment and disease prevention, such as HIV testing and referrals to potential rehabilitation facilities. These organizations make the safe disposal of dirty syringes possible, reducing the pos- sibility that civil servants or members of the community come into contact with them and become infected with a serious illness. Finally, these programs save communi- ties money. Only one person infected with HIV through a dirty needle will, on average, require at least $120,000 per year in public health expenses. But it only costs $160,000, or $20 per user, for a city to run a needle exchange program for a year. If Texas taxpayers are uncomfortable with providing state funds for a program they view as enabling drug users, then policymakers should, at the least, make it legal for these organizations to take private donations. The Austin Harm Reduction Coalition is a needle exchange program already in operation, but it relies on a mutual understanding with the Austin Police Department that they won’t be shut down. were made legal, the increased publicity would allow more people to comfortably do- nate money, making these operations possi- ble, even without state funds. Furthermore, it would also increase the amount of people using the service, as patrons would feel pro- tected from possible legal consequences for doing so. It’s time to face the facts: The opioid ep- idemic will only get worse if we refuse to do anything about it. By legalizing needle exchange programs throughout the state of Texas, the number of deaths involving opi- oids would decline, and new HIV infections, as well as of other bloodborne diseases, would plummet. It could be your best friend. Your neighbor. Your family member. Talk to your representa- tives now about the legalization of these pro- grams. Donate to the Austin Harm Reduction Coalition. Your community depends on it. Braaten is an international relations and If programs like the one run by the ARHC global studies junior from Conroe. LEGALESE | Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the UT administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees. SUBMIT A FIRING LINE | Email your Firing Lines to editor@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. RECYCLE | Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it. EDITORIAL TWITTER | Follow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@TexanOpinion) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns. Asian-American femmes find voice with Silk Club STUDENT ORG CHARLES LIU & CHRIS DUNCAN LIFE&ARTS EDITORS @THEDAILYTEXAN Student group gathers underrepresented women and femmes. By Danielle Ortiz @danielleaortiz W thinks hen one a activism, of picture of people the standing street holding signs is what probably comes to mind. But where do artists, poets, pho- tographers and writers fit into this picture? in Many young Asian-Amer- ican women, trans women, nonbinary and femme cre- atives at UT have found their platform with Silk Club, a student group that allows them to share their experi- ences with race and identity. Although Silk Club current- ly has a Facebook page for members to post art, essays and poetry, the organiza- tion hopes to reach a wider audience with its first zine, Quiet. The zine will be un- veiled at the club’s release party on Saturday, April 21, at Cheer-up Charlie’s. Journalism junior Kristina Nguyen said she formed the idea for Silk Club when she saw the need for a platform for Asian-American creatives in Austin last fall. Yen, Ashley ban studies an ur- junior events 5 FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 “A lot of people think zines go back to the ’90s feminist movement, but it goes fur- ther back than that,” Nguyen said. “I think it’s cool that we’re actually blending these two activist traditions in this way.” Silk Club reached out to the Austin community for submissions first to zine in mid-March and has than since received more 60 submissions. their Camille Park, an advertis- ing senior and creative di- rector for Silk Club, said she sees the positive response as a sign that Asian-Amer- icans have stayed quiet for too long. from “People in our club came those pressures of from coming immigrant families that have a lot of pride and value in the STEM fields,” Park said. “There wasn’t space for people like us in Austin who aren’t in those industries.” Silk Club hopes to keep up its momentum and popular- ity in the future, and Quiet is only the tip of the iceberg for the organization, as they hope to develop more cre- ative projects and even start producing videos. “I have gotten a lot of text messages from friends saying, ‘Thank you for cre- ating this platform for us,’” Park said. “I just say, ‘You don’t have thank me; to it should’ve existed in the first place.’” hannah yoes | the daily texan staff In 2017, journalism junior Kristina Nguyen saw and seized an opportunity to create Silk Club, an organization for Austin-based Asian-American women and nonbinary femmes to collaborate on projects such as its zine, Quiet, that celebrate their experience. manager for Silk Club, said she got involved because she loved the opportunity to sup- port a platform she sees as long overdue. “The way Austin is, demo- graphically, there aren’t as many Asians (as) in Hous- ton or Dallas,” Yen said. “So to have a voice in Austin, even in Texas, is very pow- erful because there was a lack of a platform for Asian femme creatives.” The name of the club’s zine, Quiet, is based on the stereotype that Asian femmes are introverted. Nguyen said the zine is an attempt to com- ment on the given identity. “There’s often a culture of silence that surrounds com- munities of color,” Nguyen said. “Quiet harkens back to that and is trying to em- to speak up power issues and on folks important their experiences.” Nguyen and other mem- bers of Silk Club were in- spired to create Quiet after hearing of Gidra, a 1960s zine based on creative ex- pression regarding social and political issues affecting the Asian-American community. FILM ‘I Feel Pretty’ has its stumbles, but is nevertheless genuine, endearing By Justin Jones @justjustin42 Amy Schumer, one of Hollywood’s most controversial figures, has made the most problematic good movie in weeks. The film is endearing in the way children can be, earnest in a sweet man- ner but too dull to think through what something will actually mean. Schumer plays Renee Bennett, an attractive white woman with a steady job, a nice flat in New York City, close friends, nice clothes and enough money for spin class. Like most people, Renee is unsatisfied with her body image, and complains constantly about her looks and her weight. The movie takes everything a few steps further, mistreating Renee at ev- ery step, as if she didn’t just look like a normal person. In a world where Kevin James makes movies that don’t men- tion his appearance and that feature him hooking up with beautiful younger women, it’s uncomfortable that Schum- er’s latest picture drills home to the au- dience that she’s “ugly.” Renee makes a wish while watching Tom Hanks’ “Big” one night, running out to a potentially magical fountain and asking to be beautiful. The next day, she hits her head very hard and has her dream come true. Suddenly, she’s the most beautiful person in the world — but she’s the only one who sees it. The film plays out like a parody of one of the many dream-comes-true Disney Channel Original Movies that have been released in the past 20 years. It has the feeling of harmless fun, with a major bubble resting under the surface, ready to pop at any secondSchumer’s support- ing cast meshes well in the film, but no one shines quite as bright as the laugh- out-loud funny Michelle Williams, who delivers a powerhouse of a comedic per- formance. She plays a high-voiced pixie of a person, an obscenely rich woman who owns a massive fashion brand and is overly self-critical. “I FEEL PRETTY” RATING: PG-13 RUNTIME: 110 MINUTES SCORE: the pathways that Renee believes were previously inaccessible because of her looks. It’s certainly reductive of the way our society treats women, but this is not a movie seeking to engage with the nuances of the culture — it’s a Disney movie without the magic. Eventually, Renee’s conidence gets her into trouble and the “spell” is un- done, causing her to discover herself. It’s here that the movie really starts to fall apart, contradicting itself at every turn: It paints her conidence as a superpower, except for when she treats people as less- er than her; it is earnest and encouraging, except when it asks the audience to laugh at Schumer. It’s not until the very end, when she gives a prolonged, if on-the- nose, speech that perfectly encapsulates the themes that Kohn and Silverstein are trying to convey, that the movie steers into the saccharine, creating something similar to the last ive minutes of a very special episode of “That’s So Raven.” Amy Schumer is both hated by con- servatives for her liberal views and de- spised by liberals for being a problem- atic white feminist — she can’t please anyone. “I Feel Pretty” will do nothing to change that, pushing her views hard and consistently stumbling along the way. But it’s in those stumbles that the movie finally makes Schumer feel like a genuine person, not some manufac- tured idea of a millennial comedian, and that counts for something. It’s certainly reductive of the way our society treats women, but this is not a movie seeking to engage with the nuances of cul- ture — it’s a Disney movie without the magic.” Justin Jones, life&arts writer When “I Feel Pretty” plays along with its main character, the movie is kind of enjoyable. Renee, with her new- found confidence, takes on the world with renewed vigor, talking to strang- ers, applying to risky dream jobs — she isn’t afraid to be herself. The script, by co-directors Abby Kohn and Marc Sil- verstein, treats her confidence as its own kind of superpower, opening up digest.texasstudentmedia.com “I Feel Pretty” plays like a parody of a Disney Channel Original Movie. copyright stx ilms, and reproduced with permission 6 FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 Today’s solution will appear here next issue 1 6 8 5 4 1 2 3 4 9 9 3 8 7 2 6 4 3 4 3 5 9 4 7 3 1 6 4 7 9 6 8 5 SUDOKUFORYOU 1 2 4 3 7 8 9 6 5 9 6 3 2 5 4 1 7 8 5 8 7 6 1 9 2 3 4 4 7 6 9 2 5 3 8 1 3 1 8 4 6 7 5 2 9 2 5 9 8 3 1 7 4 6 6 3 1 5 8 2 4 9 7 8 4 5 7 9 3 6 1 2 7 9 2 1 4 6 8 5 3 TRENTON DAESCHNER SPORTS EDITOR @TEXANSPORTS 7 FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 FOOTBALL BASEBALL Longhorns prepare for Orange-White game Andy McGuire’s versatility key to success for Texas By Travis Hlavinka @thedailytexan For the second straight game, the Longhorns won a game with a starting position player taking the mound in the ninth inning. Tuesday night’s game was a tribute to senior irst baseman Jake McKenzie, but Wednes- day night’s game was a sight seen before. Redshirt junior outielder/reliever Andy Mc- Guire was once again hand- ed the ball to close out the game after starting the game in the outield. So far, McGuire’s relieving eforts have led to success with wins on April 2 against McNeese State and on Wednesday night against Texas Southern in Sugar Land, Texas. However, McGuire said this wasn’t a new task, and he seemed to easily remember his last time when questioned if this situation had occurred prior to the season. Baseball’s a game that will eat you alive. And not being able to play it for so long, I think, helped clear my mind a little bit and come with a new perspective. Andy McGuire, redshirt junior outfielder/pitcher “(I did it in) high school,” McGuire said. “Senior year. It was pretty regular.” McGuire’s story has gone through some twists and turns since high school, though. Af- ter being recruited by Texas out of James Madison High School in Oakton, Virginia, McGuire started 22 games his freshman year in 2014, mostly Andy McGuire, redshirt junior outielder and pitcher, swings at a pitch during the Longhorns’ 5-4 victory over McNeese State on April 2 at UCFU Disch-Falk Field in Austin. katie bauer | the daily texan ile at third base. After hitting .113 over the course of that season, however, his arm was looked at as a tool that could help out the team in a diferent way. As a soph- omore, his role on the team lip-lopped. He appeared in 13 games as a reliever with- out registering at bat in the 2015 season and redshirted the 2016 season. And when David Pierce took over as head coach for a retiring Augie Garrido, McGuire just didn’t seem to it into the puz- zle. After not being a part of the team in 2017, McGuire began to contemplate a return to the sport he so dearly missed. “Baseball’s a game that will eat you alive,” McGuire said. “And not being able to play it for so long, I think, helped clear my mind a little bit and come in with a new perspective on the game and a new respect for this game.” Since rejoining the team this season, McGuire has rekindled that passion that he once had and found diferent ways to impact the team, both at the plate, in the ield and on the mound. After starting the sea- son mainly out of the bullpen, McGuire has shown himself to be one of the more reliable assets to come in for relief on the team. He currently boasts a 2.45 ERA in 18.1 innings pitched with 12 strikeouts. Couple that with a .350 batting average, 7 RBI and a 1.000 ielding per- centage in 20 games, and you have yourself a pretty potent two-way player. Pierce said his decision to let McGuire be a natural two-way play- er wasn’t out of necessity but out of impression. “Andy’s been a position player since he’s been here,” Pierce said. “And every sin- gle day, his batting practice impressive. He’s has been really, really contributed.” McGuire, who has shown a relective mood throughout the course of the season, has talked about not being able to put this season into words on more than one occasion. His overall tone, though, seems to be gracious, given all his career has been through. “To have the opportuni- ty to be out here again play- ing is — I can’t even put it into words,” McGuire said. “It’s been a long road. But it’s so fun, and I’m having so much fun.” Texas will play again this weekend in a three-game se- ries against New Orleans at UFCU Disch-Falk Field in Aus- tin. First pitch Friday night is scheduled for 7 p.m. Offensive coordinator Tim Beck works with sophomore quarterback Sam Ehlinger during spring practice on March 21 at Frank Denius Field. katie bauer | the daily texan ile By Alex Briseño @alexxbriseno the A Longhorns’ s Orange-White spring game draws one day closer, ofensive co- ordinator Tim Beck took a step back after what he called an “unfocused” practice. “Today wasn’t a very focused day by our guys,” Beck said Thursday. “I think there’s a lot going on with some of the kids, with school and some of their parents coming. Sometimes we forget they are 18-, 19-year-old kids still, and they’re excited to see mom and dad.” Longhorn faces, fresh and familiar, will run out of the tunnel of Darrell K Royal-Tex- as Memorial Stadium and play in front of a live crowd for the irst time. “My biggest thing is we’re organized, we’re lined up and we don’t cut guys loose,” defensive coordinator Todd Orlando said. “There’s gonna be a handful of guys in there (for whom) this is their irst time in that stadium playing.” Here’s what Beck and Orlando had to say Thursday in preview of Saturday night’s Orange-White spring game: Defensive Back University As prominent leaders from last year’s season prepare for the NFL Draft, new faces have come onto the scene. After National Signing Day, Texas boasts a strong strand of de- fensive backs in Caden Sterns, B.J. Foster, Jalen Green and DeMarvion Overshown — all of whom landed on the 40 Acres as some of the best talent in the state of Texas in hopes of bringing DBU back to Austin. “They’ve proved to their teammates that they’re not going to go out there and be soft,” Orlando said. “Obviously, they’re athletic and can make plays — that’s always the things you worry about. Can they han- dle the day in, day out of classes? Can they handle the demands, not only of us but (of) their teammates? They’ve proved to us in these last 13 practices that they’ll be in the mix.” With a plethora of talent in the backield, don’t expect the quarterbacks to have an easy time with the air attack. Ehlinger’s Longhorn sequel Last season, the largest question mark heading into the season lied above the quarter- back position. This year will be no diferent. Ehlinger, however, is receiving the most questions, after getting the chunk of the playing time as a freshman. One of the biggest questions is obvious: decision-making. late- Ehlinger made several game mistakes, such as the game-ending interception against Oklahoma State. But both Herman and Beck said the Westlake alumnus is beginning to build his coni- dence now that he has one year of college football under his belt. “He’s making really good “At decisions,” Beck said. Austin Westlake, he proba- bly got away with doing those things. He can’t get away with that in college football. He can’t just throw the ball up and hope things are go- ing to happen. He’s been really good at taking care of the ball this spring. ... He’s very conident right now.” As long as the weather coop- erates, the 2018 Orange-White spring game is set to begin 6:30 p.m. Saturday at Darrell K Roy- al-Texas Memorial Stadium. 8 FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2018 Carbon nanotubes could tackle global problems ENGINEERING mel westfall | the daily texan staff which could work well with these membranes because carbon dioxide is more permeable than other atmospheric molecules such as oxygen or nitrogen, Freeman said. The carbon dioxide molecules dissolve in the polymer of the membrane, similar to how they are dissolved in carbonated water, Freeman said. Once they’re dissolved, the atoms move around the membrane through difusion. Then, the atoms need to be put back together. This process isn’t new — molecular separation and carbon capture have been done before with many other membranes — but what sets Mattershift’s membrane apart is its selectivi- ty and permeability. Freeman said to think about it like football. “It’s like how far the quarterback can throw the ball and how accurate it is,” Moon said. This is the irst time these membranes have been produced on such a large scale, Moon said. Traditionally, researchers had produced car- bon nanotube membranes only for research and laboratory work. Mattershift is pioneering this commercial development of carbon nanotube membranes so that it can be a platform technology, Moon said. This means that other researchers can take these membranes and apply them to a variety of situations. said excited carbon nanotubes’ potential water is most Freeman he about puriication applications. “The ability to make clean water is one of the greatest challenges facing humanity,” Freeman said. “If we could ind a way to do that cheaply, we could solve a lot of the world’s problems.” The membranes have the poten- tial to purify water and improve energy use on a large scale. By Jennifer Liu @jenn_liu A carbon they have lthough tiny, ix big problems. nanotubes the potential are to Carbon nanotubes are cylindrical car- bon molecules with nanometer-sized diameters. A collaboration between UT-Austin, the Univer- sity of Connecticut and Mattershift, a startup that produces carbon nanotube membranes, proved that it’s possible to take these tiny tubes and make them great. In a paper published this March in Sci- ence Advances, the researchers found that these tubes can perform their jobs efectively, even on a commercial scale. Their research involves one of the irst large-scale membranes using aligned carbon nanotubes, said Joshua Moon, a graduate re- search fellow in Benny Freeman, a chemical engineering professor’s lab. It has traditional- ly been diicult to get these nanotubes to stand vertically, because they have a tendency to want to lie down. However, this seemingly small feat has huge implications, because it means molecules can be transported much more eiciently through the nanotubes, Moon said. Freeman said it makes these particular membranes very eicient at transmitting water, victoria smith| the daily texan staff While making them the perfect tool to use in processes such as water puriication. For example, the mem- branes could be used in portable water puriiers, Moon said. current to to ilter out bacteria, separate out viruses, which are much small- er. They could also be used to depollute en- tire bodies of water or purify the contaminat- ed water created as a byproduct of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. are able they aren’t able puriiers Other applications include the production of carbon-zero fuels. When fuel is burned for energy, carbon dioxide is produced as a byproduct, but if there were an eicient way to convert that carbon dioxide back into fuel, then the carbon is essentially recycled, Moon said. “If you can do that really eiciently, then you’re not going to have a lot of carbon dioxide emissions that go in the atmosphere and collect or cause cli- mate change,” Moon said. This works through molecular separation, ASTROBIOLOGY Study inds Venus may have had conditions needed for life Venus may have been a lot more friendly to life a couple billions years ago. By Kevin Dural @kevindural26 A couple billion years ago, Venus may have looked a lot more similar to how Earth looks today. According to Matthew Weller, an institutional postdoc at UT’s Institute for Geophysics, along with researchers from Rice University and the Univer- sity of British Columbia, Venus may have been habitable more than two billion years ago. The groundbreaking research comes with some caveats; Weller said the team’s indings do not suggest that life deinitively existed on Venus, but rather that the conditions needed for water and life to exist were once present in Venus’ history. “We’re very careful not to say life deinitely existed,” Weller said. “How- ever, there is a high potential for liquid water to once have been stable for a period of time long enough to sustain life forms.” He added that the right conditions to allow life to develop may have been headlined by a shallow ocean and tem- peratures way less than the 850 degrees Fahrenheit the planet sees today. When looking for possible extraterrestrial life similar to life on Earth, scientists generally look for planets that could support liquid water. “Venus, being much closer to the Sun than Earth (is), is much warmer than our planet,” Weller said. “Based on the fact that the Sun was, at a point, around 30 percent luminous than it is now, Earth-like tempera- tures may have been possible early in Venus’ history.” less These indings, presented last month at the Lunar and Planetary Sci- ence Conference in The Woodlands, Texas, could also shed light on Earth’s future. According to Weller, the condi- tions currently characteristic of Venus may relect what Earth looks like in a billion years. Researching Venus helps scien- tists to understand how and why Ve- nus diverged from Earth. Central to this, Weller said, was the diference in tectonic states between Venus and Earth. According to Weller, plate tec- tonics, the atmosphere and the sur- face of a planet all work hand in hand to promote the conditions unique to every planet. The fact that condi- tions were suitable for life to have potentially existed on a planet so diferent from Earth opens up possi- bilities for inding life on extrasolar planets, Weller said. “The potential for inding liquid in diferent tectonic states opens the door for inding life in (other) solar systems,” Weller said. “Habitability might have been easier at a point in time (and) then gotten progressively harder. In this, there is a temporal as- pect to habitability.” Researchers determine whether a celestial body is within the habitable zone to igure out whether liquid wa- ter could exist, or could have existed, on a planet. Weller said the team’s indings suggest that scientists should look outside of this habitable zone to ind life. “The potential for habitability on Venus shows that the deinition of habitability should be redeined,” Weller said. “Planets are not inhabit- able solely due to their location to the nearest host star.” Weller emphasized that these indings are important to more than just understanding the history of Ve- nus. He said that expanding the deini- tion of habitability means that astrono- mers can cast a wider net when looking for extraterrestrial neighbors. geo casillas | the daily texan staff “One very important conclusion we have reached is that we can have planets much closer or further to Sun- like stars than we originally thought,” Weller said. “When when we look at ex- trasolar planets, it could be much eas- ier to ind conditions suitable for life.”