Ross Bennett came to UT with the intention to become the next Bennett at his father’s law firm, but redesigned his future after taking a course in fashion design. Ross Bennett, a local Austin designer and textiles and apparel senior, began his design career at UT in 2002. He left UT in 2006 and returned in 2008, but after entering his designs in the Dal- las Career Fair he was sought by the Texas State Fair to design an organic eco-friendly line. Op- portunities in the fashion design profession led him to become a contestant on Fashion Star, an NBC fashion design reality TV show. This put his name into the industry and he was asked to design the grid girl uniform for the Circuit of Americas Formula One Race in November. Bennett creates custom gar- ments using fabrics made from natural fibers. He said his cli- entele consists mainly socialites The Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library is getting a new look later this month — and it is coming with a price. When the LBJ Presidential Library unveils its new exhibit Dec. 22, the library will begin charging admission. Anne Wheeler, spokesperson for the LBJ library, said admission will remain free for students, staff and faculty with a UT ID. Admission prices for others range from $3 to $8. Previous- ly, the LBJ Presidential Library was the only one of 13 presi- dential libraries that offered free admission. Admission to the Herbert Hoover Presidential Mu- seum ranges from $3 to $6 while admission to the John F. Kennedy Museum ranges from $9 to $12. Starting in December 2011, the library began undergoing a $10 million project by the Gallagher & Associates design studio to offer more interac- tive, technological exhibits. Mark K. Updegrove, LBJ Li- brary director, said the redesign of the library will provide con- text to legislation passed during the Johnson administration. Disabled law officers throughout may soon have cational options them if a bill filed state legislative Earlier this month, dith Zaffirini, D-bill that would amend educational code currently optional fee exemption for enforcement officers courses at public higher education. Eligible officers resided in the state prior to the beginning semester or session, nently disabled suffered during enforcement officer one of its political and be unable to ployment as a law officer because of UT spokesperson Susswein said UT fers the exemption, has taken advantage The UT System Board of Regents approved the cre- ation of a new university in south Texas with an ac- companying medical school that will be made up of UT- Brownsville, UT-Pan Ameri- can and the Regional Aca- demic Health Center. The proposed university, which has not been offi- cially named, was referred to as the University of the Americas in the Rio Grande Valley and would consoli- date UT-Brownsville and UTPA but would maintain both campuses functioning for academic and research purposes. The new medi- cal school will be known as the South Texas School of Medicine. An official timeline for the establish- ment of the school has not been announced because of pending legislative approval. The proposal received unanimous support from the regents during a meeting Thursday. UT System chancellor Francisco Cigarroa present- ed the proposal to the board and said existing resources at UT-Brownsville and UTPA will make establishing the larger university and medi- cal school possible. “I think we were think- ing too small,” Cigarroa said. “There are challenges in the UTPA region. The new struc- ture will help reshape this.” If created, the new uni- versity would enroll more than 27,000 students and 1Friday, December 7, 2012@thedailytexanfacebook.com/dailytexanThe Daily TexanServing the University of Texas at Austin community Holidy season gift guide. LIFE&ARTSPAGE 16Longhorns preprare video of a freshman staring at people on campus has gotten more than 50,000 hits on YouTube. 7NEWSDeparting senior staff members write last piece. 5OPINiONWe asked UT students if they think their UT degree is a bargain. 4SPORTSThe NCAA is lagging behind on the fate of UT point guard Myck Kabongo. 11LIFE & ARTSThe final Pop Index. 15SYSTEMRegents OK joint S. Texas universityBy Alexa Urafor higher what’s ahead#TXLEGE2013CAMPUSNew look, new techLBJ Library photo by Lauren GersonA construction worker carries supplies down the staircase in the Great Hall of the LBJ Presidential Library. The library is in the final phase of a major redesign and will reopen on Dec. 22, which would have been Lady Bird Johnson’s 100th birthday. By Bobby BlanchardBy Taylor HamptonCAMPUSUT student breaks into fashion industryLIBRARY continues on page 2SOUTH continues on page 2ROSS continues on page 9COPS continues Library opens new exhibits, will begin charging for admission Your number one source for Longhorn Football Season Review and Bowl Preview as a special addition to The Daily Texan . December 7 Bill provides education options disabled Powersbacks Brown’s position head coachUT president Powers Jr. expressed port for Longhorns football coach on Thursday, ensuring one that his job in question. “Now that the football team has regular season, an increase in media tion about Coach future,” Powers Tower Talk blog afternoon. “I’d like equivocally that has my full support the support of Director DeLoss succinctly, Mack will remain the head football coach.” Brown has served head football coach 1998 season, (.776) in 15 years. consecutive 10-which included fourth national MACK continues Christian David Berecka | Daily Texan StaffRoss Bennet, designer of the Grid Girls uniform for Austin’s Formula One, speaks to senior undergraduates fashion design. Editor’s note: This is the last print editon of The Daily Texan until Jan. 14, but go to dailytexanonline.com for breaking news and sports updates. TODAYSing-AlongThe Office of the Presi- dent is hosting a free, campus wide “Songs of the Season” sing-along, presented by the choir of the Butler School of Music. Hot chocolate will also be served. The event will take place from Friday noon to 1 p.m. in the West Mall. Benefit ConcertThe Butler School of Music is hosting a free, ‘Tis the Season’ benefit concert to help raise money for Austin Kent, a 24-year-old diagnosed with testicular cancer. The concert starts Friday from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the University Christian Church. Donations are encouraged but not required. Today in historyIn 1941On Friday, at 7:55 a.m., a Japanese dive bomber descended into the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor. Many consider this attack as the final push needed for the United States to fully engage in World War II. Our goal is for visitors to better understand this largely misunderstood president. — Mark K. Updegrove, LBJ Library director Name: 187/House; Width: 19p4; Depth: 7.5 in; Color: Black, 187/House; Ad Number: 1872News2Friday, December 7, 2012The Daily TexanVolume 113, Issue 81 Main Telephone: (512) 471-4591Editor: Susannah Jacob(512) 232-2212editor@dailytexanonline.comManaging Editor: Aleksander Chan(512) 232-2217managingeditor@ dailytexanonline.comRetail Advertising: (512) 471-1865joanw@mail.utexas.eduClassified Advertising: (512) 471-5244classifieds@dailytexanonline.comCONTACT USCOPYRIGHTCopyright 2012 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. TOMORROW’S WEATHERHighLow7662When a man gets excited... The University Unions Student Events Center congratulates its graduating members! Thank you for your hard workto make this semester a success! Look for these events in Spring 2013! Lunar New YearFebruary 7, 2013Texas Union Film FestivalFebruary 28, 2013Forty Acres FestApril 6, 2013Texas RevueApril 13, 2013The Student Events Center housesfifteen committees and organizations. movie screenings and cultural events. There are always opportunities for involvement, so visit utsec.org or call 475-6630 for more information. Our student leaders coordinate an incredible variety of programs for the University community, from concerts and speakers to Millie ChenAsian American Culture CommitteeJonathan HoAsian American Culture CommitteeJeff LeeAsian American Culture CommitteeFaye WangAsian American Culture Committeeemploy 1,500 faculty mem- bers and 3,700 staff with projections to create almost 7,000 new jobs in the Rio Grande Valley. UT System officials said establishing the proposed university would require streamlin- ing administration at UTPA and UT-Brownsville in order to consolidate duplicate positions. Research expenditures for the university would total $11.4 million, and the uni- versity would also have an endowment of $70.5 million. The university would be- come one of the largest in- stitutions serving primarily Hispanic students in the na- tion, Cigarroa said. Gene Powell, chairman of the board, said the new proposal represents a trans- formational opportunity for the System. “This is an important step and a bold, innova- tive plan to change the landscape in south Texas,” Powell said. “These are undeserved parts of the state despite growth. We are taking steps no one has done in a hundred years.” Powell said the proposal has received support from legislative leaders including Gov. Rick Perry and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst. The new university will require approval from the Legislature during the up- coming legislative session with an additional pa- rameter to make the new school eligible to receive funding from the Perma- nent University Fund, a state endowment funded by the investment of lease sale profits and revenue from production on state- owned land. The endowment funds several institutions in the UT System, but UT-Brownsville and UTPA are not eligible because of stipulations in the legislation passed when they were originally created. Scott Kelley, executive vice chancellor for business affairs, said the creation of the new university would not affect current funding from the endowment for other universities. The regents will appro- priate endowment funding for the new university after existing institutions receive the amount the regents would usually allocate to them from the endowment. The regents also approved $100 million over the next 10 years to fund the new uni- versity and accompanying medical school whose ad- ministration would be head- quartered in McAllen. Kenneth Shine, executive vice chancellor for health affairs, said health institu- tions in the area have com- mitted to almost quadru- pling residencies to 127. There are currently 33 resi- dencies in the area. The annual $10 million that will be given from the board will be used to hire a new dean and core faculty to set up a curriculum for the proposed medical school. “No additional dollars will be required by the state to help support this institu- tion,” Kelley said. Both UT-Brownsville president Juliet García and UTPA president Robert Nelsen expressed support for the new university. Before the vote, Nelsen spoke passionately about in- creasing education and med- ical access in south Texas and the Rio Grande Valley. “What is being offered to you today is that you have an opportunity to save our children,” Nelsen said. “If we don’t get it right in south Texas and in the Val- ley, we’re not going to get it right anywhere.” An emotional Nelsen said a south Texas medical school would also unify the Valley, where individuals sometimes wait six hours to see a doctor because of the lack of medical profes- sionals in the area. “Your vote will keep them in the Valley,” Nelsen said. “We need them there.” Nelsen’s remarks brought many of those present, including board chairman Powell who grew up in south Texas, to tears. Small amounts of mari- juana possession could be- come comparable to a traf- fic violation if a bill filed in the Texas House of Repre- sentatives passes. Rep. Harold Dutton, D- Houston, has filed a bill that would make possession of one ounce or less of marijua- na a Class C misdemeanor, comparable to a traffic ticket. Currently, any amount less than two ounces is a Class B misdemeanor, which carries a penalty of up to 180 days in jail and a fine of up to $2,000. A similar bill filed by Dutton makes possession of one gram or less of cer- tain controlled substances a Class A misdemeanor instead of a state jail felony. Drugs under this category include cocaine, ecstasy, LSD and heroin. Under the current law, any amount less than two grams is a state jail felony, punish- able by six to 24 months in state jail and a fine of up to $10,000. Offenders with certain previous convic- tions would not be subject to either of these bills. Multiple attempts to reach Dutton were unsuccessful. Buckley Rue, religious studies junior and UT’s Stu- dents for a Sensible Drug Policy president, said the bills are a small but significant step in the right direction. He said it is an issue of fairness to those arrested for minor drug possession violations. “Drug usage, particularly marijuana, transcends color and creed, leaving people of all varieties to contemplate the day they might be arrest- ed for some petty possession, which affects no one but the person getting arrested,” Rue said. “How many innocent teens must be plagued with a drug record for the rest of their life for having perhaps a gram of a substance with a lower death rate than caf- feine or aspirin?” Sociology professor Wil- liam Kelly said he agrees with Dutton’s bill. “It does not make sense to jail folks for possession of marijuana,” Kelly said. “Decriminalization of pos- session of marijuana is ra- tional and appropriate.” Dutton filed two similar bills during the last legislative session, both of which failed to make it out of the criminal jurisprudence committee. By David Lowenberg#TXLEGE2013Bills could loosen marijuana lawsSOUTHcontinues from page 1“Our goal is for visitors to bet- ter understand this largely misun- derstood president,” Updegrove said in a statement. “Exhibits will explore all aspects of Johnson’s presidency, including the Viet- nam War. President Johnson in- sisted that the LBJ Library present an unvarnished look at his Presi- dency — the triumphs and the turmoil. Now we share this story with new generations.” During the design of the new exhibit, the library consulted with historians in order to ensure both accuracy and independency. Some of the new features include access to previously- unavailable private telephone calls, an interactive decision- making Vietnam exhibit and more social media interactivity. “President Johnson wanted the Library to use the best technology available, giving visitors a com- prehensive, engaging experience,” Larry Temple, chairman of the LBJ Foundation, said in a statement. Along with never-before- heard audio, the library is also now offering new videos on the Johnson administration. LBJ Library photo by Lauren GersonConstruction continues in the Great Hall of the LBJ Presidential Library. The new library exhibits include an interactive Vietnam War exhibit and downloadable phone app. LIBRARY continues from page 1last five years. Wayne Vincent is the president of the Austin Po- lice Association, which advo- cates for the rights of Austin police officers and operates a political action committee. He said the bill provides in- creased options for disabled law enforcement officers who often have a difficult time supporting themselves and their families after an injury at work. “We should do anything we can do to help our dis- abled officers find gainful employment,” Vincent said. “I think we owe it to them.” Vincent said benefits for public employees are often a big topic within the state Legislature, and that it is hard to say whether or not the bill will pass. COPScontinues from page 1Texan 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. Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Media', P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713-8904, or to TSM Building C3.200, or call 471-5083. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Texan, P.O. 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Nick CremonaSenior Graphic Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Felimon HernandezJunior Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jacqui Bontke, Sara Gonzales, Bailey SullivanSpecial Editions/Production Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Abby Johnston Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Daniel HubleinThis issue of The Daily Texan is valued at $1.25The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Media, 2500 Whitis Ave., Austin, TX 78705. The Daily Texan is published daily, Monday through Friday, during the regular academic year and is published once weekly during the summer semester. The Daily Texan does not publish during aca- demic breaks, most Federal Holidays and exam periods. Periodical Postage Paid at Austin, TX 78710. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Daily Texan, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78713. News contributions will be accepted by tele- phone (471-4591), or at the editorial office (Texas Student Media Building 2.122). For local and national display advertising, call 471-1865. classified display advertising, call 471-1865. For classified word advertising, call 471-5244. Entire contents copyright 2012 Texas Student Media. Permanent StaffEditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Susannah JacobAssociate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drew Finke, Pete Stroud, Edgar WaltersManaging Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Aleksander ChanAssociate Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Trey Scott Digital Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hayley FickNews Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matt StottlemyreAssociate News Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrew Boze, Samantha Katsounas, Allie KoletchaSenior Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bobby Blanchard, Joshua Fechter, David Maly, Alexa UraEnterprise Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Audrey WhiteEnterprise Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrew Messamore, Megan StricklandCopy Desk Chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kristine ReynaAssociate Copy Desk Chiefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Riley Brands, Sherry Hu, Luis San Miguel, Sara ReinschEditorial Copy Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nile MillerDesign Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nicole Collins Senior Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pu Ying Huang, Omar Longoria, Jack MittsSpecial Projects Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Natasha SmithPhoto Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lawrence PeartAssociate Photo Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Elisabeth Dillon, Andrew TorreySenior Photographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pu Ying Huang, Zachary Strain, Fanny Trang, Marisa VasquezMultimedia Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jorge CoronaAssociate Multimedia Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrea MaciasSenior Videographers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oluwademilade Adejuyigbe, Thomas Allison, Shila Farahani, Lawrence Peart Life&Arts Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kelsey McKinneyAssociate Life&Arts Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jorge Corona, Sarah-Grace SweeneySenior Life&Arts Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Helen Fernandez, Shane Miller, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hannah Smothers, Alex Williams, Laura WrightSports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christian CoronaSenior Sports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lauren Giudice, Chris Hummer, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sara Beth Purdy, Rachel Thompson, Wes MaulsbyComics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ao MengAssociate Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Riki TsujiWeb Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ghayde GhraowiAssociate Web Editor, Social Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ryan SanchezAssociate Web Editors, Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Helen Fernandez, Omar LongoriaAdministrative Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Albert ChengEditorial Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Doug WarrenIssue StaffMultimedia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Aaron Berecka, Taylor Barron, Ben ChestnutReporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Taylor Hampton, David LowenbergColumnists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maria-Xenia Hardt, Ryan NillSports Writer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Garrett CallahanCopy Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rachel Kaser, Sarah Smith, Amy YuComic Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Desiree Avila, Julio Avila, Cody Bubenik, Laura Nicole Davilla, Aron Fernandez. . . . . . . . . . . .Cliona Gunter, Rory Harmon, David Hook, John Massingill, Christina Paige Sze, Stephanie VanicekIllustrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ploy BuraparteMonday .............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) CAIRO — An angry Mo- hammed Morsi refused Thursday to call off a refer- endum on a disputed con- stitution that has sparked Egypt’s worst political crisis in two years, drawing chants of “topple the regime!” from protesters who waved their shoes in contempt. The Egyptian president’s uncompromising stand came a night after thousands of his supporters and opponents fought pitched battles outside his Cairo palace, leaving at least six dead and 700 injured. Speaking in a nationally televised address, Morsi ac- cused some in the opposi- tion of serving remnants of Hosni Mubarak’s authori- tarian regime and vowed he would never tolerate anyone working for the overthrow of his “legitimate” government. That brought shouts of “the people want to topple the regime!” from the crowd of 30,000 Morsi opponents — the same chant used in the protests that brought down Mubarak. Morsi also invited the op- position to a “comprehen- sive and productive” dia- logue starting Saturday at his presidential palace, but gave no sign that he might offer any meaningful concessions. The opposition has already refused to engage Morsi unless he first rescinds decrees giving him nearly unrestricted powers and shelves the draft constitution hurriedly adopted by his Is- lamist allies in a marathon session last week. Morsi said the referen- dum on the disputed charter would go ahead as scheduled on Dec. 15. He also refused to rescind the Nov. 22 decrees. Reading from prepared notes, Morsi frequently broke off to improvise. He wore a black tie in mourning for the six people killed in Wednesday’s clashes. Earlier Thursday, Morsi’s troubles grew when another of his advisers quit to protest his handling of the crisis, raising the number of those in his 17-person inner circle who have abandoned him to seven. The only Christian in a group of four presidential assistants has also quit. Violence persisted into the night, with a group of pro- testers attacking the Cairo headquarters of Morsi’s Mus- lim Brotherhood, ransacking the ground floor. Another group of protesters attacked the Brotherhood’s offices in the Cairo district of Maadi. Outside the president’s house in his hometown of Zagazig, 50 miles north of Cairo, po- lice fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters, secu- rity officials said. During his speech, Morsi repeated earlier assertions that a conspiracy against the state was behind his move to assume near unrestricted powers, but he did not reveal any details of the plot. “It is my duty ... to protect institutions of the nation,” he said. “I will always fulfill this role, no matter how much pressure or what the situation.” Get up toMoreBY SELLING YOUR BOOKS AT BOOKHOLDERS$$$$$$$ LEVEL UP YOUR WALLET MOST CASH FOR YOUR BOOKSWITH THE BookHolders.comGround Level, Dobie Mall | 512-377-9543Extended HoursBH_LevelUp_DT_Dec5_4C.pdf 1 12/4/2012 2:39:57 PMLuis San Miguel, Wire Editor World & Nation3Friday, December 7, 2012NEWS BRIEFLYEgypt’s president fails to defuse power crisisBy Aya Batrawy & Maggie MichaelAssociated PressHassan Ammar | Associated PressAn Egyptian Army tank deploys outside the presidential palace, in Cairo, Egypt. The Egyptian army sealed off the presidential pal- ace Thursday as protesters defied a deadline to vacate the area, pressing forward with demands that Islamist leader Mohammed Morsi rescind decrees giving himself near-absolute power and withdraw a disputed draft constitution. Wash. gay couples get marriage licenses SEATTLE — Hundreds of same-sex couples across Washington state started picking up marriage licenses Thursday as a voter-approved law legalizing gay marriage took effect. King County, the state’s largest, opened the doors to its auditor’s office in Se- attle just after midnight to start distributing licenses. But hundreds of people had lined up hours earlier, snak- ing around the building on a chilly December night. By Thursday afternoon, more than 430 licenses had been issued in Seattle, where the mood was festive overnight. “We waited a long time. We’ve been together 35 years, never thinking we’d get a legal marriage. Now I feel so joy- ous I can’t hardly stand it,” said 85-year-old Pete-e Petersen, who with her partner, 77-year- old Jane Abbott Lighty, were the first to get a license. Baghdad, Kurds reach security agreementBAGHDAD — Iraq’s prime minister said Thurs- day that Baghdad and Kurdish officials reached a preliminary agreement to al- low inhabitants of disputed northern areas to oversee their own security. Nouri al-Maliki told re- porters in Baghdad that the central government and leaders from the Kurdish au- tonomous region agreed that local ethnic and sectarian groups will form units to re- place Iraqi and Kurdish forc- es currently in the disputed areas, which are claimed by Arabs, Turkomen and Kurds. Tensions between Bagh- dad and the Kurds have increased over the last two months, following a decision by al-Maliki to form a new military command to oversee security forces bordering the self-ruled Kurdish region. The move was deemed un- constitutional by the Kurds. Illegal immigration drops after decadeWASHINGTON — New census data released Thurs- day affirm a clear and sus- tained drop in illegal immi- gration, ending more than a decade of increases. The number of illegal im- migrants in the U.S. dropped to an estimated 11.1 million last year from a peak of 12 mil- lion in 2007, part of an overall waning of Hispanic immigra- tion. For the first time since 1910, Hispanic immigration last year was topped by immi- grants from Asia. Demographers say illegal Hispanic immigration — 80 percent of all illegal immi- gration comes from Mexico and Latin America — isn’t likely to approach its mid- 2000 peak again, due in part to a weakened U.S. economy and stronger enforcement but also a graying of the Mexican population. Former prime minister faces murder chargesBANGKOK — Investi- gators say they plan to file murder charges against Thai- land’s former prime min- ister and his deputy in the first prosecutions of officials for their roles in a deadly 2010 crackdown on anti- government protests. The protests and crack- down left more than 90 people dead and about 1,800 injured in Thailand’s worst political violence in decades. Former Prime Minister Ab- hisit Vejjajiva’s Democrat Par- ty, now in the opposition after being ousted in elections last year, and “red shirt” support- ers of the ruling Pheu Thai Party have blamed each other for the bloodshed since. —Compiled from Associated Press reports When I was 12 years old, I told my family that I wanted to be a journal- ist when I grew up. A sports jour- nalist. By 2022, I announced, they would all be able to watch me on TV, commenting on the final match of the soccer World Cup. My fami- ly expressed skepticism and quietly hoped that I would change my mind and switch to a more promising ca- reer — medicine, perhaps, or at least teaching. But my career path was set. Well, at least the beginning (being 12 years old and deciding to become a journalist) and the end (reporting on that match in 2022) were set. Ev- erything in between was vague and blurry. There is no set path — at least not in Germany, where I grew up. In contrast to the United States, studying journalism at university in Germany is very uncommon. Only a few universities offer degrees in journalism. Besides that, there are only a handful of renowned journal- ism schools — you don’t have to pay fees, but the entry is extremely com- petitive (about 2000 applications for 20 spots). Most people have complet- ed at least a bachelor’s degree before they enter these schools, and those who get in are very likely to land a very good job afterward. Out of the 40 graduates of the last two classes at the most renowned journalism school, 30 got a permanent job with major newspapers and magazines, and the other 10 found work as free- lance journalists and foreign corre- spondents. The vast majority of aspiring Ger- man journalists, however, never makes it into these schools and in- stead enters the field through oth- er routes. If there is anything that one could call the “usual way,” it would be this: Study anything you like, start working early on for what- ever type of media interests you, try to get extra qualifications outside of university and try to find an area to specialize in. After university, you will probably still have to complete a practical training for 18-24 months at very low wages and hope that someone will offer you a job after- ward. These are not exactly the pros- pects to ease your constantly worry- ing parents’ minds. Believe me, I am sometimes worried myself. I have completed four internships, two with newspapers, one with a major radio station and one with a TV produc- tion company. I have worked for an online magazine for two years, and I made it into a very good scholar- ship program that not only adds to my monthly budget, but also pro- vides an excellent cross-media train- ing with hands-on workshops dur- ing school holidays. It could be much worse. And still, sometimes I have doubts because I am aware that knowing the tools of journalism is not enough and that this truth is not country-specific but universal. Having a degree from a journalism school, be it from UT or any other school in the world, is not enough. It’s not about how to become a jour- nalist, it’s about how to become a good one. I think that the best thing you can do to improve your chances is to start writing, and keep writing. The same goes for photography, ra- dio and television. If you can do all of them, even better. Do it as often and as intensively as you can. Meet people. Lots of people. They increase your likelihood of finding a job. They also enhance your chances of mak- ing a living as a freelance journalist. Build a network — and by network, I don’t mean the old guys who are running media today, but the pas- sionate aspiring journalists around you. Their ideas and potential will change journalism, and you’d better be one of them when it happens. I don’t think it’s going to be easy, but I think it’s going to be possible, and most of the time I think it’s go- ing to be worth it. There are still too many stories out there, and we need to tell them. Hardt is an English junior from Freiburg, Germany. in-Chief Susannah JacobOpinion4Friday, December, 7, 2012LEGALESEOpinions 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. EDITORIAL TWITTERFollow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@DTeditorial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns. SUBMIT A FIRING LINEE-mail your Firing Lines to firingline@dailytexanonline.com. Letters must be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability. RECYCLEPlease recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on cam- pus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it. GALLERYWe Asked: Is your UT degree a bargain? By Maria-Xenia HardtDaily Texan ColumnistEthics overlookedat McCombsBy Ryan NillDaily Texan ColumnistNicole Renaux graduated from the Red McCombs School of Business in May 2010 and got a job at Black Star Co-op, a beer brewery and pub that is owned cooperatively by about 3,000 of its customers. At Black Star, the workers are organized democrat- ically. For a reasonable fee, anybody can be an owner and run for the board of directors and participate in beer design meetings. The workers are split into four functional teams — beer, kitch- en, business and pub — and they elect their team leaders and a board-staff liaison to keep the workers accountable to the board. Renaux says of her time in McCombs, “We were primed to work for Fortune 500s ... I had limited experience in small business ed- ucation and nothing in democratic businesses.” She believes her education didn’t adequately prepare her for the job she current- ly holds. Renaux would have liked to have learned the types of skills that are necessary to meet the challenges of a democratically managed workplace — for instance, practical instruction in how to deal with accountability and discipline when there is no ex- plicitly designated manager. She is not alone in that wish. Many incoming students at campuses nationwide are demanding that more of their course work be dedicated to topics of moral and ethical import. The McCombs School isn’t oblivious to changing trends. Rob- ert Prentice, director of the Business Honors Program and a pro- fessor of business law and ethics says that he has seen an in- creasing number of “kids who want to make a difference, they want to make money to pursue their passion.” But currently, the school requires that less than one percent of the total course- work required for an undergraduate degree be dedicated to eth- ics. Worse, the little coursework that is necessary to satisfy this requirement has not been effective. “There is no strong correla- tion between character and ethical action or between philosoph- ical background and ethical action,” said Prentice. Prentice had a hand in creating “Ethics Unwrapped,” a series of videos currently on the McCombs School’s website. The videos are based on the recently developed study of behavioral ethics and focus on how people make ethical decisions. Because she works in a democratic workplace, Renaux says, “You don’t just have to impress one person to get promoted; you have to impress all your co-workers.” When all your co-workers evaluate you and a different owner is walking through the door every few minutes, there is no place to hide. After a year on the job Renaux was elected to be the board- staff liaison at Black Star Co-op. Despite the title, traditional roles do not necessarily apply: Owners are customers and contribute ideas for new brews; food service staff can be elected to man- agerial positions and interact with owners. In an “Ethics Un- wrapped” video titled “Role Morality,” the narrator explains that people are willing to break their personal ethics codes as long as it fits with the role they play at work or in society. Renaux says that McCombs teaches particular roles, such as finance and mar- keting, which can stifle innovation in addition to acting in ways that may befit the role but harm the business. Perhaps the most damaging role we are all expected to play is that of employee. Carlos Perez de Alejo is executive director of Cooperation Texas, based in Austin, where he instructs peo- ple on how to start worker cooperatives. One of the biggest challenges he faces is teaching students to break out of the “em- ployee” mentality, forgetting work the instant they punch out and submitting to authority. Once a person becomes an em- powered “owner,” there is a spillover into communities, culture and society. Given the economic and societal benefits of dem- ocratic workplaces, McCombs should listen to students and in- tegrate non-traditional business structures such as social enter- prises, benefit corporations, nonprofits and cooperatives into its curricula. Nill is an ecology, evolution and behavior senior from San An- tonio. Advice from a wannabeEditor’s note: Yesterday, the Texas Coalition for Excellence in Higher Education published a report concluding that Texas’ flag- ship universities, The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University, “perform at high levels when compared to their national peers on many of the dimensions of importance to stu- dents, to the public, and to the state of Texas.” We asked UT stu- dents if they believe their UT education has been, in the report’s words, “a bargain.” “Bargain? Yeah, I guess so. The job I’m getting going out of college is worth a lot more than I would have otherwise.” — Andrew Pruet, petroleum engineering senior from Hous- ton, outside the Texas Memorial Union“A bargain? Honestly, no, because we pay such a high tu- ition and then with the way the special education depart- ment works, we have to travel to schools — I mean obvi- ously it’s not the education college’s fault — but we have to travel to schools. We pay so much for gas. We have to buy all of our own school supply materials to build materials for our teaching. We spend a lot of extra expenses, so it’s very expensive.” — Pam Diu, special education senior from Austin, on the South Mall“I do believe it’s a bargain, because I was in finance and busi- ness honors, and I feel like I’m more prepared than most busi- ness students out there. Especially since when I [was] recruit- ed, I got two or three jobs right off the bat, when a lot of people don’t have that many job offers. I was paying in-state tuition, so it was like $4-5,000, and I got a great education. I feel like I’m well-prepared for my job and everything, so yeah, I think it was a bargain.” — Nitash Hirani, Business Honors Program senior from Aus- tin, at the Littlefield fountain“Yeah, I believe so. Well, the education here at UT. ... I mean, I’m an active duty Marine, so at the same time here it’s at a lev- el where you get the best educators, I would say, grouped to- gether. You’re offered, you know, this caliber of education, as far as the curriculum goes here. It’s very competitive to get into school, and you’re around students that are competitive in na- ture. So, having that, you get curriculum that’s competitive in nature. So I think the caliber of education here at the school has prestige throughout the United States.” — AJ Quintanilla, government senior from Santa Rita, Guam, at the SAC“Yes, definitely. For one thing, it’s a public, state universi- ty, so obviously it’s going to be cheaper than a private uni- versity. But also, the classes that I’ve taken here have defi- nitely been of value to me. I don’t know if that’s specifical- ly because of the major I’m in and how relevant it is to, just, normal life. Or because, I mean, the professors here gener- ally seem to know what they’re doing and be interested in what they’re teaching.” — Amulya Aradhyula, human development junior from Aus- tin, at the SAC“I definitely feel that, compared to other schools, the cost of tuition is definitely lower. I definitely didn’t receive as much fi- nancial help as I would have liked to, but I do think, for the quality of education I’ve received thus far, it’s definitely — I’d definitely consider it a bargain.” — Alexander Villarreal, journalism sophomore from Edin- burg, on a bench outside the Red McCombs Business School“Like price? [chuckles]. I really do think so. I mean, one of the colleges I was prospecting, or considering, was Baylor. And that was, you know, much more expensive because it’s a pri- vate university and all that. But I feel like, yeah, when you com- pare prices, and ... I can’t really compare quality of education, you know, because I don’t go there. But I look at the price, and I look at how UT ranks in outside lists, and all that. I really feel like I’m getting a good deal — well not a deal, but — yeah, I re- ally feel so.” — Eddie Martinez, Radio, Television, Film sophomore from Del Rio, at the George Washington statue on the South Mall“Um, let’s see. I would say no, probably. Mainly be- cause the value of what we’re actually getting and re- ceiving for the class time per instruction with the pro- fessor isn’t actually reasonable, I guess. If you fac- tor in all the other stuff that the school’s providing, it makes it, I guess, a little more reasonable, but all said and done, when it boils down to the straight education, probably not.” — Daniel LaLonde, mechanical engineering junior from Houston, in the FAC“Okay, well, first of all, I think that any college education — it’s weird calling it a bargain, because they’re always in- credibly expensive — I mean you can get scholarships, but they’re not available to everyone. I didn’t get a whole lot of scholarships, so there was a burden on my parents to pay for my education. And if I asked them if they consider it a bargain, they would laugh. Now, of course, as a journalism major I’m not expected to make very much money when I graduate, and therefore it’s going to take a while to see a return on my investment. However, I still think that a col- lege education is worthwhile for everyone, because even if you don’t make a lot of money when you graduate, you’re still getting a lot of valuable life skills and becoming a bet- ter person.” — Erica Herbst, journalism junior from Green- ville, in the FAC NEWS 5NewsFriday, December 7, 20125a crazy bunchA 30 column is a chance for departing permanent staff to say farewell and reflect on their time spent in The Daily Texan’s basement The term comes from the old typesetting mark (-30-) to denote the end of a line. 1. Aleksander Chan, managing editor | 2. Audrey White, In-Depth editor | 3. Ghayde Ghraowi, web editor | 4. Riki Tsuji, associate comics editor | 5. Ao Meng, editor | 6. Sherry Hu, associate copy desk chief | 7. Fanny Trang, senior photographer | 8. Nicole Collins, design editor | 9. Lauren Giudice, senior sports pictured: Samantha Katsounas, associate news editor | Andrew Torrey, associate photo editor | Thomas Allison, senior videographer 6 NEWSlive collegelive close amenities subject to change600 West 26th St | 512.477.3400Great location in West Campus — walk to class. New expanded 24-hr fitness center with new equipment. NEW paint throughout the community. Upgraded Computer lab with NEW computers. NEW pool furniture • NEW rooftop basketball court. 26-west.com NEWS 7NewsFriday, December 7, 20127 Dec 19–21, Jan 2–4No School Service; PRC route will operateDec 22–Jan 1 and Jan 5,6,13,19–21No ServiceJan 7–11 Limited registration shuttle Jan 14 Spring schedule beginsNOTICE OF REDUCED SHUTTLE SERVICEWHAT Reduced frequency of UT Shuttle Bus ServiceWHEN December 10–15 and 17–18, 2012 (including Saturday, December 15) WHERE All Routes DON’T blow a grade sitting at the bus stop. Shuttles will run less frequently during final exams. Please schedule your travel time accordingly. DO plan ahead. For information on how this affects your route and schedule, please call the Capital Metro Go Line at 512.474.1200 or visit us online at capmetro.org. LATE 2012–EARLY 2013 SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE SCHEDULE DON’T BE LATE FOR FINALS! &PRESENTSBy they look back over this past semester and ahead to the next one, Student Gov- ernment president Thor Lund and vice-president Wills Brown said they are happy with what they see. Brown and Lund announced later gym hours at Gregory Gym and the Recreational Sports Center on Wednesday night, the latest in a series of goals they met this past fall. Gregory Gym will now stay open until 1 a.m. and the Rec- reational Sports Center will stay open until 11 p.m. “When Thor and I were freshmen, those were the hours,” Brown said. “The cut- back was hard on us and from other students we heard from.” With gym hours expanded, Brown and Lund said they are now looking forward to the spring, when their primary goal will be advocating for UT during the legislative ses- sion. Along with the Gradu- ate Student Assembly, Senate of College Councils and other student organizations on cam- pus, Student Government will lobby through a campaign called Invest In Texas. “Every week we have meet- ings with the operational com- mittee, going over platform, finalizing our points and pre- paring for what we need to do for winter break,” Lund said. Among other requests, the Invest in Texas platform asks the Legislature to allow UT to decide its own admissions policy, determine its own campus gun policy and give the UT System student regent and the student representa- tive on the Texas Higher Edu- cation Coordinating Board a vote in decisions. Currently, Student Gov- ernment is attempting to get outdoor water fountains built on campus. “You got to promote hydra- tion,” Brown said. “I’ve walked on campus and wished for an outdoor water fountain, be- cause sometimes you don’t know where the water fountains are inside. And that’s odd.” After asking for student input, Brown and Lund re- quested UT facilities install outdoor water fountains at Perry-Castañeda Library, near the intersection of Speedway and 24th Street and outside Robert Lee Moore Hall. Although Lund and Brown expect Invest in Texas to keep them busy this spring, they said they were equally busy this past fall. On the first day of classes and during their first student body YouTube address, Lund and Brown announced the Perry- Castañeda Library would start functioning on a 24/5 schedule midway through the semester. “We’ve had students who we don’t know come up to us and thank us for making the PCL 24/5,” Brown said. “That was a huge deal for me.” The initiative costs around $40,000 per year, of which the Student Services Budget Committee, the University Libraries and the Provost’s Of- fice split the costs. When Lund and Brown met with the Uni- versity’s administration about making the Perry-Castañeda Library 24/5, Brown said they were supportive. “It was on us to find the money, but the administra- tion was there to help us,” Brown said. As an unexpected side effect, Travis Willmann, spokesper- son for the Perry-Castañeda Library, said the library saw an 11.8 percent increase in visitors from October of last year com- pared to October of this year. Lund and Brown also ex- panded Student Government this semester, creating the new Longhorn Entrepreneurship Agency. Lund and Brown creat- ed the Longhorn Entrepreneur- ship Agency to increase support to student entrepreneurs. “We want our entrepreneur- ial students to be as celebrated as our athletes,” Lund said. Lund and Brown also re- structured intramural sports, adding a basketball league to the fall and a football league to the spring. Brown said sign-ups for basketball in the fall filled up quickly, and he suspects sign-ups for football in the spring will fill up just as rapidly. Thor Lund SG presidentWills Brown SG vice presidentSG anticipates spring initiativesBy Bobby BlanchardUT aims to hire a national- ly-recognized medical profes- sional as the inaugural dean for a planned medical school by fall 2013. Hiring a dean to admin- istrate the medical school and help oversee its forma- tion is one of many tasks the University must accomplish within the next year to be on the path to open in Septem- ber 2015 or 2016, said Steven Leslie, executive vice presi- dent and provost. “We feel like we are in a po- sition to hire a national leader of medicine to head up the school,” Leslie said. The University will appoint a committee of faculty mem- bers and health officials that will seek candidates for the position according to Leslie. A committee composed of deans, Seton officials and UT- Southwestern officials will be tasked with determining a cur- riculum and budget proposal to submit to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board for approval, Leslie said. An- other committee will propose research initiatives for the school to focus on, he said. Leslie said two medical school buildings will likely be constructed near University Medical Center Brackenridge, although an official location has not been finalized. He said one building will house class- rooms and administration and the other will be dedicated to medical research. The UT System Board of Regents pledged $30 million per year for eight years and $25 million per year in sub- sequent years for the medi- cal school’s construction and operations. The Seton Healthcare Fami- ly pledged $250 million toward the construction of the teach- ing hospital, which will replace University Medical Center Brackenridge, Leslie said. The teaching hospital’s operations will be funded by a voter-approved 5-cent property tax increase. Effec- tive Oct. 1, property taxes collected by Central Health, Travis County’s hospital dis- trict, will increase from 7.89 cents to 12.9 cents per $100 of assessed property value. The increase will generate an estimated $54 million increase in annual revenue toward Central Health. A Medicaid waiver program created in 2011 would provide $1.46 for every $1 raised by Central Health, bringing total revenue raised as a result of the property tax increase to more than $130 million annually. $35 million would fund op- erations at the teaching hos- pital and purchase medical services from medical school students and faculty for the general public. To manage these funds, Central Health, Seton Healthcare Family and other Austin health care providers will establish the Community Care Collabor- ative, a non-profit organi- zation designed to provide greater coordination be- tween health care providers that care for patients who are low-income and are un- insured or underinsured. Larry Wallace, Cen- tral Health’s vice president of service delivery, said the collaborative aims to streamline health care costs by tracking patients’ prog- ress and directing them to the proper provider to treat their ailment. Wallace said the collaborative will be es- tablished by October 2013. “I think we have a tre- mendous opportunity to provide health care in a more organized and collab- orative way,” Wallace said. Greg Hartman, Seton presi- dent and CEO, said the parties involved in the collaborative are still discussing how the col- laborative will meet its goals. “There is still a lot we have to do to get to this to work the way we want to,” Hartman said. ‘Stare of the Gator’ propels UT freshman to web fameBy Joshua FechterUT lays plans for future medical schoolA UT student is staring his way into fame, as a viral video of him awkwardly glaring at people in the UT area be- comes increasingly popular. “Stare of the Gator,” a You- Tube video uploaded Tuesday night has gotten more than 50,000 hits and appeared in a Thursday article on The Huffington Post, a popu- lar online news source. The 3-minute and 24-second video is set to the 2007 song “Stop and Stare” by OneRe- public and shows govern- ment freshman Jacob “Gator” Weaver standing completely still and staring at people on and near the UT campus as they try to figure out what he is doing. Craig Murphy, a Daily Texan photogra- pher and radio-television- film junior, filmed it from hidden locations. Weaver made the video with Murphy for Beta Upsi- lon Chi — Brothers Under Christ, a Christian fraternity they are pledging. “We needed to make a vid- eo for a talent show,” Murphy said. “We all knew that ‘Gator’ has a very interesting talent — being able to hold a blank stare for a ridiculously long time. Naturally, we figured that it might be interesting to see other people’s reaction to his unique ability.” Weaver said the longest he held a stare while making the video was roughly five min- utes, but he thinks he could stare a lot longer even though he has never tried to see how long he could do it. “It kind of hurts my face,” Weaver said. Weaver said he was given his nickname by other Beta Upsilon Chi pledges based off of a character from the 2010 movie “The Other Guys.” He said he has tried to put people in awkward situations with his staring before. “It started back in high school,” Weaver said. “Me and my buddy used to give the stare to teachers to freak them out.” He said the video took roughly an hour and a half to make, and he got a lot of dif- ferent reactions from people he stared at. “A lot of them were just like, ‘What are you doing’ or ‘Can I help you,’” Weaver said. Murphy said there were a couple unique reactions to the staring. “We got the best reactions on Guadalupe when a wom- an tried to get him to get out of the street before the light changed to green and when a group rode up the escalator in the UTC to see ‘Gator’ wait- ing at the top,” Murphy said. “They couldn’t turn around, so it was like they had no choice but to wait and hope he would move. Little did they know, the ‘Gator’ doesn’t just move.” Weaver said he plans to keep staring, and possibly make another video off cam- pus, where people won’t easily recognize him. He said he is happy with the attention the video has been getting. “It is pretty awesome,” Weaver said. “All my fam- ily knows about it and every- thing, which is kind of weird.” By David Maly — Jacob “Gator” Weaver, government freshman“They couldn’t turn around, so it was like they had no choice but to wait and hope he would move. Little did they know, the ‘Gator’ doesn’t just move.” ‘‘ CAMPUSSTUDENT GOVERNMENTUNIVERSITY 8 NEWSNews8Friday, December 7, 2012student living in west campuslive closeLive Collegetheblockoncampus.cominfo@theblockoncampus | 2501 pearl st. apt. 101 | 512.472.2562 under new management. now an american campus community. great location—walk to class. six convenient locations. designer interior finishes. six 24-hr fitness centers. So after two years at the Texan, I’m on my way out. My first two semesters at the paper were spent on the Life & Arts staff, writing weekly comic book reviews and the occasional enter- tainment feature. Under the wings of the gracious editors there, I learned how to write. My appreciation of formal- ism and the art of journal- ism blossomed under their tutelage. Thanks is especially owed to Amber Genuske — now over at the Huffington — who taught me what an em-dash is and was willing to argue with me for a straight hour whether our audience knew who Thomas Pynchon was. Here I learned ambition. I’ve held my current posi- tion over the last couple of semesters. I was brought over to the Page by the inimitable Carolynn Calabrese, who taught me how to manage a staff of artists (in her words, “like herding [fucking] cats“) and the methods to effectively impart criticism to myself and others. CC, as everyone knows her, and Victoria Grace Eliot after her, were the founders of the proud contemporary lin- eage and direction of the Page, the only full page of original, unsyndicated comics strips in American college media. From them, I learned the power of a committed vision and how to hew a workplace culture out of sheer rock. To all the art- ists who’ve ever worked under me, apologies for all the last- minute emails. You are inde- scribably brave, bringing your art and drawings to an editor and trusting them to feed your growth. They say that art is the excrement that comes with conscious living — thanks for bringing the goods with a re- spectable degree of regularity. You guys and gals on the Page are wonderful and you will continue to get better. Some words of advice to future editors, and those who aspire for positions working on the Page or the Texan at large: bring your vision, use every resource available to you and constantly reach out. My first contact with the pa- per was a handwritten letter to the comics page about how much it blew chunks. While I was in the office dropping it off, I stole some Texas Stu- dent Media-branded office letterhead and used it to bluff myself Press entry into the Alamo Drafthouse’s annual Fantastic Fest film festival. CC, the Comics Page editor at the time, was wise enough to reach out and engage with me. Through CC, I realized the power of seeing poten- tial in people. When I was brought onboard to edit the page, I realized that people will only give you what you ask from them (by the way, you should ask for every- thing). We at the Texan, and print media at large, are in a transitory period. It’s a pretty safe assumption that the peo- ple here are among the most ambitious here at the Univer- sity. We work in one of the most volatile industries that exist — you have to be crazy to work here. So collaborate and build bridges. Bring your backbone, and don’t be afraid to leap without a net. Thanks are owed to the staff and management of TSM and The Daily Texan, and to everyone here that has considered my opinion and entertained my ideas. Allahu akbar, #Moneyteam. -30- Ao Meng started at The Daily Texan in fall 2010 as a life & arts staff writer. He has been an associate comics edi- tor and is now comics editor. I started at the Texan awk- wardly halfway through the 2011 fall semester, my first at UT. As an issue staffer work- ing just one night a week, I felt like I was only able to marvel at the incredible amount of hard work that went into making the pa- per and the talented people who were a part of the pro- cess. While I had massive amounts of respect for them, I didn’t really see myself ever getting to make the remark- able kinds of contributions to the paper that they did. My design editor, Chris Benavides, definitely took a chance on me when he asked me to apply to be a senior staffer the following spring. Or maybe he was just des- perate. I didn’t even know if I was ready to take on that kind of responsibility. Either way, I am so grate- ful. As a senior designer, I learned all of the nuances of the newspaper and devel- oped the design techniques and aesthetics that I contin- ue to use in my work today. And one night a week, I was in charge. That was definitely a learning experience. I grew as a designer and as a person that semester. I owe him and Bobby for teaching me basically ev- erything I know. As design editor this se- mester, I have continued to grow and learn so much, and I am so thankful for that opportunity. I feel like I took some chances on peo- ple too, and it couldn’t have turned out any better. To my senior staff: you guys work so hard, and you have made me so proud. Thank you. To my issue staff: I’m glad you all came on this semes- ter. I have enjoyed getting to know each of you, and I’m so proud of you guys, too. To my other half, Natasha: thanks for being a wonderful friend, coworker and teach- er. I don’t really know what I’d do with out you. You, Lauren and I are going to have some crazy fun times in our apartment next year though, I know that. To Aleks, the Life & Arts girls, the sports guys and the rest of the staff: you are all wonderful. It has been a privilege working with such passionate, talented and crazy people. It’s been quite an experience. I’ll miss y’all. -30- Nicole Collins started at The Daily Texan in fall 2011 as an issue designer. She has been a senior designer and is now the design editor. I tried out for a general re- porter position at The Daily Texan before I had my first class at UT, and I never left. Instead, I made our base- ment office my home base for the last three and a half years. As a reporter, I wrote about transgender students, DREAMers, street youth and the Center for Students in Recovery. Talented photog- raphers and videographers helped bring my stories to life. I spent hours in the Glenn Maloney Room of the SSB and came to admit, grudg- ingly, that UT’s three student governance organizations oc- casionally do cool stuff. In various editing roles, including spring 2012 man- aging editor, I helped re- porters and other editors create content to deliver to the masses. Sometimes we got it wrong, but I never stopped believing in the Tex- an and its power to educate, entertain and improve UT. In between the rush of putting out a daily newspa- per, I wrote essays, research papers, poems, songs and love notes on my favorite grey couch. I drafted part of a eulogy hunched over the news desk. I’ve been drunk, furious, elated and anxious in the office. Once, heartbro- ken, I came here to cry in the middle of the night. The people I met through this job remain my mentors and dear friends. Many of those friends have long since moved along, leaving behind their own -30- columns and the sweet smell of whiskey breath. When I look around the basement, I see few staff- ers who know what “Nova Haus” means. A few semes- ters from now, I too will be but a whisper lingering in the news bullpen. I hope I leave behind an institutional commitment to using reporting to illustrate the diversity on this cam- pus and the challenges many students face. I hope the Texan In-Depth team, which I had the joy of creating this fall with two of the smartest reporters I have known at this paper, will thrive and break new ground. Most of all, I hope that long after I leave the basement for the last time, the Texan staff continues to tell stories that will make UT better and have a great time while doing it. I learned how to report, write, think and lead here. I will take my love of people, enthusiasm for reporting and quick typing fingers wherever I go. After graduation, I plan to spend a year in Nicaragua fundraising for a nonprofit. After that, I’ll make the most of the skills I gained at the Tex- an and see where the journal- ism job market takes me. I wish I could offer a shout out to every friend I made here, but I don’t know where to begin, and I would surely leave someone out. I’ll end with some thank you’s instead. Thank you to the students who let me tell your stories. Thank you to Doug, the Texan’s faculty adviser, for letting me flesh out story ideas in your office and al- ways pushing me to work harder and dream bigger. Thank you to the editors and reporters who supported me, laughed with me and believed in my crazy ideas. Thank you to every per- son I have known at the Texan. Whether we were good friends or co-workers who waved from across the office, you are my family. I love you in the way we al- ways love the people who make us who we are. -30- Audrey White started at the Texan in fall 2009 as a general reporter. She has served as the senior cam- pus reporter, associate news editor, news editor, a life and arts staff writer, managing editor and, this semester, editor of the new Texan In- Depth team. She plans to see everyone in January at Hole in the Wall. The first email I ever re- ceived from the Daily Texan web account read, “If you’re still interested, we are cur- rently conducting tryouts for new staffers for the next three weeks.” I responded almost immediately in the affirmative and have spent nearly every other night since in this basement, for- getting what sleep feels like. Now, on the eve of my de- parture from this paper (al- most a year later), I sit and stare, lost in thought and only half awake. It’s in this state of reverie that I write my first and last byline. I’m told it’s called a 30 Column. The most exhausting part of working for the web department is undoubt- edly the inevitable chore of explaining just what that means to those unfamiliar with our wing of the pa- per. In jest, I’d simplify the function as immortalizing students’ articles online. But of course, tonight, being my last night as web editor of the Texan, I’m meant to sit here and piece it all together somehow, justify my time and effort into something more meaningful than that. However, in my modesty and rationale, because I believe my presence is vaguely felt (as is the web department as a whole) and any overdramatic gesture of valediction on my behalf would only feel slight and rehearsed, I must defer all the grand farewells to the heavyweights waving good- bye this semester. Forgive me for my brevity while I thank you for your attention in witnessing me debut as I conclude. -30- Ghayde Ghraowi start- ed at The Daily Texan in spring 2011 as web issue staff. He has been an asso- ciate web editor and is now the web editor. -30- By Ao Meng-30- Web editor refuses to glorify his contribution to newspaperBy Ghayde Ghraowi-30- Comics editor advises future Texan staffersDesign editor remembers past challenges-30- In-Depth editor leaves behind home baseBy Nicole CollinsBy Audrey White NEWS 9NewsFriday, December 7, 20129 Leasing Center: First floor of The Castilian • 2323 San Antonio St. • Austin TX 78705512.478.9811 • Texan West: 2616 Salado • Vintage West: 904 W. 22½ StreetLIVE BESTlive west texanandvintage.comTexanVintageNow an American Campus communityGreat location in West Campus – walk to classGreat views of downtown, campus & the hill countryGarage parking • Designer interior finishesAPPLY TODAY KERRVILLE BUS COMPANY“friendly service since 1929” Welcome to tickets from $1* and free Wi-Fi! Book today atKerrville’s daily bus service to and from Texas, Missouri and Louisiana now available for booking on megabus.com* plus 50¢ booking fee megabus.comstay connectedI walked into the basement for the first time in the spring of 2010. Little did I know I would stay there for five semesters. During my first tryout day, I shot film and didn’t know we were suppose to have the im- ages ready for the next day’s paper. So of course, my photos didn’t come out until a week later (thanks CVS photo lab!). The second day I shot, I had borrowed a friend’s camera. I almost got “wild” in the paper that day, but I was too shy to ask the person’s name for the caption, so it didn’t run. Yet, I was still hired, along with a bunch of people who later be- came some of my best friends. It’s hard to describe what my best memory was at the Texan because there were so many. A few stood out though: I remember when I got stranded at the Kramer station after hopping on the Metro Rail for its inauguration my first semester as a staffer. A hardcore bicyclist was kind enough to show me the way back to campus. We rode our bikes together for a good hour up hills, in parks and next to the highway. Through all of my assignments, I met so many generous people like him; people who took the time to share their stories with me. Another good memory was when I photographed former president Jimmy Carter at the LBJ library. It was one of the most exciting assignments I have ever had, and the first time I was picked up by the Associated Press. I also remember all the long nights we spent in the office, trying to finish editing while blasting the music so loud we pissed off the entire newsroom (sorry guys). I remember Ry- an’s butt-naked errands around the basement. I remember those moments of complete fatigue and hysteria (we were so “good public”). I remember choosing our new staff until the early hours of the day after two intense weeks of tryouts. I re- member the pizza and the veg- gie trays, the movie nights in the parking lot, the comfortable but smelly couches, the electro- cuting tables, the late and long meetings, the many times I was “lost in translation” and so on. I remember Sara, Peter, Bruno, Dani, Bryant, Mary, Danielle, Peyton, Jeff, Trent, Shannon, Thomas, Corey, Lawrence, Ryan, Tamir, Elisa- beth, Allen, Andrew, Pu, Zach, Marisa, Jorge, Demi, Andrea and so many more! I remem- ber Eli, the giant, always there even in the latest hours. I will also remember all of the designers, the writers, the copy editors, the comic artists, the sports writers, the life and arts kids, the opin- ionators and you, Doug. We all worked so hard to get that paper out everyday, and I sometimes honestly thought we would not make it. But we did, without exception, be- cause the Texan is full of tal- ented and dedicated people. I will remember all of you guys and I will miss you a lot! I wish you all the best of luck. Thanks for making me grow both as a person and as a photographer. And thank you for offering me a home when mine was so far away. -30- Fanny Trang, from Brussels, Belgium, starting in spring 2010 as a staff photographer. She has been a senior photographer and an associate photo editor. Editor’s Note: Hayley Fick was appointed as The Daily Texan’s first digital director, a new position created to guide The Daily Texan in reaching beyond the range of its news boxes and creating an interac- tive, supplemental and share-worthy experience for readers online through our website and various so- cial media outlets. Fick is a sophomore public relations major and has previously held the positions of senior web staff and associate web editor. In digital media there are more questions than an- swers. There are no maps or compasses and very few precedents. I have to rely heavily on my own judg- ment and often times write the rule book as I go. It’s very much like the feeling I get when I’m driving in the middle of the night. When the city streets are desolate and the steady stream of traf- fic I’m used to floating along in disappears, para- noia creeps up on me. No matter how familiar I am with the road or how well I am following the posted signs, with no cars to trail behind I get this anxious feeling in the pit of my stomach that I’m in the wrong lane or I turned the wrong direction. As digital director this uncertainty is hardly irra- tional. At any given time there are nearly 20,000 cops (read: Twitter follow- ers) watching my every move and tricky intersec- tions that seem nothing like the ones I learned about in driver’s ed. Luck- ily I’ve had plenty of kind streetlights in my life to guide me along the way. There is also a certain freedom to the open road. The roadblocks of funding and convention that exist in print are removed from the digital highway. This semester, the web department has gotten a few tickets for excessive speed (read: retweets), fail- ure to yield right of way (read: not knowing when to stop live tweeting) and bro- ken tail lights (read: minor malfunctions with our new website.) We should prob- ably have a sign on our car that says “Student Driver,” but even though we’re still learning we will never use that as an excuse. Since 1900, The Daily Texan has never used the age of its staff as an excuse for being anything less than excellent, and this philoso- phy extends beyond the rich history of the printed pages. Hold us to the same standards you would hold any other driver to and feel free to honk at us when we cut you off. It has been such a privi- lege to test out the wheels on our new website that has been redesigned in a responsive format to al- low readers to get their news seamlessly on a vari- ety of devices. I can’t wait to get back on the road next semester when I re- turn as digital director, but everyday I’m logging the quirks our car has because I know my position is more than just a product of the times. I may be the first, but I surely will not be the last digital director of The Daily Texan. Thank you for being pa- tient with us. I hope you buckle up and come along for the ride. By Hayley FickFirst digital directorlearns tools of tradeBy Fanny TrangSenior photographer finds home away from home-30--30- in 2005 and a national title game appearance in 2009, the Longhorns have posted a 21-16 record over the last three seasons. The Longhorns (8-4) will face Oregon State (9-3) in the Valero Alamo Bowl on Dec. 29. “Coach Brown restored Texas’ winning tradition,” Powers continued. “He em- bodies the Texas character, is a superb ambassador for The University of Texas, and runs a program that is both win- ning and clean, a program that all alumni and fans can and should be proud of.” Powers isn’t the only one to publicly voice support for Brown. Prominent UT boost- er Red McCombs told The Daily Texan last Wednesday he did not anticipate Brown leaving any time soon. “I think we’ve been blessed to have Mack Brown as our coach,” McCombs said over the phone. “I expect him to be the coach for many years. In any event, if he were to leave the coaching job, I’d expect that to be his preroga- tive and not somebody else’s. Any reports to the contrary are unfounded.” Brown, who made $5.3 million this year, agreed to a contract extension last year through 2020. If he were to be fired before Dec. 31, his buy- out would cost $3.5 million. At the end of 2014, he would be owed $2.75 million, $2.25 million at the end of 2016 and $2 million at the end of 2017. “Mack cares about the young men on the team as people, students, and as players, in that order, and he models the kind of leader- ship that will serve our play- ers for the rest of their lives,” Powers wrote. “I look for- ward to watching this young team win the Alamo Bowl and continue to grow in the seasons to come.” that want an original dress. “When they can say it was made for me, they feel special,” Bennett said. “It’s all about having this individuality, cus- tom piece, one of a kind expe- rience that’s what I deal with.” He showcased his designs in the textile and apparel independent studies course Thursday evening. He said the most important thing for a designer is to stay true to their brand when they de- sign their collections. He has a tattoo of a needle with red thread on his left hand ring finger as a reminder. He said the red thread means consis- tency throughout the brand. “Identify your style and stick to it. It might change a little. Adapt, but stay with it because that is your iden- tity,” Bennett said. Ockhee Bego, Bennett’s fashion design lecturer, said it gives her great pleasure to teach Bennett because they communicate well. “He and I understand very well the business aspect, to the artistic aspect, to the technical things,” Bego said. English junior Ali Bass, Bennett’s assistant, said the job entails something new and different every day. “[Bennett] is a ball of ener- gy, and he has a million ideas and he’s all over the place, yet somehow he is so driven that he gets it all done,” Bass said. Bennett will debut his Fall 2013 Resort collection in January, and will travel to four cities by March to exhibit the designs. He is also work- ing on a luggage collection that will be launched in the spring. Bennett is also look- ing to open a factory on the east side of Austin so he can have complete control of the production of the garments. ROSScontinues from page 1MACKcontinues from page 1 Awards Night Disney Sports Spirit Award Nate Boyer - TexasDavey O’Brien AwardTop QuarterbackJohnny Manziel - Texas A&MDoak Walker AwardTop RunningbackMoutee Ball - WisconsinMaxwell AwardBest All-AroundManti Te’o, Linebacker Notre DameBiletnikoff Award Top ReceiverMarqise Lee - USC This Friday, the No. 3 Longhorns will get to face yet another familiar opponent. In round 3 of NCAA tour- nament play, Texas will play host to No. 14 Florida on Fri- day night at 7 p.m. in Gregory Gym. With a win, the Long- horns will play either Wichita State or USC at 8 p.m. on Sat- urday in Gregory. USC and Wichita State will play at 5 p.m. Friday afternoon. At the beginning of the sea- son, the Longhorns swept the Florida Gators on the road in University Park, Pennsyl- vania, as part of the Nike Big Four Volleyball Classic. “It will be a battle,” Texas head coach Jerritt Elliott said of playing Florida in the tour- nament this weekend. “It will be a challenge. We have to play great and in order to do that we will have to have the crowd here.” The last time they met, Florida was always one step behind Texas, forcing the sets into extra points before Texas came away with the win. The two offenses had almost iden- tical hitting averages with Texas turning in a clip of .313 and Florida turning in one of .314. Texas had 49 kills and 13 errors while Florida had 51 kills and 13 errors. The difference between the two teams, and what led to the Longhorn victory, was defense and serving. Texas claimed more points off of service aces and committed far fewer errors than the Ga- tors. In addition, the Texas defense had slightly better blocking than Florida. “We’re very focused on what Florida could do” Elliott said of preparing for a team he has already faced this year. “They progressed and got a lot better over the season, as did we. It will be a battle.” All this week, the Long- horns have been working on improving ball control in ad- dition to tweaking defensive schemes to give them the edge this weekend and through out the rest of the tournament. “We are one of the most physical teams in the coun- try, but with your physicality we are not as good with ball control,” Elliott said. “We have got to be able to find that balance. We are using power to win games, while other teams are more controlled with the ball. We will see if our ball control and defense can get better.” If the Longhorns can take care of business against the Gators, they will face the winner of the game between Wichita State and USC, played earlier Friday at 5 p.m. in Gregory. To get to the Sweet 16, Wichita State defeated No. 11 Kansas on the road in Law- rence, Kan. in front of a sell- out crowd. Though Kansas came out with the first set, the Shockers overwhelmed the Jayhawks on offense through the next three sets coming away with the 3-1 win. USC swept Saint Mary’s College of California at home in Los Angeles to earn its spot in the Austin regional semifi- nal this weekend. St. Mary’s put up resistance in the first set, forcing extra points. However, they fell easily in sets two and three to give the Trojans their fifth sweet 16 appearance in seven years. Texas will have some in- sight into USC’s game play if they should meet in the round of eight Saturday evening. Before coming to Texas, Elliott served on the volleyball staff for the Trojans for six seasons, his final two as interim head coach before the arrival of current head coach Mike Haley. “That is fantastic to be home,” Elliott said of hosting the regional semifinals and of the upcoming matches. “It provided us some routine to be able to stay at home, it helped us this week, but most of all it is good because of the fans ... It’s going to come down to a few points. We’re a confident bunch and we be- lieve in what we can do.” 10 SPTSChristian Corona, Sports Editor Sports10Friday, December 7, 2012SIDELINEVOLLEYBALL | NCAA TOURNAMENTJerritt Elliott has been a constant presence in Gregory Gym for the past 12 years. Along with swimming head coach Eddie Reese, Elliott is one of the only coaches on campus whose team has consistently performed at or above expectations. “You just got to find a way to play just a little bit better than the other team,” Elliott said. “You just got to find a way to win. You can’t look too far ahead, you got to live in the moment.” His record speaks for itself. Elliot holds a 266-75 record as the head coach at Texas over 11 years. Texas has finished its season in the Top 10 each of the last six seasons. The Longhorns have been to numerous NCAA tournament matches and have advanced as far as the champi- onship match in 2009, which was lost in five sets to Penn State. In 2009, Elliott led the Longhorns to an almost un- defeated season with the only loss during the regular season against Iowa State. “Experience,” Elliott said of what aids him most as a head coach. “When I look back, to when [women’s athletic direc- tor Chris Plonsky] hired me here at 32 years old and all that I’ve learned.” He has led Texas to five Big 12 Championships including back-to-back titles in 2011 and 2012. Elliott has coached five eventual Big 12 Players of the Year, including the last four re- cipients which includes current sophomore outside hitter Hal- ey Eckerman who was recently named the 2012 recipient of the award. Elliott is also considered to be one of the best volleyball re- cruiters in the country. As the head coach of the Longhorns, Elliott has brought in six top- two recruiting classes which includes the 2012 and 2011 recruiting classes. Only one of Elliott’s classes was not ranked. His 2011 class, which included Eckerman and middle blocker/ outside hitter Khat Bell, was the top class in the country. What makes a good coach is the ability to push a team to victory while maintaining morals and a set of standards both on and off the field. El- liott was brought to Texas to do just that. His mission was to restore Texas Volleyball to a national name and bring home victories. “Jerritt has strengthened and re-energized our vol- leyball program since his ar- rival,” Plonsky said when Elliott’s contract was extended. “He came to Texas at a point where the volleyball program needed to be re-seeded in ev- ery way. Jerritt and his staff have elevated our volleyball program nationally. Though he has yet to win a national championship while at Texas, it is only a matter of time. While the head coach at Southern California, Elliott re- cruited classes that went on to earn national titles in 2002 and Horns battle-tested for GatorsBy Sara Beth PurdyBy Sara Beth PurdyZachary Strain | Daily Texan StaffThe Longhorns practice in Gregory Gym to prepare for Friday’s match up against the Florida Gators in round 3 of the NCAA tourna- ment. Texas defeated Florida 3-0 on the road during the regular season back in August. Zachary Strain Daily Texan StaffHead coach Jerritt Elliott watches his team get ready to face Florida in Friday night’s NCAA round 3 match. Elliott is in his 12th year as the Longhorns’ head coach and holds a 266-75 record while at Texas. RECYCLE . YOUR COPY OFThe Daily TexanWinter Basketball Games to Look Forward ToDec. 19Men vs. North Carolina 8 p.m. - Austin Dec. 22 Men vs. Michigan State 1 p.m. - Michigan Jan. 5Men vs. Baylor 1 p.m. - WacoDec. 20Women vs. Cornell 2 p.m. - Austin Jan. 5Women vs. Oklahoma12:30 p.m. - Austin Jan. 13Women vs. Oklahoma State 11:30 a.m. - Austin Elliott coaches Longhorns to 11th NCAA“What a truly inspiring story by Nate Boyer. So thankful for men and women like him that protect and keep our country safe #CFBAwards.” Johnny Manziel@JManziel2TOP TWEETELLIOTT continues on page 12 For the first time in four years, the Longhorns have started 5-0. With this new feat comes momentum. Texas goes into its win- ter schedule with one thing in mind — focus. The team is young and there’s a lot to improve on, which is often hard with an inexperienced team. However, as her sea- son progresses, head coach Karen Aston will work to strive for the best. The Longhorns will face big-time opponent UCLA this Saturday in the MD Anderson Proton Therapy Showcase in Houston. The game, which will be played in Reliant Stadium, is the one of the most anticipated of this season. The last time these two teams faced off, in 2004,Texas lost a heart breaker, 63-60. As the Long- horns face off against the No. 19 Bruins, they will be looking for their sixth straight win. Through these past five games, the team has learned to come together and the players have gotten more comfortable with each oth- er. Junior Ashley Roberts thinks her guards are start- ing to mesh as a team and work off each other’s skills. “I think we are getting more comfortable with each other,” Roberts said. “We’re moving the ball a lot more and that’s why we’re getting more assists each game.” With this newfound com- fort comes more discipline and focus. That is one part of the game Aston is trying to push, especially with the long season ahead of them. However, many players are stepping up to their roles on the team. “It’s very hard to keep the team as focused because we a have a lot of young play- ers and they lose their fo- cus quite often,” Aston said. “I’m really proud of Ashley from that standpoint be- cause I can see she is start- ing to get more comfortable in our system and her matu- rity is going to help us down the stretch.” The Longhorns have 10 games between now and Jan. 14 when classes re- sume at UT. Those games include notable opponents, such as Tennessee and Iowa, along with the start of conference play. Texas will face Iowa State for its first Big 12 game on Jan. 2 in Ames, Iowa. After a disappointing 8-10 con- ference schedule last sea- son, the Longhorns look to dramatically improve. For the past two years, the team has had a losing record in its conference as it faced some of the best teams in the country. This year the Long- horns attempt to get back on the winning path with a sense of urgency. Coming out of the start- ing tip off fast and strong is a vital key for the Longhorns as they go into their winter part of the season. They have lead all of their games this season after the first half and held their opponents to lim- ited numbers. Keeping this strong lead will help them seal hard victories over the course of the year. “I’ve been continually impressed with how our team has started games,” Aston said. “I really love teams that are ready to play when the tip happens and I’m a big believer in set- ting a tone in the first four or five min- utes of a game. I’m im- pressed with how we’ve done that.” SPTS 11sportsFriday, December 7, 201211He faced allegations that he received impermissible bene- fits to pay for out-of-state trips earlier this year. He came into this season with extremely high expectations but began the year on the bench while the NCAA investi- gated those allegations. Sound familiar? It does for UCLA freshman guard Shabazz Muhammad, who missed the Bruins’ first three games this year and paid back $1,600 for accepting payment for unofficial visits to Duke and North Carolina while he was still in high school. Texas sophomore point guard Myck Kabongo, on the other hand, is still be- ing investigated by the NCAA, which is looking into whether an agent paid for a trip to Cleveland during the offseason. He has missed each of the Longhorns’ eight games this year and his void has been sorely noticeable. The Longhorns committed 21 turn- overs in a 64-41 loss to No. 15 George- town during Tuesday night’s Jimmy V Classic at New York City’s Madison Square Garden. They set Rick Barnes- era lows for points (41) and field goal percentage (29.2) in the loss. Kabongo’s replacement, freshman Javan Felix, scored four points on 1-for-9 shoot- ing while committing five turnovers on his own. “In a 40 minute game not everything is going to go well,” Barnes said. “I have to do a better job of helping them un- derstand — they don’t understand what goes into losing. If you understand the will to win then you won’t make the same mistakes over and over again.” Muhammad, who scored 15 points in his UCLA debut, a 78-70 loss to that same Georgetown team, was the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2012, according to rivals.com. He is one of many talented players on the Bruins’ roster, but UCLA, like Texas, currently sits at 5-3. The Bruins and Longhorns will square off on Saturday at 4:15 p.m. at Reliant Stadium in Houston as part of the MD Anderson Proton Therapy Showcase. UCLA’s and Texas’ women’s basketball squads face each other to kick off the event with a game that tips off at 1:30 p.m. While the Longhorns have struggled offensively, averaging just 61.9 points per game and committing 19.1 turn- overs per game, the eighth-most in the country, their defensive numbers are stellar. Texas is allowing only 56.8 points per game, the 25th-fewest in the nation, and is holding opponents to 32 percent shooting from the floor — the best mark by any Division I team. Texas is a young team. Barnes has three freshmen in his starting lineup — Felix, Cameron Ridley and Demarcus Holland — with Jaylen Bond nursing a foot injury and Sheldon McClellan, the team’s leading scorer at 16.8 points per game, coming off the bench. But the Longhorns, whose schedule is unforgiving this month, may have to grow up fast. MEN’S BASKETBALLWOMEN’S BASKETBALLThe waiting gameNCAA yet to decide Kabongo’s fateBy Christian CoronaTexas vs. UCLADate: SaturdayTime: 4:15 p.m. Location: HoustonOn air: ESPN Texas vs. UCLADate: SaturdayTime: 1:30 p.m. Location: HoustonOn air: ESPNDiscipline, focus guide Texas into winterBy Garrett CallahanRELAXEXERCISE STUDY BREAKSwww.utrecsports.orgRELAXINGSTARTS HEREMorgan Haenchen, we appreciate all of yourhard work and we wish you the best with all of your future endeavors!. ADVERTISINGGRADUATEof2012! to theCONGRATS Moragan HaenchenAdvertising Student Manager Connor LammertFreshman ForwardChassidy FussellJunior Guard 12 CLASSsports12Friday, December 7, 2012-30- Sports writer says goodbye to Daily Texan By Lauren GiudiceMorgan is now accepting applications! Texas sTudenT Television POSITIONStaff DirectorProductions DirectorNews DirectorSports DirectorMarketing DirectorOperations DirectorEntertainment DirectorProgramming DirectorWebmasterStudio SupervisorTEXASSTUDENTTV.COM A resume is required with each application. You can pick up and turn in applications at the business office on the 3rd floor of the HSM or the Station Manager’s Office in 4.106. Applications are due on December 11th, and the business office closes at 5 pm. Contact manager@texasstudenttv.com if you have any questions. Deadline: December 11th 2012Interested? Here’s what you do: 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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Five min- utes to campus, with pool, UT shuttle/Metro, shopping, park- ing, gated patio. Century Plaza Apts. 4210 Red River (512)452.4366Park Plaza and Park Court Apts. 915 & 923 E. 41st St. (512)452.6518V. I. P. Apts. 101 E. 33rd St. (512)476.0363apartmentsinaustin.net ANNOUNCEMENTS550 Licensed Child CareWE WANT TO ADOPT! Happily married couple wish- es to adopt a newborn baby through an Open Adoption. All the choices are yours! Please visit our website at: iheartadoption.org/kara.randyor call us at 1-800-581-6131 560 Public NoticeIT’S THE END OF THE WORLD(but only as we’ve come to know it)! After the corrupt world eco- nomic systems collapse, one unfathomably wise person prophesied by ALL major world religions will speak to every- one. He will NOT come across as a religious fi gure. He does NOT want to be worshipped. 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Available to work 2- 4 hours a day, for $350 a week, from your home then send an email with your resume to Brian.ste99@gmail.com and you will have more information about the job. 800 General Help WantedSTUDENTPAY- OUTS.COMPaid Survey Takers Needed In Austin. 100% FREE To Join! Click On Surveys. BASIC HTML SKILLS needed to help me with my Search Engine Optimization campaigns. $18/Hr Learn more at http:// www.jphobbs.com/dailytexan. htm 810 Offi ce-ClericalOFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED Typical duties includes; pack shipmentssupplies; track shipments; re- ceive shipments and stockInventory; data entry; routing mail; QA Inspections. Experience & profi cient in Quick Book, Excel and Word Applica- tions. e- Mail your resumes to tonystack- desk@gmail.com. Interested Applicantsmust be 21 yrs above. 850 RetailMEN’S FASHION Escalator, a contemporary men’s store, seeks an experienced sales as- sociate for its store in down- town Austin. Apply in person or online at info@escalatorstyle- formen.com 512-236-0755 870 MedicalDonors average $150 per specimen. Apply on-linewww.123Donate.comSeeks College-Educated Men18–39 to Participate in aSix-Month Donor ProgramFOR SALESell ElectronicsSTOP GETTING ROBBEDfor wireless service! Get un- limited voice, text and data for $59.99 monthly. No contracts. No credit check. No deposit. Earn FREE service by referring others. WirelessDealOfTheYear. com790 Part Time790 Part Time790 Part Time ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ HOUSING RENTAL360 Furn. Apts. DailyTexanClassi eds.comevery weeksuper tuesday COUPONSclip and save! recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recycle recyclerecycleWhen Texas lost to Ala- bama in the 2010 national championship game, I wasn’t even a Texas fan. I had ap- plied to the university, but I casually watched the game hoping for a Longhorn win. During the game, I re- member seeing shots of the sea of fans in burnt orange and my dad said to me, “That could be you someday.” In a few months, it would be. I chose to leave my home in California to find a new one in Austin. Texas was ranked fifth when I ar- rived on campus in 2010. I’m sure other juniors empathize with me, but our three years of Texas football have been sub par. First, the embarrassing 5-7 season. Then, the more acceptable 8-5. Now, Texas is at 8-4 with hopes of increasing last year’s win total by one in the Alamo Bowl. But this season was dif- ferent for me. Rather than sitting in the stands like those students I watched on television, I sat in the press box as one of the foot- ball beat writers for The Daily Texan. No journalism class could have taught me all that I learned during this semes- ter. While my four previous semesters at the Texan were valuable and brought me to this point, the football beat gave me a much better un- derstanding of what it takes to be a sports writer and a tremendous amount of re- spect for college athletes. Sports writing is com- petitive and stressful, but being one of the football beat writers has been one of the most fulfilling expe- riences of my college life. It has shown me the impor- tance of having thick skin and standing by what you write. I’ve covered Texas volleyball, soccer, men’s swimming and diving and spring football. I’ve inter- viewed Olympians, profes- sional athletes and heard some incredible stories. I am grateful to my editors and the Texan for giving me those opportunities. However, my experience at the Texan has been much more than the football beat. I took on the task of be- ing a sports writer, general reporter and copy editor my first semester. I grew up so much during my first year at UT, mostly because of the Texan. My time with copy and news helped me immensely as a writer and directed me where I know I am sup- posed to be: sports. While I belonged in the sports department, I also belonged in the Texan. I’ve worked in that dirty base- ment my entire time at UT, and it has become a home for me and has given me some incredible friends along the way. I want to thank my edi- tors: Christian, Sameer, Trey, Will, Dan, Audrey and Lena. You have all shown me incredible sup- port and understanding. My writing has improved drastically thanks to your guidance. Allie, Chris, Natasha, Nicole, Bobby and so many other great friends have made my experience at the Texan something I will remem- ber forever. I have a tremendous amount of respect for ev- eryone who works at the Texan. No one in that basement has to be there and the work that goes into each paper astounds me. Each day when I pick up a Texan I am always im- pressed and proud. There are so many things I will miss about the Texan — eating way too much Qdoba, Chris and Lauren’s press box ob- servations, watching mov- ies in the old sports office and I may even miss work- ing desk until 2 a.m. I came to Texas from out of state with no friends. But when I walked into the Texan basement and ner- vously picked up an appli- cation, I wasn’t just sign- ing up for an experience. I was also entering a broth- erhood with some truly amazing people. Though the Longhorns have been a disappointment during my two and a half years in Austin, my time at the Texan is something I will be forever thankful for. And as for Texas foot- ball, maybe next year. -30- Lauren Giudice started at The Daily Texan in fall 2010 as a general reporter, sports writer and copy editor. She is now a senior sports writer. from page 102003 after he left for Texas. During his first year as the interim head coach with the Trojans, and his first sea- son as a college-level head coach, Elliott posted a 13-5 conference record, the best finish by a first year coach in conference history. “There is just so many things that go on as head coach,” Elliott said. “But the most important thing is managing players and making sure they are in a good frame of mind and making sure they are competitive.” He has a history of culti- vating phenomenal volley- ball players. Elliott recruit- ed and coached Destinee Hooker, 2012 U.S. Olympic Team member, and was con- stantly touted as one of the best volleyball players in the world. He has produced 12 All-Americans and 15 All- Big 12 members. Personally, Elliott is a four time AVCA Central Region Coach of the Year, four time Big 12 Coach of the Year, and two time Pac-10 Coach of the Year. “What I’ve learned is that you can not look ahead, you got to take it one game at a time, that is what we have been talking about with the players,” Elliott said. “You can’t look too far head, you got to live in the moment.” check outONLINEstoriesvideosphoto galleriesdailytexanonline.com Lindsay RojasCOMICS 13 WINES · SPIRITS · FINER FOODS(512) 366-8260 · specsonline.comCHEERS TO SAVINGS!® GIVE WELL, SaveWELL. Lower Prices, Bigger Selection! ACROSS 1 & 10 “Down, boy!” 15 Something that’s hardly fitting? 16 High-culture work17 Crush, say18 Drive home19 Grp. organizing booster shots20 Like some sweaters22 Very insignificant24 Have legs25 Leather variety28 Piranhas31 No-goodnik34 Model quality36 “Paint the Sky With Stars” singer37 “Written in the Stars” musical38 Battle of good versus evil, e.g. 41 Like many batters42 Neighbor of Lat. 43 Place to get clean44 ___ legs45 Western phenomena47 Barrio kinsman48 Very short note50 Bogus52 1990s girl group member with a tongue piercing56 ___ dixit60 Voiced admiration61 They’re measured in 55-Downs63 Astrologer Dixon64 Be extremely conspicuous65 & 66 Like water that’s behind you? DOWN 1 “1st and 10” airer 2 44-Across shade 3 Doesn’t merely snack 4 Lecture, say 5 Whirl 6 Capital along Interstate 15 7 It forms a strong bond 8 Topic de Freud 9 Hungarian city that has hosted two World Puzzle Championships10 “This Boy’s Life” author Wolff11 “Not for me” 12 Not make a mistake on something13 Land o’ blarney14 Was like a bell21 Like a bell23 Drink brand with a polar bear mascot25 Equipment for pentathletes26 Eraser head? 27 1962 film starring Elvis Presley as a boxer29 R&D locales: Abbr. 30 In droves32 Estes was his 1956 running mate33 Once-faddish aerobics regimen35 Apt to artifice37 It’s always increasing39 Turns sharply40 Constellation animal45 Tom of “Tomorrow” 46 What’s used for site-seeing? 49 The “you” in the lyric “I’ll see you in my dreams” 51 Heat source? 52 Korean liquor similar to sake53 Either director of 2010’s “True Grit” 54 Nudge alternative55 See 61-Across57 Lumber58 Hard punch59 Toward the Atlantic, in Mexico62 A ways awayPuzzle by Derek BowmanFor 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 PUZZLE123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566BLACKSOXSCANDALEAREASELREUSEELECTRONICGAMESPLATOLADDERSYRINGEINSITUDEMFONTDESTHEICEMANCOMETHRENENAVELAAREEXTRACURRICULARVEEMALEASPISRAELARTISANRRATEDANODEJESSICAFLETCHERAARONPOISEIEDBLINDCARBONCOPYThe New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550For Friday, December 07, 2012Edited by Will ShortzNo. 1102ComicsFriday, December 7, 201213dailytexanonline.comcody bubenikcliona gunter NEW YORK — Thanks to the election, socialism and capitalism are forever wed as Merriam-Webster’s most looked-up words of 2012. Traffic for the unlikely pair on the company’s website about doubled this year from the year before as the health care de- bate heated up and discussion intensified over “American capitalism” versus “European socialism,” said the editor at large, Peter Sokolowski. The choice revealed Wednesday was “kind of a no-brainer,” he said. The side-by-side interest among political candidates and around kitchen tables prompted the dictionary folk to settle on two words of the year rather than one for the first time since the accolade began in 2003. “They’re words that sort of encapsulate the zeitgeist. They’re words that are in the national conversation,” said Sokolowski from company headquarters in Springfield, Mass. “The thing about an election year is it gener- ates a huge amount of very specific interest.” Democracy, globalization, marriage and bigot — all touched by politics — made the Top 10, in no particular or- der. The latter two were driven in part by the fight for same- sex marriage acceptance. Last year’s word of the year was austerity. Before that, it was pragmatic. Other words in the leading dictionary maker’s Top 10 for 2012 were also politically motivated. Harken back to Oct. 11, when Vice President Joe Biden tangled with Mitt Romney running mate Paul Ryan in a televised debate focused on foreign policy — terror attacks, defense spend- ing and war, to be specific. “With all due respect, that’s a bunch of MALAR- KEY,” declared Biden dur- ing a particularly tough row with Ryan. The mention sent look-ups of malarkey soaring on Merriam-webster.com, Sokolowski said, adding: “Clearly a one-week wonder, but what a week!” Actually, it was more like what a day. Look-ups of ma- larkey represented the larg- est spike of a single word on the website by percentage, at 3,000 percent, in a single 24-hour period this year. The company won’t release the number of page views per word but said the site gets about 1.2 billion overall each year. Malarkey, with the alterna- tive spelling of “y’’ at the end, is of unknown origin, but Merriam-Webster surmises it’s more Irish-American than Irish, tracing it to newspaper references as far back as 1929. Beyond “nonsense,” ma- larkey can mean “insincere or pretentious talk or writ- ing designed to impress one and usually to distract at- tention from ulterior mo- tives or actual conditions,” noted Sokolowski. “That’s exactly what Joe Biden was saying. Very pre- cise,” especially in conver- sation with another Irish- American, Sokolowski said. “He chose a word that reso- nated with the public, I think in part because it really reso- nated with him. It made per- fect sense for this man to use this word in this moment.” An interesting election-re- lated phenom, to be sure, but malarkey is no dead Big Bird or “binders full of women” — two Romneyisms from the defeated candidate’s televised matchups with Obama that evoked another of Merriam- Webster’s Top 10 — meme. While malarkey’s history is shaded, meme’s roots are easily traced to evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, a Brit who coined the term for a unit of cultural inheritance, not unlike genes and DNA. The retired professor at the University of Oxford made up the word in 1976 for “The Selfish Gene,” a book he pub- lished light years before the Internet and social media’s capacity to take memes viral. Sokolowski said traffic for the word meme more than doubled this year over 2011, with dramatic spikes pegged to political-related subjects that included Romney’s Big Bird and binders remarks, social media shares of images pegged to Hillary Rodham Clinton texting and Obama’s “horses and bayonets” debate rebuke of Romney in an exchange over the size of the Navy. Dawkins, reached at home in Oxford, was tickled by the dictionary shoutout. “I’m very pleased that it’s one of the 10 words that got picked out,” he said. “I’m de- lighted. I hope it may bring more people to understand something about evolution.” The book in which he used meme for the first time is mostly about the gene as the primary unit of natural selec- tion, or the Darwinian idea that only the strongest survive. In the last chapter, he said, he wanted to describe some sort of cultural replicator. And he wanted sounded like “gene,” a twist on the Greek which is the origin and “mimesis,” term meaning imitation. “It’s a very clever lauded the Sokolowski. Other words Webster’s Top 10 — Touche, thanks to “Survivor” contestant Edorsson misusing to mean “tough than “point well she was voted off May. Look-ups webster.com were fold this year over — Schadenfreude, up of the German “damage” and “taking pleasure of others, was in the media tion. Look-ups percent. The word dates to 1895. — Professionalism, percent this year Sokolowski suspects bump might have to the bad economy more job seekers, ing “glimpse into ties people value.” 14 L&ALife & Arts14Friday, December Leanne ItalieAssociated PressFeeling politically inclinedElection hot topics head list of 2012’s most popular words Merriam-Webster’s Top 10 Words How do you say goodbye? How do you walk up those stairs from the basement into the world and leave your friends and the peo- ple you love and the work you’ve done nothing else but? How do you leave? I don’t want to say, “Now, at last.” Because all I can muster is, “No, it’s too soon.” I just want to sit with Elisabeth and Natasha on the Thinking Couch and talk about nothing. And everything. I want to slip back to the photo depart- ment, and ask Andrew about his weekend and stand outside with him while he smokes. I want to lean on Doug and ask him if I can do it and what it all means. I want Aaron to plop down next to me in a chair, snap his fingers and tell me a hell of a story. I want Ben to saunter in and distract me and tell me about why and who and how. I want to sit in the old Life & Arts of- fice and talk about TV and eat Chinese food with Katie all day. I just want Amber to tell me one last time, “I think you would be good at this.” Because missing it hurts. Missing it means it endedI don’t want to miss it when Elyana sneaks in and tells it like it is. And I don’t want to miss seeing Lawrence and Guss sleep- ing huddled on the couch, snoring. I don’t want to miss Riley’s stolen smiles and Matt’s mumble and Au- drey running around on the tips of her feet. Without Kristine, who will reassure me? Without Sarah-Grace, whom will I laugh with? If I leave, will I ever know anyone as kind as Nicole? Or as gracious as Christian? Or as wise as Lena? If I don’t see Trey everyday, will I still feel his support? Because it doesn’t make me sad to leave. It makes me sad that the memories I’ve made here will fade away with time. So I’ll print them here, so ever, so I never Because I don’t to forget working -30- Aleksander ed working at Texan in spring a Life & Arts He has been Associate & Arts Editor, Editor, Associate ing Editor and Managing Editor. L&A 15One of Austin’s highly regarded Christmas traditions has been suffering a slow and steady death over the past few years. The Christmas lights dis- played by the residents of West 37th Street once caused a festive glow that could be seen for blocks, but in recent years, the shine has seen a serious decline. Former resident Jamie Lip- man initiated what later be- came a holiday cornerstone for Austinites in the ‘70s when he started putting up extrava- gant light displays in his 37th Street yard. Eventually his neighbors caught on and col- laboratively created what is perhaps the most exuberant citizen-run light display in the state. However, Lipman has since respectfully resigned from his duties and moved away from 37th Street, and his ab- sence has left a noticeable de- cline in Christmas spirit and neighborly morale. Carolyn Vo, a former UT student, was one Austinite who noticed the decline in holiday cheer on 37th Street. In 2011 she took it upon herself to reignite the once thriving tradition. “I remember when it was at its peak, and it was really awesome,” Vo said. “People still decorate but it’s not the same.” Vo hung flyers around the North University and Hyde Park neighborhoods urging people to contact her about revamping the light display. Almost everyone who saw the flyers agreed that the street needed to restore the holiday tradition. Aside from one neighbor, most residents on the street gathered at a neighborhood home to discuss decorations for the approaching holiday season. Help was not hard to attain. Most people wanted to see the lights return to what they once were, although ac- cording to Vo, that is an im- possible task. “There is no way in hell it’s going back to what it was,” Vo said. “It has to be different. I don’t think it’ll get back to its crazy heyday unless people start owning more houses.” Vo cited one issue as the increasingly high level of rent- ership on the street. Many of the 37th Street homes are now rented out annually by UT students, versus being owned by middle-aged residents who have more resources to ex- travagantly decorate a lawn. A steady stream of new residents who don’t know about the tradition has also played a part in the declining display, but many of them are catching on. Current resident Tracee Sisoian moved to her 37th Street home earlier this year and will be spending her first holiday season as a part of the Austin custom this December. “I’m from Austin so I’m very familiar with it,” Sisoian said. “The young men who used to live over here, when they moved out they gave me a lot of their lights.” Sisoian has already begun decorating her yard, although she said she has been prepar- ing her display since June of this year. Another new resident, Paul Underwood, has also begun preparations. His yard features two trees, one of which is con- nected to a motion-activated sensor that triggers a light coordinated performance to the song “Jingle Bells.” He said his decorations are still far from complete. “So I’ve got 3,000 lights on right now, and I’m hoping to get up to about six or seven thousand when I’m done,” Underwood said. Underwood is planning on what could be the most po- litically-correct yard on 37th Street this year. “I’m thinking about hooking up the other tree to play a Jewish song, like ‘Dreidel, Dreidel, Dreidel,’” Underwood said. Yards as distinct as Un- derwood’s non-secular ex- travaganza are the trademark of the 37th Street display. According to Vo, the spec- tacle on 37th Street is more than a conglomeration generic inflatables bought decorations. “It’s very interactive Vo said. “It’s so neat local. It’s not just, inflatable air balloons. of the craziest, creations I’ve ever Vo is not alone sire to see the the tradition. Through forts and the involvement her neighbors, 37th Street will time being. There is no and end date for but many residents process of setting now. The lights can be expected swing next week. By Hannah SmothersLife & ArtsFriday, December 7, 201215Relighting 37th StreetFarewell! This is Pop Index’s  nal judgment. “Mad Men.” Another season transcendance. “Call Me Maybe.” No one is than this Canadian masterpiece. “Argo.” Who would have thought Ben Affl eck would become a master director? Gillian Flynn’s “Gone Girl.” A stirring thriller pleasure is just not being guilty. Austin celebrity sightings. Ryan! Natalie! Michael Fassbender? PSY’s overrated “Gangham Style.” Lindsay Lohan in “Liz & Dick.” Not so- bad-it’s-good, just so, so bad. The national nightmare that is 24th St. Ming’s Cafe We miss their fried rice dearly. Illustration by Ploy Buraparate | Daily Texas alumna revives holiday lights display run by citizensBy Aleksander ChanManaging editor reflects on years in basement-30- Hispanics became the larg- est minority group on four-year college campuses in 2011, but have been the largest minor- ity group on the University of Texas at Austin campus since fall 2006. UT’s Hispanic en- rollment rate surpasses the national rate by almost 5 percent. The University’s per- centage of bachelor degrees awarded to Hispanics is double the national percentage. Some Hispanics who come to UT are first generation students who experience struggles, but aca- demic, scholarship and social programs help encourage these students to graduate. Nationally, Hispanics rep- resented 15 percent of four- year college students in 2010 but only 8.5 percent of the de- grees awarded in 2010 were to Hispanic students. At UT, Hispanic students represented almost 18 percent of all UT stu- dents in 2011 and 17 percent of the degrees awarded in the 2010-2011 academic year went to Hispanics. In this video piece, we take a portrait of the Hispanic stu- dent community at UT, as some Hispanic students share their opinions about their pre- carious collegiate status. Marisa Vasquez | Daily Texan StaffMULTIMEDIASee video at: bit.ly/dt_hispanic-30- McKinney, Life & Arts Editor 16 Friday, December 7, 2012Moleskines For students and the aspiring writers in your life Price: $12-$19Where: Toy Joy, Book People or moleskineus.comThe Moleskine is the way to take notes and be classy and the notebook fits easily in any bag or hand. It is perfect for the college student who is always running late, or the creative type who wants maximum street cred. —Bobby BlanchardA premium iPhone case from Kate Spade or Jack SpadeFor your brother or sister in need of a style upgrade Price: $40Where: katespade.com or jackspade.com Your phone is as much an accessory as a belt or a purse — these luxe cases provide that extra little flair. —Aleksander ChanCoolhaus ice cream sandwiches For anyone with taste buds Price: $5 per sandwichWhere: food truck located at 6th & WallerIt may be December, but until it dips below 80 degrees, it’s still ice cream weather, and Coolhaus is bound to impress with its tailor-made ice cream sandwiches, made from eclectically-flavored cookies and ice cream. Cookie flavors include the traditional snickerdoodle and chocolate chip, not to mention the delicious potato chip & butterscotch, while ice cream flavors ranging from vanilla to chicken and waffles and Maker’s Mark pecan pie make for a wide variety of combinations. —Alex WilliamsAriat boots For your favorite Texan (or Texas transplant) Price: $150-$300 Where: Allens, 1522 S. Congress Ave. Boots are not a fashion bandwagon; they are a lifestyle. This holiday season presents the perfect opportunity to win over someone special with 10 pounds of cowhide. Allens Boots, a local Austin store on South Congress, boasts an expansive collection of name-brand boots to choose from. —Stuart RaileyMushroom KitFor wannabe farmer friends Price: $20Where: the Sustainable Food Center Farmers Market at 400 W. Guadalupe St. on Saturdays and at 5315 Ed Bluestein Blvd. on Tuesdays 100th Monkey Mushroom Farm offers a grow-your-own gourmet mushroom kit that can be used right on the kitchen counter. Options include shiitake, elm oyster, pink oyster and pioppino mushrooms. The mushrooms are easy to grow, local and sustainable. —Kelly EisenbargerEpoch Coffee gift cardFor the caffeine addict in your lifePrice: any denomination Where: Epoch Coffee, 221 W North Loop Blvd. Everyone has to endure a dreaded all-nighter once in a while and caffeine is sometimes the only way to get through it. Epoch is open 24 hours with free Wi-Fi and has some of the best coffee in town imported from all over the world. It also offers delicious pizza from East Side Pies. —Shane Arthur MillerGift card for Rowing Dock rentals For outdoorsy and active friendsPrice: $15-$200Where: Rowing Dock, 2418 Strat- ford Drive Kayaking on Lady Bird Lake is a great way to get outdoors and experience Austin in a different way. Rowing Dock offers gift cards which gives you access to kayaks, canoes and paddle-boards. —Helen FernandezPre-assembled gingerbread house For anyone and everyone whose heart isn’t three sizes too smallPrice: $18.99Where: Central Market, 4001 N. Lamar Blvd. Is $19 too much to pay for a pre-assembled gingerbread house? That depends, are you the Grinch? Assembled in-house at the Central Market bakery and ready to be adorned with candy, these gingerbread houses provide you with an excuse to both buy bulk amounts of seasonal candy and wield an icing gun while drunk on eggnog. —Laura WrightAdopt a pet from the Austin Animal CenterFor anyone who isn’t allergic to petsPrice: $75 adoption fee; this includes the pet be- ing spayed or neutered, vaccinated and it will go home with a collar, tag and microchip. Where: Austin Animal Center, 7201 Levander Loop What better gift can any of us give during the holi- day season than to give a home to an orphaned pet? —Lindsey Cherner Blood For people in needPrice: freeWhere: The Blood Center of Central Texas, 4300 N. Lamar Blvd. Want to give a gift that costs nothing more than a few minutes of your time but will mean the world to the recipient? Why not blood? The Blood Center of Central Texas won’t let you bag up and wrap your blood to put under the tree of a close friend or family member (yet), but it will make sure that it goes to somebody in need. —Robert StarrVintage art or photography bookFor your kind of pretentious friend who likes old things and pretty picturesPrice: $30-$200Where: South Congress Books, 1608 South Congress Avenue South Congress Books specializes in used books a cut above the others — this is no Half Price Books. There are a plethora of rare, collectible and even out of print books to choose from, but the coffee table art and photography books are extra beautiful. Who doesn’t love a giant picture book? —Sarah-Grace SweeneyAll natural, handmade olive oil soapFor all ages, anyone who enjoys being clean Price: $5 per bar Where: austin-essentials.com or at Lori Strong’s Austin Essentials booth on South Congress every first Thursday Lori Strong’s handmade olive oil soaps come in a wide array of scents, including manly scents for more masculine gift recipients. The soap is locally made without any artificial additives and is great for helping to combat dry winter skin. —Hannah SmothersTickets to Austin Ballet’s “The Nutcracker” For significant others, parents, me Price: $12-$72. Student discount tickets for $10 available an hour before the showWhere to buy: balletaustin.org Nothing says Christmastime quite like Tchaikovsky’s classic. Nothing says “I should have stuck with those toddler ballet classes my mom made me go to” quite like seeing pretty ballerinas in whimsical costumes be more talented than you. —Alexandra HartBucket of gourmet popcorn from CornucopiaFor friends or family who like to snack and don’t have braces Price: $20-$90Where: Cornucopia, 1914 Guadalupe St. B next to Veggie Heaven Cornucopia offers more than 30 different flavors of popcorn to choose from and 3-4 flavors per tin so you can accommodate everyone’s popcorn preferences. Whether you enjoy classic flavors or have a sweet tooth and want to try birthday cake or Christmas bark, there’s a popcorn flavor for everyone — it’s a popcorn connoisseur’s paradise. — Jasmin Carina CastanonLifeArts& Classy beer For your over 21 compadre Price: variesWhere: Austin Independence Brewery, 3913 Todd Lane Austin’s Independence Brewery has a wealth of great things going for it — taste-testing days, an “Oklahoma Suks” label, as well as being local — but its Convict Hill Oatmeal Stout might be the best gift. Perfect paired with chocolate or vanilla ice cream, this dark stout with robust barley fla- vors would make a great gift in a woodthumb.com wooden six-pack carrier. —Kelsey McKinneyCrosley Portable TurntableFor music lovers Price: $149.95Where: Breakaway Records, 211 W. North Loop Blvd. The gift of vinyl is the gift that keeps on giving. With this briefcase-sized record player, you can start a record collection and be spinning them at the party later that night. —Ricky SteinBox of multiflavored macaroons from Walton’s Fancy and Staple For friends or family with a serious sweet tooth Price: $1.50 per macaroonWhere: Walton’s Fancy and Staple, 609 W. Sixth St. Walton’s Fancy and Staple is an eccentric French-style cafe that makes vibrantly colored macaroons. They are the perfect combination of sweet and crispy. The buttery out- side of the cookies melts in your mouth, while the creamy fillings contain just enough punch to flavor the little pastry without overpowering the subtlety of the cookie exterior. —Olivia ArenaMoviePass subscription For the movie fanatic, an Oscar-worthy gift Price: $49-$359Where: moviepass.comMoviePass is a national movie theater membership offered in monthly, tri-monthly and yearly installments; it offers unlimited theater access for the term of its purchase. The pass is accepted for regular 2D showings at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar and Ritz, Regal Westgate and Metropolitan, and Tinseltown South, as well as many other theaters around the U.S. The pass is also accepted under my Christmas tree this year. Really though. —Jorge CoronaVinca jewelry For ladies young and old Price: $8-$106Where: vincausa.com or these following Austin loca- tions: Atown, Luxe Apothe- tique, Creatures Boutique, Leighelana, The Burlap Bag or Solid Gold Vinca jewelry is an awe- some combination of quirky designs like unicorns, mustaches, bears and teeth with precise laser-cut mate- rials like acrylic, wood and leather. This jewelry is both edgy and girly but won’t break the bank. — Elizabeth WilliamsNeff cupcake beanie For younger siblings or goofy friends Price: $27.99Where: Tyler’s, 2338 Guadalupe St. A cupcake beanie is great for anyone who doesn’t take themselves too seriously and gets tired of the drab grays, dark blues and blacks of winter clothing. While not nec- essary for Texas’ 80-degree winters, this warm, knit hat would be a colorful and sweet mood brightener for a cold weather winter vacation. —Faith Ann Ruszkowski2012 Gift guide