The Daily Texan 2015-03-13

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Following a few weeks of campaigning within the Sen- ate of College Councils, the Senate appointed members to the 2015–2016 executive board ursday night. Rachel Osterloh won the presidential race; Meagan Abel was elected vice president; Grace Zhang was elected fi- nancial director. Osterloh, a government junior who is currently president of the Liberal Arts Council, was elected presi- dent with 10 votes out of a to- tal 14 votes cast. ree voting members abstained. Osterloh said she hopes to reach out to students across the University during her time as president. “I want to ensure that all stu- dents have the opportunity to be heard by Senate and know that they have advocates that will fight for them and their in- terests,” Osterloh said. Friday, March 13, 2015 @thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900 dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid SXSW INSIDE STATE Legislature to prioritize education this session As last-minute bills rush in before the 6:00 p.m. filing deadline Friday, House and Senate committee chairs said they consider higher education funding to be this session’s leg- islative priority. Members are allowed to file bills through the first 60 days of the legislative session. Aſter those 60 days are up, the ses- sion becomes more fast-paced, Rep. John Zerwas (R-Rich- mond) said. Bills go in and out of committees and can come up for a vote on the Senate or House floors. Zerwas, who is chair of the House higher education com- mittee, said there is typically an increase in the number of bills filed in the legislature as the deadline nears. “e deadline always brings a flurry of activity,” Zerwas said. “ere are interest groups out there that realize, all of the sudden, that they don’t have anything and they come in desperately asking to get some- thing in.” While the number of bills filed is increasing, Zerwas said he does not anticipate the fil - ing of any major new pieces of legislation. “I think we have seen most everything that is kind of high- profile or a high-priority issue among the members of the house,” Zerwas said. Sen. Kel Seliger (R-Amarillo) said his committee is not look- ing to take on any more higher By Eleanor Dearman @EllyDearman President-elect: ‘We need a baby to kiss’ Xavier Rotnofsky and Rohit Mandalapu won the Student Government executive alli- ance race ursday with 59.2 percent of the vote aſter three weeks of intense campaign- ing against Braydon Jones and Kimia Dargahi. Rotnofsky and Mandalapu, whose platform was largely sa- tirical in nature, ran the most successful humor campaign the University has seen in de- cades. eir platform included items such as asking that SG officers wear all-cellophane outfits — to increase transpar- ency — and a promise to open up an on-campus Chili’s. “It’s a bizarre feeling, but it’s so validating,” Rotnofsky said. e race between Jones- Dargahi and Rotnofsky-Man- dalapu generated significant student interest. In the run- noff election, 9,445 students cast votes, besting last spring’s overall election turnout by about 1,600 votes. Jones said he and Dargahi ran a strong campaign, and said he looks forward to seeing what the pair will accomplish in office. “I’m so proud of everything we did in this campaign,” Jones said. “I know [Rotnofsky and Mandalapu] have a big learn- ing curve, but they’ll do great.” Although most of their campaign materials were hu- morous in nature, the cam- paign became more serious as it gained momentum, and Rotnofsky and Mandalapu gave substantive answers to certain questions. “We strongly oppose Campus Carry and would work with students and ad- ministrators to show that the university is strongly op- posed to such legislation,” the team wrote in a University Democrats questionnaire. Marshall Tidrick | Daily Texan Staff Supporters of the Rotnofsky-Mandalapu campaign lift up Student Government president-elect Xavier Rotnofsky after the runoff election results were announced Thursday evening. Rotnofsky and vice president-elect Rohit Mandalapu received 59.2 percent of the vote. By Samantha Ketterer @sam_kett RUNOFF page 2 BILLS page 2 A team of UT neuroscience researchers found a way to cre- ate mutant worms that can resist the effects of alcohol, a discov- ery that might one day lead to improved treatment for people who suffer from alcoholism. Neuroscience assistant professor Jon Pierce-Shi- momura discussed the re- search, which was published online in July, earlier this week in a podcast for e Academic Minute. In the podcast, Pierce- Shimomura, who oversaw the project, said his team found a way to mutate a worm’s molecules so that alcohol that usually sticks to a molecule on a brain cell is blocked. is means when the mutated worm is later given alcohol, it won’t show effects of intoxication. While the research is still in the testing phase and it will be many years before it can be ap- plied for practical use, it might eventually lead to a drug that counteracts the addictive and intoxicating affects of alcohol, Pierce-Shimomura said. e research for the proj- ect began about five years ago and has involved rig- orous testing, according to Luisa Scott, a Univer- sity research associate who worked on the project with Pierce-Shimomura. “Alcohol has a lot of protein targets, and we’re interested in understanding how some of those targets contribute to intoxication, with an overall goal of being able to treat peo- ple with alcohol abuse,” Scott said. “A better understanding of how these proteins work can enable us to design a drug or some other variety of ma- nipulation that would be able to prevent people from get- ting intoxicated.” Scott said if a drug one day exists that combats the effects of alcohol, people might be able to drink with- out getting drunk. Scott said medication that can better assist alcoholics in this man- ner is still years away. Worms are useful for medi- cal research, because structures of the relevant molecules are identical across all organisms, according to Sarah Nordquist, a neuroscience graduate stu- dent who witnessed the study. Still, more research on the factors that impact an indi- vidual’s reaction to alcohol — a person’s tolerance level, for example, or the way they deal with cravings — will ultimately be necessary for the research to have prac- tical medical applications. “Anybody that works in re- search on non-humans — there are going to be problems and obstacles,” Nordquist said. If the research eventu- ally leads to a medication that helps alcoholics, that would be a major scientific develop- ment, biology and psychology sophomore Kalisi Logan said. “ough we’ve mapped the human genome, if we’re able to transfer a mutation from a worm to a human to treat a disease, that would be great,” Logan said. Computing project will be the largest in America. ONLINE Former governor donates papers to Briscoe Center. ONLINE NEWS SG should not give an opinion on Israel. PAGE 3 Jefferson Davis statue is not a symbol of racism. PAGE 3 OPINION Basketball falls to Iowa State on last-second shot. PAGE 5 Women’s track and field set for shot at redemption. PAGE 5 SPORTS Austin hostels are at full- occupancy for SXSW. PAGE 6 Media label Raw Paw represents Austin artists. PAGE 6 LIFE&ARTS ClickHole editor and Onion writer speaks on reporting. Students learn languages through roleplay. dailytexanonline.com ONLINE REASON TO PARTY PAGE 4 RESEARCH STATE Multimedia Check out our video at dailytexanonline.com Worms aid in anti-alcoholism research Senate elects members to next executive board Illustration by Victoria Smith | Daily Texan Staff SENATE page 2 By Sebastian Herrera @SebasAHerrera By Vinesh Kovelamudi @trippyvinnie3 BY THE NUMBERS 9,445 total votes 1,623 more than 2014 59.2% voted for Rotnofsky–Mandalapu Anybody that works in research on non- humans — there are going to be problems and obstacles. —Sarah Nordquist, Neuroscience graduate student ROTNOFSKY/MANDALAPU Andy Nguyen | Daily Texan Staff Government junior Rachel Osterloh was appointed as the presi- dent of the Senate of College councils on Thursday night.

description

The Friday, March 13, 2015 edition of The Daily Texan.

Transcript of The Daily Texan 2015-03-13

Following a few weeks of campaigning within the Sen-ate of College Councils, the Senate appointed members to the 2015–2016 executive board Thursday night.

Rachel Osterloh won the presidential race; Meagan Abel was elected vice president; Grace Zhang was elected fi-nancial director.

Osterloh, a government junior who is currently

president of the Liberal Arts Council, was elected presi-dent with 10 votes out of a to-tal 14 votes cast. Three voting members abstained.

Osterloh said she hopes to reach out to students across the University during her time as president.

“I want to ensure that all stu-dents have the opportunity to be heard by Senate and know that they have advocates that will fight for them and their in-terests,” Osterloh said.

1

Friday, March 13, 2015@thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan

Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900

dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid

SXSW INSIDE

STATE

Legislature to prioritize education this session

As last-minute bills rush in before the 6:00 p.m. filing deadline Friday, House and Senate committee chairs said they consider higher education funding to be this session’s leg-islative priority.

Members are allowed to file bills through the first 60 days of the legislative session. After those 60 days are up, the ses-sion becomes more fast-paced, Rep. John Zerwas (R-Rich-mond) said. Bills go in and out of committees and can come up for a vote on the Senate or House floors.

Zerwas, who is chair of the House higher education com-mittee, said there is typically an increase in the number of bills filed in the legislature as the deadline nears.

“The deadline always brings a flurry of activity,” Zerwas said. “There are interest groups out there that realize, all of the sudden, that they don’t have anything and they come in desperately asking to get some-thing in.”

While the number of bills filed is increasing, Zerwas said he does not anticipate the fil-ing of any major new pieces of legislation.

“I think we have seen most everything that is kind of high-profile or a high-priority issue among the members of the house,” Zerwas said.

Sen. Kel Seliger (R-Amarillo) said his committee is not look-ing to take on any more higher

By Eleanor Dearman@EllyDearman

President-elect: ‘We need a baby to kiss’Xavier Rotnofsky and Rohit

Mandalapu won the Student Government executive alli-ance race Thursday with 59.2 percent of the vote after three weeks of intense campaign-ing against Braydon Jones and Kimia Dargahi.

Rotnofsky and Mandalapu, whose platform was largely sa-tirical in nature, ran the most successful humor campaign

the University has seen in de-cades. Their platform included items such as asking that SG officers wear all-cellophane outfits — to increase transpar-ency — and a promise to open up an on-campus Chili’s.

“It’s a bizarre feeling, but it’s so validating,” Rotnofsky said.

The race between Jones-Dargahi and Rotnofsky-Man-dalapu generated significant student interest. In the run-noff election, 9,445 students cast votes, besting last spring’s

overall election turnout by about 1,600 votes.

Jones said he and Dargahi ran a strong campaign, and said he looks forward to seeing what the pair will accomplish in office.

“I’m so proud of everything we did in this campaign,” Jones said. “I know [Rotnofsky and Mandalapu] have a big learn-ing curve, but they’ll do great.”

Although most of their campaign materials were hu-morous in nature, the cam-

paign became more serious as it gained momentum, and Rotnofsky and Mandalapu gave substantive answers to certain questions.

“We strongly oppose Campus Carry and would work with students and ad-ministrators to show that the university is strongly op-posed to such legislation,” the team wrote in a University Democrats questionnaire.

Marshall Tidrick | Daily Texan StaffSupporters of the Rotnofsky-Mandalapu campaign lift up Student Government president-elect Xavier Rotnofsky after the runoff election results were announced Thursday evening. Rotnofsky and vice president-elect Rohit Mandalapu received 59.2 percent of the vote.

By Samantha Ketterer@sam_kett

RUNOFF page 2 BILLS page 2

A team of UT neuroscience researchers found a way to cre-ate mutant worms that can resist the effects of alcohol, a discov-ery that might one day lead to improved treatment for people who suffer from alcoholism.

Neuroscience assistant professor Jon Pierce-Shi-momura discussed the re-search, which was published online in July, earlier this week in a podcast for The Academic Minute.

In the podcast, Pierce-Shimomura, who oversaw the project, said his team found a way to mutate a worm’s molecules so that alcohol that usually sticks to a molecule on a brain cell is blocked. This means when the mutated worm is later given alcohol, it won’t show effects of intoxication.

While the research is still in the testing phase and it will be many years before it can be ap-plied for practical use, it might eventually lead to a drug that counteracts the addictive and intoxicating affects of alcohol, Pierce-Shimomura said.

The research for the proj-ect began about five years ago and has involved rig-orous testing, according to Luisa Scott, a Univer-sity research associate who worked on the project with Pierce-Shimomura.

“Alcohol has a lot of protein targets, and we’re interested in understanding how some of those targets contribute to intoxication, with an overall goal of being able to treat peo-ple with alcohol abuse,” Scott said. “A better understanding of how these proteins work can enable us to design a drug or some other variety of ma-nipulation that would be able to prevent people from get-ting intoxicated.”

Scott said if a drug one day exists that combats the effects of alcohol, people might be able to drink with-out getting drunk. Scott said medication that can better assist alcoholics in this man-ner is still years away.

Worms are useful for medi-cal research, because structures of the relevant molecules are identical across all organisms, according to Sarah Nordquist, a neuroscience graduate stu-dent who witnessed the study.

Still, more research on the factors that impact an indi-vidual’s reaction to alcohol — a person’s tolerance level, for example, or the way they

deal with cravings — will ultimately be necessary for the research to have prac-tical medical applications. “Anybody that works in re-search on non-humans — there are going to be problems and obstacles,” Nordquist said.

If the research eventu-ally leads to a medication that helps alcoholics, that would be a major scientific develop-ment, biology and psychology sophomore Kalisi Logan said.

“Though we’ve mapped the human genome, if we’re able to transfer a mutation from a worm to a human to treat a disease, that would be great,” Logan said.

Computing project will be the largest in America.

ONLINE

Former governor donates papers to Briscoe Center.

ONLINE

NEWSSG should not give an

opinion on Israel.PAGE 3

Jefferson Davis statue is not a symbol of racism.

PAGE 3

OPINIONBasketball falls to Iowa

State on last-second shot.PAGE 5

Women’s track and field set for shot at redemption.

PAGE 5

SPORTSAustin hostels are at full-

occupancy for SXSW. PAGE 6

Media label Raw Paw represents Austin artists.

PAGE 6

LIFE&ARTSClickHole editor and Onion writer speaks on reporting.

Students learn languages through roleplay.

dailytexanonline.com

ONLINE REASON TO PARTY

PAGE 4

RESEARCH STATE

MultimediaCheck out our video at dailytexanonline.com

Worms aid in anti-alcoholism research

Senate elects members to next executive board

Illustration by Victoria Smith | Daily Texan Staff

SENATE page 2

By Sebastian Herrera@SebasAHerrera

By Vinesh Kovelamudi@trippyvinnie3

BY THE NUMBERS9,445 total votes1,623 more than

2014

59.2% voted for Rotnofsky–Mandalapu

Anybody that works in research on non-humans — there are going to be problems and obstacles.

—Sarah Nordquist,Neuroscience graduate student

ROTNOFSKY/MANDALAPU

Andy Nguyen | Daily Texan StaffGovernment junior Rachel Osterloh was appointed as the presi-dent of the Senate of College councils on Thursday night.

Osterloh’s goals include fos-tering conversations regard-ing gender equity, making transcripts more easily ac-cessible online and updating the registrar.

Abel, an English senior and this year’s administrative di-rector, said she hopes to make a real impact on campus as vice president.

“Let’s cut the bullshit; let’s get to work,” Abel said. “I truly believe that this year we can do some real good for this campus.”

Abel said one of her platform points is making

undergraduate research a more viable possibility for stu-dents. She also said she wants to form more connections between the other legislative student organizations, SG and Graduate Student Assembly.

“In the past couple of years, the LSOs haven’t done a lot together,” Abel said. “I’d re-ally like to sit down … and see how all of our interests intersect and see how we can further our goals.”

The position of financial director went to Grace Zhang, a freshman currently serving as Fine Arts Council’s devel-opment coordinator. Zhang’s freshman status prompted questions about her ability to

serve as financial director. Fine Arts financial direc-

tor Dan Molina said although Zhang lacks substantive expe-rience, he believes Zhang will be effective in her position.

“She shows a lot of poten-tial,” Molina said in the meet-ing. “She shows she can do the work and put in the work. Whether or not she’s actually qualified, that’s up to [the vot-ers] to decide. But at the end of the day, if she’s not qualified now, by the end of the sum-mer, she has three months to grasp [her] position … She shows all the signs of being a good financial director.”

Zhang was voted financial director with 13 votes.

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Joshua Guerra | Daily Texan StaffLil Freeman kneels down and prays outside of a club on Fourth Street on Thursday afternoon. Freeman was praying in hopes of a better life.

FRAMES featured photo thedailytexan

The Rotnofsky-Mandalapu platform also included a bill the pair already introduced to SG, calling for the removal of the Jef-ferson Davis statue on-campus. The statue’s presence became one of the most talked-about issues of the election season.

“To put him on a pedestal, quite literally, is wrong,” Rot-nofsky told the Texan.

They also took some ques-tions slightly less than seri-ously: When asked how they would establish a strong re-lationship with the next UT president, Rotnofsky suggested they would invite the president for brunch and mimosas — but clarified the mimosas would have to wait until he turns 21, the legal drinking age, in June.

At the SG debate, Mandalapu said the biggest issue SG faces is “being relevant to 90 percent of the school” and reaching out to smaller student groups.

“You would be wrong if you said Student Government wasn’t heavily [composed of]

spirit groups and Greek life — that’s a big demographic group,” Mandalapu said. “I feel like there are times when certain minority groups aren’t reached out to, and they don’t get full representation in Stu-dent Government.”

Over the course of the cam-paign, the alliance maintained an active, vocal presence on social media. They released footage of themselves courting endorsements from fast-food restaurants and produced an attack ad against themselves.

Yik Yak, an anonymous social media app, played a sig-nificant role in Rotnofsky and Mandalapu’s victory, according to Chris Gilman, Texas Trav-esty editor-in-chief.

“In the past couple days, Xavier and Rohit have barely actually gone out and cam-paigned themselves — it’s liter-ally just been people we don’t even know going and vouching for them,” Gilman said.

Arjun Mocherla, who was an agent on the Jones-Dargahi cam-paign, said he was pleased with the increase in voter turnout.

“I think Xavier and Rohit proved that you can’t just do the same old thing and do it better — you have to do something really different,” said Mocherla, who is also vice president of the Texas Student Media Board.

Biochemistry sophomore Kamia Rathore said she thinks Rotnofsky and Mandalapu’s humor and enthusiasm will change students’ perceptions of SG.

“They made campus excited about elections, which is some-thing that’s really rare to see,” Rathore said. “They have fresh and exciting ideas, and they show that they can have a good time while they’re talking about them, too.”

education bills.“We pretty much have ev-

erything we can do a good job on this legislative session,” Seliger said. “You have to keep in mind there are bills that we have filed, and there will be a good number of bills that we will carry once they pass the House of Representatives.”

One of the House com-mittee’s goals, the Hazlewood Act, addresses tuition exemp-tions for state military veter-ans. At the end of January, a U.S. district court judge ruled that veterans who served in the military as non-Texas residents would be eligible for the tuition exemptions avail-able to native Texas veterans if they established residency in the state.

Other priority initiatives for the House committee include improving student gradua-tion rates, which will save stu-dents money in the long-term,

Zerwas said. Some proposed methods include making it easier for students to get col-lege credit through transfer courses and lowering the bar for Advanced Placement scores acceptable for credit.

Rep. Donna Howard (D-Austin), vice chair of the Sen-ate Higher Education Com-mittee, said some of the most publicized issues the legisla-ture is facing — the renewal of the Texas Dream Act and Campus Carry — will not be discussed within the higher education committee, since they have such broad implica-tions relevant to a number of other committees.

“[The speaker of the house makes] determinations, prob-ably from a variety of stand-points, [about which commit-tee hears which bill] … but there are also, what you could call political reasons, and cer-tainly more global reasons that it might go elsewhere,” Howard said.

Howard said she cannot

fully predict whether the Campus Carry bill or Dream Act bill will pass at this point.

According to Seliger, Sen-ate priorities include allocat-ing tuition revenue bonds, which are bonds to build buildings that are funded partially from the state and partially from tuition, as well as research funding.

Seliger said, to a certain ex-tent, the committee receives their priorities and sets them according to the needs voiced by universities.

“The priorities, the impor-tance is set by the people in higher education for whom we make laws and policies, as well as legislative appropria-tions,” Seliger said.

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Senate: 101 out of 2,060 total billsHouse: 221 out of 5,001 total bills

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3RILEY BRANDS, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TexanEditorialFriday, March 13, 2015

LEGALESE | Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor, the Editorial Board or the writer of the article. They are not necessarily those of the UT administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Media Board of Operating Trustees.

SUBMIT A FIRING LINE OR GUEST COLUMN | E-mail your Firing Lines and guest columns to [email protected]. Letters must be between 100 and 300 words and guest columns between 500 and 1,000. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability.

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In late February the Texan reported that Aus-tin’s Urban Outfitters, located on a central part of Guadalupe Street across from the University, purchased the leases of five buildings in order to expand its store. The clothing store is plan-ning to add two restaurants and more shopping space, which it hopes will be completed in the fall. However, the lease takeover negatively af-fected the two of the leases, which are still in business: Manju’s and Mellow Mushroom. The stores were not able to renew their leases due to the buyout.

The Drag, the lovingly nicknamed spot on Guadalupe Street across from the Univer-

sity, has been in decline since the 1980s and beloved sites have been disappearing, in par-ticular Tower Records and Raul’s. Over the past decade the street has become more and more decorated by corporate shops, such as Einstein’s Bagels, American Apparel and, of course, Urban Outfitters.

While the expansion may be a good thing for some shoppers, it goes directly against Austin’s famous slogan, “Keep Austin Weird”, meaning support local businesses. Urban Outfitters’ expansion is eliminating Manju’s, a business that has been a staple of the Drag for almost four decades. With the expansion of Urban Outfitters, students are given more limited options on clothing shopping, forc-ing them to support corporations rather than small Austin businesses.

Manju’s employee Natalie Tiner wasn’t opti-mistic about the buyout, either.

“[The buyout] is definitely going to make the Drag more corporate,” Tiner noted. “Our owner has had this store for 37 years and sold directly to the students of UT. It’s been a very personal exchange, and with a corporate store coming in, it’s going to be less personal.”

Another employee, Lucie Rincones, expressed similar concerns of depersonalization.

“We’ve had moms come in with their daugh-ters saying that they had shopped here when they were in college...and they can’t do that anymore,” Rincones said.

With the closing of Manju’s, the University community is losing a familiar staple on the Drag.

Urban Outfitters’ expansion is a troubling

event for Austin’s slowly dwindling small-busi-ness community. Unfortunately, high rent and corporations have been pushing out small busi-nesses in favor of corporations. The beloved Toy Joy was pushed out of Guadalupe Street in 2013 after the owners noted in an open letter that the “neighborhood was becoming more expensive to do business in.” The store was replaced by corporate Langford Market. Urban Outfitters’ expansion may not come as much of a surprise, but it is still troubling for a city that prides itself

on its small businesses.Ultimately, the expansion is a sign of the times

in Austin. As the city grows, it is losing the abil-ity to be weird. The expansion may be seen as a good thing because it will clean up the block, but unfortunately it comes at a price. As Tiner said, “[The expansion] can construed as progress, but for the community and the people that have been here for years, it’s not. It’s destructive.”

Ferguson is an English and art history junior from Austin.

COLUMN

Planned Urban Oufitters expansion would make Austin less weird

Marshall Tidrick | Daily Texan File PhotoUrban Outfitters on the Drag is panning to expand by adding more two restaurants.

By Lauren FergusonDaily Texan Columnist

@LaurenFerg2

[Urban Outfitters] is planning to add two restaurants and more shopping space, which it hopes will be completed in the fall.

EDITORIAL

FIRING LINE

As someone who has followed the Six Pack statue controversy since the late 1980s, I feel obligated to respond to the current advocacy by two SG presidential tickets and the Daily Texan Editorial Board to remove the statue of Jefferson Davis.

Contrary to current conventional wis-dom, the statue of Davis was not erected in 1933 to glorify white supremacy. Instead, the Davis statue, along with the other five Six Pack statues and the Littlefield Fountain, together form one complete work of art in-tended to memorialize the 97 Longhorns killed in World War I and to acknowledge that WWI had finally reunited the Ameri-can North and South, 50 years after our Civil War.

Hence, the statue of Davis, president of the Confederacy, sits on the west side of the Main Mall, and the statue of Woodrow Wilson, US president during WWI, sits on

the east side. Sculptor Pompeo Coppini and architect Paul Cret did not make these choices randomly. Due to a lack of funds, the statue of George Washington was not completed by Coppini until 1955. Far from being a glorification of white privilege, the Littlefield Memorial Entrance Gate, con-sisting of the fountain and six statues, was created as a conciliatory acknowledgement that the wounds from the Civil War were finally beginning to heal.

Also, efforts were undertaken by UT stu-dents in the early 1990s to remove the Davis statue as well as the statues of Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Albert Sidney Johnston. A few years later, the game plan changed. Instead of removing statues, at-tempts were made to build a more diverse set of statues. Hence, the unveiling of the MLK statue on the UT campus in 1999, the statue of Cesar Chavez in 2007 and the statue of Barbara Jordan in 2009.

This second strategy is far more sound. Instead of removing statues and memori-als that ably served their purpose in the world of the 1930s, we should simply add more statues to reflect the current world-view.

— Clark Patterson, UT alumnus, in re-sponse to the Tuesday editorial titled “Jeffer-son Davis statue removal legislation offers us hope for future of SG.”

Davis statue not a racist symbol

At some point last week, SG Representa-tive Meredith Rotwein was rumored to be proposing a resolution promoting the re-lationship between the University and the State of Israel. It flew in the face of prec-edent for SG to wade into a foreign policy issue with little relevance to them and was subsequently withdrawn before the agenda for Tuesday’s meeting was sent out.

However, in a breach of decorum, the rules were then suspended at the meeting, and representatives voted to send it to the Student Affairs Committee. Unlike typical resolutions, this idea was never sent out by the SG Clerk on a public agenda for exami-nation and scrutiny by the University com-munity and the general public.

Absent our opinion on the underlying quandary, this is not a mature or respon-sible way to handle such a controversial is-sue. If Rotwein and the resolution’s other sponsors cannot pass this measure honest-ly, they shouldn’t suspend the rules to pass it otherwise.

On the more central question of the con-tent of the resolution, we similarly think the proposal is an incorrect course of ac-tion. The University’s Student Government should stay out of foreign policy squabbles as much as possible, including the osten-sible diplomatic missions of the University. More than any specific problem with the

resolution’s contents itself, which praises the work UT does with pertinent institutes of higher education in Israel, this is our main disagreement.

The only precedent at all in recent his-tory is a resolution from last semester that urged the administration to divest from the genocidal regime in the Republic of Sudan.

Admittedly, we endorsed that resolu-tion. But in that instance, the University of Texas Investment Management Company was continuing to invest in energy compa-nies doing business in Sudan. That is, the resolution’s aim was to remove a stain from UT’s reputation.

This legislation, on the other hand, would achieve nothing of the sort. Until that changes, there is absolutely no reason for SG to get involved.

There are a plethora of valid opinions regarding this country’s relationship with Israel, as well as the overarching Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Many people on the 40 Acres, including the resolution’s sponsors and other supporters, have such opinions.

But SG simply is the wrong place to voice them. And trying to push through the measure with limited opportunity for campus community members to review it is definitely not the way to voice them. SG should vote down this unfortunate resolu-tion.

SG should not speak on Israel

Contrary to current conven-tional wisdom, the statue of Davis was not erected in 1933 to glorify white supremacy.

Mr. President,Earlier this week, University of Oklahoma

President David Boren made national and inter-national headlines by denouncing a fraternity’s chant that singled out and discriminated against African-Americans.

The moment Boren found out about the chant, he was quick to call out the individuals involved and threatened disciplinary action. Not long after, he kicked the Sigma Alpha Epsilon chap-ter off campus and ordered the members living there to remove their belongings. A day later, he expelled two students charged with leadership roles in the racist chant. Boren acted quickly and boldly to draw a line in the sand against discrimi-nation at his university.

On Feb. 7, the Phi Gamma Delta chapter at UT Austin held a party that mocked Mexican culture. While the Fiji house is not on campus, unlike the SAE house at OU, you could have set a precedent by condemning the “border patrol” party.

Instead, you sent other administration offi-cials to address the issue and left it to the student leaders on campus to decry the event. A student-written letter of concern with over 1,000 signa-tures was not enough for your administration to take action. A rally with over 200 students was held and still, no action. Earlier this week, a fo-rum regarding the party was hosted by the Cen-ter for Mexican American Studies and the overall consensus was clear: a lack of your administra-tion’s support.

On Tuesday, you released a statement saying

that you “deplore this behavior, which is contrary to the core values of The University of Texas at Austin.”

I completely agree with you, Mr. President. These types of events shouldn’t occur and like you, I deplore this behavior. The problem then comes with your statement: pure talk and no ac-tion.

The core values are unimportant if there is no one to defend them. As UT’s top administrative official, you should safeguard these core prin-ciples and take action to make sure that students observe them.

Today is March 13. It took you 33 days to even make a comment about a discriminatory event just off campus. Thirty-three days! It took Boren just hours to make a single comment about the events at his university.

The Latino community at UT did not ask for any of the Fiji students to be expelled, but we didn’t ask for silence, either. The fact that you are commenting 33 days after such an issue goes to show how much you care, understand the pain of those offended and how unimportant you think such discriminatory events are to your diversity agenda.

Yes, Mr. President, you are a lame duck presi-dent, but you could have left an even stronger legacy by taking action — and yet you didn’t. You could have held a town hall asking the UT community how they felt about this — and yet you didn’t. You could have made sure that your administration was the one reaching out to stu-dents and not the other way around. You could have done so many things — and yet you didn’t. I invite you to participate and communicate with us, to take action, to do something about the in-justices we face on your campus — our campus!

Mr. President, on behalf of the underrepre-sented groups on campus, I must say that you have failed us. Your inability to act will only pave the way for further racially discriminatory events at UT, and as always, I am sure your response will be that your hands are tied. Shame on you, Mr. President.

García is a government, history, international relations and Latin American studies senior from Brownsville.

A letter to Powers concerning Fiji

By Mauricio Garcia Guest Columnist

COLUMN

Lauren Ussery | Daily Texan File PhotoThe Fiji house just north of campus.

On Feb. 7, the Phi Gamma Del-ta chapter at UT Austin held a party that mocked Mexican culture.

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4 Friday, March 13, 2015 COMICS

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Texas had it in the bag.

And then, just like that, Iowa State’s Monte Mor-ris’ step-back buzzer-beater sunk Texas and gave Iowa State the 69–67 win in the Big 12 tournament quarterfi-nals Thursday.

“What an unbelievable game — still not sure how we won,” Iowa State head coach Fred Hoiberg said. “Monte Morris just made a heck of an individual play.”

Texas hadn’t trailed a sin-gle second of the game, lead-ing by a comfortable mar-gin throughout. But as the clock began to dwindle, so did Texas.

Junior forward Connor Lammert gave it right to Iowa State on an inbounds pass. Sophomore guard Isa-iah Taylor nonchalantly walked into a 10-second backcourt violation. And, all of a sudden, with just over a minute left, Iowa State tied it up with a 10–0 run.

“It’s tough losing the way we did because just the turnovers in the last four minutes, really,” Texas head coach Rick Barnes said. “We made a few careless plays at the wrong time.”

Texas still had a chance, though. An offensive re-bound gave Texas the op-portunity to hold for the last shot as the score was knot-ted at 67, but, instead, junior guard Javan Felix cranked a three that clanked off the back rim and gave Iowa State the last chance.

“I can understand you

would like to hold the ball there for that last shot if you could,” Barnes said. “But I could understand Javan shooting it with the rhythm he was into.”

The Cyclones made the most of their last opportu-nity. Morris, a sophomore guard, was isolated and hit a step-back jumper over junior guard Demarcus Holland as the buzzer went off to elimi-nate the Longhorns in the Big 12 tournament in Kansas City, Missouri. The Sprint Center, which was filled by Iowa State faithfuls, erupted.

“I tried as hard as I could to stop him from getting to the basket,” Holland said. “He made a great move; I tried to contest it, and he made the shot.”

The Longhorns beat Texas Tech on Wednesday night by pounding it inside in a second-half stretch that saw the Longhorns look as crisp as they have all season. But with Iowa State’s defensive player of the year, Jameel McKay, fronting Texas’ ju-nior center Cameron Ridley nearly all game, Texas chal-lenged Iowa State to a three- point shootout.

Texas fired up 22 from long range. Iowa State matched. Texas knocked down 10 of those. Iowa State matched.

Texas was able to build themselves a comfortable lead as Iowa State went ice-cold in the latter parts of the first half. From the 12:51 to the 3:06 mark, Iowa State missed 11 straight shots as Texas went on a 14–0 run to take control of the half and the game.

“It’s not very often we’re

going to have a nine-minute scoring drought with what we have out there offensive-ly,” Hoiberg said. “Give those guys a lot of credit.”

With a raucous crowd urging them on, Iowa State didn’t bend over. They fought and fought, cutting the lead many times. Texas found an answer each and every time — until the end.

“We played our hearts out,”

Taylor said. “Our coaching staff put us in a great position to win a game.”

Senior forward Jonathan Holmes led Texas with 15 points. Taylor added 13. Fe-lix poured in 10, all coming in the first half.

Iowa State was led by 24 from Morris and 22 from ju-nior forward Georges Niang.

Now all Texas can do is wait until the NCAA

tournament selection committee determines its fate Sunday.

“We can’t really control anything right now,” Holland said. “We dropped one today that would have really helped us out a lot. I’m confident whatever tournament we got to, and, if we go to the Big Dance, that we will be a great team that can compete with anybody in the country.”

Texas’ batting order is filled with players that can change a game at any giv-en moment, but few have more consistency at the plate than junior left field-er Ben Johnson.

Take the start of Tuesday night’s game against Incar-nate Word: Johnson wasted no time sparking the Long-horn offense, leading off the bottom of the first in-ning with an infield single to third base on the first pitch he saw. Johnson then hustled to third base when the throw to first sailed into foul territory and scored on a double by the next batter.

That lone run was the first of seven Texas scored in an easy midweek win, and it’s the latest instance of Johnson using both his skill at the plate and hustle on the base paths to get the Longhorns going.

“My job as the leadoff man is to get on-base and find a way to score a run,” Johnson said. “That’s my goal every time I get up to the plate.”

Going into Tuesday’s game, Johnson led the Longhorns — and the Big 12 — with a .433 batting average and was fourth in the league with a .481 on-base percentage. He’s also coming off of memo-rable weekend at Stanford, where he hit two home runs in the series opener last Thursday night and went 5-for-5 with two RBI in Sunday’s finale.

Johnson said one of the biggest keys for his success has been attacking the ball early in the count.

“I’m not sure what the number is, but the majority of my hits have been on the first few pitches to me at bat,” Johnson said. “It’s just looking for a pitch you’re

going to get, and once you get it, take advantage of it and don’t miss it.”

While his statistics paint a great picture, it’s what doesn’t show up in the box score — hustle — that has really made Johnson a leader in Texas’ lineup.

In the Longhorns’ home opener, Johnson took full advantage of a mistake by the UTSA center fielder. Johnson converted what should have been a single into a three-base error when the ball rolled under the outfielder’s glove and all the way to the wall.

“What [Johnson and senior right fielder Col-lin Shaw] really are is they hustle,” head coach Augie Garrido said. “They use their speed to get two bases instead of one on-base hits a lot.”

Texas now opens up conference play beginning with a three-game series at home against West Virgin-ia this weekend and anoth-er three-game set versus Kansas State next weekend.

As the games get increas-ingly important, Johnson’s plan is simple: to do more of what he’s already doing.

“[I’ll] just do whatever it takes to get on-base, whether that’s getting a hit, taking a walk or get-ting hit by a pitch — find a way to get on and get in,” Johnson said.

On a cloudy day at Mike A. Myers Stadium ear-lier this week, the Texas women’s 4x400-meter team laughed as they leisurely jogged off the track, sweat drenching their burnt orange warmups.

Despite their calmness, just a three-hour plane ride separates the nation’s top-4x400-meter team from the stress of the indoor NCAA Championships, the crown jewel of college indoor track and field.

However, to the sprint-ers, composed of juniors Morolake Akinosun and Courtney Okolo, sopho-more Kendall Baisden and senior Ashley Spencer, it’s just another track meet.

“When you have some of the best 400-meter talent in the country — if not the world — what’s to be ner-vous about?” Spencer said.

The Longhorns have been in this situation be-fore, however, coming out on the losing end. Last year at the women’s

championship meet, Texas held a 1.5-point lead over Oregon, and the last race, the 4x400-meter, of the meet held the title.

Coming down to a photo finish, the Ducks edged out the Longhorns by a beak.

Oregon recorded the fastest 4x400-meter time in collegiate history; Texas re-corded the second-fastest. But the Longhorns’ loss, coming at two-tenths of a second, propelled Oregon past Texas, giving them the women’s title by half a point.

“[We have] so much fire and energy from what hap-pened [last year],” Akino-sun said. “We’re ready to use that and go out and com-pete this weekend. Sure, on paper, we’re ranked first in our event and fifth in the country, but you don’t run the race on paper”.

Okolo, a Bowerman hopeful, believes their ex-perience last year and in other indoor meets this season will only help the team this year.

“We were really close last year, but, this year, we’re

more experienced,” Okolo said. “We’ve been on the national stage together, so now we know what it takes.”

This is the first full sea-son Akinosun, Okolo, Bai-son and Spencer have been together on the 4x400-meter team at the national level. Although the group ran together last season, Akinosun didn’t compete in the championship meet.

“We know each oth-er, and we want to win this with each other and for each other,” Okolo said.

The strong chemistry between the foursome has only helped their success.

They even keep up each other’s superstitions. Akinosun has had two batons since her senior year of high school that she has never let touch the ground.

“There are a lot of times when you’re a head coach, and you stand back in awe,” head coach Mario Sategna said. “These girls provide one of those times. They push each other to the max, and it’s fun to watch.”

5

5GARRETT CALLAHAN, SPORTS EDITOR | @texansportsFriday, March 13, 2015

SIDELINEMEN’S BASKETBALL | TEXAS 67 – IOWA STATE 69

Bummer buzzer-beater sinks TexasBy Evan Berkowitz

@Evan_Berkowitz

Longhorns set to make up for missed opportunity

WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD

By Jacob Martella@ViewFromTheBox

BAYLOR

WEST VIRGINIA

NCAAM

TCU

KANSAS

OKLAHOMA

OKLAHOMA ST.

WEEKEND TEXAS

SPORTS

Baseball vs. West VirginiaFriday, 6 p.m.

Saturday, 5 p.m. Sunday, 12:30 p.m.Longhorn Network

Softball @ ArkansasSaturday, 1 p.m.

Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Monday, 8 p.m.

SEC Network

If you’re a Cowboys fan and think Murray will

be easy to replace you are just ignorant and

butthurt

Chad Hollingsworth@ChadH_31

TOP TWEET

Johnson’s hustling play helping Texas

Sam Ortega | Daily Texan file photoJunior sprinter Morolake Akinoson and the Texas women’s 4x400-meter team are headed to the indoor NCAA Championships hoping to make up for a last-second defeat last year.

WEEKEND PREVIEWWOMEN’S TENNIS

After suffering inju-ries and coming off five back-to-back losses, No. 54 Texas women’s tennis will travel north and play its Big 12 opening match against No. 23 Oklahoma on Friday and then face off against No. 10 Oklahoma State on Saturday.

In the last dual match, in which the team played Houston, Texas only dressed five healthy play-ers and had to forfeit a match in doubles and singles. During the injury spell, Texas played a tough schedule resulting in them going 0–5 for road games.

So far, eight of Texas’ past opponents are in this week’s ITA national rank-ings. The Longhorns will need to return healthy players to get out of the slump.

Oklahoma head coach David Mullins said the team is ready to play a fully healthy Texas team and will conclude its five-game homestand against the Longhorns. Oklahoma State has been ranked in the ITA top 10 for the past two weeks.

Last season, Texas suffered a tough loss to Oklahoma State in the semifinals of the Big 12 championships in Fort Worth. This game will be the first time they’ve faced off since that loss.

The match versus Okla-homa will begin at 5 p.m. and will be aired live on SoonerSports.tv and later be re-aired on various Fox Sports channels. Texas will play Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Oklahoma, at 1 p.m. with live scoring at OKState.com.

—Reanna Zuniga

Daulton VenglarDaily Texan Staff

Iowa State soph-omore guard Monte Morris capped off a 12–0 run by the Cyclones with a game-winning shot over Texas junior guard Demarcus Hol-land on Thurs-day night. The loss eliminated the Longhorns from the Big 12 tournament and put them on the bubble for the NCAA tourna-ment.

By Bradley Maddox@BradleyMaddoxUT

BASEBALL

It’s just looking for a pitch you’re going to get, and once you get it, take advantage of it and don’t miss it.

—Ben Johnson, Junior left fielder

Multimedia publishing house supports local artists’ projects

As celebrities make their ways to penthouse suites for South By Southwest, a large number of festival-goers will call Firehouse Lounge & Hostel and Drifter Jack’s Hostel home for the week.

When Collin Ballard co-founded Firehouse two years ago, there were no hostels in Austin. Currently, Firehouse is fully booked during SXSW. The hostel can house up to 72 people, has private or dorm-style rooms, and is located a block off of Sixth Street in the oldest standing fire-house in Austin.

Ballard said he opened the hostel because it was the perfect combination of his passion for travel and love of hosting. Work-ing the front desk as concierge allows Ballard to direct guests to different spots in Austin depend-ing on their interests. He enjoys tailoring his suggestions to make sure guests take full advantage of all Austin has to offer.

He recommends his guests visit East Sixth Street’s “off the beaten path” bar scene, Rainey Street, and the shops on South Congress.

If guests aren’t interested in leaving the cozy confines of the hostel, Firehouse will be hosting its own festivities.

The shows will take place in the dimly lit hostel bar with warm red walls and comfortable black leather booths. Firehouse kicks off its SXSW week Tuesday around 3 p.m. with a number of local bands, and it will finish up with a laid-back lounge Saturday.

“[Firehouse is] a nice little place to come and meet your friends and recharge,” Ballard said. “Charge your phone, charge your body. Get some water [and] get some more alcohol before heading out to the last shows of the week.“

Across town, Drifter Jack’s is preparing for incoming SXSW guests. Drifter Jack’s is not only a hostel; it’s a showcase of Austin artists’ murals. Located off Gua-dalupe and 26th streets, Drifter Jack’s will house artists and bands from all over the world.

Three weeks before Drifter Jack’s opening in October 2013, more then 25 artists worked to cover the hostel’s walls with mu-rals. Andy Ward, UT alumnus and owner of Drifter Jack’s, said he gave the artists free reign to paint

the blank walls however they pleased. As a result, each room has a different theme that exhibits the artists’ individual styles.

Painter and graffiti artist Chris Rodgers, who created murals downtown such as the #BeSome-body mural and Russian House mural, painted one of the rooms.

The wall is a an East Coast meets West Coast theme with Tupac’s and Biggie’s faces covering the wall from top to bottom.

Miranda Lewis, local artist and co-founder of visionary art collec-tive Third Coast Visions, painted female goddess figures on the yel-low, orange and green walls of the

female-only dorm. A tree of life mural with dou-

ble-helix DNA detailing on the tree’s trunk adorns the walls of “The Sacred Geometry Room.” Chance Roberts, Austin artist and co-founder of Third Coast Visions, created the art for the room.

With SXSW’s ensuing in-flux of visitors, Ballard agreed that staying at either hostels will diversify festival-goers’ vacation experience.

“Meeting people and inter-acting with guests from all over the world is the biggest pay-off,” Ballard said.

Whether you’re a doo-dling college student or an artist with decades of expe-rience, Austin-based me-dia label Raw Paw wants to represent you.

Raw Paw is a record la-bel company, publishing house and creative platform. The collective produces an expansive variety of local Austin artists’ work, includ-ing “zines,” comic books and albums.

When Will Kauber and UT alumnus Chris Davis founded Raw Paw in 2010, it was a group of artists and friends searching for a cre-ative outlet. Five years later, Raw Paw was voted best record label at the Austin Music Awards.

The community represents a group of pop-culture artists who want to network with people who share similar in-terests and passions. Davis said Raw Paw helps its mem-bers create a living off of what they love to do.

“We’re trying to wipe away the grit and muck of life and find their true potential,” Da-vis said. “Then, on our end,

try to make and establish and figure how to open up doors for that artist.”

Director of operations Clementine Kruczynski said Raw Paw can be split into three different categories — books and print, the record label and Raw Paw events.

Raw Paw publishes a series of poetry chap books, each of which features 20 original poems from a single artist and is designed by CogDut, a customized screen print-ing business run by Davis and Kauber.

Nathan Wilkins, lead vo-calist for the band Hikes, said Raw Paw both pro-motes the band’s music and genuinely supports the band’s endeavors.

“[Raw Paw and Hikes have] been growing togeth-er, instead of just watching something grow or being left behind,” Wilkins said.

Davis said Raw Paw fo-cuses on a few bands at a time, creating a team of peo-ple who lift up one another. Raw Paw also promotes Milezo, Young Tongue and Chipper Jones.

One of Raw Paws’ big-ger projects, “Raw Paw the Zine,” is an annually

published book that incorpo-rates submissions from the public. This year, the zine has an alien theme.

“This is like our flagship — full-color, full-design, with a year or more of content,” Kauber said.

Kauber said the Zine hosts a release party that encompasses all of the artistic elements.

“[Zine] is a way to capsu-late a culture and disseminate information,” Kruczynski said. “It’s more of a art col-lective than a business — very inclusive.”

Kruczynski said the group represents a creative pocket in which the goal is to fulfill artists’ dreams.

“We’re encouraging friends and the people around us to pursue their true passions,” Davis said.

The founders of Raw Paw said they advise everyone to obtain a degree in what they love and find a way to make a career out of it.

“We’re taking a last stand at trying to convince our com-munity that you can do this and make a living,” Kauber said. “Just keep trying; we’ll keep helping; we’ll keep working together.”

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By Mackenzie Palmer@mackenziepdaily

KAT SAMPSON, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR | @thedailytexan 6Friday, March 13, 2015

SXSW

Hostels offer immersive SXSW experienceBy Olivia Lewman

@thedailytexan

ART

Charlotte Carpenter Daily Texan Staff

From left, Will Kauber, Chris

Davis, Montsho Thoth, Nathan

Wilkins and Clem-entine Kruczynski

represent some of the many creative

forces behind Austin-based

media label Raw Paw. The collec-

tive was recently voted best record label at the Austin

Music Awards.

Jack DuFonDaily Texan Staff

In the week to come, these hall-ways will fill with activity and good vibrations as fes-tival goers and artists come to Austin for South By Southwest. Drifter Jack’s Hostel owes its vibrant murals to the talent and creative expres-sion of local Austinites.

Director Kenneth Branagh clearly wants people to grasp that this adaptation of “Cin-derella” is a straight retelling of the classic fairy tale.

There are no major twists or unexpected endings await-ing moviegoers. “Cinderella” treats the fairy tale story seriously. The result is a

visually stunning remake that develops a sense of originality and fun, de-spite a few story and character flaws.

Ella (Lily James) lives a happy life with her mother and father in medieval Eng-land. Tragically, her mother dies of illness, and her father soon marries Lady Tremaine (Cate Blanchett), a widow who shrewdly hides her

cruel nature. Ella’s father also dies from illness. Ella is left in a state of constant abuse by her new relatives and is mockingly rechris-tened “Cinderella.” After learning of a ball, Cinder-ella is determined to outwit her stepmother, win over a prince named Kit (Richard Madden) and reclaim the life she once had.

James is charming as

Cinderella and definitely sells the famous princess’ image of being kind and courageous. It’s disappointing that James fails to give more agency to her character.

Cinderella has often re-ceived criticisms for being a heroine who relies on luck rather than her own actions. James makes her version of the princess likeable, but she doesn’t do much to change

that perception.There are a few problems

with the film. The first act, which centers on Cinder-ella adjusting to her new life under her stepmother, is re-ally slow. The action doesn’t pick up until right before the ball begins.

Another issue is the con-stant narration from an omnipresent observer. This aspect was also featured in

“Maleficent,” and it’s grating and unnecessary. Disney is obviously afraid to edge away from this annoying trope in fantasy films.

Some aspects of the story and Cinderella’s charac-ters are failures, but the film, overall, proves that a fantasy movie with com-puter-generated mice and fairy godmothers can still be taken seriously.

MOVIE REVIEW | ‘CINDERELLA’

Disney’s ‘Cinderella’ translates well to live-actionBy Alex Pelham@TalkingofPelham