Cowboys Stadium to host 2014 Final Four

Transcription

Cowboys Stadium to host 2014 Final Four
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November
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Volume 90, No. 49
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ARLINGTON
How will the men’s basketball team perform after last
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SPORTS | PAGE 6
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Cowboys Stadium to
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NCAA announced the Metroplex hosted
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For video coverage of Wednesday’s Poetry Slam, visit THE SHORTHORN .com
Police arrest
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BY SARAH LUTZ
rested for
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LECTURE
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Historian talks
Obama, Lincoln
comparisons
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Mike Guinn, Fort Worth Slam Team founder, opens up the poetry slam Wednesday in the University Center San Jacinto Room. The open mic night
winner will participate in January’s annual MLK event, “An Evening of Spoken Word,” at the UC Bluebonnet Ballroom.D\Z_Xe`jd\e^`e\\i`e^ale`fi>\fi^\K_fdjfe`jXd\dY\if]=fidlcXJ8<#n_`Z_`j^\kk`e^i\X[p]fiX
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A Thousand Words
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Poetry slam features open mic performances and competition
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BY DUSTIN DANGLI
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In the small, dimly lit room, a poet
stood bathed in light. She raised her
voice and fired words at the crowd.
She delivered her poetry to win the
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competition over nine other competitors.
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The Houston-based artist known as
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D.E.E.P. poured her heart out in front
of a crowd9PD8I@JJ8?8CC
of more than 20 people, at
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Irons Recital
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for a sharp
TAP THAT
the Poetry Slam competition at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in the University Center San Jacinto Room.
The two pieces she performed left
many members snapping their fingers
and praising her in the middle of her
performance.
“It felt as good as always,” she said.
D.E.E.P. won $50 and will perform
with last week’s winner Andrea “Bee”
Brown at The MLK Evening of Spoken
Word on Jan. 17 in the UC Bluebonnet
Ballroom.
The night began with an open mic,
where all poets, bystanders and those
feeling brave were able to perform. The
real event began afterward when each
poet had three minutes to perform.
Two judges ranked and scored the
competitors on a scale of one to 10,
POETRY continues on page 4A
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Almost 2,000 attended
Doris Kearns Goodwin’s
lecture at Texas Hall.
BY MICHELLE LEVERETT
congressman quickly rose to
the presidency by perseverance and intelligence. And
like Lincoln, Obama will place
former political rivals to highlevel positions in his administration like New York Sen.
Hillary Clinton, Goodwin said
at Wednesday night’s lecture
in Texas Hall.
Students and faculty heard
the acclaimed Pulitzer Prize-
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Doris Kearns Goodwin said
that
two inexperienced politimkZo^eehg`]blmZg\^lmh[^
cians from Illinois — President-elect Barack Obama and
ma^ngbo^klbmrÍlÖklm
16th President Abraham LinContributor to The Shorthorn
coln have much in common.
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Like
Obama, the one-term
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GOODWIN continues on page 4A
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productivity.
Psychology aschange
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setting.
grant,
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for
up
to
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professor Yuan-Bo
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mitted
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impact his
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pacemakers, gastric stimu- the patients feel no pain.
of
a
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the
brain
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“We
have
one of the largAccording
to
a
recent
lators
between
the
stomach
cause pain. Researchers are
trying to inhibit chronic and esophagus and a wire- press release from the Col- est cohorts of pain spepain, associated with physi- less module that could be lege of Engineering, chronic cialists here at UTA in the
cal conditions like broken, worn on a belt or hat. The pain is the most common North Texas area,” he said.
bent or damaged nerves. If communication signals re- reason individuals seek
PAIN continues on page 4A
The Shorthorn: Michael Rettig
the nerves don’t heal prop- cord information from the medical care. It costs Amer-
Tricking the Brain
University receives grant for chronic pain research
Day
2
CaleNDar
Campus Notebook
Thursday
November 20, 2008
Today
Special Collections —
Revisualizing Westward
Expansion: Mondays 9
.
NOV
a.m.-7 p.m. and TuesdaySaturday 9 a.m.-5
p.m., Central Library
sixth floor. Free. For
information, contact
817-272-3393 or spcoref@
uta.edu.
20
Video Seminar — Pathways to
Entrepreneurship: 11:30 a.m.-1
p.m., 100 Nedderman Hall. Free
Pizza and drinks will be served.
For information, contact Karl
Fultz at 817-272-1119 or kfultz@
uta.uta.
Wesley Foundation Event: noon,
311 UTA Blvd. Free Food. For
information, contact the Wesley
Foundation at 817-274-6282 or
[email protected].
Maversity Workshop: 12:301:30 p.m., UC Concho Room.
Free. For information, contact
Multicultural Affairs at 817-2722099 or multicultural_affairs@
uta.edu.
Self-assembled Nanodevices and
Nanosensors: 3:30-4:45 p.m.,
105 Nedderman Hall. Free. For
information, contact Zeynep
Celik-Butler, PhD. at 817-272-1536
or [email protected].
Global Grounds International Coffee Hour: 4-5:30 p.m., UC Palo
Duro Lounge. Free. For information, contact Julie Holmer at 817272-2355 or [email protected].
International film Festival
featuring The Fish Fall in Love:
6:30 p.m., 100 Nedderman Hall.
Free. For information, contact
Lindsey Zaleski at 817-272-6107 or
[email protected].
TechnoScholar Workshop —
Demystifying the Search for
Scholarly Impact: 4-5 p.m.,
510 Central Library. Free. For
information, contact Suzanne
Beckett at 817-272-0923 or
sbecket@uta;edu.
Residence Hall Association
Meeting: 4:30-5:30 p.m., UC
Student Congress Chambers.
Free. For information, contact
Erica Weaver at [email protected].
Second Annual Real Estate
Developers’ Roundtable: 5-7 p.m.,
204 Architecture Building. $25,
includes DVD of proceedings.
For information, contact Anna
Peredo-Manor at ampmanor@
uta.edu.
Thinking Green — Powering
the Future: 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
101 College Hall. Free. For
information, contact Cathy
Prichett at 817-272-7215 or hcc@
uta.edu.
Asian Heritage Month Closing
Celebration: 6:30 p.m., UC
Carlisle Suite. For information,
contact Multicultural Affairs at
817-272-2099 or multicultural_
[email protected].
Choral & Symphony Orchestra
Concert: 7:30 p.m., Irons Recital
Hall. $3 for students/seniors, $5
general public. For information,
contact 817-272-3471 or music@
uta.edu.
Friday
International Crime
— An Introduction
to the MS-13 Street
Gang: noon, Central
Library sixth floor.
Free. For information, contact Lindsey
Zaleski at 817-272-6107 or [email protected].
NOV.
21
International Spouses Club: 1-3
p.m., Swift Center. Free. For
information, contact Julie Holmer
at 817-272-2355 or jholmer@uta.
edu.
Calendar submissions must be made
by 4 p.m. two days prior to run date.
To enter your event, call 817-272-3661 or log
on to www.theshorthorn.com/calendar
The ShorThorn
STaRING BaCK
aT yOU
Quoteworthy
“Lincoln
trusted his own
leadership and
convinced them
to care about
the country
more then their
own beliefs. If
they are willing
to put the
common goals
ahead of their
own ambitions
and work
together, then it
can work.”
Left: Film and video junior Kevin Ly erases his charcoal
drawing during Drawing Concepts on Wednesday at the Fine
Arts Building. The class enlarged photographs of human faces
through viewfinders.
PHOTOS By
MONICa LOPEZ
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian,
during her lecture at Texas Hall.
See Page 1
Today
Mostly sunny
High 62°F
Low 37°F
Opening Their Eyes to Reading
a service learning project for preschoolers encourages a love for literature
by alaNNa QuilleN
Contributor to The Shorthorn
Friday
Sunny
High 55°F
Low 38°F
Saturday
Mostly cloudy
High 63°F
Low 49°F
Sunday
20% chance of rain
High 68°F
Low 54°F
Monday
20% chance of
thunderstorms
High 65°F
Low 42°F
— National Weather Service
at www.weather.gov
poliCe report
This is a part of the daily activity log produced by
the university’s Police Department. To report a
criminal incident on campus, call 817-272-3381.
Two nonstudents were
arrested on charges of criminal
trespassing Tuesday at 901 Oak St.
Police chief explains how
to survive a shooting
Above: Drawing sophomore Kristina Townsend makes an
enlarged charcoal drawing of a photograph Wednesday in the
Fine Arts Building.
Doris Kearns Goodwin,
five-Day foreCast
Campus briefs
“Beginning is half the work.”
David Silva believes in this expression, especially when it comes to helping
underprivileged children.
Vice Provost Silva, education assistant professor Kathleen Tice and Phi
Kappa Phi Honor Society members created a project that serves children from
low-wage, non-English-speaking families at the Open Door Preschool in east
Dallas.
“These are the working poor,” he said.
“We’re talking about folks who make
hard decisions every day.”
Every Friday for the past four weeks,
36 students in Tice’s Literacy Studies
class have been reading selected books
to 20 kids at the preschool.
after noticing a dramatic increase in
vocabulary and reading skills, she believes that the children and her students
are benefiting from each other.
“My students are excited about being
with the kids, and the children can
sense that,” she said. “These children
have so much potential, and we focus
on what they can do instead of in terms
of deficit.”
The project began when Phi Kappa
Phi members Tice and Silva noticed a
literacy grant offered by the society.
as a Board of Trustees member at
the preschool, Silva suggested using the
grant towards the three, four and fiveyear-old underprivileged children to buy
books to read aloud to them.
“This is education happening out the
in the community with the support of
a national organization,” he said. “It
doesn’t get any better than that.”
The project’s final reading will take
place Friday morning, where the children will receive a tote bag with six different books the students have read to
them. The children will also get a UTa
backpack filled with coloring books,
For video coverage and
photos this weekend, visit
The ShorThorn .com
note pads, crayons and pencils donated
from Phi Kappa Phi members.
Open Door Preschool director Sandra Thomas said she’s thankful that
people want to help her kids.
“The kids look forward to Fridays,”
Thomas said. “When the students come
into the classroom, their eyes light up.”
In the future, Tice and Silva want
to apply for more funding for similar
projects.
“We’re capturing them at the beginning and showing them that we care
enough to go out and work with them,”
Silva said. “These kids won’t remember
us, but they’ll remember the experience.”
alaNNa QuilleN
[email protected]
Assistant police chief Rick Gomez will
go over a few details students should know
to survive a school shooting and when to
report suspicious behavior.
The presentation is 12:05-1:05 p.m.
Thursday during the 2008 Crime Prevention
Brown Bag luncheon in the University Center
Guadalupe Room.
Gomez will have a short PowerPoint and
then show the DVD “Shots Fired.”
He said this event was created mainly
due to the incidents at Virginia Tech and
Northern Illinois universities.
“There are some dos and don’ts every
person on campus should know,” he said.
The first 45 attendees get pizza and iced
tea, first come, first served. Gomez said
he’d hate to turn anyone away, but the room
can only hold 50 people, so students should
come early to save a seat.
— Jason Boyd
Planetarium sells Holiday
in the Park tickets
University students can buy tickets for
Holiday in the Park at Six Flags Over Texas
in the Chemistry and Physics Building. At the
Planetarium, a ticket for a day pass costs
$19.99 plus tax.
The tickets are good for two weekends
in December and can be bought at the
Planetarium ticket booth or Planetarium
office room 364.
Planetarium program coordinator Amy
Barraclough said the Planetarium bought
about 100 discounted tickets from Six Flags
to resell them. The Planetarium sells them
$10 cheaper per ticket than front-gate
prices.
On Dec. 12 the park is open 4-10 p.m.,
Dec. 13, 2-10 p.m., Dec. 14, 4-10 p.m., Dec.
20, 2-10 p.m. and Dec. 21, 4-10 p.m.
At Holiday in the Park, visitors can
experience added perks like holiday lights
and décor, buy Christmas crafts, slide
down a snow hill and watch various holidaythemed shows throughout the park.
“Hopefully, this will be just one more
service we can do for the public — to keep
them interested in the Planetarium and all
that we provide,” she said.
— Bryan Bastible
CorreCtioNs
The “Relevant Fiction” story and caption
Tuesday should have stated that The Violet Hour opened in the Studio Theater in
the Fine Arts Building.
Wednesday’s story, “University limits travel
spending,” should have stated that Gov. Rick
Perry asked state agencies to look for ways
to reduce spending where possible.
how to reaCh us
News Front Desk .............................. 817-272-3661
News after 5 p.m............................. 817-272-3205
Advertising ...................................... 817-272-3188
Fax ................................................. 817-272-5009
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Box 19038, Arlington, TX 76019
Editor in chief ..................................Emily Toman
[email protected]
News Editor ............................Julie Ann Sanchez
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Assistant News Editor .................Abigail Howlett
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[email protected]
Ad Representatives ..................Dondria Bowman,
Eric Lara, Mike Love, Pax Salinas, Sylvia
Santelli, Amanda Simpson, Karen Teran, Kasey
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Ad Artists ....................................Gabriel DeWitt,
Robert Harper, Benira Miller
Receptionists ............................ Monica Barbery,
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Courier ..................................... Charlie Beesley
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The Shorthorn are not necessarily those of the
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THE UNIVERSITy OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON
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Thursday, November 20, 2008
World VieW
Page 3A
The ShorThorn
in texas
nation
Marriage ban goes to court
the estimated 18,000 same-sex
marriages that were sanctioned
in California before election day.
Gay rights groups and local
governments petitioning to
overturn the ban were joined
by the measure’s sponsors and
Attorney General Jerry Brown
in urging the Supreme Court to
consider whether Proposition 8
passes legal muster.
The initiative’s opponents
had also asked the court to grant
a stay of the measure, which
would have allowed gay marriages to begin again while the
justices considered the cases.
The court denied that request.
The justices directed Brown
and lawyers for the Yes on 8
campaign to submit arguments
by dec. 19 on why the ballot
initiative should not be nullified.
it said lawyers for the plaintiffs,
who include same-sex couples
who did not wed before the election, must respond before Jan.
5.
oral arguments could be
scheduled as early as March, according to court spokeswoman
lynn Holton.
Both opponents and supporters of Proposition 8 expressed
confidence Wednesday that their
arguments would prevail.
But they also agreed that the
cases present the court’s seven
justices — six of whom voted
to review the challenges — with
complex questions that have few
precedents in state case law.
AUSTIN — The debate on how
to teach evolution in science
classrooms heated up in Texas on
Wednesday as the State Board of
Education listened to public comments on proposed revisions to the
state’s science curriculum.
The current curriculum requires
students be taught the “strengths
and weaknesses” of all scientific
theories, wording that some say has
been used to undermine the theory
of evolution.
The proposal being discussed
would change the language to say
“strengths and limitations,” even
though a review committee had recommended removing the reference
altogether.
economy
dow slips
to less than
8,000 points
recession spiral into something
worse.
The drop illustrated once
again how quickly the economic
danger can shift in tumultuous
times like these. The inflation
fears that gripped the nation
just a few months ago now
seem like a distant memory.
“Consumer price inflation
has suddenly screeched into
reverse,” said Brian Bethune,
economist at iHS Global insight. “The inflation threat has
disappeared from the radar
screen.”
Worried about the economic
in the world
Pirate ‘mother ship’
sunk by Indian Navy
AP Photo: Danny Johnston
A shopper pushes a cart at a Little Rock, Ark., Sam’s Club store owned by Wal-Mart Stores Inc., on Wednesday.
data, a gloomy outlook from the
Federal reserve and the fate
of the Big Three automakers,
investors yanked money out
of the stock market. The dow
drifted lower for most of the
day, then plummeted in a tumultuous final hour of trading.
it crossed under 8,000 in
the last minutes before the closing bell and closed down 427
points, or about 5 percent, at
7,997 — its lowest close since
March 2003. The average has
dipped below 8,000 on other
days since the meltdown began
in mid-September but had not
closed there.
crime
Grassy Knoll couple recall
1963 Kennedy assasination
the associated Press
AP Photo: Ed Reinke
Bill Newman points to the spot he and his wife Gayle, left, were located
when President John F. Kennedy was shot Nov. 22, 1963, as they tour The
Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Tuesday, June 3, 2008.
dAllAS — it seems as if
the gracious couple has told the
story a thousand times — how
the crack of an assassin’s bullet
struck the president just a few
feet from where they stood.
Sometimes it’s a reporter or
author, but often it’s a curious citizen who hopes Bill and
Gayle Newman can uncover a
sliver of evidence to buttress
their own theory about the
death of John F. Kennedy.
Who wouldn’t want to hear
from the couple who were so
close to the assassination that is
arguably the most scrutinized
in American history — particularly as the tragic event marks
its 45th anniversary on Saturday?
“At the time, we were both
23 years old and we didn’t realize the part in history that
we played, because we were
the closest people to him when
that third shot rang out,” Gayle
Newman said in a recent interview. “Now as we have grown
older, we do realize that this is
something that will be a part of
all of our life.”
The Newmans settled into
a spot on the lawn at dealey Plaza — just below the infamous grassy knoll — a few
minutes before Kennedy’s motorcade glided by on Nov. 22,
1963. Their two young sons,
4-year-old Billy and 2-year-old
Clayton, were in tow.
crime
interpol to investigate possible information leak in Mexico
as part of an investigation of law
enforcement officers who allegedly shared police information
with traffickers.
Gutierrez Vargas directed the
international police agency’s National Central Bureau in Mexico,
where he had access to interpol’s database of information
on suspected terrorists, wanted
persons, fingerprints and dNA
profiles, among other data, the
lyon, France-based agency said.
interpol’s Web site says that
officers of the National Central
Bureaus are connected to its police communications network so
they can share crucial information on criminals and criminal
activities daily.
Staffers from interpol’s General Secretariat plan to meet
with Mexican authorities and
determine if there was any improper use of interpol’s systems.
Meanwhile, the agency is stand-
COMING UP
FRIDAY
CAIRO, Egypt — Al-Qaida’s No.
2 slurred Barack Obama with a
demeaning racial term for a black
American who does the bidding
of whites in a new Web message
Wednesday intended to dent the
president-elect’s popularity among
Arabs and Muslims and claim he will
not change U.S. policy.
Ayman al-Zawahri’s speech was
al-Qaida’s first reaction to Obama’s
election victory — and it suggested
the terror network is worried the
new American leader could undermine its rallying cry that the United
States is an enemy oppressor.
Obama has been welcomed by
many in the Middle East who hope
he will end what they see as American aggression against Muslims and
Arabs under President George W.
Bush. Some believe his race and
Muslim family connections could
make him more understanding of
the developing world’s concerns.
— The Associated Press
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Read about a seminar hosted by UTA Police
where they describe what to do in a situation
with a hostile intruder.
ing by its man in Mexico: “inter- General’s office is responsible for
pol can categorically state that it interpol’s office in Mexico.
The Attorney General’s office
has never been given any reason
to question the integrity of Mr. did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
Gutierrez Vargas.”
Gutierrez Vargas, the director
interpol said the team will
leave for Mexico on Thursday to for international Police Affairs
discuss with Mexico’s Attorney and interpol at Mexico’s FedGeneral’s office what needs to eral investigative Agency, is only
be done, if anything, to ensure the latest high-ranking Mexican
compliance with the agency’s police official to be detained on
rules, which are designed to pre- suspicion of links to the nation’s
vent leaks. The federal Attorney
Daviddrug
M.gangs.
Nelson,
Al-Qaida insults Obama
in audio message
pe
the associated Press
MeXiCo CiTY — interpol
is sending a special investigative
team to Mexico to determine
whether sensitive information
from its database on criminals
and terrorists was leaked to drug
cartels, the agency said Wednesday.
interpol launched the probe
after Mexican federal police official ricardo Gutierrez Vargas
was placed under house arrest
NEW DELHI — The ship, operating
off the coast of Oman in the lawless
waters of the Gulf of Aden, was
crewed by heavily armed men, some
carrying rocket-propelled grenade
launchers. Behind it were a pair
of speedboats — the sort pirates
often use when they launch attacks
on merchant ships in these violent
seas.
What followed, officials said
Wednesday, was a rare victory in
a sea war against Somalia-based
piracy that has become increasingly
more violent, and where the pirates
are ever more bold.
A patrolling Indian navy frigate
quickly identified the vessel as a
“mother ship” — a mobile attack
base used to take gangs of pirates
and smaller speedboats into deep
water — and ordered it to stop and
be searched.
“They responded on the offensive and said that they would
blow up the Indian naval ship,” Commander Nirad Sinha, a navy press
officer, told reporters in New Delhi.
Then the pirates opened fire.
rS
t.
the associated Press
WASHiNGToN — A growing fear of economic deflation
helped take the air out of the
stock market Wednesday, and
another white-knuckle final
hour on Wall Street pushed the
dow Jones industrials under
8,000 to their lowest close since
the financial meltdown began.
Consumer prices in october took their biggest monthly
plunge in the six decades that
records have been kept — a reprieve for shoppers but a danger
sign for the economy because
falling prices can make a mild
Activists to testify on
science standards
Co
o
galized gay marriage.
All three cases claim the
measure abridges the civil rights
of a vulnerable minority group.
They argue that voters alone did
not have the authority to enact
such a significant constitutional
change.
As is its custom when it takes
up cases, the court elaborated
little. However, the justices did
say they want to address what
effect, if any, a ruling upholding
the amendment would have on
HOUSTON — The father of a
Houston-area teenager who lied
about being sexually assaulted was
given a six-year prison sentence for
stabbing a student who had been
accused in the alleged rape.
Ruben Cuellar-Romo, 45, was
sentenced by a jury on Wednesday
after he pleaded guilty two days
earlier to aggravated assault, the
Houston Chronicle reported on its
Web site Wednesday.
The victim, 17-year-old Joshua
Chapa, recovered from injuries to
his chest, abdomen and hand.
S.
the associated Press
SAN FrANCiSCo — California’s highest court agreed
Wednesday to hear several legal
challenges to the state’s new ban
on same-sex marriage but refused to allow gay couples to
resume marrying before it rules.
The California Supreme
Court accepted three lawsuits
seeking to nullify Proposition 8,
a voter-approved constitutional
amendment that overruled the
court’s decision in May that le-
Father sent to prison
for stabbing student
Page 4A
Poetry
continued from page 1A
said Michael Guinn, Fort
Worth National Poetry
Slams founder. The final
score combined the sum
of both judges’ scores.
After the first round,
those with the top four
scores returned for the
finals. They judged the
contestants by originality,
content and performance.
Alumnus Anthony Gordon speculated the way
judges scored each artist.
“It’s just if the judges
feel you,” he said.
Gordon came to the
competition not only to
express himself through
poetry, but also to become
a member of the Fort
Worth Poetry Slam Team.
Aerospace engineering
freshman Jarred Wright
still considers himself a
rookie. This was his second poetry slam, the first
Thursday, November 20, 2008
The ShorThorn
being last week’s slam at
the university.
“I have the talent, and
I need to express it,” he
said. “I’m here to win the
prize and get the vibe of
the crowd.”
James Hawthorne, one
of the organizers, said the
competition was hosted
to get students more involved and give them a
chance to express themselves in a new way.
“Nowadays, when you
have so much negativity
in some of the songs, it’s
another way to express
yourself in a positive way,”
he said. “It’s good clean
fun.”
Although
Gordon
didn’t win, he plans to
continue attending poetry
slams.
“It’s a release. It’s therapy,” he said. “Poetry is the
only thing that’s kept me
out of jail. It’s a release.”
athletics
New programs
may be offered
to disabled
Students are asked to
give feedback in a survey
through campus recreation.
dustin dangli
[email protected]
The
competition
consisted of 10
poets ranked
by two judges
on a scale of
one to 10.
The Shorthorn: Monica Lopez
The Shorthorn: Monica Lopez
Crash
continued from page 1A
was arrested in his home.
“The police car tried to initiate a pursuit with the suspect
vehicle. The suspect vehicle fled,”
Miller said. “During the pursuit
the police car was involved in
a three-car accident at Mitchell
and Center.”
The officer’s marked patrol
vehicle caught fire, but the officer
was able to escape uninjured,
and a citizen was treated at the
scene. Miller said the pursuit was
headed southbound on Center
Fort Worth poet A J Houston performs “I Can’t Afford Not Knowing, ” a piece about
struggling fathers. Houston is also an inspirational speaker and teacher.
Street, but was unable to offer
any more details.
Miller said there was a driver’s
license check going on at Mitchell
and Center before the pursuit occurred. He said the checks occur
regularly across Arlington and
consist of stopping every vehicle
or every other vehicle to check for
proper driver’s license.
Martinez faces a $2,500 bail
for evading arrest, $210 for a
non-seat belted person, and $477
for a failure to maintain financial
responsibility warrant, totaling
of $3,187.
sarah lutz
[email protected]
Final
continued from page 1A
2009.
“I think that’s great,” kinesiology senior Leonard Frank
said. “I was just watching the
games yesterday, so I’d be
looking forward to that. That’s
awesome.”
Frank is also excited about
the possibility of going to the
tournament.
“I’ve always wanted to go
to the Final Four, but it’s never
been within distance,” he said.
Biology freshman Emman-
uel Bekoe speculates that the
Final Four championship will
put the city on the map.
“It’s one of the best things to
happen to Arlington,” he said.
He knows tickets for the
seats will be pricey, but that
won’t stop him from trying to
go — especially if his home
team makes it to the tournament the same year.
“If Texas would be in the
Final Four, that would be
magical to me,” Bekoe said. “It
doesn’t get much better than
that.”
Mark Bauer
[email protected]
“We’re trying to determine
what people want and tailor
our services to them,” he said.
“I don’t want to limit people’s
imagination.”
By Jason Boyd
Campus Recreation direcThe Shorthorn staff
tor Doug Kuykendall said
The Movin’ Mavs and the department, that wants
Campus Recreation will offer to have more comprehensive
a survey for disabled students disabled services, hired Garthrough the beginning of ner this semester as assistant
January to gauge interest in director for his expertise in
disabled sports and recreation this area.
opportunities.
Kuykendall said he also
Choices could be imple- wants to start a class for stumented as soon as
dents with disabilispring 2009, said “We’re
ties on how to use the
Chris Muller, Campus
weight machines and
Recreation associate trying to
other equipment.
director.
Dianne Hengst,
determine
Potential programs
Students
with Diswhat people abilities Office
include
intramural
direcsports like wheelchair want and
tor, applauds Gartennis or swimming.
ner’s efforts.
tailor our
It might also in“Individuals with
clude educational ser- services to
disabilities are a divices for equipment them.”
verse group and often
use in the Maverick
want to participate
Activities Center, said chris Muller,
in all aspects of proDoug Garner, Movin’ Campus
grams, services and
Recreation
Mavs head coach.
opportunities offered
The survey opened associate
throughout campus,”
two weeks ago, and so director
she said.
far, five disabled stuHengst said her
dents have completed
office has started to
it, Muller said. Sevhelp spread the word
enty percent see a need for by e-mailing members and
handicap-geared activities in posting the link on their Web
Campus Recreation.
site.
Survey questions ask
Muller said his office plans
if students would like to on having some new services
participate in a recreation in no later than 12 months,
activity and what kind of but has told the people inactivity. Options include volved to not get discouraged
bowling, tennis, table tennis if the classes aren’t popular
and swimming and a write-in at first.
option.
It asks if students want to
Jason Boyd
be competitive or just learn
[email protected]
personal fitness.
Pulitzer
prizewinning
author and
historian,
Doris
Kearns
Goodwin,
speaks
about her
book Team
of Rivals:
The Political
Genius of
Abraham
Lincoln on
Wednesday
at Texas
Hall. The
lecture was
part of the
Maverick
Speakers
Series.
Goodwin
continued from page 1A
Rick Johnson & Co. 266-1100 Prod. Dept
FILM: BW
Insertion date: November 11, 13, 14, 18, 20, 21 and December 2, 4, and 5, 2008
winning historian’s lecture on
the presidential elections and
how they relate to her book,
Team of Rivals: The Political
Genius of Abraham Lincoln.
Goodwin said if there’s one
thing Obama takes straight
from the book, it’s his desire to
surround himself with people
who support him.
“I would say even more
importantly are the temperamental qualities they share
because Obama is a rookie,
that’s most important,” she
said. “Like Lincoln, he thinks
things through and tries not to
make the same mistakes.”
Goodwin said these days
it’s more difficult to become a
great president.
“If someone can take us
through a crisis and end in a
stronger way, then that might
signify greatness,” she said.
Goodwin said Obama’s
plan to bring rivals into his
cabinet is a positive step.
“Lincoln trusted his own
leadership and convinced
them to care about the country more then their own beliefs,” she said. “If they are
willing to put the common
goals ahead of their own ambitions and work together,
then it can work.”
Allan Saxe, political science
associate professor, said Goodwin’s receiving much attention
because her book emphasizes
the political adversaries Lincoln accumulated as an unexpected presidential candidate
I N V E N T YO U RS E L F
Pain
continued from page 1A
so register today. Visit sanjac.edu/schedule.
(281 ) 998-6150
SANJAC.edu
EOI
sanjac_1002_shorthorn.indd 1
11/10/08 1:26:27 PM
One of the researchers,
electrical engineering professor J.C. Chiao, suffers
from chronic neck pain. Because the surgery is extremely dangerous, he lives with
the constant pain.
“You cannot cure pain.
We can inhibit pain,” he said.
“We aim to build a complete
module that can automatically optimize inhibition of
chronic pain.”
He said researchers were
concerned that patients
JOB No: SANJAC 1002
Pub: The Shorthorn
SIZE: 5.499” x 10.5”
Want to get your college degree faster? SJC can help.
With our Holiday Mini session, you can earn transferable
ber 18,
college credits in just three weeks. Classes start Decem
The Shorthorn: Jacob Adkisson
— which parallels Obama’s
path to the presidency.
“It’s not Goodwin’s fault the
media is comparing Obama
to Lincoln,” Saxe said. “In the
sense, [Obama] is looking at
Hillary Clinton as a potential
cabinet member. Lincoln was
not that peculiar, because in
the 19th century it wasn’t unheard of for presidents to reach
out to former opponents.”
He said the media is way off
base when they compare the
two politicians.
“It’s a far stretch to say
Obama’s like Lincoln,” Saxe
said. “He hasn’t served or appointed anyone to his cabinet
yet, and it’s not like Lincoln
and his opponents suddenly
became friends
after appointing them.”
Danny Woodward, communications assistant to the
university president, said the
lecture was originally intended to for the Maverick Activities Center. That facility could
only hold 450 people. 1,814
people attended the lecture.
“People from all over were
eager to attend,” he said. “All
of our lectures have been great
because not only do people
learn from them, but they
bring people to the campus
who normally wouldn’t be
here.”
Michelle leverett
[email protected]
search and academcould
overstimuic reputation. The
late themselves by
university researchputting the setting
ers will work with
higher than needed,
Intel researchers to
where they couldn’t
develop more effifeel anything. If pacient wireless comtients had the tolmunication moderance settings too
ules.
high, he could put
“We have verified
his hand over a
flame and not feel it J.C. Chiao, electrical our system in aniengineering
mals,” he said. “We
at all. The researchprofessor
are now building a
ers’ new device lets
more sophisticated
the patients pick the
system to optimize
dosage he wants,
and then it would remember the pain inhibition.”
the setting, preventing overstimulation.
Bryan BastiBle
He said this research will
[email protected]
advance the university’s re-
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Page 5A
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DR. RUTH
Q: I am a 28-year-old male, and I am bike riding as a problem, but maybe you
concerned about a gradual reduction in are sitting too much in front of a computmy "orgasmic pleasure." I have been er or doing something like that. If the
experiencing pain in my left groin, but I sensations don't come back, I'd advise
don't recall pulling it. I saw a doctor and going back to your doctor, or maybe conhe checked for swelling, hernias, etc., sulting another one.
and could find nothing wrong.
He suspected that I experiQ: My husband always
enced a groin pull. But that
wants sex -- is this normal? In
still doesn't explain the reducthe past few months, I have
tion of orgasmic pleasure that
lost my desire to have sex. Not
I have experienced. I still
that I want it from anyone
have a normal (perhaps better
else; I don't want it at all.
than normal) sex drive, I ejacWhat is wrong with me? I love
ulate the same amount and I
my husband more than ever,
feel a sense of calm and satisand we get along great, but
faction after an orgasm. But
when it comes time to go to
the actual sensation of the
bed, he turns into a horndog.
orgasm itself is nothing like it Dr. Ruth
We need help, please.
used to be. Rather than a Send your
body-consuming tidal wave of questions to Dr.
A: This may be one of
pleasure, I now experience a Ruth Westheimer those "chicken or egg" situasmall ripple in a lake. If it
tions. If you feel pressured for
wasn't for the feeling of satis- c/o King
sex, maybe that's what is makfaction afterward, I'm not sure Features
ing you not want to engage in
that the sex would even be Syndicate, 235 E. sexual relations. On the other
worth the effort! Is reduction 45th St., New
hand, if you've lost your
of orgasmic feeling a common York, NY 10017
desire for some other reason,
condition, and if so, how can I
then perhaps that is what is
be treated?
making your husband desperate. In any case, I believe your situation
A: As men get older, they do experi- is a relationship problem, not a sexual
ence less-intense orgasms, but "older" one. Try to figure out what has changed
doesn't usually mean 28. Maybe because about your relationship, and maybe you
of this groin pull, you are somewhat can patch things up. And bear in mind,
nervous about your genital region, and the cause probably has nothing to do with
this is the root of the problem. I've also your sex life but stems from some other
heard that men who do a lot of bicycle aspect of your relationship. If you can't
riding may experience a loss of sensa- solve this riddle on your own, then you
tion. There are special seats that can help two should go for counseling.
with this -- not that you've mentioned
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Instructions:
Fill in the grid so
that every row,
every column and
every 3x3 grid
contains the digits 1
through 9 with no
repeats. That
means that no
number is repeated
in any row, column
or box.
Solution
Solution, tips and
computer program
at www.sudoku.com
ABOUT SPORTS
Justin Rains, editor
[email protected]
Sports publishes Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
Pa e 6
g
A
SPORTS
REMEMBER
Read Friday’s Sports page for full coverage
of the women’s basketball team’s trip
to Fort Worth to face Metroplex rival TCU.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
THE SHORTHORN
VOLLEYBALL
UTA freshman makes
All-Conference Team
Outside hitter Amanda Aguilera
becomes the first Maverick
freshman on the team since ‘93.
BY STEPHEN PETERS
The Shorthorn staff
The Shorthorn: Michael Rettig
SMACK DOWN
Business management junior Adam Boykin swings at a tennis ball Wednesday
night at the UTA Tennis Center. Boykin said he and his friends often meet on
the courts at night to play for fun.
After the final volleyball match
last Saturday, one player’s season
continued with the Southland
Conference’s All-Conference Team
selections Tuesday.
Freshman outside hitter Amanda Aguilera was named to the First
Team All-Conference, following a
season in which she led the Mavericks in kills per set at 2.85 and
recorded 10 double-doubles in 16
conference matches.
Aguilera is the first Maverick
freshman since 1993 to earn First
Team All-Conference recognition
and the eighth player overall.
“It means a lot — I worked
really hard for it,” she said. “My
teammates worked really hard for
it, and without them, I couldn’t
have done it.”
Aguilera’s 314 kills and 939 attempts are good for eighth and
fifth place all-time in school history by a freshman. She also was
10th in freshman history with 303
digs.
Head coach Diane Seymour said
there was “no doubt” that Aguilera
had the numbers in conference
matches to receive the selection.
“I was very, very happy to see
that other conference coaches saw
that she was doing good things as
well,” she said. “We needed her to
carry more of a load, and that’s
what she did.”
2008 SOUTHLAND ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAM
CONFERENCE AWARDS
Name/School/Position/Year
Chloe Smith/Central Arkansas/MB/So.
Jessica Weynand/Texas State/OH/Jr.
Kendra Rowland/UTSA/OH/So.
Lauren Railey/SFA/OH/Sr.
Lauren Holdroff/Lamar/MB/Jr.
Anna Ferguson/Sam Houston/MB/Jr.
Emily Jones Wilkes/Texas State/MB/Sr.
Amy Weigle/Texas State/MB/Sr.
Robyn Smith/Central Arkansas/S/Jr.
Kelsey Jewasko/UTSA/L/Fr.
Amanda Aguilera/UTA /OH/Fr.
Mary Caitlin Bottles/SFA/MB/Fr.
Player of the Year - Chloe Smith, Central
Arkansas
Newcomer of the Year - Stefanie Robbins,
UTSA
Freshman of the Year - Jessica Hays,
Central Arkansas
Libero of the Year - Kelsey Jewasko,
UTSA
Setter of the Year - Robyn Smith, Central
Arkansas
Coach of the Year - Steven McRoberts,
Central Arkansas
The freshman recorded a season-high 24 kills against Lamar in
Beaumont — the most by any Maverick this year. Against McNeese
State, she notched a season-high
23 digs and on two separate occasions scored 5 aces in one match.
Aguilera said she knows that
with this selection, it’ll make next
year that much harder to fly under
the radar.
“The pressure’s on,” she said.
“Everyone knows what I can do, so
I either stay there or get better.”
Aguilera said she felt a little
snubbed by not getting SLC Freshman of the Year. Central Arkansas’s Jessica Hays, who was selected as Honorable Mention
All-Conference, took
home the award after
compiling
2.9 kills
per set and 2.85 digs
per set.
AMANDA
AGUILERA
Led the team
with:
• 314 kills
• 2.85 kills
per set
• 939 attack
attempts
• 32 service
aces
“I’m disappointed because I
wanted it,” she said. “I’m sure other
people deserved it, too.”
STEPHEN PETERS
[email protected]
COLUMN
Under Pressure
Can the Mavs keep winning
when expectations are high?
W
The team proved it can
win the big games when
it isn’t supposed to, but
can it handle the pressure
when the target rests
solely on the backs of
Cross, Vereen, Guignard
and the rest of the
2008 team?
P a s t
maverick
t e a m s
never
had
expectations of
this magnitude
heaped
on
them. Prior to
last season, the
closest the team
came to this kind
of glory was in the
form of a shared
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o Villagrana
Sponsored by
KXb\Xe\ncffbXk
The Shortho
hen the men’s basketball team Guignard said the team had the ability to win a
knocked off Southland Conference game or two in the national tournament.
Heck, senior forward Anthony Vereen even
Tournament No. 3 seed Northwestern
State at the end of last season, they achieved made his way onto a Wheaties box, sort of.
The campus community believes
something never before seen in
in this team and rightly so, after the
program history.
performance it put on last season.
On campus, the team became cult
They were the ultimate Cinderella
heroes overnight.
story, clinching a tournament spot
They hosted a media day at Texas
during the season’s final week,
Hall that included Fort Worth Starthen running the table as an afterTelegram columnist Jim Reeves, and
thought No. 7 seed that no one
head coach Scott Cross appeared
outside of Arlington saw coming.
on numerous TV and radio shows
That all changes this season.
including ESPN Radio’s “Galloway and
By cutting down the net at the
Co.”
Merrell Center in Katy last season,
Their legend only grew as the
the Mavs did more than stamp their
Mavericks hung tight with a Memphis
JUSTIN RAINS
ticket to the Big Dance, they served
team that would eventually lose a
notice to the rest of the Southland
heartbreaker to Kansas in the national
Conference that they had arrived.
championship game.
Now, everyone will want to take a piece out
Since then, the talk surrounding the team
has been all about a repeat. Junior guard Rogér of the defending champs.
2003-2004 regular season conference
title or a berth in the National Invitational
Tournament (NIT) after the 1980-1981
campaign.
There will be no “Picked Sixth” on
the backs of T-shirts for inspiration. No
rallying cries about how no one believes in
them or how everyone is counting them out.
The fairy tale is over now. A championship
isn’t preferred or even a “wow, wouldn’t that
be neat” occurrence, it’s expected.
The Mavs have the talent and the coaching.
The question now is: can they handle of
pressure of being expected to win?
— Justin Rains is a journalism senior and
sports editor of The Shorthorn
Agree? Disagree? Let us know at
THE SHO
HORTHORN
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ORT
OR
RTHO
THOR
HORN
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NOVEMBER 25TH
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