8
Students Against Guns on Campus hosted a rally in the West Mall on Tuesday opposing House Bill 937, which, if passed, would allow guns in classrooms of public universities. e rally aimed to show Texas legislators that the ma- jority of students believe the bill would make campuses more dangerous, according to Jordan Pahl, Middle Eastern studies senior and a founding member of the anti-campus carry organization. “Guns really alter the atmo- sphere of a university,” Pahl said. “Our University is already a safe place. e idea that students need their guns on campus to keep them safe is not [right] and … would not change [cam- puses] for the better.” e bill is currently being considered in the Texas House. If passed, HB 937 would allow licensed handgun carriers to The Moody College of Communication helped ed- ucate local musicians about hearing loss and provided them with custom earplugs at the UT Speech and Hear- ing Center on Tuesday. The program, which is a collaboration between Estes Audiology Hearing Centers, the Health Alli- ance for Austin Musicians (HAAM) and UT’s De- partment of Communica- tion Sciences and Disor- ders, gives local musicians who are insured through HAAM accurate hearing tests and individual coun- seling about how to protect their hearing. Soriya Estes, president and founder of Estes Audi- ology, said the main draw for musicians to come to the center is to have access to an affordable set of custom, filtered earplugs. Custom earplugs usually cost more than $200, but On Sundays, social work senior Denisse Calde- ron wakes up and visits the Austin State Supported Living Center (ASSLC) to meet with residents and accompany them to a church service. “My work at the ASSLC has really influenced my life greatly,” Calderon said. “Since I’ve volunteered with them for about four years now, I have gotten to know a lot of their mannerisms and quirks and things I can do to really put on a smile on their faces or calm them down if they feel [uncomfortable] at Mass.” Calderon is one of around 50 UT students and mem- bers of other University groups who set aside their time to volunteer at the ASSLC, a home for the el- derly with a focus on those with mental disabilities. But the center may close by August 2017 aſter the Texas Senate passed a bill earlier this month with a provision to close the ASSLC aſter nearly a century of operation. If the House approves the bill and Gov. Greg Abbott signs it, the center may close its doors permanently over the next several years, and the more than 200 residents who currently live there would be relocated to other care facilities. University volunteers at the center attend and help throw recreational events, Aſter 13 years directing the Longhorn Band, Rob- ert M. Carnochan will leave the University this summer to become the University of Miami’s wind ensembles director. Carnochan said he chose to move on to Mi- ami to focus on composing music and conducting the wind ensemble. Carnochan said the band has made minor changes to some of its shows, but its core aspects have remained the same during his tenure as director. “I give a lot of credit back to Vince DiNino and his building of the band from 1955–1975 to create what exists now,” Carnochan said. “My job is more of main- taining it. I’m a steward here of carrying on the tra- dition of the greatness that was developed during the DiNino years.” Carnochan said he wants the band to know that LHB members need to work to- gether to carry on a tradition of excellence into the future. “is is not my band,” Carnochan said. “It’s the University of Texas band, and all of us have the privi- lege of being involved with it. We need to respect it, and we need to carry on the great traditions.” Carnochan said his big- gest achievement while di- recting the band was bring- ing people together from all walks of life. “e group is so diverse with so many people from different walks of life,” Car- nochan said. “[My biggest achievement is] trying to get all of those people from all over the state of Texas and work toward a common goal and, most importantly, to act with great class and respect toward the institution itself.” Director of bands Jerry Junkin said he will miss Car- nochan’s warm personality. “He was a very stable influence,” Junkin said. “Certainly we hope to find those qualities in ad- dition to his obviously strong musicianship.” Junkin said the next band director has not been selected yet. Garrett Maples, electri- Friday is the last day for in- structors to create a summer course on Blackboard, in what will be the last semester for the online system before the Uni- versity makes the full transition to Canvas. e University officially be- gan phasing out Blackboard, another learning management system, in fall 2013. In the fall 2015 semester, Blackboard will no longer be an option, and Canvas will be used entirely in its place. “Our goal is to have every- one on Canvas this summer,” said Brad Englert, chief infor- mation officer for UT Infor- mation Technology Services. “We’ve been reaching out and using support to help with the transition.” Of the roughly 3,000 in- structors using a learning management system on cam- pus, 222 courses were housed on Blackboard this semester, Englert said. Drew ornley, a lecturer in the McCombs School of Sign President Powers farewell and help support student media. Only $10 for students visit farewellpowers.com to find out more Wednesday, April 29, 2015 @thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900 dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid SPORTS PAGE 6 COMICS PAGE 7 LIFE&ARTS PAGE 8 Blackboard option to be erased Friday Students organize anti-campus carry rally CAMPUS By Sam Ketterer @sam_kett Courtesy of Canvas Friday is the last day for for instructors to request summer courses on Blackboard before the University fully transitions to Canvas. BLACKBOARD page 2 CAMPUS By Sebastian Herrera @SebasAHerrera Joshua Guerra | Daily Texan Staff Public health professor Alfred McAlister was one of two professors who spoke at the Students Against Guns on Campus rally in the West Mall on Tuesday afternoon. RALLY page 3 CAMPUS Hearing clinic on campus fits local musicians with earplugs CAMPUS Longhorn Band director leaves to lead Miami wind ensemble By Lauren Florence @laurenreneeflo By Caleb Wong @caleber96 Mariana Gonzalez | Daily Texan Staff Paige Juarez, local audiologist at Estes Audiology, helps make a custom earplug mold for local musician Walker Lukens on Tuesday morning. MUSICIANS page 2 BAND page 3 STATE Senate bill to cut funds for assisted living homes By Eleanor Dearman & Rachel Lew @thedailytexan CENTERS page 3

The Daily Texan 2015-04-29

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The Wednesday, April 29 2015, edition of The Daily Texan.

Citation preview

Students Against Guns on Campus hosted a rally in the West Mall on Tuesday opposing House Bill 937, which, if passed, would allow guns in classrooms of public universities.

The rally aimed to show Texas legislators that the ma-jority of students believe the bill would make campuses more dangerous, according to Jordan Pahl, Middle Eastern studies senior and a founding member of the anti-campus carry organization.

“Guns really alter the atmo-sphere of a university,” Pahl said. “Our University is already a safe place. The idea that students need their guns on campus to keep them safe is not [right] and … would not change [cam-puses] for the better.”

The bill is currently being considered in the Texas House. If passed, HB 937 would allow licensed handgun carriers to

The Moody College of Communication helped ed-ucate local musicians about hearing loss and provided them with custom earplugs at the UT Speech and Hear-ing Center on Tuesday.

The program, which is a collaboration between Estes Audiology Hearing Centers, the Health Alli-ance for Austin Musicians (HAAM) and UT’s De-partment of Communica-tion Sciences and Disor-ders, gives local musicians who are insured through HAAM accurate hearing tests and individual coun-seling about how to protect their hearing.

Soriya Estes, president

and founder of Estes Audi-ology, said the main draw for musicians to come to the center is to have access to an affordable set

of custom, filtered earplugs. Custom earplugs usually cost more than $200, but

On Sundays, social work senior Denisse Calde-ron wakes up and visits the Austin State Supported Living Center (ASSLC) to meet with residents and accompany them to a church service.

“My work at the ASSLC has really influenced my life greatly,” Calderon said. “Since I’ve volunteered with them for about four years now, I have gotten to know a lot of their mannerisms and quirks and things I can do to really put on a smile on their faces or calm them down if they feel [uncomfortable] at Mass.”

Calderon is one of around 50 UT students and mem-bers of other University groups who set aside their time to volunteer at the ASSLC, a home for the el-derly with a focus on those with mental disabilities.

But the center may close by August 2017 after the Texas Senate passed a bill earlier this month with a provision to close the ASSLC after nearly a century of operation.

If the House approves the bill and Gov. Greg Abbott signs it, the center may close its doors permanently over the next several years, and the more than 200 residents who currently live there would be relocated to other care facilities.

University volunteers at the center attend and help throw recreational events,

After 13 years directing the Longhorn Band, Rob-ert M. Carnochan will leave the University this summer to become the University of Miami’s wind ensembles director. Carnochan said he chose to move on to Mi-ami to focus on composing music and conducting the wind ensemble.

Carnochan said the band has made minor changes to some of its shows, but its core aspects have remained the same during his tenure as director.

“I give a lot of credit back to Vince DiNino and his building of the band from 1955–1975 to create what exists now,” Carnochan said.

“My job is more of main-taining it. I’m a steward here of carrying on the tra-dition of the greatness that was developed during the DiNino years.”

Carnochan said he wants the band to know that LHB members need to work to-gether to carry on a tradition of excellence into the future.

“This is not my band,” Carnochan said. “It’s the University of Texas band, and all of us have the privi-lege of being involved with it. We need to respect it, and we need to carry on the great traditions.”

Carnochan said his big-gest achievement while di-recting the band was bring-ing people together from all walks of life.

“The group is so diverse

with so many people from different walks of life,” Car-nochan said. “[My biggest achievement is] trying to get all of those people from all over the state of Texas and work toward a common goal and, most importantly, to act with great class and respect toward the institution itself.”

Director of bands Jerry Junkin said he will miss Car-nochan’s warm personality.

“He was a very stable influence,” Junkin said. “Certainly we hope to find those qualities in ad-dition to his obviously strong musicianship.”

Junkin said the next band director has not been selected yet.

Garrett Maples, electri-

Friday is the last day for in-structors to create a summer course on Blackboard, in what will be the last semester for the online system before the Uni-versity makes the full transition to Canvas.

The University officially be-gan phasing out Blackboard, another learning management system, in fall 2013. In the fall 2015 semester, Blackboard will no longer be an option, and Canvas will be used entirely in its place.

“Our goal is to have every-one on Canvas this summer,” said Brad Englert, chief infor-mation officer for UT Infor-mation Technology Services. “We’ve been reaching out and using support to help with the transition.”

Of the roughly 3,000 in-structors using a learning management system on cam-pus, 222 courses were housed on Blackboard this semester, Englert said.

Drew Thornley, a lecturer in the McCombs School of

Name: POWERS; Width: 60p0; Depth: 2 in; Color: Process color, POWERS; Ad Number: -

1

Name: Untitled 23; Width: 60p0; Depth: 2 in; Color: Process color, Untitled 23; Ad Number: -

Sign President Powers farewell and help support student media. Only $10 for studentsvisit farewellpowers.com to find out more

Wednesday, April 29, 2015@thedailytexan facebook.com/dailytexan

Serving the University of Texas at Austin community since 1900

dailytexanonline.com bit.ly/dtvid

SPORTS PAGE 6 COMICS PAGE 7 LIFE&ARTS PAGE 8

Blackboard option to be erased Friday

Students organize anti-campus carry rally

CAMPUS

By Sam Ketterer@sam_kett

Courtesy of CanvasFriday is the last day for for instructors to request summer courses on Blackboard before the University fully transitions to Canvas.BLACKBOARD page 2

CAMPUS

By Sebastian Herrera@SebasAHerrera

Joshua Guerra | Daily Texan StaffPublic health professor Alfred McAlister was one of two professors who spoke at the Students Against Guns on Campus rally in the West Mall on Tuesday afternoon.RALLY page 3

CAMPUS

Hearing clinic on campus fits local musicians with earplugs

CAMPUS

Longhorn Band director leaves to lead Miami wind ensemble

By Lauren Florence@laurenreneeflo

By Caleb Wong@caleber96

Mariana Gonzalez | Daily Texan StaffPaige Juarez, local audiologist at Estes Audiology, helps make a custom earplug mold for local musician Walker Lukens on Tuesday morning.

MUSICIANS page 2 BAND page 3

STATE

Senate bill to cut funds for assisted living homesBy Eleanor Dearman

& Rachel Lew@thedailytexan

CENTERS page 3

are available for a $25 co-pay through the cen-ter for musicians. Es-tes said, the program, which runs four times a year, has served about 1,500 local musicians since 2009.

“Many musicians with HAAM — and just musi-cians in general — don’t like foam plugs in their ear because it muffles sound, so they elect to not wear anything be-cause they don’t want to compromise the sound on stage,” Estes said. “But then they’re damag-ing their hearing perma-nently, which then fur-ther compromises it later down the road.”

In individual coun-seling sessions, clini-cians discuss the dura-tion and intensity of each musician’s set be-cause it helps them to customize the hearing protection, which is es-sential for preserving the musician’s liveli-hood and employment, Estes said.

Alison Barry, Span-ish and communica-tion sciences and dis-orders senior, said she would love if the center had resources to pro-vide services to student musicians or to help stress the importance of hearing protection to those students.

“Musicians and peo-ple who enjoy concerts — specifically loud mu-sic, like rock, techno or metal — need to realize that they are incurring damage every time they attend a concert without proper hearing protec-tion,” Barry said. “They need to take these pre-cautions early in life if they want to be able to hear just as well in their old age.”

James Booth, com-munication sciences and disorders professor, said the Department of Com-munication Sciences and Disorders got involved because the program fit its mission of communi-ty outreach and directly improving lives of com-munity members.

“A startling figure is that adults with uncor-rected hearing loss suffer from much higher rates of depression,” Booth said. “Not being able to hear isolates us from the world. Musicians help to make Austin a great place to live, and many are struggling financial-ly, so we should do what we can to help.”

2

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Business, said he will contin-ue to use Blackboard for his summer courses.

“I don’t see a need to change,” Thornley said. “I mean, if [IT Services tells] me I can still use it, and I’ve been using it for six years — I’m used to it — why would I change before I have to?”

IT Services began phasing out Blackboard for Canvas after the Course and Learning Manage-ment Evaluation Steering Com-mittee conducted a survey in which a majority of students and faculty said they pre-ferred Canvas, according

to a September 2013 Daily Texan article.

According to Englert, one of the driving forces behind making the switch to Canvas was creating a more user-friendly interface for students and faculty.

“I think people appreci-ate the look and feel, the in-tuitive nature of Canvas,” En-glert said. “It’s not as clunky as Blackboard.”

Thornley said he does not use material from blackboard in class enough to merit making a switch before it is required.

“I don’t care about the func-tionality of one versus the other,” Thornley said. “I post the sylla-

bus, I email my class, and I post grades. So I never really gave it much thought.”

Thornley, who accepted a tenured position at another col-lege for the fall, said he would have made the switch come fall semester.

“If I stayed, I would have gone to a tutorial and never complained and learned how to use it,” Thornley said. “I’m not trying to be defiant. I’m not more important than anybody else. … I’m used to [Blackboard], so why not use it?”

IT Services, which oper-ates Canvas, provides ser-vices to faculty and staff to aid in the transition and

learn how to effectively use the system. According to En-glert, the Center for Teaching and Learning is the primary source for Canvas tutori-als, workshops and office hours. It also operates a 24/7 help desk.

Kyle Doherty, a radio-tele-vision-film sophomore, said he prefers Canvas over Black-board, although he said he felt a two-year transition was too long.

“I think [IT Services] definitely overhyped it a little,” Doherty said. “I think they could have made it a quicker transition, and ev-eryone would have been OK with it.”

BLACKBOARDcontinues from page 1

MUSICANScontinues from page 1

Graeme Hamilton | Daily Texan StaffSolomon and Francisco, harvesters at Johnson’s Backyard Garden, pick onions Thursday afternoon. The farm offers a CSA program that delivers fresh produce to subscribers.

FRAMES featured photo

Courtesy of Jerry HayesAfter 13 years of directing the Longhorn Band, director Robert M. Carnochan will depart the University this summer to become the University of Miami’s wind ensemble director.

A recent report has linked the disposal of wastewater from fracking to small earth-quakes in Texas and other ar-eas, including the Central and Eastern U.S.

“We have had no seismic activity for decades, and then suddenly when [fracking] has been brought in, we start see-ing it,” said Andrew Dobbs, Central Texas program di-rector for Texas Campaign for the Environment. “I don’t think this a stretch from the facts.”

Fracking, also known as hydraulic fracturing, uses high-pressured water to re-lease natural gas from under-ground rocks.

Researchers from the Unit-ed States Geological Survey, a science organization based in California, conducted the re-port. They analyzed changes in the rate of earthquake occurrence using USGS da-tabases of earthquakes re-corded since 1970. The team found the average number of earthquakes jumped from 21 per year from 1972–2008 to 99 earthquakes per year from 2009–2013.

The largest of a series of earthquakes this year in

Texas occurred in the Dal-las-Fort Worth area with a 3.3 magnitude.

“I’m not surprised,” me-chanical engineering profes-sor Michael Webber said. “There is a lot of anecdotal ev-idence that has revealed these earthquakes near the regions of wastewater injection.”

According to the report, the increase in seismicity has been linked to the injection of wastewater, a byproduct of fracking, into disposal wells deep underground. Although fracking is not directly related to the earthquakes seen in affected areas, wastewater in-jection has been found to be the cause.

Webber, deputy director of the Energy Institute, said the state legislature has been fairly inactive in response to recent earthquakes.

“There is room for the state to take action on it,” Webber said. “It involves finding a way to reduce the wastewater and minimize [its] injection. We need to figure out better locations on where to inject the wastewater.”

According to USGS’s re-port, evidence from case his-tories suggests the magnitude of an earthquake tends to in-crease as the total volume of injected wastewater increases.

“I think it’s a sign to con-tinue [research and devel-opment] for other renew-able sources, and I feel we shouldn’t be using natural gas as a crutch,” said Jaclyn Kachelmeyer, Campus En-vironmental Center director.

Currently, the Environ-mental Protection Agency is investigating the effects of fracking on the environ-ment. According to a state-ment on the agency’s web-site, the EPA is investigating how fracking affects natural water resources but does not yet have an investigation into its link to seismic activity.

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences, one of the oldest U.S. honor societies and policy research centers, accepted two UT professors and researchers as members last week.

Veteran members from the Academy nominated mathematics professor Björn Engquist and George Geor-giou, molecular biosciences, chemical and biomedical engineering professor, to be accepted into the organi-zation. After an 18-month review, both Engquist and Georgiou were made official members.

Mark Robinson, chief operating officer at the Academy, said becoming a part of the Academy is a prestigious honor.

“Members have the right and opportunity to nominate people that they believe pose excellence in their field,” Rob-inson said. “[The founders] were looking to create an acad-emy that represented all profes-sions. … It really is meant to be a swath of the best and the brightest.”

The Academy recognizes achievement in the natural sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities, and gathers researchers together to address

national problems. Georgiou has made sev-

eral discoveries in the medical field. His research includes the study of protein therapeu-tics, especially how proteins can be used to fight against cancerous tumors.

“We take human enzymes and re-design them so that they can destroy the metabolite can-cer cells need,” Georgiou said in an interview with the Uni-versity. “It destroys the metabo-lite. … The cancer cells can-not grow, but the normal cells are unaffected.”

Engquist, who specializes in applied mathematics, research-es computational methods that could predict the weather or determine if a bridge or other infrastructure can withstand a certain weight. Several of Engquist’s numerical methods and equations have been used in combination with seismolo-

gy to help model oil reservoirs. “A lot of math is abstract,”

said Engquist. “This is an op-portunity to do math but also to engage in the activi-ties in engineering science, or social science, or wherever. You have the benefits of see-ing it being applied in the real world, and you can play around with the math that you love.”

One of Engquist’s mentees, mathematics graduate stu-dent Yunan Yang, said that Engquist’s seismological in-novations and discoveries go far beyond detecting resources underground.

“The way he does every-thing makes me feel very confident about the field,” Yang said. “He’s very patient, although the things are trivial for him. Before he received that award, he already was a very famous mathematician.”

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W&N 3

NEWS Wednesday, April 29, 2015 3

CAMPUS

By Katie Keenan@thedailytexan

George GeorgiouMolecular bioscience and

engineering professor

Björn Engquist Mathematics professor

RESEARCH

Report: Rise in earthquakes tied to fracking wastewaterBy Wes Scarborough

@westhemess13EARTHQUAKES

IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN U.S.

1973–2008: There was an average of 21 earthquakes of magnitude 3 and larger in the Central and Eastern U.S.2009–2013: The rate jumped to an average of 99 M3+ earthquakes per year.2014: There were 659 M3+ earthquakes, most of which were in the 3–4 magnitude.

carry concealed weapons into campus buildings. Certain fa-cilities, such as hospitals, pre-schools, grade schools, sports events and residence halls, would be exempt.

Pahl said anti-campus carry representatives oppose the bill because of stressed students, drug and alcohol abuse, ac-cidental shootings and the difficulty police officers may have identifying criminals in shooting situations.

Only a few dozen people attended the rally, which anti-campus carry SG President Xavier Rotnofsky and Vice President Rohit Mandalapu and multiple faculty members backed.

Public health professor Alfred McAlister said the majority of UT professors, administration and UTPD of-ficers are also not in favor of campus carry.

“Evidence proves the more guns that are out there, the more people get shot,” McAli-ster said. “How dare the leg-islature [be in the process of passing] a law that the Univer-sity of Texas can’t opt out of. We should be furious. I am.”

Chase Jennings, the senior advisor for Texas’ chapter of Students for Concealed Carry, a national organization in favor of campus carry, said students at public universities such as UT should also see the ben-efits campus carry could bring to universities.

Jennings said campus carry

is more than just a way to pro-tect against mass shootings.

“Unfortunately, police of-ficers cannot be everywhere at all times,” Jennings said. “A lot of situations where [campus carry would work] deal with people protecting themselves when they are alone and are walking around campuses vul-nerable to attackers. We have seen time after time where stu-dents get raped on campus and get attacked. People have the right to protect themselves.”

RALLYcontinues from page 1

cal engineering junior and cymbal player, said he hopes the incoming band director will move the band

forward while still respecting its traditions.

“I want a band direc-tor who will come with a passion for perfection but respect for our traditions,”

Garrett said. “LHB is a very old band with lots practices unique to us and our style. We are the showband of the Southwest, and I hope any new director will help us maintain that proud title.”

BANDcontinues from page 1

visit with residents and help maintain the center’s grounds, according to Anne McGonigle, assistant director of commu-nity relations for the ASSLC.

McGonigle said student vol-unteers will be more important than ever if the bill passes and the center has to close.

“We are still serving these individuals, and volunteers are still a big part of that and will continue to be, regardless of the decision made by the Legisla-ture,” McGonigle said. “I think it will be an important time for volunteers to come out and interact with the residents and let them know how important they are.”

Combined, the Austin

center and 12 others like it across the state receive more than $660 million in funding from the state. Last year, the Sunset Advisory Commis-sion, a state commission that reviews the efficiency of state agencies, concluded the centers were no longer affordable.

According to McGonigle, volunteers — especially those with Friends of the Austin State Supported Living Center, a lo-cal nonprofit that raises money for the ASSLC — will have a role in raising funds and deter-mining how they are distrib-uted if the center closes.

Marylu Vasquez, a commu-nication sciences senior who has volunteered at the center for the past three years, said she enjoys working there because many of the residents think of

her and the other volunteers as friends.

“You get to meet them by name, and they remember you, even though they are not your assigned person,” Vasquez said.

Lance Angelle, a volunteer at the center and a exercise sci-ence and allied health profes-sions senior, said he is disap-pointed the center may close.

“Many of the residents will be displaced into private health care facilities but won’t have any income to pay for it or family members to help them since many of them are older,” Angelle said. “I think if more people spent time with the residents they would see the sense of joy and purpose that the state supported liv-ing center has brought to so many people.”

CENTERScontinues from page 1

Rachel Zein | Daily Texan Staff After nearly 100 years of operation, the Austin State Supported Living Center faces closure because of a bill that was passed by the Texas Senate passed earlier this month.

Courtesy of Jerry HayesAfter 13 years of directing the Longhorn Band, director Robert M. Carnochan will depart the University this summer to become the University of Miami’s wind ensemble director.

Academy of Arts and sciences welcomes two UT professors

OnlineFor more student perspectives and video coverage on campus carry bills, check out dailytexanonline.com.

SG hears resolution on diversity pamphlets The Student Government Assembly heard a resolu-tion Tuesday in support of a pamphlet that would be dis-tributed in courses carrying a cultural diversity flag.

As the resolution stands, the pamphlet outlines histor-ical incidents of racism and sexism at UT. The authors of the resolution said the pam-phlet would help stop the repetition of this racism and sexism in the future.

“We understood that talking about these things wasn’t going to make people comfortable,” said Bryan

Davis, government senior and author of the resolution. “But given the history of things that happened at UT over the years, … we kind of want [the pamphlet] to drive home the point that these are issues that need to be taken very seriously.”

The resolution was origi-nally not on the agenda because an SG represen-tative did not turn a copy of the resolution in on time. After several stu-dents spoke during open forum and asked the As-sembly to hear the resolu-tion, the Assembly voted to add the resolution to the agenda.

Davis said he wanted

the Assembly to hear the resolution so it could have the chance to approve the resolution before the end of the semester.

“I came in here think-ing that the bill was dead,” Davis said. “I’m at a loss for words. I didn’t think this was going to happen.”

The resolution will move to the Student Affairs com-mittee and, if passed, will be taken to a vote in SG next week. If SG approves the resolution, the Uni-versity would still have to approve the pamphlet be-fore it could be distributed in courses with a cultural diversity flag.

—Samantha Ketterer

NEWS BRIEFLY

As your new Student Government presi-dent and vice president, we know it is our job to advocate for what is best for students and will maximize safety. House Bill 937, currently being considered in the Texas House of Rep-resentatives after the Senate passed its own version of the bill in March, would allow guns in classrooms on public university campuses. That’s why we think this bill is so dumb. Private universities are afforded the right to opt out, whereas public universities are not. Why are we, as a public university, not able to have a voice in what happens on our campus?

UT System Chancellor and former Navy SEAL Admiral William McRaven expressed his concerns about firearms on campus in a letter to legislative leaders in January, saying, “The presence of handguns...will lead to an increase in both accidental shootings and self-inflicted wounds.” Former Chancellor Francisco Cigar-roa agreed, as do the chancellors from most major Texas university systems. Current UT President William Powers Jr. also expressed dis-content with campus carry, as did Art Acevedo, the Austin police chief.

This bill, if it becomes law, will allow real firearms on campus. For some perspective, it would still be against University policy to bring pellet guns, airsoft guns and prop guns — fake guns — onto campus. You’ll be able to bring a pistol to campus, but if it has an orange tip, get that out of here!

Students should have a say in what happens on their own campus. A change.org petition of UT students opposing campus carry had over

5,000 signatures as of Tuesday morning. UT’s Student Government passed a resolution offi-cially opposing guns on our campus. Accord-ing to a poll conducted by Everytown for Gun Safety, over 60 percent of those polled believed that students should not be allowed to carry handguns on campuses or in dormitories, and over 70 percent believe college students should not be allowed to bring concealed handguns to class.

Many of the Texas schools affected by this leg-islation are as big or bigger than the cities where many of these legislators hail from. We have reached out to student body presidents and vice presidents across the state, and an overwhelm-ing majority share our opinion. We, as fellow student representatives, have been elected to voice the needs of our students,and do not ap-preciate attempts in the Legislature to take local governance away from our communities.

Guns disrupt the academic atmosphere of a university. Sitting in a class, knowing that fellow students might be armed, alters the en-vironment. For professors and teaching assis-tants, lecturing in front of a hall of hundreds of students, knowing that some are potentially armed, encroaches upon the sanctity of the classroom.

College students experience incredible amounts of academic, social, and family stress. RAs shouldn’t have to deal with guns in dorms on top of the multitude of stresses associ-ated with on-campus living. Campus police shouldn’t have to worry about distinguishing between a well-intentioned citizen and a bad actor. Professors shouldn’t have to worry about students bringing guns to classes.

Claims that students are in danger on UT’s campus and need guns to protect themselves are unfounded. Since the UT Police Depart-

ment began keeping online records in 2000, there have been no murders on the UT Austin campus. In a hypothetical active shooter sce-nario, who would you rather trust handling the situation: a trained UTPD officer or a sleep-deprived (probably hungover) upperclassman? HB 937 is attempting to fix a problem that does not exist.

The Texas Legislature is ostensibly trying to pass this bill for the good of campuses across the state. How is that the case if so much of cam-pus is against this legislation? The best outcome would be for the bill to be defeated; otherwise, we implore the House to amend the current leg-

islation with an opt-out clause that enables the stakeholders within a university to decide what’s best for campus.

The only guns that should be allowed on cam-pus are our biceps. As good and strong boys, we stand staunchly against campus carry. We hope the Texas Legislature listens to campus opinion and grants all Texas universities the discretion to make decisions regarding their own safety.

Rotnofsky is a Plan II, linguistics, computer science and creative writing junior from Laredo. Mandalapu is a Plan II and economics senior from Sugar Land. They are Student Government president and vice president, respectively.

4A OPINION

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

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

RECYCLE | Please recycle this copy of The Daily Texan. Place the paper in one of the recycling bins on campus or back in the burnt-orange newsstand where you found it.EDITORIAL TWITTER | Follow The Daily Texan Editorial Board on Twitter (@TexanEditorial) and receive updates on our latest editorials and columns.

4RILEY BRANDS, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF / @TexanEditorialWednesday, April 29, 2015

COLUMN

Rotnofsky, Mandalapu: Students say ‘no thanks’ to guns on campusBy Xavier Rotnofsky & Rohit Man-

dalapuGuest Columnists

@RotMan2015

Jack DuFon | Daily Texan File PhotoRohit Mandalapu and Xavier Rotnofsky, Student Government vice president and president, respectively.

GALLERY

Saniya Walawalkar | Daily Texan Staff

COLUMN

Recent crime against student shows we must make safety top priority

In the early morning hours of April 25, Indiana University student Hannah Wilson was beaten to death. Reported missing the day before, her body was found in Need-more, about 20 miles from campus. The in-vestigation into Wilson’s death led to Dan-iel E. Messel, who was arrested the same day. According to CBS News, Messel has a history of violence against women that spans decades. One investigator suggested to FOX News that Hannah Wilson’s disap-pearance is “eerily similar” to that of the 2011 disappearance of another IU student, Lauren Spierer.

Hannah Wilson is just one tragic ex-ample of the safety risks college students face. According to UTPD’s daily crime log between Feb. 26 and April 25, other than a medley of public intoxication, possession, and theft charges, there were 25 instances of interpersonal harm. There was one sex-ual assault, two harassments, four assaults that caused bodily injury, two assaults in which physical contact of an offensive or provocative nature was made, one viola-

tion of a protective order, four terrorist threats, two counts of prohibited weap-ons and three counts of deadly conduct in one incident alone, three indecent expo-sures, one disorderly conduct in which the anus or genitals were exposed in public, one disorderly conduct charge of an abu-sive, indecent or profane nature, and one charge of dating violence. And these were just the crimes reported to the police.

The University has long been called on to increase campus safety efforts, but per-haps never has it received more attention to it than in recent years. As a rising soph-omore at the time, I remember the string of abduction and sexual assault cases that took place along 26th street in the summer of 2013. But as the UTPD crime log dem-onstrates, campus safety is more than two perpetrators; crime can happen any time, anywhere. And it does.

There have been a number of efforts to increase campus safety from institutions other than the University administration. The Rady-Strickland administration in-stituted SafeRide to carry student safely from sixth street to West Campus, though admittedly the goal of this was to reduce drunk driving in and around campus. SURE Walk, which is a volunteer program that provides students with safe walks to and from campus between 10 pm and 2 am Mondays through Thursdays, is an-other SG effort to increase student safety

at night.These are all excellent places to start in

the fight to make our campus safer. I en-courage every reader to take advantage of these programs.

But what isn’t so great is the one thing these programs have in common: they are student efforts with no institutional sup-port. That is simply unacceptable. Our

university has a $25 billion endowment, the largest of any public university in the nation. It needs to be put towards what matters. Student safety should be a pri-ority. We deserve to be supported by the administration; the University owes us our safety on campus.

Smith is a history and humanities junior from Austin.

By Claire SmithSenior Columnist @claireseysmith

Jarrid Denman | Daily Texan File PhotoUT Police Department and Austin Police Department SUVs parked on campus.

Interested in seeing your opinions expressed on our page? The deadline to submit guest op-eds is Thursday. Submissions can be emailed to [email protected].

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Sawyer produced a solid out-ing until he ran into trouble in the fourth inning.

Sawyer hit the leadoff bat-ter and walked the next to start the inning. But the soph-omore made his biggest mis-take when he threw a ball over the head of redshirt freshman third baseman Bret Boswell, attempting to throw out the leadoff runner on a bunt.

The error allowed a run to score and was the first run in the Panthers’ biggest inning. Prairie View A&M drew three more walks in the inning and scored four runs to tie the game at 4–4.

The Longhorns answered in the bottom frame as senior right fielder Collin Shaw started the inning with a leadoff walk and then stole second base. Johnson singled Shaw home

and Texas took a 5–4 lead that it would not surrender.

“After we had that walk in the park in the fourth, the of-fense continued to stay focused and that was a really a good sign – the fact that they didn’t panic or come out of character,” head coach Augie Garrido said.

Texas’ offensive onslaught continued in the sixth inning when Johnson opened the in-ning with his second base hit of the ball game and a steal — a season-high eighth of the game. Sophomore center field-er Zane Gurwitz followed with a walk, and sophomore catcher Tres Barrera scored Johnson to push the lead to 7–4. Texas added another run in the in-ning off a sacrifice fly from freshman shortstop Joe Baker.

Senior second baseman Brooks Marlow added the Longhorns’ final runs in the ninth with a two-run bomb

that barely missed the Taco Shack “Free Taco” sign in the right field bullpen. Longhorn senior pitcher Ty Marlow finished off the game, and Texas secured its 23rd win of the season to move a game above .500 before its weekend matchup with Texas Tech.

“Every win is important,” Baker said. “We just wanted to get out there and take care of things like we should’ve all year. We had a down year but it was good to get out there and get a win. Hopefully it’ll propel us in the next series.”

Despite the four run fourth inning, the Texas pitching staff only allowed one hit. Fresh-man pitcher Jake McKenzie earned the win after relieving sophomore pitcher Jon Mal-min in the fourth inning.

The Longhorns will play their final home series starting Friday against the Red Raiders.

teams, as well. Former Texas quarterback David Ash was forced to retire early because of multiple concussions throughout his career. But the decision didn’t come easily.

“I just prayed a lot about it,” Ash said at a news conference in September where he announced his retirement “The decision, it was, I think, the process of it all, the doctor and coaches.”

The decision to retire is often the result of the possi-ble consequences of multiple concussions, such as such as depression and anxiety.

“I never really was a person who believed in depression,” said Trickett. “It is real, and

it’s when I was by myself.”Along with depression, the

topic of whether concussions are linked to an increased risk of suicide has become a prominent focus among concussion research. For-mer NFL linebackers Jovan Belcher and Junior Seau, who both died by suicide, had re-peated head trauma through-out their careers in the NFL.

“At least for me, just be-ing brutally honest, there are suicidal thoughts within this,” said Poletto.

However, at the panel, the athletes said the most promi-nent way they dealt with their concussions is by talking to and consulting with experts to bet-ter understand their injuries.

“Talking about it helps a

ton,” said Trickett. “Express-ing how you feel and what you’ve gone through is one of those things that absolutely help athletes who are dealing with concussions.”

this team could be remem-bered as one of the biggest disappointments in pro-gram history.

The Longhorns are cur-rently in grave danger of missing the NCAA Tour-nament field for the third time in the past four sea-sons. This would make the members of the current senior class the first since the NCAA Tournament began to make fewer than two appearances during their four-year careers.

Texas sits at 82nd in the country in RPI and are 0–9 against the RPI top 25, including sweeps at

the hands of TCU this past weekend. The Longhorns pounded out 30 hits dur-ing the series and are bat-ting .316 in their past eight games, raising their season batting average from .242 to .253. Texas also slugged at a .515 clip raising its to-tal on the season from .361 to .391.

During that same span the team produced at least four runs in five games, after doing so only three times in its previous 12 games. However the pro-duction of the Texas bats has not guaranteed a win, as the Longhorns are just 4–4 in the past seven games because of struggles on the mound and on defense.

Texas’ opponents have also scored 45 runs over this time, an average of over 5.5 allowed runs per game. Of those runs, 31 of them have been earned, pushing the team’s total ERA above 3.00 for the first time since the February series against Minnesota.

With just two confer-ence series left in the regu-lar season, it appears the Longhorns will be unable to build on the momentum of last season’s postseason run. Unless they win the Big 12 Tournament in Oklahoma City, which would give them an automatic bid, the Long-horns are almost certainly going to miss the NCAA Tournament for the third time in four seasons.

initially, but we’ve got two weeks now to train and practice, so we feel good about it.”

While the competition in the NCAA Tournament is undoubtedly tough, it’s nothing the Longhorns haven’t faced yet this year. Texas squared off against

seven teams currently ranked in the top 20 of the ITA rankings this season, with three of those teams — No. 1 Oklahoma, No. 2 Bay-lor and No. 5 TCU — com-ing from the Big 12.

“We were prepared really well for the NCAA Tourna-ment playing three teams that are contenders for the national championship in our own conference,” senior

Søren Hess–Olesen said. “We know the kind of level we need to play at to win the whole thing, and our sched-ule has definitely helped prepare us.”

Tournament play for Texas begins May 8. If the Longhorns can defeat the Midshipmen, they will face the winner of California and Texas A&M-Corpus Christi in the second round.

PANTHERScontinues from page 6

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TENNIScontinues from page 6

CONCUSSIONScontinues from page 6

You only get one brain in life, it’s not some-thing you can get surgery on. That was one of my leading rules into hanging it up.

—Anna Cassell, Former Northwestern

soccer player

R E C Y C L E ♲ AFTER READING YOUR COPY

SPORTS Wednesday, April 29, 2015 5

In the summer of 1975, then head coach Cliff Gustafson led Texas base-ball to the first of two na-tional titles it would win under his watch. For the Longhorns program, this marked their seventh Col-lege World Series appear-ance in Gustafson’s first eight seasons at the helm.

But over the next three seasons, the program missed the NCAA Tour-nament twice, including a humbling 1978 season when the it had a 12-12

record in conference play. Texas bounced back in 1979, reaching the College World Series semifinals and would not miss the tournament field for the rest of Gustafson’s tenure.

Similarly, in 2011, the Longhorns reached Oma-ha for the seventh time under head coach Augie Garrido, but they were eliminated after losing both of their games. Up to that point, Texas had been as good as any program in the nation since Garrido took over in 1997, with two National titles in the previous decade.

The Longhorns missed the NCAA Tournament in both 2012 and 2013, dropping every series in Big 12 play in 2013. Simi-larly to 1979, in 2014, they bounced back from a cou-ple seasons of frustration to reach the College World Series semi-finals.

Texas, ranking in the top 10 in preseason polls, entered the 2015 season with high expectations as a squad capable of produc-ing another celebration in Omaha. Instead, barring a miraculous turnaround,

After a series sweep with lit-tle offensive production, Tex-as’ bats started early Tuesday.

To lead off the first inning, junior left fielder Ben Johnson ripped a ball through Prairie View A&M third baseman Connor Wrye’s legs to open up the game for Texas. Although Johnson’s hit was scored an er-ror, it was the spark for Texas’ offense, which scored three runs in the first inning and plated another nine runs in a 12–4 win over the Panthers.

“[My lead-off at-bat] set the tone early,” Johnson said. “Obviously we want to score a lot of runs, and we did that tonight. That’s the goal every game. I think it was one of those things, no matter what the situations was, we were go-ing to keep putting it on them.”

But it wasn’t easy sailing for the Longhorns. Texas’ sopho-more starting pitcher Josh

6 SPTS

6GARRETT CALLAHAN, SPORTS EDITOR | @texansportsWednesday, April 29, 2015

Texas pummels Prairie View PanthersSIDELINE

Graeme Hamilton | Daily Texan StaffJunior outfielder Ben Johnson swings away at a pitch Tuesday against Texas A&M Prairie View. Johnson went 2-for-4 in the game with two RBIs, four stolen bases and also scored four times.

By Nick Castillo@Nick_Castillo74

Striving for its first na-tional title in program history, No. 10 Texas men’s tennis learned its NCAA Championship seed Tuesday afternoon.

Texas (19–6, 2–3 Big 12) will enter the tournament, which begins late next week, as the No. 9 overall seed and will face Navy in the first round at the Cas-well Tennis Center in Aus-tin. Navy posted a 20–10 record this season and entered the tournament as an automatic qualifier after claiming the Patriot League title.

The Longhorns come into the NCAA tournament after losing three of their last four matches, with all three losses coming against teams seeded in the top five of this year’s tournament.

Despite the team’s strug-gles, head coach Michael Center remains confident in his team’s chances.

“We lost three of those last four, but we lost to some of the best teams in the na-tion,” Center said. “We be-lieve that we can compete with any team in the country, and we’ve got a senior–laden team, so I’m excited to see what we can do.”

Prior to the tournament selection, Texas’ most recent match came against No. 1 Oklahoma in the semifinals of the Big 12 Men’s Tennis Cham-pionship. The Longhorns lost by a score of 4–3, with sopho-more George Goldhoff drop-ping the deciding match in a third-set tiebreaker.

“I think that match re-ally motivated us as a team,” Goldhoff said. “Obviously we were pretty devastated

Texas receives ninth seed in NCAA Championship

Marshall Tidrick | Daily Texan StaffThe Longhorns will enter the NCAA Tournament having lost three of their last four matches.

By Michael Shapiro@mshap2

MEN’S TENNISSTAT GUY | BASEBALL

Longhorns in jeopardy of missing College World Series once more

Former student-athletes discuss concussionsHEALTH

It isn’t easy for an athlete to stop competing, but that’s ex-actly what the former student-athletes who were members of a panel on concussions did out of concern for their health.

“There is a hole in your heart that is going to happen,” former Northwestern soccer player Anna Cassell said Tues-day at a panel on concussions.

Cassell, former Boston Col-lege safety Spenser Rositano, former West Virginia starting quarterback Clint Trickett and Molly Poletto, University of Utah undergraduate assistant for soccer, spoke on a panel Tuesday night to discuss their decisions to retire from athletics

after suffering multiple concus-sions. All four athletes left their respective sports because of fear of health risks.

Members of the panel, which Texas’ Center for Sports Lead-ership & Innovation presented, said the head injuries caused them to make decisions about their future in sports.

“I was getting concussions more easily, I was becoming more prone. So that’s when I [sought] help and saw a neurol-ogist and talked and consulted with them. They were like, ‘You got to think about your future,’” said Cassell, who amassed six concussions before retiring. “You only get one brain in life, it’s not something you can get surgery on. That was one of my leading rules into hanging it up.”

Concussions have affected members of Texas athletic

By Aaron Torres@aarontl11

Daulton Venglar | Daily Texan file photoAlthough Texas has been able to rack up hits during the season, it is struggling to bring in runners in scoring position.

By Drew Lieberman@DrewLieberman

NBAMAVERICKS

ROCKETS

RAYS

YANKEES

Trevor Ariza low key garbage.

Quandre Diggs@qdiggs6

TOP TWEET

Texas holds big lead going into final day

Men’s golf heads into the final round of the Big 12 Championships with a 20-stroke lead.

Texas shot a 292 in the third round, led by fresh-man Scottie Scheffler, who made four birdies and two bogeys to post a 68.

Sophomore Gavin Hall finished with sole posses-sion of second place after shooting a 74 in the third round. Freshman Doug Ghrim is tied for third place after shooting a 68 in the third round.

Sophomore Beau Hoss-ler and senior Kramer Hickok both shot 73 on Tuesday. Hossler is tied for 13th, while Hickok is tied for 19th.

The Longhorns are the only team to have all of their players in the top 20.

Texas Tech currently stands in possesion of second place.

Texas tees off at 9:40 a.m. Wednesday with Texas Tech and TCU.

—Aaron Torres

SPORTS BRIEFLY

Garrett Callahan | Daily Texan StaffFrom left, Molly Poletto, Clint Trickett and Anna Cassell discuss their personal experiences with concussions at a panel in the AT&T Conference Center on Wednesday.

MLBRANGERS

MARINERS

PHILLIES

CARDINALS

TEXAS PRAIRIE VIEWVS.

BLUE JAYS

RED SOX

PANTHERS page 5

CONCUSSIONS page 5

BASEBALL page 5

TENNIS page 5

TODAY IN HISTORY

1986Roger Clemens strikes out 20 batters in a game against the Seattle Mariners.

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COMICS 7

COMICS Wednesday, April 29, 2015 7

Today’s solution will appear here next issue

Arrr matey. This scurrvy beast is today’s answerrrrrr.

Crop it out, or it’ll be the the �shes for ya!

8 2 3 9 4 1 7 6 54 7 9 6 5 8 1 3 21 6 5 2 7 3 8 9 49 8 1 5 2 6 3 4 76 5 7 3 1 4 9 2 83 4 2 7 8 9 5 1 65 3 6 8 9 2 4 7 12 1 8 4 3 7 6 5 97 9 4 1 6 5 2 8 3

SUDOKUFORYOU

6 8 1 4 2 9 3 7 59 5 2 1 7 3 6 8 47 3 4 5 8 6 1 9 21 2 3 8 9 4 5 6 75 4 9 2 6 7 8 1 38 7 6 3 1 5 2 4 93 9 5 6 4 8 7 2 12 6 7 9 3 1 4 5 84 1 8 7 5 2 9 3 6

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Since 2008, the Zac Brown Band has dominated country music with its Southern style and powerful songs. Its mu-sic is some of the best in the genre, capturing even the at-tention of non-country fans. The band’s fourth studio al-bum, Jekyll + Hyde, which it released Tuesday, combines its signature country sound with influences from rock, pop and soul music to pro-vide a new twist to distin-guish it from the band’s pre-vious records.

The first track “Beautiful Drug,” is scarier than it is im-pressive on first listen. The song isn’t just a nod to pop music, it’s an attempt at a top-40 hit. “Beautiful Drug” evokes memories of Taylor Swift’s country-to-pop transforma-tion, when she transitioned to pop for larger audiences and revenue, abandoning country music and her roots.

Although “Beautiful Drug” might suggest the Zac Brown Band is about to head down the same path as Swift, the rest of the songs on Jekyll + Hyde prove that the Zac Brown Band is not abandon-ing country music, but rather diversifying its sound.

The diverse nature of this record comes with ease for Brown and his cohorts. From the rock creed “Heavy Is the Head,” which features Sound-garden’s Chris Cornell, to the jazzy “Mange Tree,” featur-ing singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, each song on the record has its own identity.

Other big names appear in the credits. Grammy-winning blues musician Keb’ Mo’ and former Pink Floyd member Roger Waters helped write “Remedy” and “Junkyard,” respectively. All of these influences contrib-ute to the varied style of the entire album.

This variety never translated onto the recordings of its first three albums. Jekyll + Hyde

merges the straightforward-country band from its past albums with the flexible-and-creative band from tours.

Although its sound is more diverse than ever, the Zac Brown Band hasn’t aban-doned the country sound that made them famous. Its Southern style is still prominent on Jekyll + Hyde in songs such as the album’s lead single, “Homegrown,” and “I’ll Be Your Man (Song for a Daughter).”

A few songs suffer from the new directions the band explored on the album. “Lov-ing You Easy” sounds like Bruno Mars went country. “Tomorrow Never Comes” is awkward, but the album in-cludes a better acoustic ver-sion of the song.

As songs, almost every in-dividual track can stand on its own. When put together as an album, however, they don’t make much sense. Nothing ties each track to the next; the album is more of a collage of interesting songs than one joint work of art.

Jekyll + Hyde earns its name by displaying the Zac Brown Band’s varied style — one most people haven’t heard before. This album might not live up to the mag-nitude of the band’s previ-ous pure-country releases; its first album, The Founda-tion, and 2013’s country re-cord of the year Uncaged, are rooted firmly in Southern country music. Yet, hear-ing the band’s evolution on Jekyll + Hyde is an overall enjoyable listen.

Although there are a number of directors who didn’t attend college, such as Quentin Tarantino and Stan-ley Kubrick, not all aspiring movie makers can simply pick up a camera and make it big.

As competition to write, direct and produce mov-ies becomes more and more competitive, film schools across the country urge their students to gain real-world experience.

Film students hunt for internships to gain practi-cal experience in the field. When they perform various tasks, such as editing foot-age or handling equipment, students see how filmmakers handle pre-production and post-production work.

Radio-television-f i lm senior Lucas Doyle reads scripts, delivers packages and runs errands for his

internship with production studio Arts + Labor. He said it’s crucial to work closely with people in the industry because they help guide stu-dents through the do’s and don’ts of filmmaking.

“You can work on your own stuff as much as possible or be on set as much as pos-sible, but it’s always helpful to see how professionals do it,” Doyle said. “It’s important to know what’s ahead of you.”

Anne Lewis, a senior radio-television-film lec-turer and documentary filmmaker, said she learned to edit mainly by watching other editors work. She ad-vised students to look into organizations, such as the Austin Film Society, that help students make useful industry contacts.

She said students should apply for UTLA — a pro-gram in which students spend a semester attending classes in Los Angeles and interning for a number of

production companies.“Getting out in the field

from the very beginning is very valuable for students,” Lewis said. “It’s exposure to how things actually function in the real world.”

Radio-television-film se-nior Kelsey Duncan works as an assistant editor and production assistant at in-dependent film production company Alpheus Media. She said her internship helped her learn editing software and make use-ful contacts with potential employers. She also said in-ternships help film students who are not as technically skilled at using cameras or editing footage.

“There are a lot of people who come into college with experience,” Duncan said. “There are people who don’t have internships, but they know more than I could ever think about cameras and di-recting. For me, [interning] was a really great choice, and

I’m glad I did it.”Lewis said working for

bigger companies doesn’t necessarily guarantee learn-ing everything there is to know about film. She said large production companies look appealing and help stu-dents gain useful contacts, but independent studios offer students the freedom to learn skills in various as-pects of film, such as editing and cinematography.

“There are advantages to working for a small com-pany,” Lewis said. “You prob-ably get to do more than working for a large company, where you would be con-fined to one area.”

Doyle said he appreciates working at Arts + Labor and feels he’s receiving training for what he hopes to do for the rest of his career.

“It’s nice to see what’s ac-tually going to be expected once you graduate and the day-to-day routine for the position I want,” Doyle said.

When Ryan Knowles isn’t waiting tables at Bar-ley Swine, he straps on his suspenders, grabs his fold-ing card table and unloads a 1950s Olympia typewriter. The farmers’ markets and streets of Austin become his workspace.

Knowles used to have a habit of writing poetry for people at bars and on res-taurant napkins. But when his then-girlfriend’s mom encouraged him to turn it into something more, he be-gan the project Untouched Poetry in 2010. Now, he sets up his typewriter every weekend in popular places, such as South Congress, and waits for people to request a poem.

“I dubbed it Untouched Poetry because it’s art being created without ever having been seen before,” Knowles said. “It’s right there on the spot. It’s untainted.”

Before writing, Knowles gets to know his custom-ers and asks them what they want their poem to be about. People choose topics such as loved ones, dogs and holidays.

“There’s a connotation with poetry that it has to be deep, but it could be about blue-berries and Legos,” Knowles said. “I’ll get a little bit of information, and an image pops up in my head. I write a line or two about it, and usually everything just starts to unravel.”

After about two or three minutes of writing, Knowles

hands over the typed free-form poem, signed and dated on antique-looking paper. Al-though he doesn’t charge cus-tomers, most people tip him.

Journalism senior Hec-tor Perez filmed Knowles for a day while working on a video assignment for his “TV Reporting and Produc-ing” course. Perez said most customers gave Knowles $5 or $10, but one customer, who asked for a Mother’s Day poem, gave him $40.

“Writing is tough, espe-cially right there on the spot

in two or three minutes, just cranking something out with a person there looking at you the whole time,” Perez said. “And it wasn’t just a bunch of words on there. It was all re-ally good.”

Accounting junior Chris-tina Chatterpaul requested a poem at a farmers’ market a few weekends ago. Knowles wrote a poem about her and her friends’ trip to the market to buy turnips. The poem be-gan: “You find your self root-ed / like the turnips in hand / like the childish love / of a

perfect violin.” “It was written really

beautifully,” Chatterpaul said. “It’s really cool to see this guy take a lost art or old school thing and bring it into today. Most writers write books to try to be pub-lished, but he’s writing for a direct audience.”

In addition to writing on the streets, Knowles works events such as parties and weddings. Knowles said he hopes a year from now, Un-touched Poetry will be his full-time job. He has been writing

poetry since the third grade, but certain events have en-couraged him to turn to writ-ing more than others. Eight days after his 14th birthday, his mother was killed in an act of domestic violence. His fa-ther, now in prison, was con-victed of killing his mother in front of Knowles and three of his siblings.

“I started writing a lot more,” Knowles said. “I al-ways considered myself a sen-sitive, romantically observant person. Once I was faced with that tragedy, I would turn to

the pen to release expression.”Over the years, he turned to

drugs and alcohol to deal with the trauma. Now, Knowles has removed those substances from his life and finds solace in meditation, but the sad-ness he feels over losing his mom continues to influence his writing.

“Sadness is almost beautiful because it’s real and it’s raw,” Knowles said. “I’m working with myself to allow those things to come up and to not run from them but to sit with them and find healing.”

8 L&A

KAT SAMPSON, LIFE&ARTS EDITOR | @thedailytexan 8Wednesday, April 29, 2015

ART

Untouched Poetry offers on-demand poemsBy Marisa Charpentier

@marisacharp21

CAMPUS

Charlotte CarpenterDaily Texan Staff

Ryan Knowles writes poetry for visitors of the Art City Austin Fes-tival on Sunday. Knowles uses a vintage type-writer to create original poems based on themes his customers request.

JEKYLL + HYDE

Artist: Zac Brown BandTracks: 16Rating: 7/10

Illustration by Connor Murphy | Daily Texan Staff

Film students praise internship experiencesBy Alex Pelham@TalkingofPelham

ALBUM REVIEW | ‘JEKYLL + HYDE’

Zac Brown Band brings new sounds to album

By Chris Duncan@chr_dunc