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By Destinee Hodge Daily Texan Staff UT Facilities Services an- nounced this week that they will be reducing fountain oper- ation hours indefinitely to save money. The move comes in the shadow of $30 million in bud- get cuts and the need for the different University depart- ments to become more eco- nomical, Facilities Services spokeswoman Laurie Lentz said. Under the revised sched- ule, Facilities Services will save $40,000 per year. “We’re shortening the operat- ing hours for the 10 major foun- tains on the main campus from 17 hours per day to 10 hours per day,” Lentz said. The fountains, which usual- ly run from 7 a.m. to midnight, will be turned on from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. under the new schedule. The University has not re- duced the hours of operation of the fountains for the sole pur- pose of saving money since 2002, Lentz said. “The entire campus has been looking at cost-saving measures, and the facilities group is no ex- ception,” she said. In addition to routine main- tenance, the only other time in recent history that the foun- tains have been turned off was in 2009 to adhere to city regu- lations for water conservation during a drought. “When we turned off the fountains last summer, we were doing it to support the city’s drought restrictions,” Lentz said. “We are not bound to city policy because we’re a state organization, but we wanted to cooperate and we wanted to support what the city was doing.” In addition to saving money, the department estimated that SPORTS PAGE 6 T HE D AILY T EXAN www.dailytexanonline.com Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900 Friday, July 2, 2010 75 Low High 82 TOMORROW’S WEATHER LIFE & ARTS PAGE 4 Student Event Center president shares his ideal playlist LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4 What is your favorite children’s sports movie? Fourth of July weekend picks Editor’s note: Riders from the Sense Corp Texas 4000 for Can- cer will correspond with The Dai- ly Texan through a series of articles from the road. Each week over the 70-day trek, riders from the Rocky Mountain and Coastal routes will describe their experiences along the journey, depicting the places they pedal through and the people they meet along the way. By Mariana Fanous Daily Texan Guest Columnist Coastal Route SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Ca- lif. — There’s a lot to be said about hope. Many people in- terpret it in different ways. Hope is one of the three core tenets in our Sense Corp Tex- as 4000 for Cancer mission. We spread hope through our inter- action with everyone we meet, and they are quick to share their appreciation, hospitali- ty and lessons they’ve learned over the years. I remember two special situations in particular. I stayed with a couple in Farm- ington, N.M.: Loretta, who had a heart of gold and never hesitated to lend us a helping hand, and her husband Mike, who rode with us the next day. Those few hours alone with him taught me so much. He gave me a greater appreciation of life and a new perspective. A couple of years ago, he had his colon removed because of precancerous cells. Since then, he promised to live life to its fullest — dream big, no regrets, always act, always smile. I can relate everything I’ve learned from him to our trip. I stayed with another cou- ple in South Lake Tahoe who had the same mentality as Mike. They lost their 14-year- TEXAS 40 By Collin Eaton Daily Texan Staff Just what is the value of a bachelor’s degree from the 40 Acres? In a time of rising student loan debt and uncertainty in the job market, a report released this week by PayScale, an independent salary and wage research group, attempts to gauge the monetary value of college degrees. The independent research group collected information from hundreds of public and private universities to compare the average costs of college, as well as the 30-year return on in- vestment and the annual return on investment of a degree. In the study, UT ranks 113th with in-state tuition and 136th with out-of-state tuition in na- tional ROI out of 852 tuition plans from private and pub- lic universities across the coun- try. The average cost of attend- ing UT for four to six years is roughly $96,000. The return on that investment, seen through salaries a UT alumnus will ac- crue over 30 years, will average about $696,000 in 2010 dollars. UT students paying out-of-state tuition must fork over about $163,000 when attending school. Their return on investment over 30 years will total $644,000. In Texas, UT has the third- highest ROI behind Rice Univer- sity and Texas A&M University. Compared to only in-state and out-of-state public university tu- itions, UT ranks 38th and 52nd, respectively. Rice is ranked 22nd nationally with a 30-year ROI of $1,132,000, and Texas A&M’s in- state tuition is ranked 71st with a 30-year ROI of $816,000. UT economics professor Dan- iel Hamermesh said the issue has been one of the most thor- oughly researched over the past 50 years. The study showed the annual return on investment for both in-state and out-of-state tu- ition hovers at about 12 and 10 percent, respectively. “The fact is, it’s probably a better bet [to attend college] than it has been in many, many years,” Hamermesh said. “Look at the numbers here. The annu- al ROI is about right at about 11 or 12 percent; can you go put your money in the bank at 11 percent today? No. One Netherlands Brazil VS. Argentina Germany VS. Paraguay Spain VS. Uruguay Ghana VS. By Michael Sherfield Daily Texan Staff After two days of expert testimony and witness recollections, Day Three of former UT student Laura Hall’s resentencing trial for tampering with evidence and hindering apprehension in Jennifer Cave’s 2005 murder was an emotional one. Jim Sedwick took the witness stand with tears welling in his eyes, trying to hold back his emotions as he told the jury about the day he told his children their sister was dead. Across the courtroom, the rest of Cave’s family — who bear the last name Sedwick after Jennifer’s mother, Sharon, married Jim — sat with bowed heads, arms interlocked as tears trickled down their cheeks. Following the replay of recorded calls Hall made while in prison to her family, Jim and Sha- ron Sedwick told how they found their daugh- ter in 2005, and the aftermath of her gruesome murder the morning of August 17, 2005. Jim Sedwick, who found Cave’s body in the bathtub of Colton Pitonyak’s West Cam- pus apartment, took the stand first. He re- counted the family’s concern in not being able to contact Cave and driving to Austin to find her. Pitonyak has been convicted of her murder and is serving a 55-year sentence, while Hall was found guilty of tampering with evidence and sentenced in 2007 to five years before an appeals court maintained her conviction but overturned her sentence. After contacting police and failing to get into Pitonyak’s apartment through the door, Sedwick used the frame of a pair of sun- glasses to unlatch a window and entered the apartment at 10 p.m. on August 19, 2005. With Sharon Sedwick, one of their daugh- ters and a family friend outside, Jim Sedwick crept through the empty apartment, search- ing for his stepdaughter. “I began to smell something,” Sedwick said, Stories of cancer victims strengthen riders’ resolve to overcome obstacles RACE continues on page 2 Streamlined operations save University money, cut back on water usage FRIDAY Quote to note ‘Cholas por vida’ Local artist Joey Seeman pays tribute to the cholas, pachucas, rucas and gang girls who have influenced his life’s work with a new art show at Rio Rita’s Cafe y Cantina. — Taylor Steinberg Student Event Center president WEEKEND LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4 SATURDAY soberRide Call 512-657-2999 for cabs offering free rides from 11 p.m. until 3 a.m. SUNDAY What would Willie do? The Backyard hosts Willie Nelson’s annual Fourth of July Picnic, featuring Kris Kristofferson, Leon Russell and Los Lonely Boys, among others. Tickets cost $55 and the doors open at 10 a.m. “[The] tour was great — so great that I decided to write a commemorative haiku for every city we were in. Canada treated us like kings. Chicago treated us like trash. Balance was restored.” The great American pastime The Round Rock Express takes on the Memphis Redbirds at the Dell Diamond at 7:05 p.m. Tickets cost $13. Thinking outside the box Group looks into value of a bachelor’s degree at UT Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff Fiona Adams, 7, views images at the Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art on Thursday afternoon. Victim’s parents grieve at Hall trial Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff Laura Hall stands in court for her resentencing trial at the Blackwell/Thurman Criminal Justice Center on Thursday. Hall was proven guilty of tampering with evidence in the murder case of Jennifer Cave in 2005. Campus fountain hours to decrease Hospitality of strangers, challenge inspire cyclists 9 a.m. World Cup 1:30 p.m. World Cup 9 a.m. 1:30 p.m. BUDGET continues on page 2 HALL continues on page 2 EXPENSES continues on page 2 Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff Cassi Williams and Andrew Newell walk by the East Mall Fountain on Thursday. UT Facilities Services is shortening the operating hours for the fountains on the main campus.
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Page 1: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

By Destinee HodgeDaily Texan Staff

UT Facilities Services an-nounced this week that they will be reducing fountain oper-ation hours indefinitely to save money.

T h e m o v e c o m e s i n t h e shadow of $30 million in bud-get cuts and the need for the different University depart-ments to become more eco-nomical , Facil i t ies Services spokeswoman Laurie Lentz said. Under the revised sched-ule, Facil it ies Services will save $40,000 per year.

“We’re shortening the operat-ing hours for the 10 major foun-tains on the main campus from 17 hours per day to 10 hours per day,” Lentz said.

The fountains, which usual-ly run from 7 a.m. to midnight, will be turned on from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. under the new schedule.

The University has not re-duced the hours of operation of the fountains for the sole pur-pose of saving money since

2002, Lentz said.“The entire campus has been

looking at cost-saving measures, and the facilities group is no ex-ception,” she said.

In addition to routine main-tenance, the only other time in recent history that the foun-tains have been turned off was in 2009 to adhere to city regu-lations for water conservation during a drought.

“When we turned off the

fountains last summer, we were doing it to support the city’s drought restrictions,” Lentz said. “We are not bound to city policy because we’re a state organization, but we wanted to cooperate and we wanted to support what the city was doing.”

In addition to saving money, the department estimated that

SPORTS PAGE 6

THE DAILY TEXANwww.dailytexanonline.comServing the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900Friday, July 2, 2010

75LowHigh

82

TOMORROW’S WEATHER

LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4Student Event Center president shares his ideal playlist LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4

What is your favorite children’s sports movie?

Fourth of July weekend picks

Editor’s note: Riders from the Sense Corp Texas 4000 for Can-

cer will correspond with The Dai-ly Texan through a series of articles from the road. Each week over the 70-day trek, riders from the Rocky Mountain and Coastal routes will describe their experiences along the journey, depicting the places they pedal through and the people they

meet along the way.

By Mariana Fanous Daily Texan Guest Columnist

Coastal RouteSOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Ca-

lif. — There’s a lot to be said about hope. Many people in-terpret it in different ways. Hope is one of the three core tenets in our Sense Corp Tex-as 4000 for Cancer mission. We spread hope through our inter-action with everyone we meet,

and they are quick to share their appreciation, hospitali-ty and lessons they’ve learned over the years. I remember two special situations in particular. I stayed with a couple in Farm-ington, N.M.: Loretta, who had a heart of gold and never hesitated to lend us a helping hand, and her husband Mike, who rode with us the next day. Those few hours alone with him taught me so much. He gave me a greater appreciation of life and a new perspective.

A couple of years ago, he had his colon removed because of precancerous cells. Since then, he promised to live life to its fullest — dream big, no regrets, always act, always smile. I can relate everything I’ve learned from him to our trip.

I stayed with another cou-ple in South Lake Tahoe who had the same mentality as Mike. They lost their 14-year-

TEXAS 40

By Collin Eaton Daily Texan Staff

Just what is the value of a bachelor ’s degree from the 40 Acres?

In a time of rising student loan debt and uncertainty in the job market, a report released this week by PayScale, an independent salary and wage research group, attempts to gauge the monetary value of college degrees.

The independent research group collected information from hundreds of public and private universities to compare the average costs of college, as well as the 30-year return on in-vestment and the annual return on investment of a degree.

In the study, UT ranks 113th with in-state tuition and 136th with out-of-state tuition in na-tional ROI out of 852 tuition plans from private and pub-lic universities across the coun-try. The average cost of attend-ing UT for four to six years is roughly $96,000. The return on that investment, seen through salaries a UT alumnus will ac-crue over 30 years, will average about $696,000 in 2010 dollars. UT students paying out-of-state tuition must fork over about $163,000 when attending school. Their return on investment over 30 years will total $644,000.

In Texas, UT has the third-highest ROI behind Rice Univer-sity and Texas A&M University. Compared to only in-state and out-of-state public university tu-itions, UT ranks 38th and 52nd, respectively. Rice is ranked 22nd nationally with a 30-year ROI of $1,132,000, and Texas A&M’s in-state tuition is ranked 71st with a 30-year ROI of $816,000.

UT economics professor Dan-iel Hamermesh said the issue has been one of the most thor-oughly researched over the past 50 years. The study showed the annual return on investment for both in-state and out-of-state tu-ition hovers at about 12 and 10 percent, respectively.

“The fact is, it’s probably a better bet [to attend college] than it has been in many, many years,” Hamermesh said. “Look at the numbers here. The annu-al ROI is about right at about 11 or 12 percent; can you go put your money in the bank at 11 percent today? No. One

Netherlands BrazilVS.

Argentina GermanyVS.

Paraguay SpainVS.

UruguayGhanaVS.

By Michael Sherfield Daily Texan Staff

After two days of expert testimony and witness recollections, Day Three of former UT student Laura Hall’s resentencing trial for tampering with evidence and hindering apprehension in Jennifer Cave’s 2005 murder was an emotional one.

Jim Sedwick took the witness stand with tears welling in his eyes, trying to hold back his emotions as he told the jury about the day he told his children their sister was dead.

Across the courtroom, the rest of Cave’s family — who bear the last name Sedwick after Jennifer’s mother, Sharon, married Jim — sat with bowed heads, arms interlocked as tears trickled down their cheeks.

Following the replay of recorded calls Hall made while in prison to her family, Jim and Sha-ron Sedwick told how they found their daugh-ter in 2005, and the aftermath of her gruesome murder the morning of August 17, 2005.

Jim Sedwick, who found Cave’s body in the bathtub of Colton Pitonyak’s West Cam-pus apartment, took the stand first. He re-counted the family’s concern in not being able to contact Cave and driving to Austin to find her.

Pitonyak has been convicted of her murder and is serving a 55-year sentence, while Hall was found guilty of tampering with evidence and sentenced in 2007 to five years before an appeals court maintained her conviction but overturned her sentence.

After contacting police and failing to get into Pitonyak’s apartment through the door, Sedwick used the frame of a pair of sun-glasses to unlatch a window and entered the apartment at 10 p.m. on August 19, 2005.

With Sharon Sedwick, one of their daugh-

ters and a family friend outside, Jim Sedwick crept through the empty apartment, search-ing for his stepdaughter.

“I began to smell something,” Sedwick said,

Stories of cancer victims strengthen riders’ resolve to overcome obstacles

RACE continues on page 2

Streamlined operations save University money, cut back on water usage‘‘

1A

FRIDAY

Quote to note

‘Cholas por vida’Local artist Joey Seeman pays tribute to the cholas, pachucas, rucas and gang girls who have influenced his life’s work with a new art show at Rio Rita’s Cafe y Cantina.

— Taylor SteinbergStudent Event Center

president

WEEKEND

LIFE&ARTS PAGE 4

SATURDAYsoberRideCall 512-657-2999 for cabs offering free rides from 11 p.m. until 3 a.m.

SUNDAYWhat would Willie do?The Backyard hosts Willie Nelson’s annual Fourth of July Picnic, featuring Kris Kristofferson, Leon Russell and Los Lonely Boys, among others. Tickets cost $55 and the doors open at 10 a.m.

“[The] tour was great — so great that I

decided to write a commemorative

haiku for every city we were in. Canada treated us like kings. Chicago treated us like trash. Balance

was restored.”

The great American pastimeThe Round Rock Express takes on the Memphis Redbirds at the Dell Diamond at 7:05 p.m. Tickets cost $13.

Thinking outside the box Group looks into value of a bachelor’s degree at UT

Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff

Fiona Adams, 7, views images at the Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art on Thursday afternoon.

Victim’s parents grieve at Hall trial

Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff

Laura Hall stands in court for her resentencing trial at the Blackwell/Thurman Criminal Justice Center on Thursday. Hall was proven guilty of tampering with evidence in the murder case of Jennifer Cave in 2005.

Campus fountain hours to decreaseHospitality of strangers, challenge inspire cyclists

9 a.m.

World Cup

1:30 p.m.

World Cup9 a.m.

1:30 p.m.

BUDGET continues on page 2

HALL continues on page 2 EXPENSES continues on page 2

Mary Kang | Daily Texan Staff

Cassi Williams and Andrew Newell walk by the East Mall Fountain on Thursday. UT Facilities Services is shortening the operating hours for the fountains on the main campus.

Page 2: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

News Friday, July 2, 20102

TODAY’S WEATHER

High Low

81 75I didn’t even get to Looney Tunes land.

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old son to cancer and decided to move to Tahoe to start their lives over. They took us hik-ing to the beach and out on their boat.

I have seen the impact those two host families made on me, and I can see the impact our mission has had on them. Hope is a belief in a positive outcome, a feeling that some-thing desired may happen. To everyone we meet, our journey instills hope that there exist people who are fighting for a cure for cancer and that a cure will be found.

In the past week, we have traveled 591 miles and crossed two state borders. We went from Zion National Park in Utah through Nevada, and into South Lake Tahoe.

Utah was absolutely gor-geous, especially leaving Zion. We went through small towns and over mountains. I remem-ber crossing the border into Nevada. I participated in our traditional border race and we had a strong headwind, as al-ways, on the Rockies route. I was so happy to see the Ne-vada border sign, and the state itself was very rewarding.

The change in scenery from the first 20 days to Nevada was much needed. We start-ed climbing mountain ranges. My legs grew accustomed to the 10-mile climbs to the sum-mit and a twisting, steep, five-mile downhill. It makes it all worthwhile knowing that for every uphill, there comes a downhill.

Coming down these moun-tains is very fulfilling. It’s a time of relaxation, of coasting, and just taking in the breath-taking view of greenery and

snow-capped mountains.The last two days before Cal-

ifornia, the “promised land,” were very tough because of mountains, long mileage and

strong headwinds. I say this before every rest day, but I be-lieve I top myself every time: “I’ve never been so happy to get to a rest day!”

Race: Texas 4000 brings hope to more than just participants

CORRECTIONBecause of a reporting error

in a page-two news story on the Capital Metro Red Line, the rider projections should read “1,700 people each day,” not each month.

New financial aid regulations to take effect in November

The director of UT’s Office of Student Financial Services spoke with The Daily Texan on Thurs-day about how newly proposed regulations would affect the stu-dent financial aid process at the University.

In June, the Education Depart-ment proposed 500 pages of new regulations on student financial aid offices across the country, and many of the rules will affect UT when they are finalized Nov. 1.

Thomas Melecki, director of the Office of Student Financial Ser-vices, said the Education Depart-ment will provide the definition of a credit hour — a step never before

taken, but the proposed definition fits nicely with current UT policy.

The University will now be re-quired to publish the median debt incurred by students who gradu-ate from UT. Another regulation will require the student finance of-fices to verify the information stu-dents put in their Free Application for Federal Student Aid to prevent more financial aid going to stu-dents because of mistakes or delib-erate distortions on the form.

“For instance, someone might under-report their adjusted-gross income, or they might over-report the federal taxes that they [paid],” Melecki said. “[After the federal department flags suspicious infor-mation], that has the positive affect of keeping people from getting fi-nancial aid that they’re not eligi-ble for.”

— Collin Eaton

NEWS BRIEFLY

percent these days would be good. [A return of] 11 percent? Who can get an investment like that these days?”

Al Lee, director of quantita-tive analysis at PayScale, said the study looks at the total ex-penses a student would pay over four to six years, includ-ing tuition, room, board and fi-nancial aid. Lee said the cost of tuition is lowered — and ROI is increased — if a student gets a scholarship or a grant, but in-terest on a student loan would increase the cost of college and reduce the ROI.

“We have all heard the ar-guments that four-year degree graduates have an approxi-mately $1,000,000 lifetime’s earning advantage over high school graduates,” he said. “We realized we could make a much more precise estimate of ROI [than previous studies].”

According to the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics, in the 2009-2010 fiscal year, total an-nual expenses for in-state stu-dents were $22,874, and total expenses for out-of-state stu-dents were $43,950. Textbooks and supplies cost $860, and both on- and off-campus room and board cost $9,602.

At UT, in-state tuition in-creased from $7,630 in 2006-2007 to $8,930 in 2009-2010. From 2006-2007 to 2009-2010, out-of-state tuition increased from $20,364 to $30,006.

To help cover tuition, about 67 percent of UT students received financial aid this year, and 40 percent of the total financial aid came from student loans. Thom-as Melecki, director of UT’s Of-fice of Student Financial Servic-

es, said the median student loan debt coming out of college this year was $24,998.

“You get the money today to cover the cost of going to col-lege,” Melecki said. “Then, you pay it back over a period of years with interest, and the interest that gets tacked onto that is an extra expense of hav-ing gone to college. Having stu-dent loan debt tends to inflate what people pay to have gone to college.”

Hamermesh said there are more costs of college than just tuition and other expenses. For example, there is the “opportu-nity cost” of choosing to attend college rather than, for instance, not going to college and work-ing a full-time job instead.

“The bigger costs — especial-ly in regard to Harvard, Princ-eton, Yale and all those oth-er places — is what you might have earned had you gone out to work instead,” Hamermesh said. “For students today, those extra costs are lower because it’s so hard to get jobs, and that makes going to college more at-tractive, which is one of the rea-sons we find people going to college more in bad times, and especially going more to gradu-ate schools.”

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, while the May national unemployment rate was 9.7 percent, the unemploy-ment rate for people aged 20 to 24 was 15.2 percent and the unemployment rate for people aged 25 to 29 was 11.3 percent.

Although the economic cli-mate remains tepid for new college graduates, the long-term returns on investments for UT students will make short-term economic hard-ships worthwhile.

turning off the fountains for seven more hours a day will save one million gallons of water per year.

Lentz said that although the water in the fountains recirculates, over time, wa-ter evaporates and more has to be pumped into the foun-tains.

Rachel Aitkens, director of the Campus Environmental Center, said whatever the rea-sons were for turning off the

fountains, it is going to help the environment.

“I think it’s great [because] anything the University can do for the environment that also saves money is good for ev-erybody,” she said. “The foun-tains look great and they’re a really big part of UT, but they also drain money, so I think it’s great that they’re not going to be using them as often.”

Lentz said it has been a bal-ancing act, maintaining both the monetary interests of the department as well as the aes-

thetic appeal of the University.“Our fountains are one

of the things that make this campus attractive,” she said. “At least [ the Lit t lef ie ld, East Mall and LBJ Library fountains] are icons repre-sentative of the University. We want to continue to have the University be an attrac-tive place.”

Lentz said there is no set date for the reduced hours to end and that they wil l continue for the “foresee-able future.”

expenses: Higher education seen as beneficial investment

Danielle Villasana | Daily Texan file photo

The Sense Corp Texas 4000 for Cancer team goes on a training ride in Austin before embarking on its journey to Alaska. The riders are scheduled to arrive in Anchorage, Alaska, on August 13.

Budget: Cuts lead to conservation

Hall: Victim’s family gives testimony in proceedings

recalling how he methodically moved through Pitonyak’s apart-ment. “There was a door to my left. I flipped on the light switch, and there was a body in the bathtub.”

Sedwick said he started yell-ing for his family to call the police and ran out the front door.

“I went back in. I had to look one more time because I wasn’t believing what I had seen the first time,” he said. “I could identify the dress she was wearing, and her leg was in such a position that I could see her freckles.”

Jim Sedwick didn’t allow his wife Sharon to enter the apart-ment and see Cave’s mutilated body. After being shot to death,

Cave’s body was beheaded with a hacksaw and her hands were sev-ered at the wrists.

“Sharon asked me if it’s her, and I said, ‘I think so.’ She said, ‘What do you mean you think so? I’m going in,’” Sedwick said. “I said, ‘No, you’re not.’ I physically restrained her, and thank God she never went in there.”

After being interviewed by the Austin Police Department for most of the night following the discovery of Cave’s body, the Sedwicks drove to Laredo to tell their other children about Cave’s death in person.

For several days, Jim Sedwick and APD officials were the only ones who knew about the exten-sive mutilation until news orga-

nizations read the autopsy report and published accounts of her mutilation.

“Jennifer died quickly,” Sed-wick said, recounting what he told his family. “But after she died, someone cut off her head.”

Sharon Sedwick, visibly in shock, muted a scream in reaction to her husband’s testimony. She then took the stand.

“I just remember everybody screaming. I can hear the kids screaming, I can see Jim looking at me, and after that everything goes blank,” Sharon Sedwick later testi-fied. “It’s almost like it’s unreal. I still don’t believe her hands got put in. Every time I look at her grave I think, ‘I hope her hands made it. Did she have earrings? Were her

nails painted? Was she wearing a necklace? Did she have all her fin-gers, all her toes? Were her eyes open? Were her eyes closed?’”

Sharon Sedwick continued.“It’s evil. This is somebody who

is so evil,” she said. “After you cut her head, you shoot a gun in it? Why did you have to do that? I will never understand that; I will never understand that. She’s al-ready dead. You could have just left her alone.”

Between tears, Sharon Sedwick mirrored her husband’s story, pointing to the freckles on Cave’s feet as an identifying mark.

“They were angel kisses,” Sha-ron Sedwick said. “That’s what I always told her, because she hat-ed them.”

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AdvertisingDirector of Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jalah GoetteRetail Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Brad CorbettAccount Executive/Broadcast Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carter GossCampus/National Sales Consultant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joan BowermanAssistant to Advertising Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .C.J. SalgadoStudent Advertising Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kathryn AbbasStudent Advertising Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ryan Ford, Meagan GribbinStudent Account Executives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Rene Gonzales, Cody Howard, Josh Valdez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cameron McClure, Daniel Ruszkiewkz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Josh Phipps, Victoria KanickaClassified Clerks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Teresa LaiSpecial Editions, Editorial Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Elena WattsWeb Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Danny GroverSpecial Editions, Student Editors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kira TaniguchiGraphic Designer Interns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alyssa Peters, Suchada SirisapSenior Graphic Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Felimon Hernandez

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Permanent StaffEditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lauren WinchesterManaging Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ben WermundAssociate Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Francisco Marin Jr.Associate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Heath Cleveland, Douglas Luippold. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Player, Dan TreadwayNews Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Claire CardonaAssociate News Editors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pierre Bertrand, Kelsey Crow, Cristina HerreraSenior Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Collin Eaton, Nolan Hicks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Destinee Hodge, Michael SherfieldCopy Desk Chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vicky HoAssociate Copy Desk Chiefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Elyana Barrera, Kelsey CrowDesign Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Olivia HintonSenior Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Veronica Rosalez, Simonetta Nieto, Suchada SutasirisapSpecial Projects Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .Thu VoPhoto Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bruno MorlanAssociate Photo Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lauren GersonSenior Photographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tamir Kalifa, Mary Kang, Peyton McGee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Derek Stout, Danielle VillasanaLife&Arts Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mary LingwallAssociate Life&Arts Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Madeline CrumSenior Entertainment Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Addie Anderson, Katherine Kloc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mark Lopez, Julie Rene TranFeatures Entertainment Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kate Ergenbright, Gerald Rich Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dan HurwitzAssociate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Austin RiesSenior Sports Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will Anderson, Chris Tavarez, Bri Thomas Comics Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carolynn CalabreseMultimedia Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ryan MurphyAssociate Multimedia Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carlos MedinaSenior Videographer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joanna MendezEditorial Adviser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Doug Warren

Issue StaffPhotographers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Erika Rich, Caleb FoxLife&Arts Writers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Neha Aziz, Justin SedgwickColumnist. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page HalePage Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mark Nuncio, Veronica CarrCopy Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reese Rackets, Amy Hoang, Vivian GravesComics Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tavia Morra, Darian Dixon, Melissa Lu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Katie Carrell, Sammy Martinez. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Nick Jimenez, Betsy Cooper

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Page 3: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

Friday, July 2, 2010OpiniOn 3The Daily Texan

GALLERY

Editor-in-Chief: Lauren WinchesterPhone: (512) 232-2212E-mail: [email protected] Editors: Heath Cleveland Doug LuippoldDave Player Dan Treadway

Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange news stand where you found it.

REcYcLE!

E-mail your Firing Lines to [email protected]. Letters must be more than 100 and fewer than 300 words. The Texan reserves the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity and liability.

SUBMIT A FIRING LINE

vIEwpoINT

Golden standards

THE FIRING LINE

GALLERY

Pressure and perfection in collegeBy Paige Hall

Daily Texan Columnist

While many come to UT believing their grade point average and resume will be the most stressful aspect of college life, there are many unexpectedly nerve-racking experi-ences students discover upon arriving on the 40 Acres.

Just stroll through West Campus on any Friday night and listen to the parties going on. You probably wouldn’t consider casu-al parties an avenue for pressure, but there are more jitters at a party than attendees will ever let on. Many students feel tenser at par-ties than they ever will during an exam or job interview.

The sudden shift from predictable high school drama to rapid collegiate independence causes a frantic search for places to go, things to see and who to become. Just like any other new environment, when you enter college, you want to fit in.

Many girls buyout the Tyler ’s stock of Nike running shorts, and guys snap up some “authentic” $400.00 cowboy boots and fad-ed Wranglers jeans, just to show how proud they are of their country heritage. In high

school, people conformed differently. Ev-eryone was in a group, and everyone knew where they stood.

In college, the pressure evolves from who is in your prom group to who won’t em-barrass you at OU weekend, and choosing whether you’re going to that weekend’s par-ty becomes a decision to ensure you’re going to the right parties Thursday, Friday and Sat-urday night.

Essentially, many young women show up at UT and suddenly feel like the most impor-tant goal is being that perfect college girl. You know, the one that you feel you encounter con-stantly but have never actually met.

She is everywhere around campus — at Gregory Gym training for her fifth triathlon and at C. Jane buying that dress in the window that costs a month’s rent. She sits near you in class with her perfect notes that scream 4.0 GPA. You see her taking shots at parties, only to look out your window the next morning to see her jogging along the sidewalk. This sum-mer she’s probably biking to Alaska or solving the world’s energy crisis.

I’ve never met this perfect college girl, and none of us ever will — she doesn’t exist. Deep down we all know this, yet for some reason

we continue to fight it out to be the fittest, the best-dressed or the most fun at those parties. I would be terrified if I ever met a perfect hu-man being, especially a perfect college girl, be-cause I’m pretty sure she’d be an android.

The ability to embrace imperfections and stand out is what makes college what it is. With such an eccentric and massive student popula-tion to choose from, it strikes me as odd that so many seek the same ideal image. UT would be a prosaic place if everyone was the same.

For college-aged girls, trying to be the per-fect personality, size and the all-around perfect human being is a silly undertaking. Bettering yourself is admirable, but attempting perfec-tion is not.

Perhaps the desperate quest for perfection is about finding comfort in similarity. Everyone who’s fighting for the top spot or trying to get noticed has something in common — they all yearn for acceptance, love and, in some ways, idolization. These ventures are common, and they can be unhealthy, but hopefully those who participate find what they were looking for.

Perfection is vastly overrated. If you remem-ber that, you may be surprised who notices.

Hale is an undeclared senior.

Awkward encounters and new friendshipsDear class of 2014,One of the really cool things about UT is that the

range of insights, opinions and viewpoints of the 50,000-member student body are about as diverse as the students themselves. In the event that you read yesterday’s column, “Awkward encounters of the col-lege kind,” which suggested various ways to avoid uncomfortable interactions with acquaintances, allow me to provide a different take on your encounters.

One thing Meredith is dead right about is that UT is not as big as you think. You will run into friends and acquaintances all the time, and furthermore, it won’t be more than a couple years before you know virtually every other undergraduate at UT within one degree of separation. For every undergrad on campus, you’re probably acquainted with at least one other person who knows him or her.

However, I advise you not to consider everyone you meet at UT as “a potential entry into the awk-ward encounter database.” Think of it this way — every person you meet at UT is special. It’s cliche, but it’s true. Every one of them is intelligent, driven and passionate about something.

Though they may just seem like faces in the crowd as you pass them on your way to class, everybody has roots, a history and a story to tell.

And if you take a risk, put yourself out there and don’t shy away from being somebody’s friend, you may learn their story. Perhaps you’ll even get the privilege of becoming part of it. Your lifelong friends are out there right now, and beginning this fall, you’re going to start having opportunities to meet them — quite possibly in the places you’d least expect. So don’t do dumb things you know you’ll later regret, and you’ll soon find that in those awkward encoun-ters are the beginnings of countless new friendships.

Good luck and hook ‘em!

— Matt PortilloUT senior, Camp Texas counselor

Here’s to radical proposalsA recent edition of the UT LAW Magazine

proudly and deservedly celebrated the law school’s Actual Innocence Clinic. Thanks to that clinic’s efforts, state authorities reversed two wrongful 1997 convictions and freed two inno-cent men. The clinic, and the related nonprofit Texas Center for Actual Innocence, were created in 2003 by UT Criminal Defense Clinic director Robert Dawson, may he rest in peace.

As I applaud these students’ and professors’ efforts, I cannot help but think back to 1996-97. That school year, members of the University com-munity, including law students and members of The Daily Texan’s Editorial Board, publicly advocated for the establishment of a clinic based on the Cardozo Law School Innocence Project, founded four years before. These wide-eyed student activists communicated their proposal to President Robert Berdahl as well as Dean Michael Sharlot. The idea was taken under consideration. Subsequently, professor Dawson informed the students that their suggestion had been declined. We can only speculate as to whether the University’s recalcitrance was grounded in administrative inertia, insufficient funding or macro-institutional hesitance to rush in where even angels fear to tread. Thus, while praising the Actual Innocence Clinic’s recent tri-umph, I mourn six years of potential victories the University could have had if it were less fearful of radical proposals or being more ardent in its commitment to justice.

— David C. BarrancoUT law, class of 1997

Earn your merit raiseThursday’s Daily Texan article, “Merit-based pay

reduced to single award,” detailed UT’s intention to grant “merit raises” this fall for faculty and staff.

One staff member interviewed predicts that such raises would “breed resentment” among staff. How? The only individuals who would be resentful are those who don’t deserve a merit payment.

The staff member went on to say, “a lot of staff” would rather not have the merit increase, ostensibly to keep peace in their respective offices. Really? Show me a UT staff worker who is willing to turn down a raise in favor of clerical harmony, and I’ll show you someone who works in an office of one — that, or they just jumped on the UT turnip truck yesterday.

There has always been the longstanding complaint about how upper management in the UT ivory tower is paid too much. While I agree their salaries should be scrutinized and there is plenty of fat to cut there, they are paid the big(ger) bucks for their tremendous responsibilities. Those administrators also do some-thing many staff members fail to do: they compete.

Too many times I have known or heard of staff who believe that just because they show up for eight hours a day, do the absolute minimum of work assigned to them and don’t do anything more than what is expected of them, they deserve something. They do: their minimum salary. To say that someone like this deserves a merit increase is just ridiculous. It’s also unfair to those who show initiative and go the extra mile — the ones who compete.

If you’re the kind of person who thinks you deserve something for nothing, then sooner or later you’ll discover that in this economy you will have to compete — either for your own current job or a spot in the unemployment line.

— Philip A. GuerreroGraduate coordinator

Jackson School of Geosciences

Addressing diversityThursday’s column, “UT should have more

diverse student body,” is a lengthy example of the reflex-inducing nature of racial equity issues on this campus. In the article, Chelsea Adler sug-gested that the University should, through vari-ous student-run programs, reach out to young black students and expose them to the opportu-nities UT provides, since blacks are particularly underrepresented at our university.

The imbalance is pretty clear: Blacks make up about 11 percent of Texas’ population, but only 5 percent of UT students are black. Encouraging blacks, particularly black men, to attend college is a noble goal. A college degree has been cited as the best way to bridge the black-white income gap and it’s widely known that degree-holders of all races are less likely to be divorced, incarcer-ated and have children out of wedlock — all of which are major issues facing the black commu-nity. It’s clear that we, as a university, a state and a society, would be far better off if we aggressive-ly pursued programs like the ones described in Adler’s column and begin actively reaching out to underrepresented student populations.

When approaching issues of racial inequity, why not start from square one? Affirmative action isn’t the only answer to correct such imbalances. I’m ashamed to see simple issues of racial imbalance always be framed by affirmative action. I tip my hat to Adler for continuing to bring this important issue to our attention.

— John BradyCivil engineering graduate student

Transportation director, Student Government

LEGALESEOpinions 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 ad-ministration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Stu-dent Media Board of Operating Trustees. All Tex-an editorials are written by The Daily Texan’s Edito-rial Board.

Schools outside Texas found themselves a little squeamish about where on their educational path Texas’ new textbook standards could take them, and rightfully so. Texas is the sec-ond largest purchaser of new textbooks in a $7 billion text-book market, so most textbook companies cater their prod-ucts to Texas’ standards. Since many states can only afford to pick up second-hand textbooks, there was a good chance that the State Board of Education’s “rewritten history” was headed into the classrooms and minds of students way beyond Tex-as’ borders.

But fortunately for those students and ours, California, the largest purchaser of textbooks, decided to weigh in.

In May, California state Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco) authored SB 1451, a bill that would prohibit textbooks reflect-ing Texas’ malapropos standards from entering California‘s classrooms. The bill claims that the SBOE’s changes reflect a “sharp departure from widely accepted historical teachings.” The bill is well on its way to becoming a law. Last month, the assembly committee of the California State Senate released its amendments to the bill, bringing it one step closer to reality.

Who can blame California? The SBOE has done everything from propagate its members’ belief that the founding fathers did not intend for there to be a separation of church and state, to changing “democracy” to “constitutional republic.” Appar-ently, the SBOE thinks it is more qualified than the Supreme Court to interpret the establishment clause.

One can also see the politically-biased revisions California is trying to avoid in the SBOE’s new treatment of social issues. Prior to the changes, Texas students were to “analyze social is-sues such as the treatment of minorities, child labor, growth of cities and problems of immigrants.”

Thankfully, the SBOE rescued our children from such leftist language that could have been written by Trotsky himself.

The new standards equate the hardships of minority groups to “the struggles” faced by the “philanthropy of industrialists” and the Social Gospel — an obscure Christian ideology.

If the only thing you know about the struggles of the Social Gospel and the philanthropy of industrialists is that they’re both mostly unheard of, and you don’t know why they are as important to U.S. history as the oppression of women, minori-ties and children, then you obviously don’t know the facts, ac-cording to Kelly Shackelford, president and CEO of Liberty In-stitute, a conservative political organization.

In a prominent editorial titled, “Texas Textbook Critics Just Can’t Handle the Truth” published last month on FoxNews.com, Shackelford defends the board against misinformed accusa-tions that “liberal editorial boards” are spreading around.

Unfortunately, Shackelford doesn’t practice what she preach-es and she misrepresents most of the “liberal” criticisms.

In a response to the allegations that Thomas Jefferson was removed from the standards because the conservative board members didn’t like his role in the development in the separa-tion of church and state, Shackelford writes, “The truth? Jeffer-son is in the standards five times, second in prominence only to George Washington, and the Declaration of Independence he authored appears another 25 times.”

Shackelford’s defense would have been a clever response had she not misinterpreted her own overgeneralization. In fact, Jefferson’s philosophical contributions to our nation’s founding were removed from the standards, and the “liberal” editorial boards were objecting to Jefferson’s removal in that respect (so are we), not his removal from the book entirely, as Shackelford’s response implies.

But the far right’s petulant rabble-rousing won’t preserve its partisan misrepresentation of our nation’s history.

Because California stepped in, textbook manufacturers are going to be catering to the Golden State’s needs over the Lone Star’s, and that means that the SBOE’s historical interference will either be nonexistent or severely mitigated in the text-books in Texas schools. After all, Texas schools can still pur-chase books that don’t conform with up to 50 percent of the new standards, and the SBOE can’t alter history to that ex-treme of a degree.

With California’s golden influence, maybe we’ll finally see Texas climb up the education ladder. At least the SBOE left us in a situation where the only direction was up. We’re in 36th place compared to the rest of the 50 nifty for graduation rates, 49th for verbal SAT scores and 46th for math SAT scores. Don’t blame them, though; the board members weren’t trying to pre-serve education, they were trying to preserve patriotism and traditional family values.

— Heath Cleveland for the editorial board

GALLERY

Page 4: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

Life&Arts Life&Arts Editor: Mary LingwallE-mail: [email protected]: (512) 232-2209www.dailytexanonline.com

The Daily Texan

4Friday, July 2, 2010

Editor’s note: This is the third in-stallment of a weekly series that ex-plores the musical tastes of notable

Austinites and UT students.

By Mary LingwallDaily Texan Staff

Taylor Steinberg is a busy man. Last year, as chair of the Music and Entertainment Committee at UT, he

booked Girl Talk and White Den-im for semester’s 40 Acres Fest. A rising UT senior, Steinberg is now the president of the Student Events Center and is interning with C3 Presents, an events firm responsible for the Austin City Limits Mu-sic Festival and Lolla-palooza. But work is far from what defines Steinberg, whose favor-ite things include going to shows, playing the drums, riding his mountain bike and eat-ing at Fricano’s Deli.

During this year’s South By Southwest, Steinberg started play-

ing drums for local band The Sour Notes, who afterward went on its first North American tour.

“[The] tour was great — so great that I decided to write a com-

memorative haiku for ev-ery city we were in,” Steinberg said. “Can-ada treated us like kings. Chicago treated us like trash. Balance

was restored.”Back in Austin, gearing

up for The Sour Notes’ July 8 show with Mother Falcon at The Parish, Steinberg enjoys his favorite Austin beer, Independence Brewery Co.’s Bootlegger Brown Ale, and his

favorite Austin meal, Fricano’s “The Ainsworth” sandwich.

“I always get the Ainsworth,” Steinberg said. “Whoever is work-ing there just makes whatever the hell they feel like. And I’m the least picky eater that I know.”

Apart from his culinary prefer-ences, Steinberg’s taste in music is equally eclectic as he listens to a va-riety of bands, including local in-die prog-rockers White Denim and sludge-metal band The Melvins.

Right now, some of Steinberg’s favorite tracks are “Misnomer” by Four Tet, The Antlers’ “Kettering” and Ghost Town Electric’s “Atom-ic Temple.”

Music man knows no ‘sour note’Tamir Kalifa | Daily Texan Staff

Taylor Steinberg is the president of the Student Events Center and an intern with C3 Presents, the company responsible for the Austin City Limits Music Festival. His favorite tracks include “Kettering” by The Antlers and Four Tet’s “Misnomer.”

THE A-LIST

By Mary Lingwall

Band’s alt-rockers strive to produce cinematic sound

By Neha AzizDaily Texan Staff

Local alternative rock band Sounds Under Radio has been making a name for itself since 2007, with two independently released albums under its belt: Cinematica in 2008, and My Com-munist Heart in 2010. Though still unsigned, the band has al-ready been featured in “Spider-Man 3” and The CW’s latest hit, “The Vampire Diaries.” Tonight, Sounds Under Radio is getting back to its Austin roots with a show at Stubb’s Bar-B-Que.

Lead singer and front man Lang Freeman began his musi-cal career at UT, where he stud-ied English and met his future bandmate, Bradley Oliver.

“We both lived at Moore-Hill Dormitory,” Freeman said. “We each played with different bands that were around Austin, and eventually decided to form our own. The other two members came into the picture as well, and we focused on building the perfect band.”

Sounds Under Radio cites The Beatles, Radiohead and Nirva-na as influences on its Brit-rock sound, which the band members describe as cinematic-infused with centered pop.

“The guys and I are just huge fans of music. We listen to [a] wide variety of music, from Muse to Led Zeppelin,” Freeman said. “We like a lot of things, so we let that influence the music that we create. We have so many differ-ent tastes. In our van right now, we have Queens of the Stone Age and a local band from San Antonio called Nothing More.”

Though the band’s success had been escalating, there was a particular moment when Free-man knew that they had made it big.

“There was a show that we played, and I was looking out at the audience. There was not a single friend or person that I knew, all I saw were people singing the lyrics along with me,” he said.

Sounds Under Radio was the only unsigned band to be fea-tured on the “Spider-Man 3” soundtrack, with its song “Por-trait of a Summer Thief.” On “The Vampire Diaries,” the band was prominently played in a powerful, key scene in the series.

“The music supervisor for ‘The Vampire Dairies’ had known us and heard us play a few times,” Freeman said. “He had mentioned that there was a scene in an upcoming episode that needed to have music add-ed to it. He asked if we had any-thing, and we gave him a bunch of stuff. In the end, he picked ‘All You Wanted,’ and the song had fit in so perfectly with the scene. I had watched the episode and since have become a fan of the series.”

With regard to audience ex-pectations, Sounds Under Radio ultimately aims to put on a elab-orate performance.

“Each show is a little different from the last,” Freeman said. “It does not matter how small the venue is, or if there are 50 peo-ple in the audience — we put on a stadium-style rock show.”

evenT preview sounds under radio

wHAT: Sounds Under Radio with Naked Empire, Red Line Chemistry and The Early Republic

wHere: Stubb’s Bar-B-Que, 801 Red River St.

wHen: Tonight at 9

TiCKeTS: $8 in advance; $10 at the door

weeKend piCKS

Baseball. Apple pie. Bruce Springsteen. These classic staples of American culture will be in full force this coming Independence Day. Just like nothing screams America like eating apple pie while listening to Bruce Spring-steen at a baseball game, nothing screams “July Fourth” like fire-works, and Austin will have plen-ty of national pride with a num-ber of dazzling fireworks dis-plays and celebrations.

Don’t make this holiday just another day in the backyard, grilling packaged hot dogs. Head over to any of these entertaining events and revel in your patrio-tism, Texas-style.

Doc’s Motorworks Bar and GrillDuring the day, certain restau-

rants will host their own celebra-tions with good eats, including Doc’s Motorworks Bar and Grill on South Congress Avenue. The old auto-repair-shop-turned-res-taurant will be flowing with do-mestic brews and drink specials,

capped off by a breathtaking fire-works show over Lady Bird Lake.

wHere: Doc’s Motorworks Bar and Grill, 1123 S. Congress Ave.wHen: 11 a.m.-midnightHOw MUCH: Cost of menu items

— Justin Sedgwick

Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic

Austin is known for its music scene, and nobody embodies the laid-back Texas persona quite like Willie Nelson. The Austin-bred musician will be returning for his annual Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic at the Backyard at Bee Cave. Performers include Kris Kristofferson, Johnny Bush, David Allen Coe, Randy Rogers Band, Los Lonely Boys and Asleep at the Wheel, among others. Food from local restaurants will be sold on-site, and each person is allowed to bring two sealed bottles of water. If you’d like to soak in the relaxed country-music vibes with Wil-lie Nelson & Co., be sure to buy a ticket soon as the picnic may sell out quickly.

wHere: The Backyard at Bee Cave, 13472 Bee Cave Pkwy.wHen: Doors at 10 a.m. HOw MUCH: $55 at thebackyard.net

— J.S.

The Final BUNtier: Fourth Annual Veggie Hot Dog Eating ContestFrom “I Love Mike Litt,” the

guys who helped organize the third annual Treasure City Thrift Recycled Fashion Show, comes “The Final BUNtier: Fourth Annu-al Veggie Hot Dog Eating Contest” at the Tiniest Bar in Texas.

Registration is still open for the solo or doubles categories for a chance to win a $450 Resolution Garden to grow your own veggies and herbs. One free veggie dog is included in the price of the ticket for noncontestants.

There will also be free Nad-aMoo! ice cream and candy-bar toppings to help you cool down this Independence Day. Attendees can also participate in a best cos-tume and sign contest, and prizes will be awarded to whoever dress-es the most otherworldly for this

intergalactic-themed competition. Special guests include Austin’s own vegan firefighters.

wHere: The Tiniest Bar in Texas, 817 W. Fifth St.wHen: Doors open at 1 p.m.HOw MUCH: $5

— Gerald Rich

Fourth of July Celebration at Seaholm Power Plant

The best of the city’s Fourth of July celebrations are downtown — first and foremost, with an elaborate fireworks display at the Seaholm Power Plant, which was modified from an electrical power plant into a concert and event venue.

This annual celebration is great for picnicking families and will feature a prime view of down-town, set against the backdrop of the fireworks at sunset. Bands on the lineup include T Bird and the Breaks, The Bright Light Social Hour and ‘Til We’re Blue or De-stroy. Donations from the event will benefit Anthropos Arts, a nonprofit based in East Austin that works to bring music educa-tion to disadvantaged youth.

wHere: Seaholm Power Plant, 214 West Ave.wHen: 4 p.m.HOw MUCH: Free; RSVP at july4thaustin.com

— J.S.

H-E-B Austin Symphony July Fourth Concert and Fireworks

The H-E-B Austin Symphony July Fourth Concert will be held at Auditorium Shores, where the Austin Symphony Orchestra will be performing patriotic songs. The event will conclude with the Texas National Guard Salute Bat-tery shooting off 75 mm Howitzer cannons as the “1812 Overture” is performed beneath skies filled with fireworks. Concessions will be available on-site.

wHere: Auditorium Shores at the Long Center for the Performing Arts, 701 W. Riverside Dr.wHen: 8:30-10 p.m.HOw MUCH: Free

— J.S.

Brew-B-Que at Buda City ParkOr, you could make the drive

30 minutes south to the Brew-B-Que at Buda City Park. The event boasts extensive beer and barbe-cue samplings and talented Tex-as musicians all afternoon. Teams may register for drinking games such as beer pong, quarters and flip cup. Also, brewmasters will give lectures on the process of cre-ating their most flavorful beers.

wHere: Buda City Park, 204 San Antonio St., BudawHen: 11 a.m.-11 p.m.HOw MUCH: $15 at the gate

— J.S.

ON THE WEB:Listen to his full

playlist and watch the video interview

@dailytexanonline.com

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The Daily Texan

Caleb Fox | Daily Texan Staff

The Long Center for the Performing Arts will host the H-E-B Austin Symphony July Fourth Concert and Fireworks at Auditorium Shores. The event will end with a performance of the “1812 Overture.”

Sparks to fly during Fourth of July celebrations

patrick Meredith | Austin American-Statesman

Left to right, Sounds Under Radio band members Doug Wilson, Bradley Oliver, Lang Freeman and Sonny Sanchez sit inside The Driskill Hotel on Wednesday. The Austin-based band will play a show tonight at Stubb’s Bar-B-Que.

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Page 5: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

COMICSFriday, July 2, 2010 5

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Page 6: The Daily Texan 7-2-10

SPORTS Sports Editor: Dan HurwitzE-mail: [email protected]: (512) 232-2210www.dailytexanonline.com

THE DAILY TEXANTHE DAILY TEXAN

6Friday, July 2, 2010

SIDELINE

MLBAmerican League

Athletics 8Orioles 1

Rays 4Twins 4

Rangers 0LA Angels 1

Blue Jays 1Indians 6

Mariners 2NY Yankees 4

National League

Mets 1Nationals 2

Phillies 2Pirates 3

Brewers 4 Cardinals 1

Giants 3Rockies 7

Astros 3Padres 0

Reds 3Chi Cubs 2

SPORTS BRIEFLY

5463

7281

6A SPTS

Like the majority of Texas students, I had the privilege of growing up in the ’90s.

The ’90s was a decade full of Clinton, Backstreet Boys, Mi-chael Jordan and “Seinfeld.” In other words, the ’90s were awe-some. The awesomeness of this decade comes from the enter-tainment that was available for children at the time.

And while Doug Funnie, Tommy Pickles, a wallaby named Rocko, Arnold and the Power Rangers provided kids with great memories from the little screen, the ultimate source of entertainment came from the sports movies that were geared toward kids.

So many life lessons were learned through these movies — from Benny “The Jet” Rodri-guez showing us to accept the strange, loner kid in “The Sand-lot,” to Charlie Conway teach-ing us to fly together in “The Mighty Ducks.”

No one can get enough of seeing the ultimate underdog go against the odds to defeat the bigger, better, stronger op-ponents. Whether it’s the Loo-ney Tunes characters upsetting the Monstars in “Space Jam,” or the “Angels in the Outfield” winning the pennant behind the arm of Mel Clark, people can’t get enough of success stories.

The ’90s provided us with these moments. And yes, there are other eras that have produced fine children’s sports movies, but none follow the theme of humor-

ous movies for the entire family that the ’90s brought us. As I go back and re-watch some of my favorite movies from my child-hood, I catch new jokes every time and sometimes get a little surprised by some of the adult humor in these films.

We all know the best sports movies range from “The Field of Dreams” to “Hoosiers” to “Bull Durham.” That has been debat-ed forever. But what hasn’t been debated as much is what the best kids’ sports movie is.

Therefore, we at The Dai-ly Texan would like to find out what the best kids’ sports movie ever is. With the help of you, the reader, in a few weeks we will have a champion.

Now, before you ask where your favorite movie is, let me give you our guidelines on what a kids’ sports movie is:

1. The central focus of the movie must involve some type of physical activity which can be considered a sport.

2. The movie must be rated ei-ther PG or G.

3. The movie must either in-volve children being involved with the participation of the sport, involve cartoon characters (Madonna and Rosie O’Donnell included) or be made by Disney or Nickelodeon.

The 32-movie bracket will in-clude four categories:

1. Baseball2. Basketball/Football3. Soccer/Hockey4. Wild CardAfter determining each week’s

winner via online voting, we will be down to a final four and an eventual champion.

Expect upsets and a Cinderella story or two.

The Daily Texan sports staff is your selection committee. After countless hours of de-liberating the seeds, we feel like we have chosen the top 32 movies and have fairly seed-ed them.

So dust off the old VCR and spend the next rainy day bring-ing back your favorite child-hood memories.

Strap on your P.F. Flyers, get out your lucky egg, practice your triple-deke or knucklepuck and try to teach your dog how to play basketball.

But most importantly, remem-ber to vote. Every vote really does count here, and any mov-ie is capable of taking home the championship.

It’s up to you if an eight-seed upsets a one. In the words of “Angels in the Outfield’s” J.P., “It can happen.”

By Dan HurwitzDaily Texan Columnist

SUMMER MOVIE MADNESS

Batter up: Vote for the best kids’ sports movie of all time

“The Sandlot” (1993)Starring: Tom Guiry, Mike Vitar, Denis

Leary and James Earl JonesRated: PG

The summer of 1962 has just be-gun, and Scotty Smalls is new in town. Referred to as an “L7 Weenie,” Smalls stumbles upon a group of boys who always play baseball at a sandlot. Not even knowing how to throw a baseball, Smalls is fortu-nate enough that Benny “The Jet” Rodriguez accepts him and give him a chance. Little do they know that Smalls would get into the big-gest pickle of his life after hitting his stepdad’s Babe Ruth-signed base-ball over the fence into the home of “The Beast.”

“Rookie of the Year” (1993)Starring: Thomas Ian Nicholas

and Gary BuseyRated: PG

Who knew a broken arm could be such a good thing? After Henry Ro-wengartner breaks his arm and has the cast removed, his doctor tells him his tendons healed a little too tight, turning his arm into a cannon. Ro-wengartner shows off his skills after catching a home run at Wrigley Field and throwing it back to the catch-er from the outfield bleachers. Once the Chicago Cubs see his rocket of an arm, they immediately sign him and make his dreams of becoming a ma-jor league pitcher come true.

“Ed” (1996)Starring: Matt LeBlanc, Jack Warden,

James Caviezel and Jayne BrookRated: PG

In the unlikeliest of friendships, Jack “Deuce” Cooper becomes best friends with his teammate and full- grown chimpanzee, Ed. Growing up on a farm with a promising career as a pitcher, Jack chokes when peo-ple watch him play, and his career is in trouble. That is, until Ed, who was originally the team mascot, joins the team as the third baseman. The two become the best of friends as Ed helps Jack get confidence and courage for the game and the ones he loves.

“A League of Their Own” (1992)Starring: Tom Hanks, Geena Davis,

Rosie O’Donnell and MadonnaRated: PG

Born and raised doing farmwork, sis-ters Dottie Hinson and Kit Keller get the chance to play for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League dur-ing World War II. With a drunk man-ager, Jimmy Dugan, this new type of team, with girls who “come from cities near and far,” brings together tomboys, flirts and real talent — especially from Dottie. Kit grows frustrated with living in her sister’s shadow, so Dottie switch-es teams, only to meet up with her sis-ter in the dramatic finale.

“The Rookie” (2002)Starring: Dennis Quaid and

Rachel GriffithsRated: G

This tale of baseball redemption, based on a true story, follows Jimmy Morris, a high school baseball coach with a hot arm and faded dreams of playing in the majors. Morris prom-ises his team that if they win dis-trict, he’ll try out for “the show,” and when the boys manage a mi-raculous comeback, the 35-year-old coach must attend an open camp. He joins the Tampa Bay Devil Rays af-ter scouts notice his ability to pitch a 98-mph fastball, and after toiling in the minors for a spell, Morris gets called up to the big leagues. Despite his age, Morris gets one last chance to prove he has what it takes.

“Little Big League” (1994)Starring: Luke Edwards, John Ashton

and Timothy BusfieldRated: PG

Some boys get a brand-new bike when they turn 12 years old; Billy Hey-wood got the Minnesota Twins. After his grandfather’s death, Billy becomes the owner and general manager of the last-place team. Despite the Twins’ aversion to working for a preteen, Billy slowly gains their trust by helping turn the Twins into a divisional contender. Things take a turn for the worse when the team hits a midseason slump and star slugger Lou Collins gets benched, but this wunderkind has one more ace up his sleeve.

“Angels in the Outfield” (1994)Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tony

Danza, Christopher Lloyd and Danny Glover

Rated: PG

When a widower father jokes that his family will be together again when the lowly California Angels win the pen-nant, his son, Roger Bomman, starts praying for his favorite baseball team. Living in foster care after his moth-er’s death, Roger gets his prayers an-swered as he starts seeing real angels that are helping his prayers come true. Suddenly, his favorite ballclub starts making a title run, thanks to a little di-vine intervention.

PLAY BALL: GO ONLINE TO VOTE dailytexanonline.com!

“The Bad News Bears” (1976)Starring: Walter Matthau, Chris

Barnes and Tatum O’NealRated: PG

Former ballplayer Morris Butter-maker takes up pool cleaning and beer drinking after the end of his baseball career, but eventually decides to earn some extra cash by coaching a little- league team, the Bears. This group of misfits lacks talent, and in desperation, Buttermaker recruits pitching sensa-tion Amanda Whurlitzer, the daugh-ter of Buttermaker’s ex-girlfriend, and Kelly Leak, the badass 13-year-old with a motorcycle. The unique group comes together as Buttermaker leads out of the cellar of the league.

Former Longhorn Chris Simms arrested on DUI charges

Police say Tennessee Titans backup quarterback Chris Simms told them he’d been smoking marijuana before he was stopped while driving Thursday — but he says he was just talking about cigarettes.

Simms, a son of former New York Giants quarterback Phil Simms, called the case against him “very weak” as he left a Manhattan courthouse after his arraignment on charges of driv-ing while impaired by drugs.

“I think it speaks for itself,” Simms, 29, said as he walked to a waiting car, with his pregnant wife on his arm. Released with-out bail, he’s due back in court Aug. 23 on the misdemeanor and traffic-violation charges.

Police and prosecutors said Simms slurred his words, had bloodshot eyes and smelled of marijuana when stopped early Thursday at a downtown Man-hattan police checkpoint, with his wife, Danielle, in the car.

According to a court com-plaint, Simms told an officer he’d been “smoking marijuana in the car earlier.”

But Simms’ lawyer, Nathan Semmel, said the quarterback didn’t say that, and wouldn’t do it.

“My client never admitted to smoking marijuana that night. He admitted to smoking ciga-rettes that night,” Semmel said.

He called it “absurd” to sug-gest that Simms would drive impaired while his wife, eight months pregnant with their sec-ond child, was riding along.

“There’s nothing in his record, whatsoever, that suggests that he would be that reckless,” Sem-mel said.

He suggested two other un-identified passengers in the car’s back seat “might be the sourc-es of the odor” of marijuana that police reported.

The New York Police Depart-ment had no immediate com-ment.

If convicted, Simms could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. He didn’t take prosecutors up on an offer to plead guilty Thursday in exchange for a $500 fine, three days of community service and a six-month license revocation.

The Titans, in a statement, said they were aware of the case and gathering more information about it.

Simms has started 16 games during his six-year NFL career and is in his second stint with the Titans. He came to Tennes-see in 2008 after being released by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, then returned to the Titans af-ter playing for the Denver Bron-cos last year as an unrestricted free agent. He was a third-round draft pick by Tampa Bay in 2003.

In 2006, Simms had emergen-cy surgery to remove his spleen, which ruptured during a game against Carolina.

His father is now an announc-er and analyst for CBS Sports and led the Giants to two Super Bowls, playing 14 seasons with the team.

— The Associated Press

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