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Te width o the average
mans oot is 4.1 inches, andthe width o the average e-males oot is approximately3.6 inches.
And a balance beam?About 4 inches whichprobably eels smaller isomeone has to ip back-ward and land perectlyback on the beam.
Te members o the Uwomens gymnastics teamdo this every day, not onlymanaging to re-plant theireet rmly on the beam, butdoing it with ease and grace.
I think it speaks a lot to
a gymnasts character thatthey do the impossible, saidRachel Zarosky, math seniorand team president. Peopledont understand what ittakes to be a gymnast.
Te balance beam is onlyone o our events wheregymnasts do the impos-sible. Te other events owomens gymnastics includeoor exercise, vault and
uneven bars. Each is di-erent with its own set oskill requirements, yet allo them carry the risk oserious injury.
eam captain LauritaVargas has ought throughtwo ACL injuries rom
tumbling on the oor andriding her bike. Despite beingon the team or three years,this is the rst year Vargaswill actually get the chanceto compete.
Most injuries come rominstantaneous, identiable
accidents, such as Vargas.But some injuries, such asteam treasurer and biol-ogy junior Sara Journeaysinjury, come simply romthe repeated pounding and
In a discussion on the rolethat race and other minoritystatuses play in creating art,Pulitzer Prize-winning au-thor Junot Daz said he eltU students should be moreconcerned about the societal
implication o recently re-ported bleach bombings inWest Campus.
When asked about two inci-dents involving water balloonsthrown at minority studentsthis school year, Daz said heelt a stronger community re-sponse was warranted.
Institutionally, the absolutelack o saety and disregardthat that represents or a cer-tain community o the school[is something] I think shouldchill everyone, Daz said, re-sponding to a question roman audience member. I theres
not an energetic response romevery member and every sec-tor o the institution, thats an
October marks the be-ginning o u season, ac-companied annually by aurry o sniy noses and 100-degree evers.
Starting Monday, Univer-sity Health Services will oeru shots to U students, ac-ulty and sta on select datesthrough Oct. 17.
Te u shot service is reeor students who have insur-ance except Health Main-tenance Organization plans,plans with insurance com-panies based outside the U.S.and governmental plans and aculty and sta who haveU Select insurance. Otherstudents, aculty and sta canbe vaccinated or $10.
Last year, UHS vaccinateda total o 5,400 students and3,400 aculty and sta, ac-cording to Sherry Bell, UHSsenior program coordina-tor, who is leading the u
shot campaign.Teresa Spalding, medicaldirector at UHS, said she seesthe most students come in a-ter Tanksgiving and winterbreak, peaking in February.Spalding said the depart-ments strategy is to vaccinateas many students as possibleto avoid the spread o the u.
I by chance, someone [is]exposed to the virus [afervaccination], they wont getit and they wont spread it,Spalding said.
Rachel York, a youth andcommunity studies junior,
received a u vaccine lastyear. York said she plans toget vaccinated again this all.
wo U proessors areamong several nation-ally chosen scholars to ana-lyze trends in young peo-ples tobacco use and howthose trends correlate totargeted marketing.
Alexandra Loukas, a kine-siology and health educationproessor, and Keryn Pasch, akinesiology and health edu-cation assistant proessor, arepart o the newly oundedobacco Center o RegulatoryScience on Youth and YoungAdults. Te center is housedat the U School o Pub-lic Health, which received agrant rom the U.S. Food andDrug Administration and theNational Institutes o Healthor its research.
Te research will includesurveying U students abouttheir tobacco usage over aperiod o six months and willalso document tobacco mar-keting around campus.
Well be documenting all
outdoor tobacco marketing and also marketing at thepoint o sale, such as at con-
venience stores, gas stations,etc., Loukas said. Well alsodocument advertising andpromotions in the maga-zines and newspapers thatour participants read, on thewebsites they visit and thedirect mail they receive romtobacco companies.
Te goal o the study isnot only to more closely un-derstand the ways in whichU students are being in-uenced by tobacco mar-keting, but also to urtherunderstand the actors thatcan lead to long-term use otobacco products.
Over the past 13 years,cigarette use has been declin-ing but use o non-cigarettealternatives is becoming in-creasingly more popular,Loukas said. Most non-ciga-rette alternatives are avored.Flavored products appeal toyounger, less experienced
Tuesday, September 24, 2013@thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan
Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900
dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid
SPORTS PAGE 6 COMICS PAGE 5 LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4
The Daily Texan speaks
one-on-one with Junot
Daz. See full interview
with Daz at
dailytexanonline.com.
ONLINE
NEWS
Greek students are over-
represented in SG.
PAGE 4
Horns Up to Junot Daz for
speaking with students.
PAGE 4
OPINION
Texas running backs
bounce back.
PAGE 6
Stat Guy: Examining the
rest of the Big 12.
PAGE 6
SPORTS
Magnum Photos are on
display at Ransom Center.
PAGE 4
The new Drake album
shows his softer side.
ONLINE
LIFE&ARTS
A UT classical archaelogy
professor went to Ukraine
to laud an excavation
sites U.N. designated
World Heritage status.
dailytexanonline.com
ONLINE REASON TO PART Y
PAGE 5
Students who ride Ushuttles to campus will needto nd alternate methods tocommute to class starting inthe spring.
Te Capital Metro boardo directors voted unani-mously at a meeting Mondayto eliminate the WickershamLane shuttle route and de-crease the coverage o theCameron Road shuttle routebeginning in spring 2014.
Te Cameron Road route
will only serve students in theCamino La Costa area north
o campus where manygraduate students reside until the end o the spring se-mester, when the route will beeliminated completely.
Pat Clubb, vice presidentor university operations,said the University tries tosupport routes that carry thelargest number o students.
Te University pays$6,435,315.18 to CapMetroor bus and shuttle service,CapMetro spokeswomanMelissa Ayala said. Te
Universitys unding to Cap-Metro remains at even
though CapMetro would haverequired the University to in-crease shuttle unding becauseo rising transportation coststo keep all current routes.
As choices are made, ia route has a low ridership,then it becomes a candidateor elimination since thosedollars can support a routewith much greater ridership,Clubb said.
Many graduate students
CITY
CAMPUS
CAMPUS
By Amanda Voeller@amandaevoeller
Fabian Fernandez / Daily Texan Staff
John Langmore, vice chair of Capital Metros board of di-rectors, listens to Austin locals voice their concerns aboutvarious issues Monday morning.BUSES page 2
UHS takesprecautionsor fu, givesree vaccines
By Leslie Zhang@ylesliezhang
By Wynne Davis@wynneellen
CapMetro axes two UT shuttle routes
Pulitzer Prize winner talks diversity, culture
Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot Daz reads from his book, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao to an audience at the BlantonAuditorium on Monday evening. Dazs complex characters often reect his own experiences as a Dominican-American immigrant.
CLUB SPORTSRESEARCH
DIAZ page 2 FLU page 2
GYMNASTICS page 6SMOKING page 2
By Rachel Wenzlaff@RachelWenzlaff
Gymnasts balance competition, injuries
Sam Ortega / Daily Texan Staff
Freshman Anna Curl of the UT womens gymnastics team balances on the horizontal barduring practice last week.
New study examinescollege smoking habitsBy Nneka Waturuocha
@thedailytexan
7/28/2019 9/24 DT (9/27)
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Volume 114, Issue 29
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Permanent StaffEditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Laura WrightAssociate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Riley Brands, Pete StroudManaging Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shabab SiddiquiAssociate Managing Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Elisabeth Dillon, Kelsey McKinneyNews Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah WhiteAssociate News Edit ors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christine Ayala, Joshua Fecht er, Samantha Ketterer, Jordan RudnerSenior Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jacob Kerr, Alberto Long, Amanda Voeller
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Jonathan Garza / Daily Texan Staff
Physics junior Reggie Du practices his indoor free climbing at Gregory Gym on Monday afternoon.
FRAMESfeaturedphoto
BUSEScontinues from page 1
DIAZcontinues from page 1
FLUcontinues from page 1
SMOKINGcontinues from page 1
who live ar rom campusride the shuttle twice a day,while many students wholive in West Campus ride
the shuttle multiple timesper day, so the graduatestudents are underrepre-sented, sociology graduatestudent Chelsea Smith said.
Were paying the sameamount as everybody else,but were [counted] as less,Smith said.
Smith said CapMetroshould count how manypeople ride the bus in addi-tion to the number o ridesthe bus provides.
We all pay these ees, andthe numbers on ridershipthat CapMetro and [Parking
and ransportation Services]are using reer to rides as op-posed to riders, Smith said.
David Villarreal, Gradu-ate Student Assembly com-munications director, saidhe thinks the ridership dataCapMetro used or this de-cision may be incorrect.
Supposedly, every time astudent enters the bus romeither the ront or the rear,they pass through lasersthat count them, Villarrealsaid. However, i you go toany U shuttle, you will seethat the reectors are onlyon the ront door and notthe rear exit. Tis is impor-tant because many studentsenter and exit through therear doors without ever be-ing counted.
Columbia Mishra, Grad-uate Student Assembly
president, said she thinksCapMetro and U shouldhave given students moretime to become inormed onthe issue instead o discuss-ing it in the summer whena majority o students were
not at school. CapMetroheld seven public meetingsin early September and helda public hearing on Sept. 16.
Mishra said transporta-tion services should holdthese types o public orumson campus because it is in-convenient or students to goto the CapMetro headquar-ters to voice their opinions.
Smith said the routecancellations will hurtgraduate and low-incomestudents who live ar romcampus because they willbe orced to move to areasalong shuttle routes, andthese areas will have inat-ed housing prices.
[Tis will] have impli-cations or overall hous-ing costs in all o Austin,Smith said. I people areorced to move into spe-cic areas that are cateredto by shuttles, that is goingto increase housing costs inthose areas.
Biology senior April Shultzsaid she is worried about theCapMetro mainline busesbecoming more crowded.
[Te 7 and 37 buses]are going to be really, reallycrowded now, more thanthey were beore, Shultzsaid. Its just not really agood decision all around orthe community, or this area,or the students that live hereand or the other residents.
I used to always get the uwhen I didnt get the u shot,and ever since I got the shot,I dont get the u so I makesure to get it, York said.
Business reshman FarihaHossain said she gets vac-cinated approximately everyother year and plans to visitUHS sometime this week toget the u vaccine.
I have a really weak im-mune system, Hossain said.I get sick when the weatherchanges rapidly.
Some students dont be-lieve the u shot helps themavoid the u.
I only get it i Im requiredto, biology reshman MarciaRondonuwu said. In highschool, I was in a premedprogram. Because I volun-teered at a hospital, I was re-quired to get a u shot.
Despite some studentsclaims regarding the u vac-cines ineciency, UHS saidit ofers the vaccines in thebest interest o the students.
Were here to keep stu-dents healthy so they can per-orm well academically and intheir personal lives, Bell said.Getting a u shot is the bestway to prevent the u.
A ull schedule o vac-cination dates, inorma-tion about the u and usymptoms can be ound athealthyhorns.utexas.edu.
tobacco users.According to Loukas, this
sort o marketing might in-troduce young college stu-dents to tobacco throughseemingly harmless alterna-tives and cause them to gethooked to nicotine, leadingthem to cigarettes and otherhealth consequences com-mon among smokers.
I dont smoke mysel butI know a ew people who do,
biology junior Ashley Fenuyisaid. A lot o my riends lovegoing to hookah bars, but Idont think they really knowthe possible health efects thatcome rom things like that.
Public health junior Des-tinee Clark noted the signi-cance o the research.
I think that understand-ing the efects that comerom these things [is] impor-tant, Clark said. We needthis inormation so we canmake wiser decisions when itcomes to tobacco.
Te FDA and the National
Insitutes o Health will use thendings o the research to in-uence regulation o tobaccoproducts, which will protectthe health o college studentsand the health o the public asa whole, Loukas said.
Because our study isunded by the Food andDrug Administration andthe National Institutes oHealth we hope that ourstudy can inorm regulationo products that are currentlyunregulated, Loukas said.
R
E
C
Y
C
L
E
The
Daily
Texan
AFTER
READING
YOUR COPY
CORRECTIONS
Because of a reporting error,
a story on the Sept. 20 issue
of The Daily Texan aboutrenovations to Auditorium
Shores misattributed a
quote about the benefts to
students. Terry Jungman,
Austin Parks and Recreation
department representative,
said the quote.
Because of an editing error,
a graphic that ran on the
Sept. 23 issue of The Daily
Texan with a story about AUF
funding at the UT System
used an incorrect logo. The
logo should have been from
UT-Permian Basin in Odessa. extraordinary thing.Daz read a selection rom
his award-winning 2008novel Te Brie Wondrous
Lie o Oscar Wao and en-gaged guests in a Q-and-Asession at the Blanton Mu-seum o Art on Monday. Hespoke as part o the exas In-stitute or Literary and ex-tual Studies series, ReadingRace in Literature and Film.
French proessor Alex-andra Wettlauer, whoseclass reads Oscar Wao,said she was excited to hearDaz speak.
It was great to hear himspeak because he has such agreat voice in his novels, and Ithink in person he has a very
distinctive voice and way oconnecting to the audiencewhich breaks down barri-ers, Wettlauer said. You eltlike he was talking directly toeach one o us, and I eel liketheres that same energy andcreative explosions in the wayhe speaks that we ell in love
with in Oscar Wao, [Tis Is]How You Lose Her and hisother stories.
Daz spoke about his tiesto the Caribbean and theimpact o masculine gen-der stereotypes on his lie,
an issue he said afects so-ciety as a whole today.
Recently Daz wrote apiece called Monstro orTe New Yorker, which takesplace in Haiti and alls intothe science ction realm. At-tendees asked him how heound himsel writing abouta post-apocalyptic world.
Science ction allows usto really see what happenedin the Caribbean where re-alism doesnt, Daz said.
English senior OmarGamboa said he read OscarWao in a reshman Englishclass and he simply had tosee the author in person.
His work really strikesa chord or me, remind-ing me o home, the ma-chismo I grew up with andjust, well, being a hopeulnerd in the midst o it all,Gambao said.
7/28/2019 9/24 DT (9/27)
3/6
Te Capital Metro Boardo Directors met Monday todiscuss a number o issues,including the possible shut-ting down o two low-rider-ship shuttle routes that catermainly to graduate students.According to Capital Metro,the University is no longergiving them enough unds tokeep these routes running.
Te Capital Metro boardhad a chance to keep theWickersham Lane and Cam-eron Road shuttle routes, theroutes in question, open, but
aer hearing testimony roma ew key players in the de-bate, it approved their elimi-nation unanimously, 7-0.
Te move didnt come asall that big a surprise to Co-lumbia Mishra, presidento the Graduate StudentAssembly.
It was a ormality on CapMetros part to approve [theproposal], Mishra said.
Tat proposal came aboutthrough discussions last yearby the U Shuttle Com-mittee, which included 11graduate students. Accord-
ing to Parking and rans-
portation Services DirectorBobby Stone, the committeevoted 10-1-4 in avor o thechanges now to be enactedand against ghting or ad-ditional unds to maintainthe routes.
Still, the move will have aproound impact on gradu-ate students. In an interviewwith the Daily exan edito-rial board early this month,Mishra pointed out thatmany graduate students haveto look or housing in theareas the routes in question
service because o a combi-nation o low salaries andhigh rents.
Luckily, the pain wontbe elt all at once. While theWickersham Lane shuttle,which serves several apart-ment complexes south oRiverside Drive, will be dis-continued at the end o thissemester, the Cameron Roadshuttle will be phased out bythe end o next semester. In-stead o being given the ax inDecember, the northernmostshuttle will instead be lim-ited to the apartments along
Camino La Costa starting
next semester beore beingcanceled completely at theend o the school year.
At the hearing, CapitalMetros Principal Planner Ro-berto Gonzalez reiterated theagencys reasons or acceptingthe proposal, including lowridership counts and the pos-sibility o rerouting city busesto ll the gaps le by the routecancellations. However, weremain concerned about theaccuracy o the data on whichso much o this decisionwas based.
Sociology graduate studentChelsea Smith took the op-portunity today to questionwhether simply countingthe number o rides taken ina day was a air measure oroute popularity.
o me that [measure oridership] counts rides, soas U students were all pay-ing into this budget, so thisnumber that were using is thenumber o rides that happen[throughout a] day, Smithsaid. I a student living inWest Campus takes it to androm campus multiple times
a day, that could be, say, six
to eight rides, but as graduatestudents and other studentsliving arther away, were onlytaking the shuttle in once aday ... Were paying the sameamount as everybody else, butwere counting as less.
In addition to Smithsconcerns, GSA communica-tions director David Villar-real, who was not presentat the hearing, has calledinto question the reliabilityo numbers obtained by theagencys onboard automaticcounting technology.
Supposedly, every time astudent enters the bus rom ei-ther the ront or the rear, theypass through lasers that countthem, Villarreal said. Howev-er, i you go to any U shuttle,you will see that the reectorsare only on the ront door andnot the rear exit. Tis is impor-tant because many studentsenter and exit ... without everbeing counted.
We understand that Capi-tal Metro oered studentsseveral chances to speak outagainst the proposal. Wealso understand that there
were a number o graduate
students on the committeethat originally put orth thisproposal. However, we haveto side with Mishra, whotold the board that [stu-dents] need more time andopportunity to participate inthe process.
Granted, members o thepublic were allowed onelast chance to weigh in to-day, but the actual vote wasshoehorned into the end othe meeting in a package omeasures that included un-related items o business such
as the approval o contracts to
implement a customer WiFisystem on city buses and todemolish and remove an ex-isting HVAC chiller.
Students deserve betterthan that. At the very least,they deserve a public orumon our campus, as Mishracalled or Monday. Whilesome o the changes are slat-ed to be implemented nextsemester, the damage doneMonday is not irreversible.Te responsibility now lieswith students to look or aunding solution to keep
students on the shuttles.
Tis uesday, less than amonth into the semester, stu-dents will be asked to vote inthe rst Student Governmentelection o the school yearwhen they elect two rst-year representatives rom the
reshman class. In the buzzthat surrounds both thiselection and the larger elec-tions in the spring, I, mysela Greek member o the Stu-dent Government Assembly,nd mysel struggling withan issue that is oen spokeno but rarely conronted:dominant Greek representa-tion in Student Government.
More than hal o the peo-ple who represent studentsand who make decisions re-garding students academic,external and internal con-cerns come rom 14 percent
o Us general population.Tere are 16 students whoare members o Greek or-ganizations sitting on a31-person legislative body,not to mention the studentbody president, who is also amember o a Greek organiza-tion and holds the power oappointment or more than17 executive agencies.
Tis imbalance is notsomething that has gone un-
noticed, nor is it somethingthat I believe should go un-addressed. Te University oexas at Austin is devotedto creating a diverse and in-clusive campus. However,within Student Government,we all short o achieving thatsame demographic ideal.
It would appear that the
Greek candidates almostalways win their elections,presumably because Greekshave the privileged supporto a large and active voterbase. Unortunately, whilethe support or Greek can-didates is tremendous, evenhumbling, it creates an un-necessary barrier to entry orthe remaining 86 percent oour campus, resulting in thelower level o representationo non-Greek students inthe assembly. All this raisesthe question: How is StudentGovernment as an organi-
zation supposed to addressstudent issues i there isnt adiverse range o students tocontribute their perspectivesand solutions? Te answeris quite simple: It cant. Notully, anyway.
In addition to the obviousproblems with having a ma-jority Greek assembly, thereare many misconceptionsabout Greek representativescaused by the advantages
Greek students have in theelection process. Below arethree examples o complaintsmysel and other StudentGovernment members haveheard and the correspondingresponses I would give, givenmy own experiences:
1. Greek assembly hope-
uls dont have to campaignbecause they automaticallyget the Greek vote.
Te ruth: As a whole, wedo run campaigns. We dedi-cate hours standing on theWest Mall and have trashcans o yers no one actu-ally reads to prove it. Wehave Youube videos, wit-ter accounts, Facebook pages,damaged grades during elec-tion season, riends that areinundated with noticationsabout our platorm pointsand a whole lot o organi-zation meetings to attend
in order to get our namesout there.
2. Greek assembly mem-bers make sure their riendsget positions within StudentGovernment.
Te ruth: All representa-tive positions are elected, andthere is no easible way in-ternal members could grantanyone those positions. Re-garding appointments, the
Executive Board (composedo the President, VP and veother members that essential-ly serve as their cabinet) ex-tensively interview everyonewho lls out the appointmentapplications and ofcially putpeople up or appointments.Once nominated or ap-pointment, each appointee is
careully reviewed by the As-sembly Board (a committeecomprised o all committeechairs, typically representa-tives with experience or rel-evant platorms), and nallythe Student Government As-sembly (composed o college,First Year, and UniversityWide Representatives) ques-tions, debates and votes onthe appointees.
3. Greek members othe assembly are not dedi-cated and dont make anyreal change.
Te ruth: Absolutely un-true. Tere are, admittedly,representatives who are elect-ed and drop the assemblyor a variety o reasons, butthere is no trend that sug-gests these are predominant-ly Greek members. Most ous have excellent attendancerecords, work regularly withadministrators and studentsand oen achieve our plat-orm points by the end o
the session.In short, Greek students
have had many positiveimpacts on our Universitythrough Student Govern-ment. But that doesnt changemy belie that the advantagepossessed by Greek candi-dates in Student Governmentelections is unair. Conse-
quently, I encourage you toendorse the candidates whobest represent your views,whatever background, cul-ture, organization or politi-cal afliation they themselvesmay hold. Te Greek com-
munity is by no means theonly area o campus capableo mobilizing a large supportbase, and more communitieson campus would do well toollow the Greeks example ovoter engagement. Becomeexcited, start campaigns anddont let the Greek commu-nity represent you as much
as it does i you dont eelthat it can adequately addressyour issues. And lastly, bethoughtul when you log intowww.utexasvote.org.
Dimitrof is a governmentsophomore rom Houston.
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 | E-mail your Firing Lines to
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3LAURA WRIGHT, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TEXANEDITORIAL
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
EDITORIAL
GALLERY
Lauren Moore / Daily Texan Staff
HORNS UP: JUNOT DIAZ DAZZLES STUDENTS WITHOUT SEATS
COLUMN
By Kallen DimitroffGuest Columnist
HORNS DOWN: LGBTQ TEXANS CANT GET ANY SUPPORT
Students should still fght bus route closure
In an article published in the Austin-American States-man on Saturday, Te Associated Press pointed out thatnone o the Republicans running or statewide ofce in2014 support expanding protections or LGBQ groups.Considering the socially conservative nature o our state,this makes sense, but that doesnt mean we cant resentwhoever chained scal conservatism to archaic and im-moral policies against LGBQ citizens. Would it be toomuch to ask or a conservative who dislikes the decitbut doesnt mind i a man marries a man? In exas, ap-parently, the answer is yes.
Fabian Fernandez / Daily Texan Staff
Members of the Capital Metro Board on Monday.
Proportion of under-
graduate students in
Greek life, as of Fall
2012:
14.7%of total population in
Greek life
Proportion of students
in Student Government
Assembly in Greek life,
as of Fall 2013:
45%of assembly is Greek
At an event at the Blanton Museum o Art on Mondaynight, Pulitzer-prize-winning author Junot Diaz went outo his way to accommodate the roughly 100 students whowere not able to get a seat in the packed auditorium to hearhim speak. Beore the event ofcially started, Diaz walkedoutside to the crowd and took student questions or morethan 10 minutes. Its not oen that a Pultizer-prize-win-ning author is so generous with their time, and we thankDiaz or making the money spent on his appearance wellworth it.
Greek students overrepresented in SG Assembly
7/28/2019 9/24 DT (9/27)
4/6
SARAH GRACE SWEENEY, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR / @DailyTexanArts
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ART
UT showcases Magnum Photos collection
From Marilyn Monroeand Fidel Castro to Mohan-das Gandhi, Magnum Photosportray images o culturalicons, political strie and in-ternational conict.
About 200,000 Magnumprints have been donated tothe Ransom Center in whatis expected to be the largestdonation ever made to thecenter. Te photos will be thesubject o lectures, seminarsand individual research or
years to come.Magnum, a coopera-
tive photo agency oundedin 1947 by photographersRobert Capa, David Sey-mour, George Rodger, HenriCartier-Bresson and Wil-liam Vandivert, was the rstphoto agency o its kind,created by photographers,or photographers.
Its a picture agencywhich, by its very incep-tion, changed the wholeprocess o photo agenciesand, thereore, the ace ojournalism in the 20th cen-tury, said Roy Flukinger, se-nior research curator at theRansom Center. It was aradical concept.
Beore Magnum, publica-tions hired photographersor a story and then ownedthe rights to the photos. With
the creation o Magnum,photographers retained therights to their photos aferthey were published and hadgreater say in how their pic-tures were used.
Once they ormed Mag-num, their picture storiesrelected their own inten-tions and their own nar-ratives, so the way thatthey worked wasnt anydierent but the way theirwishes were actually trans-lated into the inal pub-lication were probablymuch stronger once they
had the control, said Jes-sica McDonald, chie cura-tor o photography or theRansom Center.
Tis new level o creativecontrol allowed photogra-phers to publish their ownresh perspectives.
Tey had a point o view,they wanted to tell the storiestheir way and they wantedto control not only the wayphotographs were made, butthe way they were used andthe way that they could telltheir point o view in theirwork, Flukinger said.
Photos taken by Magnumphotographers can be usedafer initial publication. Attimes, their work becamepart o photo books, videosand multimedia projects.
Te Magnum collec-tion seamlessly transitions
between pre-conceived cat-
egories o photojournal-ism, art photography anddocumentary photography.
Something that this exhi-bition is attempting to do isto sort o muddy those cat-egories, to show that whileMagnum has transormed
since its ounding, [those
pre-conceived categories are]not clear, McDonald said. Alot o activities are going onat the same time so the pho-tographs can be understoodin a variety o contexts.
Te photo agency spansthe pre- and post-digital
eras o photography, main-
taining relevance despitedrastic changes in thepublishing industry.
Its not so simple as thisidea o pre-digital and post-digital, McDonald said. Teidea is o constant transor-mation and evolution, and
I think thats how theyre
still successul and howtheyve survived.
Te current exhibit atthe Ransom Center, Radi-cal ransormation: Mag-num Photos into the DigitalAge, is on view throughJanuary 2014.
By Elizabeth Williams@bellzabeth
Aaron Berecka/ Daily Texan Staff
People view the Magnum Photos exhibit at the Ransom Center last Wednesday. Almost 200,000 photos from the agency were
donated to the Ransom Center. The exhibit is free and open through Jan. 5, 2014.
7/28/2019 9/24 DT (9/27)
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57Magiciansassistant in anaudience, say
58Supposedinventor ofbaseball ora hint to 17-,26-, 36- and50-Across
61HollywoodsDavis
62Wicked
63Vulcan mind ___
64Source of Indianblack tea
65Ready to comeoff the stove
66Got it
DOWN
1Severedisrepute
2I havent the
foggiest 3Bringer of
peace
4Medium for VanDyck or vanGogh
5Counterparts ofcolumns
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44___ to Joy
45Dozed (off)
4727 Chopinworks
48Entertainlavishly
49Half ofStevensonsstrange case
51___ Kinte ofRoots
52The Braves, onscoreboards
54Many anarchaeologicalsite
55Like Napoleon,before Elba?
57Org. with ballsand strikes
59___-lacto-vegetarian
60Big inits. inmusic
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ACL FESTIVAL3-DAY PASS
GIVEAWAY!
MUST HAVE CURRENT UT ID TO WIN
6CHRIS HUMMER, SPORTS EDITOR / @texansports
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Longhorns dash back to success
Coming into the season,many believed exas big-gest asset would be its stableo talented and experiencedrunning backs.
Ater a dominating per-ormance in which theLonghorns rushed or 359yards in Week 1, exasground attack sculed,averaging just 128 rushingyards and 3.4 yards per car-
ry over the next two games both losses.
exas turned things aroundin a major way against Kan-sas State on Saturday, rackingup 227 yards on the groundon 47 carries while rushingor three touchdowns. Notcoincidentally, this rejuve-nated perormance by thebackeld guided the Long-horns to their rst victory inthree contests. Junior run-ning back Malcolm Brownbelieves the running backspossess an extremely highceiling.
It can be great, Brownsaid. he oensive linewas opening up those holes.We can ind them i t heyreout there. It was great andwe can do things like thatevery week.
Brown turned in his bestperormance o the seasonagainst the Wildcats with 40rushing yards and a touch-down, but it was sophomorerunning back Johnathan Graywho stole the show. Gray ranor a career-high 141 yardswhile scoring two touch-downs, and he believes the
exas oensive line was thekey to the groups turnaround.
Our oensive line did agreat job this week, prepara-tion, knowing the schemes,what K-State was going tobring at us, Gray said. Teydid a great job o block-ing. I had some big openholes. Our job as backs wasto hit them and thats what
we did tonight.he Longhorns know
they are at their best whenthe running backs are set-ting the tempo or the o-ense, as evidenced by lastSaturdays perormance.While the running backsgarnered most o the at-tention ollowing the win,co-oensive coordina-
tor Major Applewhite be-lieves every member o
the exas oense deservescredit or the groundgames turnaround.
I thought it was a greatteam eort. I thought wedid a good job up rontblocking, Applewhite said.I thought our backs did agreat job in breaking tack-
les. When you run the ball,the backs get a lot o credit.
Its the other 10 guys put-ting you in that position.
he Longhorns real-ized their ineective-ness on oense in lossesagainst Brigham YoungUniversity and Ole Missstemmed rom an imbal-ance on oense. Because
o this, exas placed in-creased emphasis on
improving the rushing at-tack heading into its gameagainst the Wildcats.
We really made it a pointat practice that we wantedto improve in our runninggame and be more balanced,senior lef guard rey Hop-kins said. We came in with
the mentality that we weregoing to run the ball.
GYMNASTICScontinues from page 1
Coming weeks daunting for Texasjoint stress that go withthe sport.I had elbow surgery
and ankle surgery, Jour-neay said. I rayed myligaments rom overuse,and I broke o a piece ocartilage in my ankle they
had to take out.According to the Ameri-can College o EmergencyPhysicians, the annualinjury rate o gymnastsis on par with rates re-ported rom contact sportssuch as hockey, soccerand basketball.
Despite these high rateso injuries, exas gym-nastics continues to drawpeople back.
I think a lot o gymnastswill tell you, you spend somuch time in the gym, itjust kind o is your lie,
Journeay said. So when
you stop doing it, you justkind o lose your sense oidentity or a while.
Although gymnastics ismainly an individual sport,the team component isimportant or the squad.
I belong here with these
people and they accept meand they love me, Jour-neay said. I love comingto [the] gym and I couldntimagine being withanyone else.
Although skills andexperiences may vary, onething remains constantacross the team members:their passion or the sportand each other.
We dont win all thetime, but I think that weprobably have the mostun at meets, Vargas said.I could not be more grate-
ul to have a team like this.
exas cant seem to catch
a break.Despite opening up theirBig 12 schedule with a 31-21victory over Kansas State and taking some momentaryheat o head coach MackBrown the Longhornslimped o the eld Saturdayafer losing both junior quar-terback David Ash and ju-nior linebacker Jordan Hicksto injury. Hicks is out or theseason with a torn Achillestendon, and Ashs status isin question or the year as hedeals with a potential secondconcussion in three weeks.
Following its bye week,exas takes on winless IowaState on the road. On pa-per, its a avorable matchupor the Longhorns. Te Cy-clones, who lost both o theirhome games this season, areaveraging just 20.5 pointsa game. In addition, IowaState is ineective at runningthe ball, which has sorryJordan Hicks been exasAchilles heel. Te Cyclonesleading rusher, Sam Rich-ardson, only totaled 86 yardsthis season.
Te Longhorns could be in
or a rough stretch when theyhead to Dallas or the RedRiver Rivalry game againstOklahoma, who shellackedthem 63-21 last season. Ledby senior running back Bren-nan Clay and junior quar-terback Blake Bell, who had
our rushing touchdowns inlast years game, the Soonersboast a rushing attack thatcould give the exas deensets. Oklahoma has beatenthe Longhorns by at least45 points our times in theMack Brown era, includingeach o the past two years.Oklahoma head coach BobStoops would love nothingmore than to send Brownout the door with one naltail kicking.
Afer the Red River Rival-ry, exas hits the road or twoo its next three games, tak-ing on a CU team that hasstumbled out to a disappoint-ing 1-2 record. Although theHorned Frogs have yet tohold an opponent under 20
points, dont underestimatetheir deense: Tey smoth-ered exas in their 20-13 winon Tanksgiving last year.Te ollowing two gamesprovide beatable opponentsor the Longhorns. Tey acea weak Kansas team at homebeore heading to Morgan-town to play West Virginia,which holds a 4-6 coner-ence record since joining theBig 12 last year.
By ar, the toughest stretch
or exas will be its nal threegames, when it will take onBig 12 avorite OklahomaState, upstart exas ech andoensive-juggernaut Baylor.Oklahoma State and Baylorlook especially dangerousbecause they have something
exas doesnt: a game-chang-ing quarterback. Despitesplitting time, J.W. Walshexcelled in Oklahoma Statesthree victories this year, usingboth his arm and legs to rackup 824 yards o oense andseven touchdowns. BaylorsBryce Petty has looked evenbetter, throwing or 1,001yards and eight touchdownswithout an interceptionthus ar.
Tough Brown preaches
one game at a time, some othese games are surely loom-ing in the back o his mind.With our ranked opponentsand only three home gamesremaining or the Longhorns,this teams resilience willbe tested.
FOOTBALL
STAT GUY
By David LeferDaily Texan Columnist
@texansports
Charlie Pearce / Daily Texan Staff
Junior running back Malcolm Brown escapes tacklers during in Saturdays win against the Wildcats. Texas running backs have bounced back after two
straight losses in non-conference play to BYU and Ole Miss and recorded 227 yards on the ground in the Longhorns 31-32 win against Kansas State.
Elisabeth Dillon / Daily Texan fle photo
Oklahoma running back Brennan Clay runs against the Longhorns defense in last seasonsRed River Rivalry game. Texas will face off against the Sooners again next month in Dallas.
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