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By Clayton ashley

cashley@kansan.com
Te Rachel Maddow Show on
MSNBC broadcast from Free State
Brewery in Lawrence yesterday.
Te show typically ofers politi-
cal news and commentary from a
lef-leaning perspective. Last nights
episode focused on both former at-
torney general Phil Klines ethics
hearing in Topeka and followed up
on the shows past coverage of Dr.
George Tillers murder in Wichita.
Rachel Maddow has been hosting
the show since its debut in Septem-
ber 2008. She was also a radio host
on the station, Air America, until it
went bankrupt last year.
Maddows show managed to fll up
the brewery to capacity hours before
the broadcast, with many Univer-
sity of Kansas students among the
crowd.
I came down because I really
like Rachels perspective on current
events and social issues, said Vin-
cent Jerkovich, Salina Freshmen, My
thinking really aligns with hers.
Jerkovich and his friends John
Baker and Gavin Hanson, both fresh-
men from Salina, said they had only
found out about the broadcast hours
before theyd arrived.
I heard about it walking down the
stairs of Wescoe. Someone walked
past me and I overheard.
Te shows decision to broadcast
from Lawrence wasnt only a surprise
to students, but to Free States man-
ager, Alex Hamilton.
Tey called us on Tuesday out of
the blue, Hamilton said.
Concerning the lef-leaning ten-
dency of the show, Hamilton also
said that Free State was open to ev-
eryone.
If Bill OReilly wanted to do a
show here we would probably let him
do it, he said.
Bill Wolf, the shows executive
producer and vice president of Prime
Time at MSNBC, said he was sur-
prised to learn about the brewerys
history.
It turned out to have this amaz-
ing story, the frst brewery allowed in
Kansas in 100 years, the John Brown
plaque, the story of Bloody Kansas,
and the 1856 burning of Lawrence; it
turns out to be this amazing place,
Wolf said. We didnt know any of
that. We were glad about that, but
that was totally a happy accident.
Wolf said the show had chosen
Kansas for their story because it was
on the front line of the culture war in
regards to reproductive rights, a topic
theyve been covering for months.
Last October the show broadcast a
documentary titled, Te Assassina-
tion of George Tiller narrated by
Rachel Maddow.
One of the big themes weve been
examining is the idea of threats...and
threats of violence...and violence be-
ing used as a political tactic, Wolf
said, and its not supposed to be that
way.
During their time in Kansas, Wolf
said the crews experience has been
positive.
Te people have been typically
incredibly nice, incredibly helpful,
and really eager to talk about this
story.
Edited by Brittany Nelson
thursday, February 24, 2011 www.kansan.com volume 123 issue 101
D
AILY
K
ANSAN
T
HE
U
NIVERSITY
The student voice since 1904
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
2011 The University Daily Kansan
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . .6A
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Cryptoquips . . . . . . . . . 4A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10A
Sudoku. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
TODAYS WEATHER
weather.com
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Rain/Snow Showers
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INDEX
HIGH
LOW
skipping meat
could improve
your health
Explore
new
options
through
campus
dining
see how
the twins
got their
start
Maggie and Rosies
father taught
them how
to play at an
early age.
RESEARcH | 3A
old school
science and
technology
celebrated
Campus and community to
celebrate the100-year an-
niversary of the Engineering
Expo this Friday and Saturday.
TRADITIONS | 3A
jAYplAY | INSIDE
SOfTbAll | 10A
Te original rules of
1. The ball may be thrown
in any direction with one or
both hands.
2. The ball may be bat-
ted in any direction with
one or both hands (never
with the fst).
3. A player cannot run
with the ball. The player must
throw it from the spot on which
he catches it, allowance to be made
for a man who catches the ball
when running at a good speed if he
tries to stop.
5. No shouldering, holding,
pushing, tripping, or striking in any
way the person of an opponent
shall be allowed; the frst infringe-
ment of this rule by any player shall
count as a foul, the second shall
disqualify him until the next goal is
made, or, if there was evident intent
to injure the person, for the whole
of the game, no substitute allowed.
7. If either side makes three
consecutive fouls, it shall count a
goal for the opponents (consecu-
tive means without the opponents
in the meantime making a foul).
10. The umpire shall be judge
of the men and shall note the fouls
and notify the referee when three
consecutive fouls have been made.
He shall have power to disqualify
men according to Rule 5.
13. The side making the most
goals in that time shall be declared
the winner. In case of a draw, the
game may, by agreement of the
captains, be continued until an-
other goal is made.
Associated Press
By aleX GaRRIson
agarrison@kansan.com
The 13 rules that started it all are
coming home well, at least close
to home.
The Nelson-Atkins Museum
in Kansas City, Mo., announced
Wednesday that the original rules
of Basket Ball document, written by
James Naismith in 1891, will be on
display beginning March 5.
The document was purchased by
David and Suzanne Booth, long-time
donors to the University of Kansas,
for more than $4 million Dec. 10 in a
New York auction. The purchase was
one of the largest ever for a piece of
sports memorabilia.
Since December, the rules that
defined the original game invented by
Naismith have been in Austin, where
the Booths live and work. But David
Booth, a graduate of the University,
has talked publicly and passionately
about bringing the document back to
Lawrence.
Its just the right thing to do the
rules really just belong at KU, he said
in January of his purchase.
Booth spoke of wanting a whole
new top-notch venue, a designa-
tion place to show off the history,
made here, thats changed the sport-
ing world forever. But the University,
including Kansas Athletics and KU
Endowment, which handles
all gifts or donations, has
been tight-lipped about
any possible plans to
house or display the
document in Lawrence.
The Nelson-Atkins
exhibition will be the
documents first public
display and its importance
as a piece of history dont
call it memorabilia, Booth
says, its more important than
that will be as a cultural
triumph, according to a media
release from the museum.
The document was actually writ-
ten in Springfield, Mass., where
Naismith, born in 1861 in
Canada, worked before
he came to Lawrence in
1898, seven years after
he created the game.
But the forty years
he spent here saw
the development
and popularization
of Basket Ball,
and thats why
the document
that began it all
belongs here,
Booth said.
In the mean-
time, he says theres
a lot to be proud of
Naismiths game has
become one of the most
popular in the world.
Wherever he is,
Booth said of Naismith,
who died in his home on
University Drive in 1939,
I bet he would think thats
pretty cool.
The free exhibit will run in
the Kirkwood Hall at the muse-
um, 4525 Oak St. in Kansas
City, Mo., until May 29.
NaiSMithS REtuRN
The document containing the 13 original rules
will see its first public display in Kansas City
By saBRIna ahmed
editor@kansan.com
With a simple, Hi he begins.
He is a poet. He is a lyricist. But
most of all, he is a storyteller. Anis
Mojgani performed last night
and moved the audience with his
words.
At Woodruff Auditorium in
the Kansas Union, award win-
ning poet Anis Mojgani had the
audience laughing at times, in
conversation at times, and espe-
cially silent at times. He waved his
hands around with the movement
of the words, telling a story with
the lines and with his body.
Mojgani said it is important
for the audience to come with an
open mind, and people should,
put aside whatever conceptions
they might have had before about
what the spoken word is and try
something different.
Anis Mojgani lives in Austin,
Texas, and has been writing poetry
for 16 years. Since he began per-
forming 13 years ago, he has been
a two-time National Poetry Slam
champion, a Poetry Slam World
Cup champion and has published
two books of poetry.
As much as he says he tries not
to let the fame change the way he
writes, he says it means he does
not have to prove anything any
more.
Now I have the freedom to
really write work that really reso-
nates with me, Mojgani said.
Mojgani said he tries to write
every day, even though it has got-
ten harder since beginning tours.
With a growing number follow-
ing in Australia and the United
Kingdom, he said it is not only
hard to stay in touch
with himself as an
artist, but also to
please his audience.
He said the fame
is not what creates
his work it is just
around him.
Some days it
doesnt matter, some
days it is kind of
cool, and other days
its kind of sucky,
Mojgani said.
Edited by Dave Boyd
Brewery gets some air time
Poet anis Mojgani en-
tertains Ku students
Howard Ting/KANSAN
News anchor Rachel Maddowof MSNBCs The Rachel MaddowShowhosts a live broadcast
fromFree State Brewery Wednesday night.
lecture local
Artem bagiev/KANSAN
Famed poet anis Mojgani uses hand gestures to speak to students at
the Kansas union Wednesday. Mojgani is known across the world for
his work.
2A / NEWS / thursdAy, FEBruAry 24, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnsAn.com
QUOTE OF THE DAY
my biggest weakness is my
sensitivity. I am too sensitive a
person.
Mike Tyson
FACT OF THE DAY
mike tyson, at the age of 20, was the
youngest boxer to win a heavy-
weight title after knocking out
trevor Berbick in the second round.
reuters.com
Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011
Featured
content
kansan.com
check out a story about the Bike
Polo Association at kansan.com.
TODAY
February 24
SUNDAY
February 27
MONDAY
February 28
SATURDAY
February 26
TUESDAY
March 1
Whats going on?
n the ofce of diversity and Equity
will host the lecture At the margins of
Black Freedom studies: Working-class
representation and the Blues Idiom at
3:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium, kansas
union, level four. clarence Lang, spring
2011 Langston hughes visiting professor
in African & African American studies will
be giving the lecture. the event is free.
nharry Potter and the deathly hallows: Part 1
will show as a part of the campus movies series.
It will start at 8 p.m. in Woodruf Auditorium,
kansas union, level fve. tickets are free with a
student saver card, $2 with a valid kuId and $3
for the general public.
nku theatre for young People will present h.G.
Wells the time machine at 10:30 a.m. in Wil-
liam Inge memorial theatre at murphy hall. tick-
ets are $10 for the public, $9 for senior citizens,
ku faculty and staf and $5 for ku students.
FRIDAY
February 25
ndr. Berghout will perform on the World War
II memorial campaniles 53 bronze bells from
5-5:30 p.m. In the event of inclement weather,
the concert will be canceled.
North American Bike Polo
Association
WEDNESDAY
March 2
nstacy nadeau, an original dove Evolution
model, will talk about true beauty and how it is
not dependent upon skin color or size. nadeau
will speak at 7 p.m. in the Woodruf Auditorium
on level fve of the kansas union.
kus version of dancing With
the stars happens tonight at 7
in the kansas union Ball room.
dancers include the student
body president, the chancellors
husband, Baby Jay and more!
Pick up your free ticket voucher
at the suA ticket ofce before
hand.
nGeographer Lee schwartz will discuss the
importance of geography in the formulation of
foreign policy at 7:30 p.m. at the dole Institute of
Politics.
View photos of the fair at kansan.
com/photos/galleries.
Flu prevention main topic
at wellness fair
For more events, see
calendar.ku.edu
nthe hall center for the humanities will host a
workshop to discuss ethical, philisophical and so-
cial implications of youth in media. the workshop
will be held at 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the seminar
room of the hall center.
BUSINESS
LGBT calls for new
same-sex restrooms
the university of kansas Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual and transgender-
resource center has established a
new gender-neutral bathroom task
force this semester.
the task force is conducting a
survey on the amount of gender-
neutral bathrooms on campus as
well as single-stalled bathrooms
that can be converted into gender-
neutral bathrooms. the task force
wants to create more campus
bathrooms that serve the diversity
of students and their needs.
there are restrooms that can
be easily altered with changing
the sign on the door,said diane
Genther, LGBt resource center co-
ordinator and task force member.
Genther said that more gender-
neutral bathrooms would help
transgender students, disabled
students with a diferent gendered
attendant and parents with difer-
ent gendered children.
Its an issue that potentially af-
fects a lot of people,Genther said.
Its important that we be thinking
about the needs of these students
and making their campus experi-
ence as comfortable as possible.
task force members will share
their survey fndings at the task
forces next meeting march 8. the
meeting will be held from noon to
1 p.m. in the International room of
the kansas union.
AdamStrunk
the university daily kansan is the
student newspaper of the university
of kansas. the first copy is paid
through the student activity fee.
Additional copies of the kansan
are 50 cents. subscriptions can
be purchased at the kansan
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the university daily kansan (Issn
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Annual subscriptions by mail are
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kJhk is the student
voice in radio. Each day
there is news, music,
sports, talk shows and
other content made
for students, by students. Whether
its rock n roll or reggae, sports or
special events, kJhk 90.7 is for you.
MEDIA PARTNERS
check out
kansan.com
or kuJh-tV
on knology of
kansas channel 31 in Lawrence for
more on what youve read in todays
kansan and other news. updates
from the newsroom air at noon, 1
p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m. the student-
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CONTACT US
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contact nick Gerik, Alex Garrison,
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kansan on twitter at thekansan_
news.
ET CETERA
Liquor bill could
hurt businesses
A bill allowing grocery and
convenience stores to sell alcohol
other than 3.2 beer was presented
to the kansas senate tuesday.
kansas is only one of fve states
with the regulation that only
licensed liquor stores can sell any-
thing but cereal malt beverages.
some local liquor stores are
upset about the bill, saying that
it may help grocery stores, but it
will hurt their businesses.
A lot of liquor stores will close
if this bill passes and a lot of
family businesses that have been
in business for years probably
wont make it, said matt Easley,
manager of on the rocks, 1818
massachusetts st.
If the bill passes, grocery and
convenience stores wanting to
sell alcohol will either have to wait
until 2017 when the states license
cap expires or buy a license from
a closing liquor store.
the senate could vote on the
bill as early as Friday.
Lyndsey Mott
CAMPUS
By AndreA Olsen
aolsen@kansan.com
Science and technology have
made great strides in the past
century, but some traditions
remain the same. This year
marks the 100-year anniversary
of the Engineering Expo at the
University of Kansas, an event
dedicated to highlighting the
current research and technol-
ogy from all fields of engineer-
ing, mathematics and science.
The first Engineering Expo
took place on March 31, 1911, as
a holiday reserved for engineer-
ing students only. There was
a parade of floats designed by
each department of the school,
beginning at Marvin Hall and
ending on Massachusetts Street.
Along with the parade, the
original Expo included athletic
competitions, a large dinner,
and a dance at the end of the
day for the students and their
dates.
In 1922 the School of
Engineering decided to open up
the event to the whole campus
and community. Through the
years, the event has evolved into
a two-day event on a Friday and
Saturday reserved for students
from surrounding elementary,
junior high and high schools.
More than a thousand students
from grades K-12 attend each
year, participating in compe-
titions, attending demonstra-
tions, and listening to presen-
tations about the programs
and research in the School of
Engineering.
As Expo co-chair for the
Engineering Student Council,
Megan Ketchum has been
working all year on researching
the history of the Engineering
Expo in preparation for this
week. Pulling files from the
University Archives, Ketchum
looked at old traditions from
Expo through the years,
including the crowning of an
Engineering Queen and an
old rivalry among the Schools
of Engineering and Law that
involved parade float vandalism
in the 1960s. The old traditions
will be highlighted in a timeline
spanning Learned and Eaton
Halls. The timeline will track
not only the Engineering Expo,
but the progress of science and
technology through the years
as well.
To commemorate the 100-year
anniversary, the Engineering
Student Council has sched-
uled a whole week of events
leading up to the traditional
Expo this Friday and Saturday.
Coinciding with National
Engineers Week, the E-Week
on this campus is being pro-
moted as a homecoming for the
School of Engineering and their
students. Every student organi-
zation in the school is involved
in Expo, whether its making
presentations on research or
helping run the competitions.
This years events are geared at
the entire KU community.
This is a really neat project
because its so multidisciplinary.
It involves every type of engi-
neering as well as chemistry,
Black said, as well as being a
timely experiment in sustain-
ability.
Engineering Expo also
involved the architecture,
chemistry, mathematics and
physics departments, as well as
the branches of the armed ser-
vices in the past. As part of this
years E-Week festivities, all of
those departments have been
invited to participate again. The
Center for Environmentally
Beneficial Catalysis is work-
ing with the chemistry depart-
ment to sponsor a biodiesel fuel
manufacturing competition for
high school students. Roderick
Black, Director of Laboratories
for the Chemistry Department,
said six teams will compete,
making and burning the fuel
in an engine before testing its
quality and efficiency.
The point of Expo is to
open up our doors and show
everyone what engineering
is about and how our school
works, Ketchum, a junior from
Ottawa, said. Our goal is get-
ting people into the building
and interested in our work.
Edited by Danielle Packer
Expo celebrates 100 years
SCIENCE
kansan newsroom
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development center
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / ThurSdAy, februAry 24, 2011 / NEWS / 3A
GSP Hall closed next academic year for renovations
By Max Lush
mlush@kansan.com
Following the end of the school
year, GSP Hall will undergo an
approximate $13.1 million renova-
tion and close for the 2011-2012
academic school year.
The appearance of GSP will not
be the only thing that changes about
the residence hall. Beginning in the
fall semester of 2012, GSP will wel-
come male students for the first
time since opening in 1955.
Diana Robertson, director of the
department of student housing,
said the renovations are next on the
departments schedule for housing
improvements.
Robertson said the department
has seen fewer requests from stu-
dents asking to live in single-gender
halls.
The reality is students today are
more interested in living in co-ed
halls, Robertson said. Theyre
more preferable.
Sarah Hoffman, a junior from
Bullhead, Ariz., who lived in GSP-
Corbin her freshman year said if she
could do things over, she would stay
in a co-ed residence hall.
I wish I had more guy friends,
Hoffman said. All the guys I know
I had to meet in my classes.
However, Hoffman did like some
aspects of living in an all-women
hall better than living in a co-ed
hall.
It was nice not to have to be
worried about how you look while
walking through the hall, Hoffman
said.
Adjacent to GSP, Corbin Hall
will remain an all-women residence
hall along with six other scholarship
halls on campus.
Robertson said architectural
plans and designs for the hall are
about 95 percent complete. The
occupancy will change from 428
beds to 374 after the renovations.
Robertson said they have not filled
GSP to maximum occupancy in a
number of years.
Students who would live in GSP
next school year will be dispersed
throughout the residence halls on
Daisy Hill.
Robertson said one of the biggest
changes would be the addition of
three bathrooms to each floor. Two
bathrooms will be for shared use,
along with one in a suite on the
north side of each wing. As of now,
there is only one shared bathroom
in each wing of the hall.
The renovation process will
begin with architecture crews com-
pletely gutting the inside of the
hall and installing brand new infra-
structure throughout the building,
Robertson said.
A temporary dining area will
be arranged for Corbins resi-
dents for next years students.
Previously, Corbin residents ate in
the GSP Dining Center inside GSP.
Robertson said their food would be
prepped and delivered from Mrs.
Es on Daisy Hill.
After GSPs renovations,
Robertson said the department
would renovate McCollum,
Corbin and Oliver Halls, in that
order. Robertson said the housing
improvements hope to be done by
2017 or 2018.
Edited by Corey Thibodeaux
Dalton Gomez/KANSAN
Gertrude Sellards Pearson, or GSP, has plans for renovations and becoming co-ed. The Kansas Board of Regents approved a $13.1 million bond for
this project.
cAmpUS
HoUSINg
Doctor discusses benefts of medical marijuana at KU
for more coverage of this story, check
out KuJhs newscast today at 4 p.m.
By JONaThaN shORMaN
jshorman@kansan.com

In the background of a state-wide
debate over legalization, about 50 stu-
dents gathered Wednesday evening
to hear about the efects and possi-
bilities of medical marijuana.
Wichita doctor Jon Hauxwell
spoke to students at Staufer-Flint
Hall about the
benefts and
drawbacks of
medical pot.
Any sub-
stance that is ca-
pable of altering
human physiol-
ogy in a good
way is usually
capable of alter-
ing it in a bad
way, Hauxwell said.
Hauxwell, who kept his comments
exclusively about medical marijuana
use, spoke about two common ways
of consuming marijuana by inha-
lation or eating. Inhaling marijuana,
which is usally done by smoking it,
helps individuals quickly determine
their optimal dosage for relieving
pain, he said.
However, Hauxwell said taking pot
through eating could be better for in-
dividuals who require larger doses.
Te efect of the pot also lasts longer
when eaten.
Hauxwell said that he was frustrat-
ed by restrictions sometimes placed
on medical marijuana.
Canabis ought to be an option
and it shouldnt be an option of last
resort, Hauxwell said.
Hauxwell said that pot could be
addictive, but withdrawl symptoms,
which include irritability and dif-
fculty sleeping and concentrating,
are relatively mild compared with the
withdrawl efects of other drugs.
Last week, a bill
was introduced into
the Kansas House
of Representatives
that would legalize
medical marijuana.
Hauxwell, who
supports legaliza-
tion, has submitted
written testimony
for the bill.
Te KU chapter
for National Orga-
nization for the Reform of Marijuana
Laws (NORML) sponsored Haux-
wells talk and has been tabling in
front of Wescoe Hall this week.
NORML provided computers for
students to send e-mails to their rep-
resentatives urging them to support
the legalization of medical mari-
juana.
Jacob Fox, KU NORML presi-
dent, said the reception they received
from students had been positive and
that the group would be participat-
ing in a demonstration in Topeka at
a later date.
EditedbyBrittanyNelson
Information provided by Dr. Diana Robertson, director of the Department of Student Housing.
RESIDENcE HALL RENoVATIoN TImELINE
Past renovations (year represents when renovations were completed) future renovations (year represents when renovations are planning to be completed by)
TEmpLIN HALL: 1997
LEWIS HALL: 1999
ELLSWoRTH HALL: 2003
HASHINgER HALL: 2006
gSp HALL: 2012
mccoLLUm HALL: 2016*
coRBIN HALL: 2017
oLIVER HALL: 2018
*renovations will begin in 2013.
They will be done one wing at a
time. each wing renovation will
take one year to complete.
for more coverage of this story, check out KuJhs newscast
today at 4 p.m.
Dalton Gomez/KANSAN
More than 50 students sat in Staufer-Flint 100 to hear physician Jon Hauxwell speak Wednes-
day night at a lecture hosted by NORML. Hauxwell spoke about the benifts that Cannabis has to
ofer while at the same time acknowledging some of the negative efects that can appear when
used.
Canabis ought to be an
option and it shouldnt
be an option of last
resort.
JON hAuxwell
doctor
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4A / ENTERTAINMENT / thursdAy, FebruAry 24, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnsAn.com
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 6
It may be one of those stuck
days. Perhaps its time to take a
break. Go on a vacation (mental
or otherwise), or at least a long
walk. Later things open up.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7
Life seems more complicated
than it really is today. With a
little bit of focus, you can han-
dle anything that comes at you,
one step at a time.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 6
the day starts off well, with new
ideas. Later you find it difficult
to concentrate. dont blame
yourself. channel your energy
towards creative solutions.
CANCER (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 7
today is a 7 -- If you start the
day on the wrong foot, dont
worry, it gets better. you could
always try going back to bed
and getting up again on the
other foot.
LEo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6
youre full of things to say and
express. do it in a playful way,
with music, dance or a science
experiment. be colorful. Let
children teach you about joy.
VIRGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6
dedicate some of your time
at home to make your place
special. clean up and organize
your sacred spaces. then you
can invite someone over to din-
ner.
LIbRA (Sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is an 8
you feel sexy today, and thats
okay. others find your confi-
dence attractive. step out of
your shell, meet new people
and dont be so serious.
SCoRpIo (oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
your creativity still gets
the attention, even if you
slow down to more intimate
thoughts. Write memoir essays
or paint a self-portrait. reflect
on yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21)
Today is an 8
When youre relaxed, youre
more productive. Find the art-
istry in your work. Get things
done earlier in the day, as later
it may get busy.
CApRICoRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 5
A sense of tiredness fills the air.
Get some rest, for your health.
take a siesta, if you can. dont
be impatient. things are mov-
ing along, even slowly.
AqUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8
Guard against being impetuous.
Postpone daydreams for reality.
dont sweat the small stuff, and
dont waste money. continue to
increase work effort.
pISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
Privacy is essential. An impasse
appears with a loved one. they
arent after the money. consider
that you dont know the full
story. Its not personal.
10 is the easiest day, 0 the
most challenging.
HoRoSCopE
Chris Worley
SNUGGS
CRoSSWoRD
MatthewMarsaglia
Recipe for raunchiness with heart
RoN ARTESIAN
Netfix to carry TV classics
Mcclatchy tribune
LOS ANGELES The technol-
ogy of the future is being used in
hopes of giving life to TV shows
of the past.
CBS Corp. has cut a deal with
Netflix to give its customers access
to classic TV including Star
Trek, Cheers, Twin Peaks and
Family Ties.
The two-year, non-exclusive
deal will allow Netflix customers
to stream online assorted CBS-
owned library content along with
the various other movies and tele-
vision product Netflix offers for
streaming, at prices that start at
$7.99 per month.
What the deal does not include
is many current CBS shows. Thats
because the network is wary of
potentially hurting the rerun value
of the shows on its schedule. Only
two recent programs Medium
and Flashpoint were cited
as part of the deal. Medium
is already sold into reruns, and
Flashpoint is a summer series
whose long-term future is unde-
termined.
Although terms of the deal were
not disclosed, it could put north of
$200 million into CBS pockets for
two years. CBS can extend the deal
for up to two more years.
This deal recognizes the
increasing value of our content
in todays marketplace, said CBS
Television Distribution President
Scott Koondel.
MoVIES
TELEVISIoN
Mcclatchy-tribune
Ever since their 1998 modern
classic Theres Something About
Mary, writers-directors Peter and
Bobby Farrelly have struggled to
try to recapture lightning in a
bottle and conjure up yet another
raunchy comedy with a heart of
gold.
Their latest effort, Hall Pass,
starring Owen Wilson and Jason
Sudeikis as a pair of married
suburban men yearning for the
freedom of youth, falls right in
line with the likes of Me, Myself
and Irene (2000), Shallow Hal
(2001) and The Heartbreak Kid
(2007). Any time a movie needs to
resort to two sequences involv-
ing unexpected bowel moments
for laughs, you know youre in
trouble.
Wilson plays Rick, perpetu-
ally horny after nearly 20 years
of marriage to Maggie (Jenna
Fischer). He and his best friend,
Fred (Sudeikis), similarly frus-
trated in his marriage to Grace
(Christina Applegate), cant quite
believe their luck when their
wives give them a hall pass a
week off from marriage to sleep
with other women. The wives
are inspired by a psychologist
friend (Joy Behar, awkward and
miscast), who insists this strat-
egy will save their relationships.
T HURSDAY
$200 Cash
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DOWNTOWN | 23rd & KASOLD | 6th & WAKARUSA
W I T H T H E M E N T I O N O F T H I S A D
I T S A L M O S T H E R E . . .
G E T I N S H A P E F O R
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W / O U R L O W C A L S M O O T H I E S
O
Letter GuideLines
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com. Write LettertOtHe editOr in
the e-mail subject line.
Length: 300 words
The submission should include the
authors name, grade and hometown.
Find our full letter to the editor policy
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how to submit A LEttER to thE EDitoR
nick Gerik, editor
864-4810 or ngerik@kansan.com
Michael Holtz, managing editor
864-4810 or agarrison@kansan.com
Kelly stroda, managing editor
864-4810 or kstroda@kansan.com
d.M. scott, opinion editor
864-4924 or dscott@kansan.com
Mandy Matney, associate opinion editor
864-4924 or mmatney@kansan.com
Carolyn Battle, business manager
864-4358 or cbattle@kansan.com
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864-4477 or jcassin@kansan.com
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864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com
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864-7666 or jschlitt@kansan.com
tHe editOriaL BOard
Members of The Kansan Editorial Board are Nick
Gerik, Alex Garrison, Kelly Stroda, D.M. Scott and
Mandy Matney.
contAct us
PaGe 5a tHe uniVersitY daiLY Kansan
There is no doubt that we live in eco-
nomically shaky times. The state of the
economy is unstable. The deficit is tre-
mendous. The national unemployment
rate is 9 percent, and that doesnt even
include the underemployed and those
who have given up looking.
The entire nation is looking to
Washington to provide real solutions
to create jobs, which would lead to
economic and personal stability - and
maybe even some sleep for those hit
hardest by the recession.
Thus far, unfortunately, Congress
has only pursued ideas that would hurt
the vulnerable, rather than answers that
would solve their problems. Little action
has been taken that would really achieve
the aims of either deficit reduction or
job creation - both a bitter blow to the
Americans who voted hopefully for Tea
Party candidates based on their righ-
teous anger at the plight of the middle
class and a regrettable vindication of
those distrustful of right-wing economic
policy.
Indeed, one of the only proposals that
would immediately affect jobs is the
House Republicans initiative to com-
pletely eliminate National Public Radio
and the Public Broadcasting Service.
About the fact that these institutions
employ thousands of people, Speaker
Boehner has spoken: So be it.
Their other proposals, ostensibly in
the name of deficit reduction, are aimed
almost entirely at decreasing social
services. House Republicans want to
de-fund AmeriCorps, de-fund Planned
Parenthood, and cut funding for Pell
Grants (drastically more than Obamas
proposal would), unemployment com-
pensation, Poison Control centers,
community health centers, and WIC (a
nutrition program for women and their
children).
And these were only the proposed
cuts of the past couple of weeks, with
more sure to come.
Especially in a time when so many
are already vulnerable and more
people depend on assistance, we
should not be cutting these social
services. AmeriCorps, for example, is
an enormous volunteer organization
that helped rebuild New Orleans after
Hurricane Katrina, and members work
daily to improve the lives of those in
impoverished communities. Pell Grants
help send students to college. Planned
Parenthood uses its federal funding to
provide cancer- and STI-screenings,
contraception and reproductive health
care to those without insurance cover-
age. WIC allows low-income women to
provide for the health and well-being of
their children.
In short, all of these proposed cuts
would target those already hit hardest by
the recession.
Economically, its hard to believe that
anyone really thinks that these social
service programs created the deficit and
jobs crisis we are in when there are so
many other far more plausible reasons.
For instance, we have been engaged in
two expensive wars for several years.
The carelessness of Wall Street bankers
and the financial sector plunged us into
a recession, for which they got a slap
on the wrist. The U.S. government pays
out billions yearly in the form of tax
breaks, loopholes and subsidies to very
rich individuals as well as to enormous
corporations in the industries of natural
resources, finance, agriculture and phar-
maceuticals. Many corporations send
jobs overseas and store their cash in
offshore tax havens and face no conse-
quences.
Taxpayers fund all of these things,
and in return many of them find their
future, their health and their finances
jeopardized. The middle and lower
classes are being punished for the
excesses and miscalculations of the rich
and powerful.
To put it lightly, the proposed solu-
tions offered by a disquieting number
of our leaders are both morally and eco-
nomically deplorable.
Free is a sophomore from Blue
Springs, Mo., in womens studies.
Freeall
for
By Ali Free
afree@kansan.com
opinion
apps.facebook.com/dailykansan
tHursdaY, FeBruarY 24, 2011
Resignation should follow IFC hazing incidents
editOriaL
eCOnOMY
weet of the week
tweet us your opinions to @kansanopinion
If your tweet is particularly interesting, unique, clever,
insightful and/or funny, it could be selected as the tweet of
the week. You have 140 characters, good luck!
The recent investigation into the
actions of the KU Interfraternity Council
(IFC) has shed light on hazing rituals
that occurred during a November officer-
transition ceremony in which executive
board members took turns hitting other
members with a paddle.
While sanctions have been placed on
the IFC, President Jay Trump and fellow
members Jake Drodge and John Pecis
have been able to retain their positions
despite participation in the very activity
that caused this scandal.
The fact that Trump has not been
removed from office after his involve-
ment in the scandal shows the
Universitys lack of commitment toward
upholding its no-tolerance position on
hazing.
However, it would be unfair to single
out Trump for this incident, since other
members of the Interfraternity Council
also allowed this behavior to occur. This
hazing scandal was not caused by the
actions of Trump alone, but by all who
participated in the activity, including
anyone who stood by and allowed it to
transpire.
IFC members Drodge and Pecis
were also able to retain their positions
despite active participation in the pad-
dling of other officers. This incident was
not initiated by one individual, but by
multiple leaders who demonstrated a col-
lective irresponsibility and disregard for
University policy.
When a person actively participates
in behavior they are supposed to oversee
and regulate, they lose all credibility for
being able to do that job effectively in the
future.
While we hope Trump has learned
valuable lessons from this experience,
he has already lost too much credibility
to easily regain the confidence of the
University. After his participation in haz-
ing that he was obligated to stop, many
people at the University will understand-
ably regard his position with cynicism
and doubt.
Regardless of whatever efforts Trump
may make to regain his credibility as
president of the IFC, his actions cannot
be forgotten, nor merely reprimanded
with sanctions.
Marlesa Roney, vice provost for stu-
dent success, boldly proclaimed that
hazing will not be tolerated at KU, but
allowing Trump to retain his position in
spite of his actions sends the opposite
message. The sanctions placed on the
IFC are not strict enough to ensure that
such hazing incidents do not happen in
the future. The fact that someone who
was supposed to oversee hazing could
actively partake in it and not be immedi-
ately removed from that position is trou-
bling, and sends the message that such
behavior is tolerable.
Even if the university is not willing
to effectively remove Trump from his
position as president, he should step
down from the position so that the IFCs
credibility can be restored. The council
itself almost voted to remove Trump
from office, with 11 votes to remove
him against six votes to retain him, and
the only thing that prevented Trumps
removal was the lack of a two-thirds
majority vote.
With most of his own council express-
ing dissatisfaction at his leadership,
Trump should resign as president to
effectively send a message that the IFC is
actively working to repair its image to the
rest of the University.
While the IFC has pledged to make
the appropriate changes to eliminate haz-
ing activities in the future, that change
cannot come while their current leader-
ship remains in place. Trump and his
fellow officers have proven that they are
not capable of complying with University
anti-hazing policies, and their active
participation in the very activity they
were obligated to prevent does not merit
a second chance at leadership. Mistakes
can be forgiven, but the IFC must have a
zero-tolerance policy on hazing if it is to
be taken seriously.
Spencer Davidson on behalf of the
Kansan Editorial Board.
Why does Anschutz have a gate in
their stairway? If its to stop people
from falling down the stairs, why
arent they elsewhere?
My face is so dry that I had to rub
chapstick to stop the pain.
The Kansan is trying to make the
Free For All smaller and smaller
until its gone, just like the Crossing.
Editors note: False. We are just
trying to make it better and more
competitive.
I feel like the only single girl in the
whole wide world ... And Im now
going to drop out of college and
become a nun. Or gets some cats.
Try looking beyond the frats...
Are you wanting to go lesbian in
retaliation? Because I can help with
that.
Something outrageous happened
in the mens restroom in Smith.
There is underwear in the trash and
the toilet is overfowing with paper
towels.
Its so easy to see how social
network sites can make people
slightly narcissistic.
I understand Charmin is out of the
question, but would it be possible
to have public TP that doesnt rip
after each square?
Dear Nicolas Cage, STOP!!
Right now having sex in the library
is way higher on my college to-do
list than achieving a high GPA.
If the way to a mans heart is his
stomach, whats the way into his
pants?
Overheard conversations on the
buses are more exciting than
Jersey Shore has been lately.
You know you are taking too many
hours when hanging up your
backpack could potentially break
the bathroom stall.
To the people sitting next to me in
class... Could you talk throughout
the entire class period everyday?
I love not being able to hear the
lecture.
Im honestly surprised KSU didnt
turn Black & Purple into a country
song.
Do penguins have knees?
New rule: If the TA is asleep, I get to
sleep too.
The only time I wouldnt want to
kick it with Dexter is if I was in a
room covered in plastic.
Mizzou fans are truly awful. K-State
fans, like jean shorts, are homely,
but harmless.
Damn! Just went into Eaton for
the frst time tonight... The rest of
us non-engineering majors are
really getting the poopy end of the
lollipop.
oVampires suck
osex and the City 2
o Wall street: Money never sleeps
oValentine's day
osaw 3d
othe Last airbender
Recently, I had a conversation with a
friend about the HBO show Boardwalk
Empire. I like a lot of things about that
show. I like the writing. I like the acting.
I like that hitman with the crazy face and
scary voice. But I didnt mention any of
these things first.
The first thing I said was that I thought
the middle of the first season kind of
sucked. I could have started by saying that
the last three episodes were really strong
(spoilers: The mob commits a bunch of
crimes), but I decided it would be a good
idea to go over what I didnt like first. I did
this because, like everyone, I enjoy com-
plaining.
Complaining is great. For whatever rea-
son, people find it much easier to find fault
with something than to compliment it.
I had a Shakespeare class last semester
and the first text we read was Romeo
& Juliet. Obviously the story is a great
tragedy, but I spent most of my time com-
plaining about the last two acts (what,
the priest just leaves her there? Come on,
Shakespeare!) and generally ragging on the
greatest writer in the English language.
I could maybe talk for five minutes on
what I liked about The Social Network,
but I could write an eight volume treatise
on what I hated about Transformers:
Revenge of the Fallen.
If youre having trouble coming up with
legitimate criticism for a paper you have to
write, try focusing on what you hate about
the subject.
First, get some practice with an easy
target, like that local TV spot you just saw.
Now, we both know that its just for a local
business and that it was done on a shoe-
string budget, but dont let that stop you
from mercilessly ripping it apart.
Thats another great thing about com-
plaining: You barely need any material to
get started.
For example, look at the recent trailer
for Captain America: The First Avenger.
Despite the fact that Ive only seen about
30 seconds of footage that in no way
resembles the movie in full, Ive already
started complaining about the cast, the title
and the clunkiness of the action sequences.
But Lou, youre saying, they dont even
show any action sequences in the trailer!
And thats where youre wrong. Theres
a couple seconds of Captain America
fighting robots (or something, it goes too
quickly to really tell) and from that, I have
extrapolated that the whole movie is bad.
However, there are downsides to com-
plaining all the time. For one, people dont
really care why you hate a specific episode
of a TV show theyve never seen. For
another, its really not that constructive.
That said, I really look forward to hear-
ing all your complaints about this column.
Schumaker is a junior from Overland
Park in film and media studies.
Whats better than complaining?
Complaining about complaining
By lou SchumAker
lschumaker@kansan.com
T
h
e
P
o
l
l

W
e
e
k
l
y
the Oscars are this weekend.
What did you think the WOrst
movie of the last year was?
POP CuLture
New Congress, same story for the middle class
6A / NEWS / thursDAY, februArY 24, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnsAn.com
enroll@ku.edu
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100097
BY ANGELIQUE
MCNAUGHTON
amcnaughton@kansan.com
Wednesdays full senate meeting
in the Kansas room of the Kansas
Union lasted more than two hours.
Senate members passed bills to fund
future speakers and altered the lan-
guage in the rules and regulations
to provide Senate with more leeway
when it comes to indirect funding.
Much of the discussion for the
night, though, focused on the Center
for Community Outreachs request
to fund their Into the Streets
Week philanthropist speaker Greg
Mortenson.
Mortensons price tag for the
event is $34,000, of which $31,00
is honorarium and going directly
to him.
Last night the Senate agreed to
the bill requesting $9,000 for the
event, which takes place at the end
of March.
Another bill passed to provide
funding for the Jewish student group,
Chabad, but with less opposition.
Chabad requested $1,500 to fund
their Jewish Culture Night featur-
ing internationally renowned men-
talist Marc Salem. Salem highlights
the power of the mind in his per-
formances and will be on campus
March 14.
In the spirit of giving, mem-
bers also authorized an amend-
ment of Student Senate Rules and
Regulations to strike the previous
rule that no funds from student
fees shall be allocated ... to directly
or indirectly raise funds for anoth-
er corporation, organization, or
group.
The new amendment allows sen-
ate to contribute indirect funding to
groups sponsoring events such as
the Dance Marathon, Relay for Life
and Up til Dawn.
The new amendment allows no
more than 10 percent of the previ-
ous three-year average donations
to be made to the third party group
which the event is fundraising for.
The original amount was 15 per-
cent but got amended to 10.
Senate members ultimately voted
to postpone their debate regarding
a newly adopted Senator Code of
Ethics. Full Senate wont meet again
to discuss the code until March
16 because of the mens basketball
game next week.
Smith asked Senate members at
the full Senate meeting last night
in the Kansas Room of the Student
Union what would make our cam-
pus their dream campus.
Below are some of the respons-
es:
Community service option for
paying for parking tickets
Shuttle to the airport
Always-open library
New business school
Dr. Pepper
Edited by Dave Boyd
STUDENT SENATE
Senators approve funds for speaker, culture night
READ THE fULL
STORY ONLINE
at kansan.com/
BY CHrIs HONG
chong@kansan.com
The Emily Taylor Womens
Resource Center at the University
of Kansas awarded 15 students
and professors, including basket-
ball player Tyrell Reed, Wednesday
afternoon for, well, being the
man.
The Men of Merit award honors
the work of individuals who posi-
tively redefine masculinity through
challenging norms, taking action
and leading by example while giv-
ing back to the community. Kathy
Rose-Mockry, program director for
the ETWRC, said that men are
statistically behind in graduation
rates and university involvement,
and the award recognizes men who
challenge the status-quo.
As you look at some of the
men, it may be that they take a role
that is not traditionally masculine,
Rose-Mockry said.
Jon Sabillon, a senior from
Lawrence, was one of the recipients
of the award. He said he was hon-
ored to be among what he consid-
ered prominent men.
It says something about what I
have been doing and to keep doing
what Im doing, he said.
Kameron Mack, another award
recipient, said it was nice that his
work at the university was not
going unnoticed. Mack is involved
with the Black Student Union and
the University Dance Company.
I feel there are lot of different
varieties to what makes a man a
man, he said. Its a great honor to
be able to consider myself a man of
merit because of the diversity that
comes with it and the whole idea
of breaking the mold and breaking
the stereotypes.
This year was the third time the
award had been given.
Edited by Jacque Weber
CAMPUS
Womens Resource Center honors
campus fgures as Men of Merit
Photo contributed by Alexandra Avila
Men of Merit awardees honored for going beyond expectations and redefning masculinity.
NAMES Of
RECIPIENTS
Aaron Quisenberry, Alex
earles, Alex ross, bill tuttle,
Ph.D., curtis marsh, eric
A. sader, frank Desalvo,
Ph.D., Glen W. White, Ph.D.,
Jason kingman, John G.
Younger, PhD, Jon sabillon,
kory christian kirkegaard,
shayne henry, tyrel reed
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / ThurSdAy, februAry 24, 2011 / SPORTS / 7A
fOOTbALL
More experience, fresh recruits promise better run
BY KORY CARPENTER
kcarpenter@kansan.com

From local watering holes to
Internet message boards, there
seemed to be one dividing question
among Kansas football fans last fall:
talent or coaching?
The team just wasnt very good
in 2010, and fans wanted to know
why. It might not have been that
simple. The coaching staff was
completely new, the depth chart
was thin almost across the board,
and the returning players lacked
significant experience from years
past.
Its been the Todd Reesing
show; Kerry Meier and Dezmon
Briscoe were getting all the foot-
balls, offensive coordinator Chuck
Long said. Even Jake Sharp was
gone.
The spread offense that former
coach, Mark Mangino, brought to
Lawrence was gone, along with
its best offensive weapons. To get
a sense of the offensive problems
Kansas coaches dealt with, two of
the better offensive players in 2010
were former defenders.
We had a lot of guys at the
skill positions with no experience,
Long said. Daymond Patterson
was on defense,
DJ Beshears was
on defense and
we pulled them
over.
P a t t e r s o n
led the team in
receiving yards
with 487 while
Beshears aver-
aged more than
25 yards per
kick return for
the season.
Those were the bright spots.
Even then, Kansas struggled to
contend offensively, finishing 111th
nationally in points per game.
Both Patterson and Beshears
return for the Jayhawks next sea-
son, which should bring a new level
of experience, something that Long
says wasnt quite there last season.
We saw what could happen when
things were hitting on all cylinders,
its just a matter of consistency all
the way throughout, he said. That
comes with
experience.
The offense
is bottom-
heavy right
now accord-
ing to Long,
something that
bodes well for
the future but
might bring
some more
growing pain
in 2011.
The 2011 schedule wont do any
favors for the offense, either, with
games at Georgia Tech as well as
the new round-robin format in
the Big 12 Conference. Experience
should help smooth some of those
bumps the team faced last year,
though.
Along with the experience comes
the recruiting class the Kansas
coaching staff signed. Players
like quarterback Brock Berglund,
running backs Anthony Pierson
and Darrian Miller, and receiver
JaCorey Shepherd should bring
much needed competition to every
position on offense.
Long said the coaches last year
tried tailoring the offense to fit the
personnel they had; players who
they didnt recruit. Now with the
the influx of incoming talent and
a year of building relationships,
they can begin to mold the system
with players theyve handpicked.
Everything is up for grabs heading
into practices. Age wont matter.
Redshirts wont be determined
until after training camp, Long
said. Right now were just all going
in gung-ho.
Edited by Corey Thibodeaux
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Ofensive coordinator Chuck Long cites the inexperience of ofensive players as a contributer to
last seasons lackluster performance. Experience and newtalent could spell this seasons success.
We had a lot of guys at
the skill positions with no
experience.
ChuCK lONg
Ofensive coordinator
Catherine Carmichael
KU Volleyball Player
Caitlin Wise
Panhellenic
President 2010
Shade Keys Little
Honorary President of
University Womens Club
Abby Rimel
Team Leader,
Jayhawk Motorsports
Baby Jay
KU Mascot
Jennifer Wamelink
Associate Director for
Resident Life
Matt Rissien
KU Superfan
Michael Wade Smith
Student Body President
Curtis Marsh
Director of KU Info
Rod Harris
KU Football Player
TONIGHT!
7p.m.kansas union ballroom, level 5
Come see KUs biggest & brightest
stars grace the dance floor!
D
AILY
K
ANSAN
T
HE
U
NIVERSITY
h t t p: / / k an s an gu i de. c om/ bu s i n es s es / l awr en c e/ wh eel /
h t t p: / / k an s an gu i de. c om/ bu s i n es s es / l awr en c e/ c ol d- s t on e- c r eamer y /
READ THE KANSAN
GET REWARDED
WHO WON PRIZES
FROM
WHEAT STATE PIZZA
CONGRATULATIONS
ERIC SPARKS
JUNIOR - BIOLOGY MAJOR
8A / SPORTS / THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnSAn.com
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Earn $1000-$3200/mo to
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HELP-WANTED SOFTBALL UMPIRES
LPRD has openings for adult sports
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attached garage $1500/mo avail June
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
JOBS
HOUSING
HOUSING JOBS JOBS HOUSING HOUSING
BY Blake schuster
bschuster@kansan.com
With the stakes high, the Kansas
swimming and diving team gave it
all it had in Austin, Texas, on Day
1 of the Big 12 Championships, but
it just wasnt enough. The Jayhawks
currently sit tied for third with
Missouri at 62 points, while Texas
and Texas A&M are tied for first
with 84 points. Nebraska and Iowa
State round out the field in fifth
and sixth place respectively, the
Cornhuskers with 56 points, and
the Cyclones with 52.
Kansas competed in both of the
events yesterday, setting the sea-
sons best times in the process.
In the 200-yard medley relay,
the Kansas team of Joy Bunting,
Abigail Anderson, Monica
Johannessen and Iuliia Kuzhil
placed third with a time of 1:39.10,
Texas A&M posted the winning
time of 1:36.62, with Texas .36
seconds behind them.
In our 200 medley relay our
back half of Abigail Anderson
and Monica Johannessen put it
together really well, coach Clark
Campbell said after the meet.
The Jayhawks also swam
extremely strong in the 800-yard
freestyle relay, but would again
come up short. Kansas placed
fourth behind Texas, Texas A&M,
and Missouri with a time of
7:20.91. Texas finished 20 seconds
sooner than the Jayhawks.
Despite the days outcome,
Campbell was pleased overall on
how his squad competed.
I thought we had a solid ses-
sion. It could have been better, but
the good thing about tonight is
we got everyone involved in some
way where there is not a lot of
pressure, Campbell said.
The Jayhawks are back in the
pool today for Day 2 of the com-
petition, and just about the whole
roster will be involved.
Racing the 500-yard freestyle
is Allison Moffit, Morgan Sharp,
Shannon Garlie, Malia Johnson,
and Rebecca Swank.
In the 200-yard individual
medley is Cora Powers, Sara
Snow, Heather Clark, Brittany
Rospierski, Alyssa Potter, Alison
Lusk, Brittany Potter, Brooke
Brull, Stephanie Payne, and Joy
Bunting.
For the final race, the 50-yard
freestyle, the Jayhawks are repre-
sented by Alyssa Rudman, Kara
Stranski, Cath Liggett, Sarah
Hettenbach, Madison Wagner,
Shelby Cox, Monica Johannessen,
and Amanda Maez.
Edited by Brittany Nelson
Swimmers look to fnish strong at Big 12 Championships
SwImmINg & DIVINg
Contributed by Laura Jacobsen/The Daily Texan
Kansas swimmer Rebecca Swank competes at the Big 12 Conference Championships Wednesday. The Jayhawks tied for third place with Missouri at
the close of day 1.
I
f you asked me one account you
should follow on Twitter besides mine,
I would retort with Are you a Kansas
basketball fan? Of course you are, or I
hope so, since you go to this university.
Now that we have established that you are
a fan of the Jayhawks, I will tell you to fol-
low @FakeJoeDooley.
Dooleybear, Doom$day, or just FJD,
is, as the accounts bio states, NOT the
real Joe Dooley. Rather, its a parody rep-
resentation of what we think a baller KU
assistant coach would be in an awesome
world. Rock Chalk! The account is not a
representation of the University, Kansas
Athletics, Kansas basketball or the real Joe
Dooley. It is just a Jayhawk fan controlling
the account, and not, of course, assistant
coach Joe Dooley.
@FakeJoeDooley isnt the only parody
account for a Jayhawk coach. There is also
somebody running an @EvilTurnerGill
account. This again doesnt represent
the real Turner Gill. As many know, Gill
is an upstanding man, who is rooted in
Christian values and developing his foot-
ball players into respectable men. His par-
ody Twitter account counterpart however,
is into sex, drugs and alcohol, much like
Fake Joe Dooley.
The fake Twitter accounts dont just
pertain to Kansas. Big 12 commissioner
Dan Beebe has an admirer from afar. @
DanBeebee has tweeted about his content
with Colorado and Nebraska leaving the
conference. While the real Dan Beebe
is sad to see the two go, we may never
know how he really feels. Saturday he
tweeted that the Big 12 is an equal oppor-
tunity conference because Iowa State had
an opportunity against Kansas since
Robinson and Selby were out with injuries.
Lets go bigger picture. Before Twitter
even existed, The Onion was known for
fake news. Its probably, in my opinion,
one of the best places to be misinformed.
On Jan. 21, The Onion launched a TV
show on IFC (Independent Film Channel).
Now instead of going online to find
clips, we have a full newscast. Comedy
Central signed on to show The Onions
SportsDome, a 30-minute cast mocking
ESPNs SportsCenter.
Sports figures arent the only ones
that have fake Twitter accounts. There is
Chicago mayor-elect Rahm Emanuel,
@MayorEmanuel, Apple CEO Steve Jobs,
@ceoSteveJobs, BPGlobalPR,
@BPGlobalPR and possibly my favorite,
FakeAPStyle, @FakeAPStylebook. All four
are witty in their own way.
But I challenge you to find the best
account that is humorous in 140 charac-
ters or less.
Editedby Dave Boyd
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / thurSdAy, februAry 24, 2011 / SPORTS / 9A
MORNINg bREw
QUOTES OF THE DAY
basketball is like war in that of-
fensive weapons are developed
frst, and it always takes a while for
the defense to catch up.
Red Auerbach,
www.quotegarden.com
FACT OF THE DAY
the Kansas softball team has hit
20 homeruns in its frst 10 games
of the season. It has outscored
opponents 85-28 for the year.
kuathletics.com
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: Andre emmett holds the
all-time career big 12 record for
points with 2256 at texas tech.
Who in the big 12 is just 40 points
away from surpassing him?
A: Lacedarius dunn of baylor.
www.big12sports.com
THIS wEEK IN
KANSAS AthLetICS
TODAY
Swimming
big 12 Championships,
All day
at Austin, texas
FRIDAY
Tennis
vs. ut Arlington
2 p.m.
Lawrence
baseball
vs. St. Louis
3 p.m.
Lawrence
Softball
vs. Minnesota, noon.
vs. uNC Greensboro,
4:30 p.m.
at Greensboro, N.C.
Track
big 12 Indoor
Championships,
All day
at Lincoln, Neb.
Phony personas are fun to follow
BY MIKE LAVIERI
mlavieri@kansan.com
NbA
Anthony scores big in Knicks debut, gets love from fans
AssocIAtEd PREss
NEW YORK Carmelo
Anthonys debut on the big stage
was a huge hit.
Anthony had 27 points and 10
rebounds, hitting a pair of clutch
buckets down the stretch in front of
a crowd that cheered his every move
as New York beat the Milwaukee
Bucks 114-108 on Wednesday night
in his Knicks debut.
Anthony made only 10 of 25
shots but was at his best in the clos-
ing minutes, helping New York hold
on after fellow superstar Amare
Stoudemire fouled out. He matched
the third-highest scoring game in a
Knicks debut since 1964, just two
points shy of Keith Van Horns 29
on Oct. 29, 2003.
Chauncey Billups, who came with
Anthony from Denver in Tuesdays
blockbuster trade, finished with
21 points and eight assists as the
Knicks won their third straight.
Toney Douglas scored 23 points
and Stoudemire had 19.
With fans chanting for both
Anthony and Billups in the final
minute, New York matched its win
total from last season with its 29th
victory but now the Knicks have
much bigger plans than that.
The Knicks have never had a
winning season since Anthony
entered the NBA and are mired in
a franchise-worst stretch of nine
straight losing seasons. Their reviv-
al began when Stoudemire signed
last summer and reached a new
level Wednesday when Anthony
walked out of the tunnel onto the
floor where he came in averaging
30.4 points, just off Kobe Bryants
30.5 for tops among active players.
Milwaukee was down four when
Anthony drove the baseline for a
dunk with 1:18 remaining, and his
tough bucket in the lane with the
shot clock running down with 26
seconds left made it 108-102.
He added two free throws with
11.4 seconds remaining, fans chant-
ing Melo! Melo! as he sank them
for a six-point edge. Billups was ser-
enaded with a Chauncey Billups!
chant he later went to the line.
The Knicks gave up a lot to
land them, surrendering starters
Danilo Gallinari, Raymond Felton,
Timofey Mozgov and top reserve
Wilson Chandler. But they insist-
ed the price was worth it for the
chance to pair Anthony along with
Stoudemire, with both locked up
long term after Anthony signed a
contract extension on his way out
of Denver.
With the building appearing
completely full before tipoff, fans
roared as quotes from Anthony
appeared on the overhead video-
board before introductions, not-
ing he was born in Brooklyn and
wanted to be former Knicks star
Bernard King.
Anthony was then introduced
first to a raucous ovation, and
quickly earned his first points as a
Knick on an offensive rebound with
9:37 left in the first quarter.
But he appeared rusty after play-
ing little over the last week and
perhaps a little worn out after a
whirlwind All-Star weekend, and
his jumper was off for most of the
night.
He arrived in New York on
Tuesday night and was introduced
along with Billups in a packed pre-
game press conference, telling the
huge crowd that he was ready to
get down to business right now.
Knicks coach Mike DAntoni
said he put in four or five plays
and it would be almost like an
All-Star game. The Knicks were
sharp early, shooting 59 percent
in the first quarter and opening an
11-point lead early in the second on
Anthonys dunk.
Milwaukee cut it to 59-57 at half-
time and grabbed the lead early
in the third quarter. The Knicks
quickly went back ahead and were
up 86-79 after Douglas scored
the last five points of the period,
including a 3-pointer with 2.6 sec-
onds left.

Enrollment Begins April 1


Timetable published March 11

110807
Dates to Remember







KU Summer School

JAYHAWK
SUMMER.com
EVERYDAY
PIZZA &
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Sun - Thurs
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By HannaH Wise
hwise@kansan.com
Sophomore twins Rosie and
Maggie Hull have been playing
together since they could throw
a ball.
Softball is a game where it
is hard to go out and play by
yourself, Rosie said. You needed
another person to play catch or
to hit you balls and so it was like
you always had your teammate
there and your best friend there
to help you.
Their father was instrumental
in the beginning of their soft-
ball career by taking them out to
play catch together from an early
age. Growing up, they learned to
throw with both arms and hit on
each side of the plate, even though
they are both right handed off
the field. Now, Rosie throws with
her right and Maggie throws with
her left.
We would just switch gloves all
the time and it wasnt until high
school when we decided to stick
with one, Rosie said.
The twins shared experiences
have helped them grow as ath-
letes. During their junior year
of high school, Maggie tore her
ACL playing basketball. A month
later, Rosie also tore her ACL
SportS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
thursday, February 24, 2011 www.kansan.com PaGe 10a
Kansas comes up short the frst day at the Big 12 Championships, but looks to fnish strong on the second day.
Team sits in third place at competition
Swimming & Diving| 8A
Kansas 73, OKlahOma state 66
Jayhawks win shootout
sOftball
Bond of Hull sisters strengthens play on the feld
cOmmentary
NCAA
bracket
still a
toss-up
I
ts that time of year, finally.
Conference tournaments are
nudging closer, bracketology
experts are predicting the now
field of 68, and Selection Sunday
is less than 3 weeks away. Before
you begin studying trends, dis-
secting matchups, and attempt to
win your NCAA bracket pool, Ive
got some advice: Take your print-
ed out bracket and throw it away.
Save the $5 entry fee and buy a
six-pack or something. Because
youre not winning your pool, not
if you follow college basketball at
all. Anyone who has followed the
sport this year knows of the circus
weve all seen lately within the top
25 rankings.
I hate to agree with the ESPN
talking heads and sports radio
blowhards across the country,
but theyre right this year. This
tournament is going to be crazy.
Crazier than usual. Anytime you
have five teams with legit argu-
ments to be No. 1 this late in
February, its pretty obvious that
parity rules the land in 2011. I
dont know who No. 1 should be.
Ohio State? Kansas? Duke? Who
knows.
Maybe smaller schools like BYU
and San Diego State can make a
run? Theyve hung around the
top 10 all season, beating up on
powerhouses like Air Force and
Wyoming.
When you drop down the
rankings a bit, you see teams like
North Carolina and Kentucky,
a pair of teams with more
McDonalds high school All-
Americans than the McDonalds
All-American game this year.
Theyve underachieved somewhat,
but who wants to bet against those
teams early in the tournament?
The talent could surprise anyone
for one game.
Look up at East Lansing,
Michigan, home of Michigan State
and future Hall of Fame coach
Tom Izzo. The guy could be in a
coma and make the Final Four,
accomplishing the feat six of the
last 12 years. Izzos squad has been
mediocre to bad all season, sitting
on the bubble since Christmas it
seems. Want to bet against this
probable 11-seed?
Teams with talent are under-
achieving, small schools are con-
fusing people with their stellar
records yet JV-like schedule, and
the top eight or so teams have
separation anxiety with the rest
of the pack. The top four teams
all went down last week, the first
time thats happened since 2003.
So when the experts on ESPN
tell you whos primed for an early
upset, or which dark horse will
make a deep run, dont listen.
They dont know this year, and
neither do we. If you must donate
your $5 and fill out a bracket,
dont waste your time doing
research this year. Do what every
bracket champion does: Pick the
coolest mascot and hope for the
best.
Edited by Brittany Nelson
By kory Carpenter
kcarpenter@kansan.com
facts abOut the hull twins
maggie rOsie
Left Handed
Power Hitter
.400 Batting
Avg.
Outfeld
studying:
Journalism
and
Spanish
this season: 12
Hits, 11 Runs, 2
Homeruns
Right Handed
Slapper
.353 Batting
Avg.
Outfeld
studying:
Human
Biology
this season: 12
Hits, 12 Runs, 1
Homerun
playing basketball at almost
the same spot on the court as
Maggie had.
I cant tell you, when it hap-
pened it was like it happened
to my other half, Maggie said.
Literally, I felt like I knew
exactly when she went down
that it was ACL. I could just tell
from the pain that she was in.
They did rehab together.
They were on crutches togeth-
er. It bonded them more than
ever before. As twins, Rosie and
Maggie have learned over the
years to stop trying to fight their
differences and embrace their
similarities.
We have really been through
it all together and we know
how hard the other has worked
our entire lives and so we can
just share in this joy together,
Maggie said.
Their differences stand out
most on the softball field.. Rosie
is a slapper and leads off the
batting line up for the Jayhawks.
Maggie is a power hitter and sits
in the sixth spot.
When youre out there on
the field and youre in uniform
and sometimes there are bat-
ting helmets and all this stuff,
Rosie said. It is cool to be out
on the softball field and to see
our differences about the game
be brought out when we are at
the plate.
They had a strong freshman
season for the Jayhawks. Rosie
managed 55 hits and 21 runs
with a .350 batting average.
Maggie had 38 hits, 13 runs and
a .253 batting average.
The offseason gave them the
opportunity to be stronger and
faster. After just ten games, they
are on track to surpass their pre-
vious season stats. Rosie has 12
hits and 12 runs with one home
run. Maggie has 12 hits and
11 runs with two home runs.
They are two major offensive
threats for the Jayhawks and can
only become stronger over their
junior and senior seasons.
Their number one goal going
into recruitment was to play
softball for the same school.
Being able to both play for
Kansas was a dream for the
Hulls.
And when Maggie found out
that Rosie was going to get the
hit-away signal for the first time
in her college career, she was
so excited. That hit-away signal
resulted in Rosies homer.
Maggie really is my number
one fan, Rosie said. She is the
one who gets it, the one who is
always pulling for me, always
so happy when I get hits and
when I do my best. Its the same
for me I am just as happy when
she gets up and does the job as
when I do it myself.
Edited by Corey Thibodeaux
Kansas 32 | 41 73
35 | 31 66 Oklahoma state
Jayhawk stat leaders
Points rebounds assists
aishah
sutherland
7
angel
goodrich
14
monica
engleman
7
Contributed by Kylie mcmains/the Daily oCollegian
Sophomore forward Carolyn Davis got into foul trouble early and played just 16 minutes. She scored nine points for the night.
etHan padWay
epadway@kansan.com
An eight-point run late in the game gave
the Kansas womens basketball team a lead
that the would not surrender as they held on
to beat Oklahoma State 73-66.
Sophomore guard Angel Goodrich sparked
the run, draining a three-point shot with 2:26
remaining in the game. Sophomore guard
Monica Engelman made another three to ex-
tend the Jayhawks lead to fve with 1:18 lef
in the game.
I just remember being
on the right side of the
foor. I think they were
overloaded most of the
game once we had it on
one side and I knew once
I got the ball I needed to
be ready. Te other ones
where I got the ball I didnt
get a good pass, so once I
got that pass I had it in my
pocket and let it go, Goo-
drich said in an interview with 1320 KLWN.
Te Jayhawks won without a big game
from their leading scorer, sophomore for-
ward Carolyn Davis. Davis got into foul trou-
ble early and was limited to just 16 minutes
for the night. Davis, who averages 18.7 points
per game and set her career high in her last
game against Missouri, managed just nine
points against the Oklahoma State.
We had four kids in double fgures. We
didnt stand around and say Carolyns not
playing; what are we going to do. Tat shows
growth, maturity, toughness, poise and com-
posure, and we answered runs, said Kansas
coach Bonnie Henrickson in an interview
with 1320 KLWN.
Te Jayhawks trailed by three at halfime,
and were greatly outrebounded. Te Jay-
hawks grabbed 11 rebounds compared to 24
by the Cowgirls in the frst half, 10 of which
came of the ofensive glass.
In the frst half Oklahoma State fresh-
man center Vicky McIntyre lit up the Jay-
hawks with 16 points. Te Jayhawks held
her in check in the second half, allowing her
to score just two more points the rest of the
night. In the second half the Jayhawks evened
up the rebound total, grabbing 19 compared
to Oklahoma States 20.
I thought the post players made some ad-
justments in the second half and tried to be a
little bit more physical with her and body up
to her a little bit more, Henrickson said in an
interview with 1320 KLWN.
Redshirt freshman forward Tania Jackson
stepped up with Davis on the bench. Jackson
scored 12 points and made all three of her
three-point shot attempts. Jacksons three
three-point shots were a career high for her.
It did (feel great). I have been kind of dry
the past, what whole season, so it just felt
good to shoot all three and make all three.
I think that was just a good feeling to have
and it kept me going. I just
felt good about making
and sinking them so I kept
on shooting, Jackson said
in an interview with 1320
KLWN.
Goodrich and junior
forward Aisha Sutherland
led the Jayhawks in scor-
ing with 14 points a piece.
Goodrich also had fve as-
sists in the game. It was the
frst time Goodrich was able to play in her
home state of Oklahoma because she was in-
jured in her last trip down.
How good was Angel Goodrich? I mean
just good decisions, defensively pressuring
the ball, takes a charge late, hits the three op-
posite of us. Just poise, composure, and a lot
of toughness, Henrickson said in an inter-
view with 1320 KLWN.
Sutherland was key for the Jayhawks as
they tried to hold onto their lead with less
than a minute lef. With less than 33 seconds
lef in the game Sutherland went to the line
three times and made four of her six shots.
Sutherland also led the team in rebounding
with seven boards.
Monica Engelman added 10 points to give
the Jayhawks four players who scored in dou-
ble digits.
Te win lifs the Jayhawks to 18-9 on the
season and 5-8 in Big 12 Conference play. It
knocks Oklahoma State to 15-11 on the sea-
son and 3-10 in Big 12 play.
I think were very excited. I think as every
win comes we get closer and closer as a team
and more confdence in each other. Tat is
what we need right now, we need to stay to-
gether and just have that confdence, Jackson
said in an interview with 1320 KLWN.
Edited by Jacque Weber
Late run pushes Kansas past the Oklahoma State Cowgirls
I think as every win
comes we get closer and
closer as a team and more
confdent in each other.
TAniA JAckSOn
Freshman forward
aishah
sutherland
14

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