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The student voice since 1904
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The Elections Commission said the candidate did not qualify because
she didnt have enough hours to be a junior. StudENt SENAtE | 6A
Student loses senate seat
because of credit hours
index
Monday, april 26, 2010 www.kansan.coM voluMe 121 issue 143
Kale Pick and Jordan Webb fght for next years spot in the spring game. SPORtS | 1B
Quest for new QB continues
Editors Note: The names of
three of the victims and all of the
assailants have been changed
to protect the privacy of the
women who shared their
stories. Amanda said
she was comfortable
using her name in
the article.
K
ate awakens to the sharp pain
of an IV needle inserted in her
left arm. She opens her eyes to a
room in Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Why am I here? Alcohol poisoning?
She doesnt remember drinking that
much, but she does remember she has a
test in two hours.
I have to get out of here.
Before she can unhook her IV, a
nurse and police officer enter the room.
Do you remember anything from last
night? they ask.
Nothing.
A short pause, the nurses and police
officers eyes meet and turn back to Kate.
We think you have been sexu-
ally assaulted, the nurse says.
She suggests Kate have a rape kit
and blood tests done.
Kate doesnt comprehend what shes
hearing, but she feels her throbbing head
and churning stomach and thinks she
might vomit.
Confused and traumatized, Kate
declines to stay for a rape kit, and instead
goes home to shower and sleep.
Kate, a KU sophomore, had joined
the one of every four undergraduate
women at U.S. colleges who have been
victims of sexual assault, according to a
2000 National Institute of Justice Report.
The same report found that women who
drank enough alcohol to get drunk had a
higher risk of being victimized sexually.
The American Academy of Pediatrics
calls alcohol the most common date-
rape drug. It makes women more vul-
nerable to an assault, less able to resist
an assailant and impairs their judgment
afterwards when they make critical deci-
sions about reporting to police and pre-
serving evidence.
But no amount of excessive drinking
ever justifies a sexual assault.
In the aftermath
College-age women seek justice, peace and healing
while coping with the pain of a sexual assault
By Haley Jones | hjones@kansan.com
Jane, a 19-year-old Lawrence resident who did not want her face pictured, is waiting to see the man accused
of raping her stand trial in July. Jane said she was raped by someone she knewat a friends house party.
Photo by Chance dibben/KANSAN
SEE aftermath ON PAgE 4A
Campus
By saManTHa FosTeR
sfoster@kansan.com

Three years ago Potter Lake
was a dirty, unattractive eyesore.
But since then, students with
the Potter Lake Project have been
trying to restore it to its former
beauty.
Students spent a few hours
Saturday cleaning dead leaves
from the banks of Potter Lake and
planting a flower bed. The group
used the work day to beautify the
area around the lake in prepara-
tion for the dredging that will
take place this summer.
Timarie Trarbach, a senior
from Salina, said she had been
involved with the Potter Lake
Project since it started more than
two years ago and enjoyed work-
ing with the team.
I think its a good thing to get
the lake cleaned up and look-
ing better, Trarbach said. Its an
important part of KU.
Saturday was the groups first
work day this semester, but last
years work days included projects
like putting in aerators, which
add oxygen to the water so fish
can live in it, and pulling out
coontail that was growing in the
middle of the lake.
Matt Nahrstedt, a junior from
St. Peters, Mo., and president of
the project, said the temporary
fixes and work days the group has
done in the past improved the
lakes condition, but didnt solve
its problems.
Theyve helped, but theres
been nothing with as major an
impact as this summer will have,
Nahrstedt said.
Ezra Huscher, a senior from
Salina and officer of the project,
said there was a need for students
to take care of Potter Lake, but that
he hoped the University would
start viewing it as a responsibility.
He said University administration
had neglected the lake during the
last 50 years, which led to its poor
condition.
Hopefully the administration
will pay more attention in the
future and it wont need to be
such a grass roots movement any-
more, Huscher said.
Student Senate approved
$58,000 in funding earlier this
month to dredge Potter Lake. The
chancellors office is contributing
another $50,000 and alumni have
also contributed to the project.
Edited by Becky Howlett
Students work to restore beauty of Potter Lake
Spencer Walsh/KANSAN
Derek Hannon, a Senior fromShawnee, rakes dead vegetation of the edge of Potter Lake. Hannon heard about the Potter Lake Project in an e-mail sent to all the Environmental Studies Majors.
Storyteller
fnds niche:
puppeteer
for all ages
By Kelly sTRoDa
kstroda@kansan.com
Everybody thinks Trixie is a
witch.
Between her pale, olive green
face, big, crooked nose and wiry
gray hair, its arguable.
But say that to her face, and
shell let you have it.
Or rather her handler, Priscilla,
will after all, Trixies a puppet.
Priscilla Howe, a storyteller and
puppeteer from Lawrence, started
telling stories full-time in 1993.
Howe has a bachelors degree in
French and a masters degree in
library science, but she never fore-
saw frogs, turtles, babies and bats
as her future co-workers.
It doesnt surprise me now,
Howe said. But it would have
been a surprise to me to think of
it ahead.
Howe didnt always know story-
telling and puppetry were what she
wanted to do.
In 1988, she began a job as a
Slavic cataloger at the University
of Kansas. After two years, Priscilla
said she realized that wasnt what
SEE PUPPets ON PAgE 3A
ENTERTaINmENT
Bar patron repeatedly
calls 911 for ride home
NEW HAVEN, Conn. Police in one
Connecticut city have a warning for
nightclub patrons: Dont call 911 for a
ride home.
New Haven police say thats what
28-year-old Quandria Bailey did, calling
the emergency line six times to request
a ride from a nightclub back to her
Meriden home.
Bailey was charged with six counts
of misuse of the 911 system early
Sunday. She was released on a $1,000
bond and is scheduled to appear in
court May 5.
A telephone number for Bailey could
not immediately be located Sunday
and it was unclear whether she had an
attorney.
Identical twin seniors
taking twin prom dates
JAMESTOWN, N.D. A pair of
identical North Dakota twin sisters
are hoping to double their fun at their
high school prom.
Adrian and Hannah McInnes asked
identical twins Josh and Jerimiah
Dockter to be their dates for Saturdays
formal dance at Jamestown High
School.
The pairs met at the grocery store
where they all work. The girls say they
thought it would be cool to double-
date with another set of identical
twins.
The Dockter brothers, who gradu-
ated in 2009 and skipped their prom,
said yes.
But dont expect the girls to wear
matching dresses to go with their
matching dates. Adrian and Jerimiah
will wear white, while Hannah and Josh
will go in black.
Beatles impersonator
arrested at bands gig
SAN DIEGO Its going to be a hard
days night in jail for a Beatles imper-
sonator after police arrested him on an
old warrant outside an appearance on
a San Diego morning news show.
Carlsbad police Lt. Marc Reno says
Theodore Ted Felicetti was arrested
Friday on an outstanding warrant for
failure to appear on a drunken driving
charge in December 2008. Felicetti
plays Paul McCartney in the Beatles
tribute band Help!.
Investigators received tips that Feli-
cetti played in the band, then learned
on the groups Facebook page that
they would be appearing on the morn-
ing news show.
Stations news director Rich Goldner
says two ofcers let Felicetti fnish the
performance of I Am the Walrus, then
arrested him outside the studio.
Felicetti is being held on
$130,000 bail.
Associated Press
2A / NEWS / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANSAN.COM
QUOTE OF THE DAY
He [President Bush] is probably
choking on a pretzel or something.
I hope nobody tells him that I have
won this award while he is eating a
pretzel. ... He has the funniest lines
in the flm. I am eternally grateful to
him.
Michael Moore
FACT OF THE DAY
Today is National Pretzel Day.
holidayinsights.com
ET CETERA
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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the kansan
business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, kS 66045.
The University Daily kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the
school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams and
weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is
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Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster:
Send address changes to The University Daily kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, kS 66045
Monday, April 26, 2010
TUESDAY
April 27
nScience on Tap will host a discussion titled
What the Old Bones Say: Fossils, feathers, and
fight. kU paleontologist David Burnham will
discuss how scientists know what they know
about birds and fight, based on looking at the
fossil record. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. at the
Free State Brewing Company and the discus-
sion beings at 7:30.
WEDNESDAY
April 28
nPianist Daniel Cunha will perform from
4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in
Murphy Hall as part of the kU School of Musics
Student Recital Series.
nThe kU School of Music will present the
Bass Studio Recital from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in
Room 118 of Murphy Hall.
THURSDAY
April 29
FRIDAY
April 30
SATURDAY
May 1
nDelta Epsilon Iota will host a round robin
sand volleyball tournament from 1 p.m. to 5
p.m. on the courts outside of Robinson Center.
Registration for teams of eight costs $45.
All proceeds will beneft the local Boys and
Girls Club.
SUNDAY
May 2
nElizabeth Berghout, associate professor of
music, will play the bells at 5 p.m. in the World
War II Memorial Campanile and Carillon.
nThe College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
will host Make it Funky from 2 to 4 p.m. in
Alderson Auditorium of the kansas Union. The
event is an exploration of African-American
music and writing.
nAuthor Martin Henn will talk about his
new book Under the Color of Law from 4 to
5 p.m. in the Parlors of the kansas Union.
nDr. Michael Shull, professor at the Univer-
sity of Colorado at Boulder, will present the
lecture Missing Baryons: Searching between
the Galaxies from 4 to 5 p.m. in Room 2074 of
Malott Hall.
CONTACT US
Tell us your news. Contact Stephen
Montemayor, Lauren Cunningham,
Jennifer Torline, Brianne Pfannenstiel,
Vicky Lu, kevin Hardy, Lauren Hendrick
or Aly Van Dyke at (785) 864-4810
or editor@kansan.com. Follow The
kansan on Twitter at Thekansan_News.
kansan newsroom
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If you would like to submit an event to be included
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nThe University Career Center will hold its
Just in Time Career Fair from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
on the ffth foor of the kansas Union. Employ-
ers with open internships and full-time jobs
will be present.
nThe kU Bookstore will hold a sidewalk sale
outside of the kansas Union from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. The sale will be held in the fourth foor
lobby in the case of inclement weather.
nStudent Union Activities will host its Tunes
at Noon music performance series at 12 p.m. in
front of the kansas Union.
nElif Andac, assistant professor of sociol-
ogy, will present the lecture Understanding
the Dynamics of Assimilation and Diversity in
Nation-Building: A Case from Southeastern
Turkey at noon in 706 Fraser.
Featured
videos
KUJH-TV
kansas Sampler, a store that sells fan
gear for local sports teams, will open a new
store at Ninth and Massachusetts streets
in Lawrence.
Kansas Sampler opening downtown
Video by KUJH-TV
Data showing people spend seven hours a
day on some form of media has social experts
debating the efects.
Experts debate efects of social media
Video by Alicia Banister/KUJH-TV
Cosby: Proceed with caution in concealed
carry consideration 55 comments
Bledowski: When love crosses the line
14 comments
Shorman: Landslide may not be so
representative after all 13 comments
Letter to the Editor: No Pride in draft
dodging 13 comments
Unexpectedly expecting 10 comments
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ticket 7 comments
POPULAR STORIES ON KANSAN.COM
ODD NEWS
Speaker honors slain
students memory
Nationally syndicated colum-
nist Connie Schultz will give this
years Jana Mackey Distinguished
Lecture Wednesday at 7:30 p.m at
the Dole Institute of Politics.
The lecture, titled Words from
the Heart: Gender, Justice and
Advocacy, is part of an annual
series meant to commemorate
late KU law student Jana Mackey,
who was murdered by her ex-
boyfriend in 2008. Mackey, who
was a dedicated womens rights
activist, graduated with a KU
bachelors degree in 2004.
We selected Connie Schultz
to be this years speaker because
of her dedication to issues of
concern to Jana, said Kathy Rose-
Mockry, director of the Emily
Taylor Womens Resource Center
in a news release. Connie has
spent her career fghting for the
same causes Jana did: womens
rights, equality, social justice and
serving others.
Schultz, a biweekly columnist
for the Cleveland Plain Dealer and
Creators Syndicate, won the Pulit-
zer prize for commentary in 2005
and is the author of two books.
The program is free and open
to the public. Seating is available
on a frst-come, frst-served basis.
Kevin Hardy
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / NEWS / 3A
she was meant to do. So she moved
to Middletown, Conn., to become
a childrens librarian.
In Middletown, Howe met Judy
Stoughton, the new head of the
librarys childrens department and
a woman who would become one
of Howes greatest influences in
storytelling and puppetry.
One day Stoughton asked Howe
a question that would ultimately
change her performing career: I
like to do puppets. Would you like
to do puppets with me?
Howe was reluctant at first,
claiming puppets werent her
thing. But that attitude didnt stick
around for long.
You know, she had a natu-
ral flare for puppetry, though,
Stoughton said. So, I dont remem-
ber her resisting very long.
Soon Howe was hooked.
Before Stoughton inspired Howe
to become a puppeteer, Howe had
already started telling stories as
part of her job.
One day some librarians were
going to a school to tell stories and
asked Priscilla to tag along.
Then they asked her to tell a
story.
Thats the job that helped her
learn what she loves, Howe said.
I thought, Oh, this is so fun! I
want to do this some more, Howe
said.
So she did.
Seventeen years later, Howe tells
about 150 different stories using
75 puppets Trixie is her most
popular.
Howe tells stories from books,
folktales and some she has created
herself. Stories range from two min-
utes to 95 minutes. And her stories
arent just for kids. She has a series
of stories called Blood, Guts, Spies
and Naked Ladies geared toward
adults.
Howe has told
stories around
the country
and around
the world. She
has performed
in Bulgaria,
B e l g i u m ,
G e r m a n y ,
Mexico and
Brazil. Next year,
Howe will have a
stint of performances in Peru and
will be in Argentina the following
year.
Howe doesnt just tell stories in
English. Sometimes after telling
her most requested The Ghost
With the One Black Eye, shell
tell the story again
in either French or
Bulgarian.
Howe said she
enjoyed creating
these opportunities
for others to con-
nect.
Thats really the
epic core of what I
do, she said. Im
connecting with the
audience, theyre
connecting with me and then
theyre connecting among them-
selves.
In the beginning, she said telling
stories was much more about her-
self. Now its about the experience,
the stories and the audience.
But Howes puppet Mavis the
Monkey might beg to differ. As
far as Mavis is concerned, shes the
star of the show. Mavis always has
a cheery face a face that is eager
to talk (and Mavis will definitely
talk).
And dont be alarmed if Mavis
grabs hold of her tail, also known
as a tailophone, to order pizza in
the middle of a show.
I would like extra cheese, sala-
mi, bologna, uhm, pepperoni, bub-
blegum and peanut butter.
Edited by Becky Howlett
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Priscilla Howe holds her puppet, Baby. Howe has been a puppeteer for more than 17 years now. She tells stories for children and adults alike.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Priscilla Howe banters with her most popular puppet, Trixie. Howe has performed around the
world with her collection of 75 puppets and more than 150 diferent stories. The local puppeteer
will travel to performin Peru next year and Argentina the following year.
PUPPETS
(continued from 1A)
Thats really the epic
core of what I do. Im
connecting with the
audience.
PRISCILLA HOWE
Puppeteer
Pulitzer winner will
lecture about poetry
Mary Oliver, poet and winner
of the National Book Award and
Pulitzer Prize, will present at 7:30
p.m. May 5 as part of the Hall
Center for the Humanities 2009-
10 Humanities Lecture Series.
Oliver will do a reading
and take questions from the
audience at the Lied Center. The
event, supported by the Sosland
Foundation of Kansas City and
Kansas Public Radio, is free and
open to the public.
Oliver will then visit with the
public during A Conversation
with Mar Oliver, at 10 a.m. May
6 at the Hall Center Conference
Hall.
The Humanities Lecture
Series events with Oliver were
originally scheduled for March
23, but were canceled because
of illness.
Oliver is the author of 18 poet-
ry collections, most notably the
Pulitzer Prize-winning Ameri-
can Primitive (1983) and New
and Selected Poems, Volume
One (1992), which garnered
a National Book Award. She is
best known for her precise and
evocative imagery of nature.
Kevin Hardy
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Annie McKay, former assis-
tant director of the Emily
Taylor Womens Resource Center,
who specializes in sexual violence
prevention services, said it was wrong to
blame victims for the crimes against them
by pointing to their behavior.
We have long been conditioned to say,
Well, I guess I shouldnt have looked like
that, or, Had I made better choices, I
wouldnt have been raped, she said. But
you can make every right decision and still
be sexually assaulted.
The decision to report a sexual assault is
not easy. Victims face a barrage of invasive
tests and a legal system that requires them
to retell in detail and relive their humiliat-
ing attack before police officers, nurses,
doctors, prosecutors, psychiatrists, and, for
the select few whose cases make it to court,
a judge and jury.
A lack of eyewitnesses other than vic-
tims in most rapes makes rape the most
difficult crime to prosecute, especially if
victims dont call police quickly or allow
for the gathering of biological evidence,
Amy McGowan, assistant Douglas County
district attorney, said. McGowan was a
Jackson County, Mo., prosecutor for 17
years and has worked in her current posi-
tion for five years.
Because many sex crime cases lack
physical evidence, such as an attackers
DNA left behind in sperm, to corroborate
a victims testimony, McGowan said her
office prosecuted only about one of every
four cases. The district attorneys office
prosecutes only when it knows it has suf-
ficient evidence to prove a defendant guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt. Otherwise, the
victim might be dragged through a painful
and futile process in search for justice the
legal system couldnt provide.
I look at every case as, Can I prove this
to a jury? McGowan said. Its tough
the majority of cases I cant file.
n n n
Kate remembers little about the night
she was assaulted. Her last memories of
the night are drinking two drinks and one
shot she bought for herself, then sipping a
drink a male KU senior she met at the bar
bought for her.
We were having fun, Kate said. It was
a typical dollar night and he bought me a
drink. He seemed nice enough.
Kate suspects she was drugged. However,
at the hospital she had more than three
times the legal amount of alcohol in her
blood and the doctor told her that at the
time she was assaulted, it would have been
affecting her body like surgical anesthesia.
Shes seen pictures her friends took that
night at a local bar. In one, she has 10 shots
lined up on the bar. Kate says she would
never have deliberately drunk them all.
But, with no memory of an attack, she cant
offer effective testimony in court. That is, if
her case can ever be prosecuted. It has been
under review by the district attorney since
the assault in September.
What she knows of that night after he
bought her the drink she has learned from
police and friends who were with her. Her
friends left her alone for only two minutes,
but it was long enough for her to disappear
outside with the young man who bought
her the drink. Later police would tell Kate
and her friends that witnesses saw a man
on top of her, with her dress pulled up
around her waist. Police also told Kate
that passers-by, who saw the two on the
ground behind a bush, approached them
and pulled the man off of Kate. The man
then fled on foot. After receiving a ride
home from the passers-by, Kate arrived
back at her sorority house, disheveled and
drifting in and out of consciousness.
Haley, a friend and onetime roommate
who saw Kate when the passers-by brought
her home at about 3 a.m., said, I dont
think she knew where she was. She couldnt
say words. It was all jibberish. She could
walk but couldnt actually say anything that
made any sense.
At first, Haley thought Kate had too
many drinks, but she had never seen her
this incoherent. Her sorority sisters called
an ambulance and told the paramedics
who picked Kate up that she would need
a rape kit.
A recent study published in the Journal
of American College Health found that 96
percent of the sexual assault victims who
had been given roofies, the nickname
for the sedative Rohypnol slipped into
drinks by would-be rapists, had already
consumed alcohol beforehand. Jessie Fazel,
a nurse who examines victims of sexual
assault at Lawrence Memorial Hospital,
said a majority of the victims came to the
hospital under the influence of alcohol,
rather than roofies. She said that some
would-be rapists also slipped over-the-
counter drugs such as Benadryl and Visine
into their intended victims drinks to
intensify alcohols effect, but that voluntary
alcohol consumption could incapacitate a
potential victim just as effectively.
I see lots of people who dont know
what happened or had a memory lapse
who think they were drugged, she said.
Lots of times we cant tell if they blacked
out from alcohol or medication.
Thorough examination can reveal traces
of a drug such as Rohypnol in the victims
blood. Had Kate consented to the rape kit
and exams, nurses could have contacted
GaDuGi Rape Crisis Center and an advo-
cate could have come to the hospital to
accompany her through the painful and
embarrassing exams.
Instead, Kate fled the hospital and called
her parents. When she related what she
remembered to her dad, Tom, who lives in
Wichita, she cried for the first time since
the assault.
I started bawling, Kate said. Saying it
out loud, telling my dad what happened,
was so hard.
Her father found it hard to listen.
It was terrible, he said. She was still
disoriented.
He immediately left for Lawrence to
make what he called the longest two-and-
a-half hour drive of his life.
Kate didnt take her KU test that day.
Instead, she went to her mothers house
in Overland Park for two weeks, feeling
numb. When she returned to campus,
she struggled to resume a semblance of
the life she had before the assault. She
avoided going to class for fear of seeing
her attacker on campus. She didnt feel like
going out, because it could happen again.
Returning to her sorority house brought
with it the pain of gossip and speculation
about that night. Self-blame, guilt and
shame overcame her when she heard talk
of what she should have done to avoid
it. Kate remembers hearing one friend say,
Maybe if she wasnt so drunk it wouldnt
have happened.
n n n
Contrary to popular belief, most rapists
are not strangers who jump out of bushes.
According to the Department of Justices
National Crime Victimization Study, about
73 percent of victims knew their attackers
before the assault. Rapists can be dates,
boyfriends, friends, marital partners or
family members. Such relationships can
complicate and delay a victims decision to
report. For victims such as Jessica, mutu-
al friendships can dissuade them from
reporting their rapes to police at all.
Jessica, an Overland Park senior, was
sexually assaulted last semester by her
friend Dan. She was out at a bar with
friends and Dan offered her a ride home.
When they arrived at her house, he claimed
he was too drunk to drive himself home.
Drinking blurred her memory of the event,
but she does know he didnt succeed in
raping her. At the time of the assault, she
was having her period and using a tampon.
She woke up with it still inside her. But she
remembers him holding her body down
on the bed for 20 to 30 minutes, groping
her, repeatedly assuring her they were just
fooling around. She felt powerless against
his tight grasp of her wrists.
All I can remember saying was, What
are you doing? Why are you doing this to
me? Youre supposed to be my friend, she
said.
The next morning, when she woke up,
he was gone. She began vomiting, and
couldnt stop. After two scalding hot show-
ers, she took still another. No amount of
scrubbing could cleanse her of the dirty
feeling that overpowered her. She decided
no one should know about her humiliating
experience.
I felt completely isolated in my own
feelings, she said. I felt unlovable.
Eventually, Jessica found the courage
to tell a mutual friend who knew her
attacker. The friend approached Dan about
the assault, but he denied responsibility,
claiming Jessica had seduced him. He said
she had put his hands up her dress and
asked him to come over. Jessica said she
knows these are lies, but they are lies
that, in her weaker moments, even she is
tempted to believe.
Things he said made me question
myself, but in my heart of hearts I know I
didnt do anything wrong, she said.
Jessica never reported the assault, opting
to try and forget. But four months later,
she finds herself crying and remembering
the attack regularly. She still lives with fear
that he will tell even more mutual friends
and blame her.
We have other friends who dont know
about it, she said. I label myself as bro-
ken and damaged, and its hard to get past
that.
McKay, former assistant director of the
womens resource center, said many victims
were reluctant to classify what happened as
rape because their experiences broke the
mold of the classic rape scenario. She said
because many victims know their attacker,
they are conflicted and even feel some
responsibility for protecting that person.
They think, I dont want to see what
happens to people on Law and Order:
SVU happen to this guy. Theres so much
inherent shame in it, she said.
Even if a victim reports the assault, deal-
ing with a nine-month investigation and
no guarantee of resolution is a daunting
risk for many survivors. She said many
choose to handle it personally and try to
bury it or move on with their lives.
But nothing stays buried forever,
McKay said.
n n n
For Amanda, 22, the regret of not report-
ing didnt surface until years after she was
raped. A Lawrence resident and one-time
Johnson County Community College stu-
dent, Amanda was a 15-year-old freshman
at Eudora High School when she met Pat,
a junior all-star athlete who played football
and basketball. She was the cute new girl,
and he noticed her. Amanda was forbid-
den from dating until she was 16, but her
parents made an exception in March of her
freshman year and allowed Pat to take her
to a movie with two other friends.
When he picked her up, the plan had
changed. The other couple couldnt come,
he explained. After the movie, she heard
Pat call his dad and say he would be late
getting home. Amanda said he drove her
out onto a country road not far from her
home, reclined her seat, and got on top of
her. She said she tried to push him away,
honk the horn, anything to stop him, but
he was 6-foot-3 and 200 pounds. She was
powerless.
I was just frozen, she said. I felt like I
could see myself lying there, but I couldnt
stop anything. I kept asking God, Why is
this happening?
Amanda said what felt like two hours
lasted only 20 minutes. Neither of them
spoke when Pat drove her home. Amanda
didnt tell her parents for three months,
despite continued questioning from her
worried mom, who would tell her, The
sparkle in your eye is gone. Youre not the
same.
I thought it was my fault and I didnt
want my parents to be disappointed in
me, Amanda said. My self-worth spiraled
downward.
When she finally told her parents what
had happened, they called police immedi-
ately to see what their options were, but they
had few left. There was no evidence, other
than her testimony. Amanda and her par-
ents decided not to continue a futile police
investigation.
He was popular, Amanda said. I felt
like everyone would believe him and side
with him.
Amanda said she also partially blamed
herself for being raped. She even socialized
with Pat for a month after he raped her. She
said he threatened to kill her and himself if
she told, and reminded her in a text mes-
sage, No one will ever love you again.
Rumors of the rape spread around school,
but Amanda said that, just as quickly, other
rumors arose that she was a whore and had
led him on. She felt tainted, broken and
dirty.
Of course, now I regret not reporting
because I wonder if he did that to other
girls, she said. Now Id rather people know
and choose to believe me or not. Either way,
I know the truth.
Now, seven years after the assault,
Amanda said she could talk about it with-
out crying.
n n n
Jane, 19, a Lawrence resident who was
drinking when someone she knewraped her,
was fortunate that other friends interrupted
the attack and were willing witnesses for the
truth. It happened after her two-year rela-
tionship with her boyfriend ended in March,
and Jane decided to let loose. One night at
a friends house party, she threw back five
double shots. Another woman at the party
found her lying face down in her own vomit
a few hours later. The woman helped her to
the bathroom then laid her on the couch
with a blanket to sober up.
While she lay there, passed out, Josh,
a man she knew and considered a friend,
pulled the blanket over both of them and
raped her.
When I realized what was happening,
it was like I was dreaming, she said. I saw
shadows, I heard people talking, I saw things
going on around me, but I wasnt able to help
myself.
But there were witnesses. Five of Janes
friends saw Josh lying intimately with Jane,
who was still unconscious. They made him
leave. Jane awakened to her friends voices
telling her, Its OK, honey; hes gone. She
noticed her underwear was at her knees.
The next morning, she called police. Jane
hadnt showered or changed her clothes.
Police brought her to the hospital immedi-
ately and nurses did a rape kit. She called her
mother, who came to the hospital. For the
first time since the assault, Jane cried.
It was embarrassing, but we didnt say
anything, Jane said. We didnt need to.
Jane and her mother went to the district
attorneys office. Attorneys and police there
worked with her to record a confession her
assailant, Josh, made to her over the phone.
Jane called Josh and, though he denied hav-
ing sex with her, admitted he penetrated her
with his fingers. What he didnt know was
that any unwanted penetration constitutes
rape. He was arrested and his bail set at
$125,000.
Jane said the process has been difficult
because the attacker is in her circle of
friends, some of whom have criticized her.
However, she has never regretted report-
ing it.
I didnt want to feel that for the rest of
my life I have to defend myself, she said.
But I have nothing to prove. He admit-
ted to a horrible crime and that guilt is his
alone.
The decision to go to police and turn in
someone she knew was not easy, she said,
but it helped her rediscover her self worth.
Im done feeling sorry for myself, she
said. Im done being unhappy. Im done
feeling worthless and letting myself be treat-
ed that way. I dont want to stay a victim of
this or anything for the rest of my life.
Janes assailant Josh had his preliminary
hearing Thursday and was scheduled to
stand trial in July.
n n n
Kates case is pending review by the
district attorneys office, but unlikely to go
forward without more evidence. Police still
have the blue mini dress and high heels
she was wearing the night of the assault.
She wont be getting them back. Theyre
potential evidence now.
While her alleged attacker remains free
and hasnt been charged, Kate and her fam-
ily are still suffering from the aftershock
of the assault. She failed her class when
she missed the test the morning after her
assault. The lost credits kept her from
meeting requirements for admission to
the School of Journalism and will delay
her graduation by one semester. She had
more than $1,000 in medical expenses,
will pay tuition a second time for the class
she failed, and now faces therapist fees
for counseling. Tom, her father, said if
the district attorneys office doesnt find
enough evidence to press criminal charges,
he would consider pursuing a civil lawsuit
for damages.
Looking back, Kate remembers how
confused she was when she refused the
tests the nurses and police officers encour-
aged her to take.
They asked if I wanted to be tested for
date rape drugs, Kate said. I didnt even
believe I had been sexually assaulted. I had
no idea what they were talking about. I just
kept saying I needed to leave.
Several months after the attack, Kate
saw her attacker at the Ambler Student
Recreation Fitness Center, playing basket-
ball. A little stunned, she stopped momen-
tarily, and caught his eye.
Immediately, I just thought, Why are
you standing so close to me when you
know whats happened? she said.
Kate initially felt resentful when she
saw him on campus. Now, she says she has
given up living with anger. She considers
herself lucky. Regardless of whether her
attacker is prosecuted, Kate said she has
healed and moved on with her life.
Im definitely more watchful of the
people Im with, but it doesnt control my
life, she said. All I can do is watch out for
my friends and make sure it doesnt hap-
pen to them.
Kate even said she wouldnt rule out
accepting another free drink if someone
bought it for her and she kept a close
eye on it.
Editedby Brandy Entsminger
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 26, 2010 / NEWS / 5A 4A / NEWS / MONdAy, April 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM
Chance Dibben/KANSAN
Amanda, a Lawrence resident and former Johnson County Community College student, said she was raped when she was a freshman in high school. Although Amanda said she
regrets not reporting the rape, she said she has worked hard to forgive her attacker and hopes her story will strengthen other women.
AftermAth (continued from 1a)
how Kansas law defnes
felonies such as rape
in Kansas, felony ofenses are classi-
fed by 10 severity levels, with level one
the most serious. rape is a level one
criminal ofense the same level as
murder. Ofenses level one through four
carry presumptive imprisonment,which
means the defendant is almost certain to
serve time in prison if convicted.
Kansas law defnes rape as sexual
intercourse with a person who does not
consent to the sexual intercourse when
the victim is overcome by force or fear;
when the victim is unconscious or phys-
ically powerless; or when the victim is
incapable of giving consent because of
mental defciency or disease, or when the
victim is incapable of giving consent
because of the efect of any alcoholic
liquor, narcotic, drug or other substance,
which condition was known by the of-
fender or was reasonably apparent to the
ofender.
According to the most recent report,
only 6 percent of rapists will ever
spend a day in jail.
NAtiONAl CeNter
fOr pOliCy ANAlySiS, 1999
All I can remember saying was, What
are you doing? Why are you doing
this to me? Youre supposed to be my
friend.
JeSSiCA
Overland park senior
I felt completely isolated in my own
feelings. I felt unlovable.
JeSSiCA
Overland park senior
Im done feeling sorry for myself. Im
done being unhappy. Im done feel-
ing worthless and letting myself be
treated that way.
JANe
Nineteen-year-old
lawrence resident
Sixty percent of sexual assaults are not
reported.
U.S. depArtMeNt Of JUStiCe, 2005
What to do after an assault
to help preserve evidence
Jessie fazel, a nurse at lawrence Memorial
Hospital, is trained to collect evidence from
victims after an assault. She advises victims
to avoid showering, douching, brushing their
teeth, or eating or drinking anything and to
come to the hospital as soon as possible.
time is evidence, fazel said, because rape
kits must be conducted within 72 hours of
an assault. for a rape kit, nurses take a blood
sample, comb through pubic hairs and pluck
25 of them, and swab the inside of the va-
gina, mouth and anus for the attackers dNA
in semen residue. Samples are analyzed at
the Kansas Bureau of investigation intopeka,
where rape cases go to the top of the list,
along with murders. Samples are stored and
can be matched with the rapist years after
the attack.
Kathy Guth, a nurse practitioner in
womens health, is certifed to do rape kits at
Watkins Memorial Hospital. She said a victim
could also opt to be given prophylaxis treat-
ments for chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis.
if the assailant didnt wear a condom, and the
victimgoes to the hospital shortly after the
attack, emergency contraception such as the
plan B pill is also an option.
Chance Dibben/KANSAN
Jane, a 19-year-old Lawrence resident, said that reporting the man who sexually assaulted her was not easy because he was in her circle of friends, but that she never regretted her decision. She said recognizing the rape was not her fault allowed
her to move past feeling like a victim.
To hear an interview
with Kate, go to
kansan.com/audioclips/10
New chapter for
boys only school
PHILADELPHIA The
private boarding school for
underprivileged students
now led by Autumn Adkins,
who describes herself simply
as a black girl from Rich-
mond, Virginia, would have
excluded her in years past.
The one-time white
boys-only institution in
Philadelphia did not admit
its frst black student until
1968 and that was only
after numerous legal chal-
lenges, months of protests, a
visit from Martin Luther King
Jr. and a ruling by the U.S.
Supreme Court. Girls werent
allowed until 1984.
Girard College a
misnomer, as it serves frst-
through 12th-graders has
come a long way since being
established by the richest
man you never heard of.
And as its newest president,
the 37-year-old Adkins is
determined to take it further,
raising the schools profle
by giving its students a true
21st-century education.
Stephen Girard, a French-
born sea captain, amassed
a fortune through shipping,
trading and banking after
coming to Philadelphia in
1776. Girard left about $6
million (approximately $146
million in todays money)
to the city of Philadelphia,
mostly to build and endow a
tuition-free school for poor,
fatherless white boys. The
schools overseers were not
looking to make history after
the most recent president
retired. But they were bowled
over by Adkins enthusiasm,
work ethic, rigorous stan-
dards and an impressive
resume that includes degrees
from the University of Virginia
and Columbia Universitys
Teachers College.
Today, most of Girards 620
students are black and half
are female; all come from
low-income families headed
by a single parent or guard-
ian. Students are selected
based on an assessment test,
family interview and, if older
than frst grade, an academic
transcript.
Associated Press
Candidate loses seat
after winning election
KUnited candidate Kelly Cosby
was removed from her Junior/
Senior College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences seat during an Elections
Commission hearing Friday.
Student Body President-Elect
Michael Wade Smith said Cosby
didnt have enough credit hours
completed to run for a junior/
senior position. Senators in CLAS
are separated into two categories,
freshman/sophomore and junior/
senior, by their credit hours.
Students running for a junior/
senior position must have 60
hours completed at the time they
are running for a seat.
Candidates must also obtain a
stamp from the deans ofce that
verifes they are eligible to run.
We made an honest mistake,
Smith said. We got that dean
stamp didnt think it was an
issue.
Smith did not contest the deci-
sion.
It couldve been an error on our
part or her part, Smith said. It was
certainly nothing malicious
The commission also fned
KUnited $25, which Smith paid
after the hearing.
Envision candidate Sameer
Sharma, a senior from Overland
Park, received the next highest
amount of votes and will take
Cosbys seat.

ENVISION CANDIDATES
AWAIT DECISION
The appeal hearing for Envision
candidates Ross Ringer and Devon
Cantwell against the commis-
sions ruling to remove Ringer
and Cantwell from the ballot was
also held on Friday. A University
Governance judicial board did not
make a decision and will release a
written decision within 30 days.
Annie Vangsnes
Award named after
KU English professor
The Kennedy Center Ameri-
can College Theatre Festival has
recognized Paul Stephen Lim, KU
professor of English and longtime
playwright, with a national award
in his name.
The Paul Stephen Lim Asian-
American Playwriting Award will
be presented annually at the festi-
val in Washington D.C. It honors an
outstanding play on any subject
written by an Asian-American stu-
dent, The award includes a $2,500
cash prize for a full-length play or
$1,000 for a one-act, a fellowship
to attend the KCACTF Summer
Playwriting Intensive or similar
program, membership in the
Dramatists Guild, and the possibil-
ity of contracting with Dramatic
Publishing to publish, license and
market the winning play.
Edgar Mendoza of Carnegie
Mellon University won the inau-
gural award for his play Blue Note
Run. Lim presented the award
April 17 at the Kennedy Center.
Lim said he was humbled to
learn that the award will bear his
name.
The KCACTF names its play-
writing awards after people like
Mark Twain, Lorraine Hansberry,
Rosa Parks, Jean Kennedy Smith,
David Mark Cohen and Paula
Vogel, Lim said in a news release.
I feel a bit shy in their company,
but I am also thrilled to be able to
encourage and nurture emerging
Asian-American playwrights with
this award.
Kevin Hardy
6A / NEWS / MONDAy, APRIL 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM
LAWRENCE
Fewer people than expected attend Larryville Luau
BY KIRSTEN KWON
kkwon@kansan.com
Nearly 9,000 people confirmed
on Facebook that they would attend
the first Larryville Luau Saturday.
The party on Massachusetts St. was
set to start at 9 a.m., but at that
time downtown Lawrence looked
typical of any weekend morning
the popular break-
fast restaurants
were crowded, and
the bars were nearly
empty.
Organizers esti-
mated that only
about 1,500 people
showed up through-
out the day.
The idea for the
luau came from a
group of KU stu-
dents who said they
thought Lawrence
was lacking a celebratory day of
continuous partying. The event
was meant to match Manhattans
Fake Paddys Day Celebration.
When Alex Akers, manager of
The Barrel House, heard about the
event she said she was instantly
intrigued. She e-mailed the cre-
ators and asked if they needed any
help and the bar became the luaus
headquarters. The eight bars that
participated opened several hours
earlier than normal and had more
staff working to accommodate the
expected masses. But by 10 a.m.,
they had seen little business.
I hope it will get busier, prob-
ably after the spring football game
around 1 p.m. Akers said.
More guests stopped in The
Barrel House throughout the day,
but it was only about half full in
the afternoon. In the late afternoon
a larger crowd formed at Brothers
where free leis were given away
and an assortment of inflatable
pool dcor filled the bar. A few
hundred people attended the free
reggae concert at
The Granada at
10 p.m.
A l e x i s
Alexander, a
senior from
Chicago, even
designed T-shirts
for the event and
had them made
for her and her
friends to wear
that day. Though
she was expect-
ing to see more
of a party, she said she enjoyed
the day.
We stayed on Mass. Street for
about three hours, Alexander said.
I was expecting it to be a lot big-
ger than it was but it was still a
good time.
Lawrence resident Shane Powers
said he was a little disappointed
in the luau because he had high
expectations but he said the over-
cast weather was also not ideal.
There should have been more
than enough to throw a good
party, Powers said of the number
of people expected to attend. Im
sure the weather had a lot to do
with it. Its tough to get into a luau
when its raining.
Bryan Spencer, a junior from
Overland Park, worked to find
sponsors for the event.
There wasnt anything more that
I could have done in four weeks.
Just pulling it off was enough for
this year, Spencer said. Now I
have 364 days to get ready for next
year and itll be bigger and better
next year.
Spencer said he and the creators
are determined to make this an
annual event.
As long as people and business-
es are interested in participating,
Spencer said the Larryville Luau
would happen again.
Edited by Ashley Montgomery
Spencer Walsh/KANSAN
AndrewLangford, a graduate fromOverland Park, shoots a ping pong ball while playing water pong, since beer pong is illegal in bars, as his teammate Josh Boice, a graduate fromLawrence, watches.
Both of themheard about Larryville Luauon Facebook.
I was expecting it to
be a lot bigger than it
was but it was still a
good time.
ALExIS ALExANDER
Senior from Chicago
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 26, 2010 / NEWS / 7A
Two congressmen seek to allow Internet gambling
NATIoNAL
Mcclatchy-tribune
WASHINGTON Americans
looking to satisfy their gambling
itch can do so now at the close to
1,700 casinos across the country. A
bill in the House of Representatives
could bring casino gambling to the
approximately 86.8 million Ameri-
can homes with Internet access.
Reps. Barney Frank, D-Mass.,
and Jim McDermott, D-Wash., are
leading a group that proposes to
repeal the Unlawful Internet Gam-
bling Enforcement Act, which is set
to go into efect June 1. Teir plan
would legalize and tax online gam-
bling.
We have an activity going on
illegally in this country and were
pretending it doesnt exist, McDer-
mott said. People have said We
want to be legal and were certainly
willing to pay taxes, and we need
the money. On every count, this is
a net positive.
Te bill calls for a six percent tax
on all deposits to be paid to state
and tribal governments made by
residents of their jurisdiction. For
example, if someone living in Mis-
souri puts $1,000 into an online
gambling account anywhere in the
country, $60 would go to Missouris
state government.
Additionally, two percent of all
deposits would go to the federal
government. Te
congres s i onal
Joint Committee
on Taxation es-
timated the bill
would generate
$30 billion for
state and tribal
governments and
$42 billion for
the federal gov-
ernment over the
next 10 years.
Tis is a huge
boon to the state governments,
McDermott said. If you look across
the country youre seeing programs
cut. In Arizona, they just cut out
a program for childrens health
for 40,000 kids. Heres a source of
money to keep that going.
Along with much-needed funds,
Frank made a libertarian argument
supporting new legislation.
American adults want to be able
to do what they want with their
own money without the govern-
ment interfering, Frank said.
Opponents of Internet gambling
arent standing by idly, and are lin-
ing up to op-
pose Frank
and McDer-
mott in the
House.
Last week,
a Republican
memo tying
jailed lobbyist
Jack Abramof
to online gam-
bling made its
way around
Capitol Hill.
Professional sports leagues are
against the bill because they think
it will expand wagers placed on
their games.
Other infuential groups, such as
the nonproft conservative Chris-
tian organization Focus on the
Family, are frmly against any ex-
tension of legal gambling.
Chad Hills, policy and research
analyst for Focus on the Family,
said addictive gambling is already a
problem in America and passage of
this legislation would only exacer-
bate that problem.
Tis basically creates a national
casino and theres no time they
wont be operating, Hills said. We
already have between 15 and 20
million people in the U.S. with a
pathological gambling problem.
Te bill was set to be considered
earlier this month by the House
Financial Services Committee, but
the hearing was canceled due to a
scheduling overload. Frank, the
panels chairman, plans to get a
vote this spring, and is confdent
the House will pass the bill.
Tere is no companion bill in
the Senate, but Sen. Robert Menen-
dez, D-N.J., introduced a bill last
August seeking to legalize and tax
poker and games of chance on the
Internet.
Te casino industry always kept
an eye on Internet gaming as a
potential business opportunity in
case its legal status ever changed.
Casino operators ofen think of the
online gamer as a completely dif-
ferent beast from the gambler who
will spend a night or a weekend at
the tables. Tat means an untapped
source of revenue is out there, and
the industry may be positioned
better than
anyone to get
in right away.
Ca s i n o s
are uniquely
poised to
quickly enter
this market
and to beneft
because its a
new activity,
its a new rev-
enue stream,
said Michael Waxman, executive
director of the Safe and Secure In-
ternet Gambling Initiative, an ad-
vocacy group that lobbies on behalf
of the Internet gaming industry.
Te land-based casino industry
and the American Gaming As-
sociation were initially opposed
to Internet gambling because they
didnt think the proper technol-
ogy existed to protect consumers.
In December 2008, the American
Gaming Association set out to de-
termine whether the appropriate
technology could be implemented,
a test that gambling websites passed
unanimously, according to Frank
Fahrenkopf, pres-
ident and CEO of
the AGA.
With that con-
cern out of the
way, most casinos
see Internet gam-
bling as another
source of revenue
rather than a
competitor.
Te Internet,
no matter
how hard it tries, will never be
able to substitute that personal
interaction that guests desire and
our team members provide, said
Troy Stremming, the senior vice
president of government relations
and public afairs for Ameristar
Casinos Inc.
Mcclatchy-tribune
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
On a recent weekday afternoon at
the University of Haiti, students
huddled under a large tree while
a professor lectured over a mega-
phone, his voice booming over the
rumble of generators and squeals of
homeless children at play.
None of the students will get
credit for attending this outdoor
religion lesson, as the vast majority
of Haitis 25,000 university students
have been shut out of class since the
Jan. 12 earthquake toppled about
90 percent of the school buildings.
There is no hope for this year,
so our only hope is that our gov-
ernment will find a plan for next
year, said Jeff Lefevre, a communi-
cations student.
We hear a lot of speeches about
tents and food, but not about high-
er education. Its not what anybody
is thinking about.
It has been more than three
months since the 7.0-magnitude
earthquake destroyed nine of the
state universitys 13 campuses, and
the countrys largest institution of
higher learning is still looking for
tents and space to offer classes
outdoors.
Some universi-
ties have reached
out to schools in
the United States,
such as Florida
I nt e r nat i ona l
University, to
form partner-
ships and seek
help. FIU has
worked for
months with the
University of Haiti to assess its
needs.
Still, officials at both public and
private universities in Haiti say that
with food and shelter straining
resources in a nation wracked with
problems, higher learning is low on
the list of priorities.
The quake served to unmask an
already crippled education system
where even university presidents
lack doctorate degrees and students
c ompl ai ne d
they had to
offer their
professors sex
to graduate.
So as educa-
tors scramble
to count the
losses, some
experts say
that the dev-
astation will
serve as the
oppor t uni t y
to create a higher education sys-
tem from scratch, or risk forev-
er becoming a leaderless nation
dependent on foreign aid.
Higher education in Haiti was a
mess prior to the earthquake, said
Louis Herns Marcelin, a University
of Miami anthropologist who is
the chancellor of Interuniversity
Institute for Research and
Development (INURED), a research
and higher education organization
in Port-au-Prince. Over the years
of institutional
degradation,
no regulation,
no standards,
it became
wh a t e v e r .
Wh a t e v e r
happens. The
e a r t hqu a ke
unveiled a
disaster that
was already
happening, he said.
An INURED study showed 80
percent of Haitis 159 universities
were in the quake-ravaged capital
of Port-au-Prince. Of the 32 they
surveyed, 28 were destroyed.
Anywhere from 3,000 to 6,000
students died.
Marcelin said the state univer-
sity needs $2.5 million immediately
just to get temporary structures
up, but the issue is not on the gov-
ernment the
U.S. or Haitis
agenda.
There has
been no concrete
message telling
us what they are
going to do, said
Gorchemy Jean
Baptiste, 25, a
pharmacy major
at the toppled
medical school.
We are ready to
go anywhere to study and come
back and help our country. Right
now we are not in class and instead
sleeping under sheets under plain
view.
Opening schools and institutions
of higher education in preparation
for the new school year is among
Haitis priorities, the government
said in a needs assessment report
presented to the March 31 inter-
national donors conference at the
United Nations.
Although it did not distinguish
between lower and higher educa-
tion, the report says more than
1,300 education institutions col-
lapsed as a result of the quake.
The government estimates that
it will cost $915 million to relaunch
Haitis education system over the
next 12 months, and $3.5 billion to
build an education system over the
next decade.
A Ministry of Education offi-
cial acknowledged that the empha-
sis has been on lower education,
because of an urgent quest to get
children off the street.
INTERNATIoNAL
Higher learning institutions
in Haiti struggle afer quake
People have said We
want to be legal and were
certainly willing to pay
taxes and we need the
money.
JiM MCdErMOTT
US rep . (d-Washington)
This basically creates
a national casino and
theres no time they wont
be operating.
CHAd HillS
policy and research analyst,
Focus on the Family
Higher education in Haiti
was a mess prior to the
earthquake.
lOUiS HErNS MArCEliN
Chancellor, interuniversity institute
for research and development
There is no hope for this
year, so our only hope is
that our government will
fnd a plan for next year.
JEFF lEFEVrE
Haitian communications student
associated Press
MALIBU, Calif. In hopes
of luring the endangered steel-
head trout into the Santa Monica
Mountains, Californias trans-
portation agency is planning to
spend $935,000 to pave over part
of a popular beach with cement
and boulders to build a freeway
of sorts for fish.
The project is the latest, yet far
from the most unusual, steelhead
recovery attempt by government
agencies that have spent millions
of dollars on concrete fish ladders,
cameras, fishways and other con-
traptions to allow seagoing trout
to spawn in California streams.
The problem, even some con-
servationists say, is that there
is little evidence construction
efforts since the 1980s have done
anything except absorb taxpayer
dollars. The work to save the
species has led to about a dozen
concrete fishways at a cost of
more than $16.7 million.
A $1 million fish ladder a
structure designed to allow fish to
migrate upstream over a barrier
may cost $7.5 million in stimu-
lus funds to rebuild. Another fish
ladder would require fish to leap
8 feet to reach it. Studies alone for
replacing a third ladder have cost
an estimated $3 million.
If we do a series of crappy proj-
ects like fish ladders to nowhere...
then the public trust for giving
money for these types of projects
is going to go away, said con-
servationist Mark Abramson of
the Santa Monica Bay Restoration
Foundation.
ENVIRoNmENT
Golden State conservationists
frustrated by fsh freeway plans
8A / ENTERTAINMENT / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM
10 is the easiest day, 0 the
most challenging.
HoRoScopES
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 8
A lot of pieces come together to-
day, and you see a way to repair
something that you thought
was permanently broken. In
the process, you save a ton of
money.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 8
The best thing you can do for
your associates is to state your
opinion and reinforce it with ac-
tion. Dont let anything distract
you.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 7
Bring water and snacks
everywhere you go. You may
not have time for a regular meal
until later. Youre running on
emotional fuel all day.
cANcER (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 6
Take today of if at all possible.
You need time to recuperate
from exciting weekend activities.
Your signifcant other cleans up
any leftover messes.
LEo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 8
something seemed broken on
Friday. Today, you see just the
way to repair or adjust elements
so that they work together
perfectly. Tweak, but dont use a
sledgehammer.
VIRGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6
Use whatever means of persua-
sion you need to convince
your signifcant other to relax.
Less stress equals more fun, so
lighten the mood.
LIbRA (Sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is a 8
Everything goes like clockwork
today. You set household goals
and someone else takes care of
them. Meanwhile, you cheerfully
handle whatever arises at work.
ScoRpIo (oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
Let your signifcant other take
the lead now. Youre perfectly
happy to go along with any
plan, reasonable or not. Main-
tain a playful attitude.
SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7
Use your persuasive powers to
move others as early as possible.
The weather could shift, and you
need to be on the road before
that happens.
cApRIcoRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 8
It really is all about you and
your most intimate friend. Get
together early to make the most
of the short time you have.
AqUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6
You wake up today knowing
that you have the power. Now
you need to decide what to do
with it. Try making everyone
around you happier.
pIScES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
Ask your group leader to work
some magic and make obstacles
disappear. Everyone needs to
see the opportunity and enthu-
siastically embrace it.
All puzzles King Features
Please recycle this newspaper
Todd Pickrell and Scott A. Winer
LITTLE ScoTTIE
cHIcKEN STRIp: 2010
SKETcHbooK
Charlie Hoogner
Drew Stearns
Nicholas Sambaluk
THE NEXT pANEL
Zoe Saldanas 2009
rise repeats in 2010
With all due respect to her
recent employer, Zoe saldana
already was Queen of the Movie
World in 2009.
Perfectly cast as the sexy,
"smart, commanding Uhura"
(This Is London magazine) in
"star Trek," she did her fair share
to ensure that was a $257 million
box ofce hit.
And then there was that "How
to Act in a Motion capture suit"
clinic she put on for "Avatar," mak-
ing her body and face register
through all of James cameron's
computerized stretching, tail-
attaching and skin-shading. That
flm has earned $742 million
and counting.
saldana, 31, had been plug-
ging away at the Hollywood thing
since 2000's ballet drama "center
stage," making a number of
movies. she had supporting roles
in flms such as "The Terminal," "Pi-
rates of the caribbean: The curse
of the Black Pearl" and "Guess
Who." But the phone is ringing
with bigger, better ofers these
days, thanks to 2009's career-
making track record.
And 2010 is shaping up as
another year we'll see a lot of her.
she's in the thrillers "The Losers"
and "Takers." And she's trying
her hand at comedy, playing
a woman secretly engaged to
James Marsden, something her
cousin (Martin Lawrence) and dad
(Ron Glass) don't approve of in
"Death at a Funeral."
MoVIES
To contribute to Free For
All, visit Kansan.com, call
785-864-0500 or try our
Facebook App.
n n n
I got up at 6:30 this morning.
This was a mistake.
n n n
Ive been watching My
Name is Earl for the past six
hours. I think I might have a
problem.
n n n

I defnitely passed out
naked for the frst time last
night.
n n n
I got so high yesterday, I felt
like my feet went through the
car and got stuck.

n n n
Im so not ofcer, drunk.
n n n
When I think back on our
relationship, I sometimes
wonder if I was drunk through
it all.
n n n
The ambulance sirens at noon
can only mean one thing: the
frst case of alcohol poisoning
for the Larryville Luau.
n n n
Watching Power Rangers
in the morning brings back my
childhood. Its morphin time.
n n n
I just realized I havent been
more than 50 miles away from
Lawrence in almost three
years...
n n n
Who are you and why did
you just Facebook poke me?
n n n
Ive had better luck selling
my body for science than
giving it away. Im so confused.
n n n
Drunken words are sober
thoughts.
n n n
Hmmm, should I ask out
this hot girl two computers
away?

n n n
Just vomited in class. The
teacher then canceled the
class for the rest of the hour.
Now Im a hero! I have to get
drunk more often.
n n n
Theres nothing like a brand
new crush!
n n n
Why am I almost 19 years
old and still watching the
Disney Channel?
n n n
Hey, no worries. Im well
into 20, and I still watch the
Disney Channel. Youre not
alone my friend.
n n n
Whoever keeps running up
and down the hallway needs
to stop. Right now. Before I
tackle them and cut their
feet of.
n n n
I just saw the stupidest
tattoo, and I was actually
embarrassed for the person.
n n n
LeTTer GuideLines
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how to submit A LEttER to thE EDitoR
stephen Montemayor, editor in chief
864-4810 or smontemayor@kansan.com
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864-4924 or emccoy@kansan.com
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THe ediTOriAL BOArd
Members of The Kansan Editorial Board are
Stephen Montemayor, Brianne Pfannenstiel,
Jennifer Torline, Lauren Cunningham, Vicky
Lu, Emily McCoy, Kate Larrabee, Stefanie Penn,
James Castle, Michael Holtz, Caitlin Thornbrugh
and Andrew Hammond.
contAct us
OpinionTHE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
monDAy, ApRiL 26, 2010 www.kAnsAn.com
pAGE 9A
G
luten intolerance, known
as celiac disease, can
wreak havoc on a persons
ability to lead a normal life. I am
all too familiar with the challenges
of gluten intolerance afer having
lived a year gluten-free.
Tere is a vast range in the
symptoms that people with the
disease, referred to as celiacs, may
experience. One celiac could have
diarrhea while another has consti-
pation. For this very reason celiac
disease is ofen misdiagnosed as
Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
Celiac disease can be present as
an infant. For others it will remain
dormant until triggered by some-
thing such as a virus, the death of
a loved one or surgery.
Beginning a gluten-free diet
prior to consulting a doctor usu-
ally is not advised because of the
sensitivity of the blood tests used
to diagnosis celiac disease.
A study printed in Te Journal
of Family Practice revealed the
inaccuracy of many of these tests.
Doctors typically recommend sus-
pected celiacs remain on a diet rich
in gluten two to four weeks before
having blood work done, but even
then there is a chance the results
will not be accurate. Many people
with a mild case fall through the
cracks.
Doctors ofen have a hard time
diagnosing celiac disease.
Celiacs, who experience the
relief of having their disease diag-
nosed, still must learn how to lead
a gluten-free life in a gluten-rich
world.
Celiac disease is fairly common,
with one in 133 Americans sufer-
ing from it, according to the Celiac
Disease Foundation. However, a
majority of society seems clueless
as to what exactly gluten is.
Gluten can be found in a variety
of things: soda, soy sauce, vinegar,
alcohol, cigarettes, the glue used
on envelopes and stamps, condi-
ments, meat or meat substitutes,
French fries, ice cream, toothpaste
and even shampoo.
Essentially, a person who is on
a gluten-free diet must avoid any-
thing that has wheat, rye, barley or
any of their derivatives.
Tese restrictions can dramati-
cally afect a persons ability to eat
on the go. Tis can be particularly
difcult if the person has other di-
etary restrictions.
For example, I am not only a ce-
liac, but I am also a vegetarian and
have a host of food allergies.
I have discovered that Lawrence
has many gluten-free, vegetar-
ian options, but vegetarian celiacs
should be particularly cautious;
many restaurants assume that
gluten-free products are safe for
vegetarians.
I recently discovered the gluten-
free bun at Local Burger contains
gelatin, which is neither vegetar-
ian nor kosher.
Many vegetarian, celiac custom-
ers unknowingly consume gelatin
when they order a veggie burger
with the gluten-free bun.
Anyone who has a special diet
should never take an employees
word for it. Unless they are follow-
ing the same specialty diet, they
likely have no idea what is safe and
what is not.
For anyone with a special diet,
asking to see the list of ingredients
is better than potentially consum-
ing a detrimental ingredient.
As awareness about celiac dis-
ease increases, society is begin-
ning to accommodate for those in
need of gluten-free products.
Following a gluten-free diet can
be quite daunting both physi-
cally and socially but it is abso-
lutely imperative for a celiac to re-
main healthy and symptom free.
Gross is a freshman from
Lindsborg in international
studies and journalism.
Big challenges posed
by gluten-free living
ARooj KHALID
ediTOriAL CArTOOn
Research goals need to change
A
fter months of negotiations,
the future of Lawrences
homeless shelter finally
has the chance of being resolved at
tomorrow nights City Commission
meeting.
Despite heated criticism of
the plan that would relocate the
Lawrence Community Shelter near
the Douglas County Jail, we sup-
port this proposal and encourage
city commissioners to once again
vote in favor of it.
Last Tuesday, city commission-
ers approved a special-use permit
needed to relocate the shelter to a
warehouse at 3701 Franklin Park
Circle.
The permit was approved by a
5-0 vote. There will be a second
reading of the proposal tomor-
row night a general procedure
for City Hall and we hope city
commissioners support it just as
strongly.
Members of the Lawrence
Community Shelter Board have
been trying to relocate the shelter
for nearly six years. Last Tuesdays
vote was the closest theyve ever
gotten to achieving this goal.
Tomorrow nights vote could be the
final step in this process.
Although no plan is perfect,
a decision must be made soon.
Loring Henderson, shelter director,
said, if approved, the relocation
would take place in 12 to 18
months, depending on how long
it would take to raise funds for the
move. After six years of hard work,
postponing the move any longer
would be unacceptable.
The new location will have
approximately 125 beds, 72 more
than the current shelter, at 944
Kentucky St. It will also provide
increased office space, a full din-
ing room and added space for
outside resources, including a
medical facility operated by Baker
University nursing students.
Improving the lives of Lawrences
homeless is a community effort.
Although many residents who live
near the Douglas County Jail ada-
mantly oppose relocating the shel-
ter near their property, right now it
appears to be the best solution.
The new location will provide
adequate housing and better pro-
grams and resources meaning
more opportunities for the home-
less to improve their lives.
In the second reading of the pro-
posal, we hope city commissioners
will consider two additional items:
a drop-in shelter and a bus route to
the new location.
Maintaining the current location
as a drop-in shelter would provide
the homeless a place to go during
the day. Given its central loca-
tion near downtown, it serves an
important use as a daytime drop-in
shelter.
The isolated location of the new
shelter would make it difficult for
its homeless residents to travel
and search for jobs. The Lawrence
Transit Office supports adding a
bus stop near the new shelter. City
commissioners need to approve its
proposal for adding one.
Given the importance of this
issue, we encourage students to
attend tomorrow nights meeting
and voice their support for the
shelters relocation. With their
support, city commissioners need
to approve the proposed move.
A final decision on this issue is
long overdue.
Michael Holtz for the Kansan
Editorial Board.
ediTOriAL BOArd
Commissions vote shows support
for Lawrences homeless population
HeALTH
N
o one enters college as a
scientist.
Certainly there are
those who are interested in the
complexities of the human body,
the beautiful chemical reactions
that occur in the space of a test
tube or the sheer wonder of the
stars in the night sky.
But to become a true scientist,
one must take this modest interest
and transform it into a legitimate
profession.
At universities such as ours,
undergraduate research oppor-
tunities help students make this
transition. Undergraduates can
get experience investigating the
genetics of worms, the migratory
patterns of butterfies, novel anti-
cancer pharmaceuticals and much,
much more.
But many students are becom-
ing increasingly ambivalent about
the value of such research and are
abandoning its true intellectual
potential.
Whether its the natural scienc-
es, the social sciences or the hu-
manities, undergraduate research
allows students to explore their
interests beyond the classroom.
It can be either independent or
guided by a research mentor. In
either case it provides the chance
to be an investigator in addition
to a student. It can even help to
graduate with honors and is an
excellent mark of distinction for
those entering graduate school.
However, this research is
sometimes performed simply as
a resume booster and not for its
own merit. Tis is particularly true
in the biological sciences, where
many students gain laboratory
experience simply as an aid to get
into medical or graduate school.
Undergraduates will ofen have
little awareness for the efects of
their research projects or even
the context of their question in
general.
Undergraduate researchers
should be able to explain the sig-
nifcance of their research for the
greater scientifc community and
defend the limits of their conclu-
sions.
But many merely perform
the motions of research, blindly
following the directions of their
faculty mentor. Research, for them,
is simply a line on their curricu-
lum vitae, one more step toward a
career.
To be fair, research is a difcult
activity for undergraduates to
comprehensively understand.
Research projects are built on
the results of decades of prior
research a complex culmina-
tion of the failures and successes of
scientists of the past.
Expecting an undergraduate to
comprehend the entirety of their
research project afer only taking a
handful of prerequisite courses is
certainly unfair.
But if the student is willing
to put in the efort to conduct a
research project they should be
expected to develop a respectable
knowledge base.
Research faculty and mentors
are also not entirely blameless.
Tough many foster independent
undergraduate research as a seri-
ous investigation and signifcant
teaching opportunity, some treat
the undergraduates purely as
hourly employees.
Te students clock in 10 to 15
hours per week in the laboratory
and perform a set of menial tasks
for an overarching project they
barely understand.
Undergraduate research is a
chance for the University to stand
out as a true academic learning
community.
Tere are research opportunities
here that rival the best colleges in
the nation. Te University ofers a
diverse range of felds, approaches
and interests that can appeal to
nearly any developing scientist.
But the only way the University
will inspire a new generation of
legitimate scientists with skills of
investigation beyond the technical
aspects of research is to encourage
sincere undergraduate devotion to
projects and active mentoring by
the faculty.
Folmsbee is a senior from
Topeka in neurobiology.
sCienTiFiC HeALTH
The
Contentious
Consumer
By sarah gross
sgross@kansan.com
Sai the
Science Guy
By sai FolmsBee
sfolmsbee@kansan.com
LeTTer TO THe ediTOr
ethics blur the line in
inclusive classrooms
During a recent lecture my pro-
fessor expressed her agreement
with any sexual afliation or rela-
tionships. Her desire was to create
an inclusive classroom, where
no judgment was passed based on
personal sexual afliation.
Along with this statement, my
teacher told us about one of her
fellow professors who didnt agree
with her stand on sexuality. Tere-
fore, she implied, he was hateful,
bigoted and ignorant.
Needless to say, this shocked
me. My professors refusal to ac-
cept her fellow professors view-
point as a legitimate perspective
contradicts her desire to create an
inclusive classroom. As a result,
she excludes all who dont agree
with her narrowly defned opinion
of what is moral.
Te idea of an inclusive
classroom is commendable, but
my professor failed to create
this environment. I would be a
member of this elusive inclusive
classroom if I agreed with exactly
what she says.
Interestingly enough, I disagree
with almost everything she says.
My frustration grows with every
class. I know I am not alone.
My call to you, fellow students,
is to think for yourselves. Profes-
sors dont hold all the knowledge.
Te privilege of being an educator
doesnt allow the right to push an
agenda on us.
College is meant to be a place to
freely explore ideas and form our
own views, not have them belittled
by our professors when we think
diferently. Classrooms will never
be inclusive if students must lis-
ten to professors spout of morally
subjective ideals.
Im paying for professors to
teach not tell me what they
believe is right and wrong. I can
decide that on my own.
Joey Williams is senior fromDenver.
Meeting information:
Day: Tuesday, April 27
Time: 6:35 p.m.
Location: City Commission
Meeting Room, first floor of
City Hall, 6 E. 6th Street
10A / NEWS / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM
ENgINEERINg
The incredible, afordable green dome home
BY JOSH HAFNER
jhafner@kansan.com
Its promoters call it the greenest
affordable home in Kansas.
Dan Rockhill, professor of archi-
tecture and director of Studio 804,
the Universitys eco-friendly design
program, described the structure
as a broken egg shell.
Deron Belt, president of the
East Lawrence Neighborhood
Association, said that the building
reminded him of a home from
Hobbiton, but not underground,
an allusion to the homes of the J.R.
R. Tolkien novels.
Whatever its called, the dome-
shaped building is raising hopes
and eyebrows in East Lawrence,
bringing with it a little-known
green technology into the com-
munity.
For the past month at the north-
east corner of 13th and New Jersey
streets, Lawrence-based SIPSmart
Building Systems has been work-
ing on the construction of a
home intended to strike a balance
between high-energy efficiency
and cost effectiveness.
The project is in partnership with
Tenants to Homeowners, a non-
profit that pairs low-income home
seekers with workforce housing
at below-market price. Executive
Director Rebecca Buford said the
project started when SIPSmart
owner Michael Morely pitched the
idea to her years ago.
He approached me and said, I
think I can do a smaller project and
really test the limits of affordabil-
ity, she said. The idea of doing a
smaller footprint of this that starts
affordably really excited me.
The focus of the homes design is
structural insulated panels. SIPs are
comprised of two layers of wooden
or metal structural board separated
by a thick layer of foam. The fac-
tory sends the house in a kit for
speedy assembly.
The three-bedroom, two-bath
dome-home in East Lawrence,
model name ARCX 29-9, should
take just four months to build, fin-
ishing in June.
The pieces fit together to pro-
duce an airtight, energy-efficient
home that requires significantly
less power and thus less money for
utilities. Kim Chaote, a SIPSmart
representative, said that the 1,470
-square-foot home would have a
monthly utility bill of $30 to $50.
However, SIPs are more expen-
sive than traditional materials.
According to Chaote, this cus-
tom made SIP design costs about
$25,000, not including the build-
ings final interior or exterior
design or the pricey shipping and
installation charges. Using available
subsidies and partnerships with
contractors to lower costs, Buford
said the Tenants to Homeowners
budget for the home was about
$150,000.
Anyone with a million dollars
can build a green house, Buford
said. Its not very hard. The ques-
tion is can you do it without a ton
of money and can you get a good
return on that pretty quickly. Im
using this project to answer that.
Chaote said the buildings unique
dome shape was chosen by Morley
and the SIPSmart team to capital-
ize on the panels ability to span
large distances without many sup-
porting walls and to use as much
area as possible on the buildings
small lot space. The SIPSmart team
said they felt the dome also had
aesthetic advantages.
I cant describe it, but theres
something about not having square
corners the flow, Chaote said.
It definitely has a more relaxed
feeling to it. When youre inside a
space like that, it inspires awe and
uplifting thoughts.
However, not everyone in
Lawrence agrees that the buildings
dome shape is a smart move.
Chaote recalled at least two people
who called the design outlandish,
promising to throw eggs at the
building if it was built. Other
objectors have more practical
reasons.
Rockhill said although using
SIPs was a wise
decision, the
dome design
hampered the
buildings over-
all efficiency.
I think
thats the most
unf or t unat e
thing about
the project,
is the design
of it leaves
something to
be desired,
Rockhill said.
It seems to
ignore ele-
ments of pas-
sive design, the
movement of
the sun. And that I think is really
ignorance, you cant not consider
that when talking about sustain-
ability.
Passive solar design is a meth-
od of crafting buildings that takes
advantage of the suns daily and
yearly cycles to reduce the neces-
sity of climate control energy use.
Often this can be achieved through
things like such as south-facing
windows. Rockhill said the domes
shape rendered it incapable of tak-
ing advantage of crucial passive
solar elements.
I congratulate its occurrence,
but it also needs to have a little
clarification as to what its boasting
about, and I do think if they would
get out of the nonsense of the shape
and think of how to use SIPs to
take advantage of the shape, then
they could really make a differ-
ence, he said.
Whether the buildings dome
design is gaudy and impractical
or novel and unique, most people
in East Lawrence seem
excited for its comple-
tion.
The response
from the community
was supportive and
positive, Belt said. I
think we are a quirky
neighborhood of sorts
I guess and I think this
house goes well with
it.
Though the house
is still for sale, Buford
said she hopes to get
it contracted in April
in order to take advan-
tage an Affordable
Housing tax credit
program that ends this
month.
Even after construction is com-
plete and the home is occupied,
there may still be disagreement
about how the house looks. More
difficult to argue about, however,
is the economic and ecological
advantages that the SIP technology
provide for a low-income family.
Its been important to offer
them something with low enough
energy bills that they will be able to
live in it, beyond just buy it in the
first place, Chaote said. And thats
the beauty of this.
Edited by Allyson Shaw
Jerry Wang/KANSAN
This house, which is near completion at 13th and NewJersey streets, is part of the Tenants to Homeowners nonproft efort. The group pairs lowincome home seekers with work force housing at
belowmarket prices.
Anyone with a mil-
lion dollars can build
a green house. The
question is can you
do it without a ton of
money and can you
get a good return on
that pretty quickly.
RebeccA bufORD
Homeowners executive
director
NATIoNAL
ASSOciAtEd PRESS
YAZOO CITY, Miss. At
least 10 people were killed when
a tornado ripped through the
rural Mississippi countryside.
Hundreds of homes also were
damaged in the storm, which
carved a path of devastation
from the Louisiana line to east-
central Mississippi, and at least
three dozen people were hurt.
Rescuers spread out Sunday
to find anyone who might be
trapped, while survivors returned
to demolished homes to salvage
what they could and bulldoze
the rubble.
This tornado was enormous,
said Gov. Haley Barbour, who
grew up in Yazoo County, a
county of about 28,000 people
known for blues, catfish and cot-
ton. The twister wreaked utter
obliteration among the pictur-
esque hills rising from the flat
Mississippi Delta, the governor
said.
Tornadoes also were report-
ed in Louisiana, Arkansas and
Alabama. The storm system
tracked northeastward, downing
trees in northwest Georgia early
Sunday before moving offshore.
10 killed in
in tornado
disaster in
Mississippi
oDD NEWS
Woman rescues
14 ducklings
WesT ALLIs, Wis. A
mother duck didnt survive her
walk across a busy Wisconsin
roadway, but a motorist made
sure the 14 ducklings stayed
safe even one that wiggled
under her dashboard.
Angela speed of the Wiscon-
sin Humane society says the
good samaritan was driving in
West Allis, a Milwaukee suburb,
on friday when she saw the
newly hatched mallards trying
to cross a busy road.
The woman told speed
that a vehicle in front of her
appeared to intentionally hit
the mother duck, leaving her
ducklings confused in the
middle of the road.
The woman gathered each
into her car and took them to
the Humane society.
but an hour later, she heard
a peep. A mechanic took apart
her dashboard and found the
14th duckling. speed says the
brood is healthy and expected
to survive.
Associated Press
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8usiucss Ccufcr, uo Fifucss Ccufcr
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By Ben Ward
bward@kansan.com
twitter.com/bm_dub
A few moments aside, it was a
rough weekend to be a pitcher at
Hoglund Ballpark.
After junior T.J. Walz silenced
Texas Tech in a 10-2 victory on
Friday, the Red Raiders spent the
rest of the weekend proving why
theyre one of the top hitting clubs
in the Big 12.
Kansas (25-16-1, 6-8-1) was
downed in the final two games
of the series, dropping the second
game 11-8 before suffering a 21-10
thumping at the hands of Texas
Tech in the series finale. The Red
Raiders offensive outburst came
at the expense of the Jayhawks
pitching staff, which had been
sound for nearly two weeks.
Their offense was really good
today, and youve just got to tip
your cap to them, junior third
baseman Tony Thompson said
after Sundays defeat.
In Fridays opener it was the
Jayhawks not the Red Raiders
that looked like one of the top
offenses in the conference.
Kansas pounded out 13 hits,
including six in its six-run first
inning, and rolled to a 10-2 vic-
tory.
The first six Jayhawks reached
base in the first inning, and each
came around to score, giving Walz
an early 6-0 lead. Thompson and
sophomore catcher Chris Manship
each smacked two-RBI singles and
junior left fielder Jimmy Waters
added an RBI single of his own to
account for most of the damage.
Any time when you score a
bunch of runs in the first inning
it takes of a load of pressure, and
you can kind of play the game a
little more relaxed, Waters said.
Eight of Kansas nine starters
each tallied a hit in the game,
and four recorded multiple hits
including junior right fielder
Casey Lytle, who had three sin-
gles, three runs scored and stole
two bases.
While the Jayhawks continued
to pile offense on the Red Raiders
scoring single runs in the sec-
ond, fourth, fifth and seventh
junior T.J. Walz easily handled the
Big 12s highest scoring offense.
Walz pitched the first seven
and 1/3 innings, holding the Red
Raiders to two runs on seven hits
while striking out seven. Walz
earned his sixth victory of the
season, and is now 3-0 with a 1.99
ERA when pitching at Hoglund
Ballpark.
Coach Ritch Price praised Walz
for throwing first pitch strikes and
pitching to contact, which he said
was in sharp contrast to what
Texas Techs pitchers did.
When you play against metal
bats, you cant set the table and
thats what happened to them
tonight, coach Price said. They
set the table for those crooked
number innings we put up.
Senior Cameron Selik wasnt as
sharp as Walz Saturday, but only
allowed two runs despite scat-
tering seven hits through four
innings.
After Texas Tech took an early
1-0 lead, sophomore catcher James
Stanfield ripped an RBI single to
center field in the second inning
which scored Thompson and tied
the game at 1-1.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
By Clark GoBle
cgoble@kansan.com
twitter.com/clark_goble
Kansas loses both games to Texas Tech. SOFTBALL | 10B
Softball swept in series
Team loses all its matches at home against Texas Tech. TENNIS | 8B
Senior day spoiled
Game 1
Kansas 10, Texas Tech 2
Game 2
Texas Tech 11, Kansas 8
Game 3
Texas Tech 21, Kansas 10
Pick and Webb
are favorites in
final rounds
Weston White/KANSAN
Sophomore quarterback Kale Pick throws a pass towards the sideline during Saturday afternoon's annual spring game. Pick threwfor 122 yards and a touchdown for the blue team.
By MaX roTHMan
mrothman@kansan.com
He may have been competing
against his own teammates, but
freshman Kale Pick displayed the
talent and intangibles of a capable
starting quarterback.
Pick completed 10 of 14 passes
for 122 yards and two touchdowns
and led the Blue Team to a 14-10
victory against the White Team in
the annual intrasquad spring game
Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
I cant be satisfied yet, Pick
said. I want to keep working
hard and have a big summer while
working with my receivers. Every
day I want to get on the same page
and get this offense going.
Since Todd Reesings depar-
ture, the battle for the starting
quarterback spot has become one
of Kansas greatest uncertainties.
Coach Turner Gill said that the
race has been whittled down to
two: Pick and freshman Jordan
Webb, who completed 5 of 9 pass-
es for 42 yards and threw one
touchdown and one interception.
While Saturdays game cannot
project who will be the best choice
to open the season, it hints at who
may have the upper edge heading
into the seasons preparation.
I think it breeds competition,
Webb said. Throughout the sum-
mer, throughout fall, until we get
to that first game, I think the com-
petition is really going to make the
starter a lot better.
Gill said that Webb had the
stronger arm, but Pick has more
experience and perhaps more
accuracy with his throws.
They both did a good job of
keeping their composure in the
huddle, Gill said. We knew they
werent going to be perfect today,
but I liked how they both did a
good job of trying to make some
plays. The one thing we need to
work on is getting rid of the foot-
ball sooner.
Both quarterbacks exhibited
versatile skills as they eluded pass
rushers to make plays down the
field. Junior tight end Tim Biere
was one of the main benefactors
of both Pick and Webbs big play
ability. Webb finished with three
catches for 56 yards and a touch-
down.
I think I caught more passes
on that first day of practice than
I did in about a week last year,
Biere said.
SEE football oN pAgE 4B
A
fter the first round of the
NFL Draft on Thursday,
ESPN draft analyst Mel
Kiper Jr. projected Dezmon Briscoe
to go off the board with the 16th pick
of the second round.
He lasted 143 picks longer.
He plummeted so far that Jimmy
Clausen, a Notre Dame quarterback
who was projected in many mock
drafts to go top-10 but fell to the late
second round, cant even relate. The
Cincinnati Bengals took Briscoe with
the 22nd pick of the sixth round.
Cincinnati isnt exactly an ideal
situation either. The Bengals selected
Texas Jordan Shipley in the third
round, so Briscoe is facing competi-
tion even from within his own draft
class. Right now, the Bengals have 11
wide receivers on their roster, includ-
ing Chad Ochocinco and free-agent
signee Antonio Bryant.
As shocking as it sounds, Briscoe
might have been better off going
undrafted and finding a better situa-
tion as a free agent.
Even though the draft didnt go as
planned for Briscoe, theres no ques-
tion that Briscoe made the correct
decision to enter.
Opposoing defenses would have
locked in on Briscoe like they did
many times last season, and Kale
Pick/Jordan Webb/whoever wins the
QB job wont match Reesings ability,
at least in their first extended playing
time. Briscoe was First Team All-Big
12 in 2009 and started all three sea-
sons as a Jayhawk.
The questions surrounding Briscoe
werent about his productivity. They
were about his toughness, his top-
end speed and his off-the-field antics.
So any decreased productivity in
his senior season would have hurt
Briscoes stock dramatically.
Sure, Briscoe could have decided
to come back, go to every class in
the fall and catch a few more balls
while getting whacked by a defender.
He could have worked with trainers
to slightly improve his 40-yard-dash
time.
But the chance of making slight
improvements wouldnt be worth the
risk of dropping out of the NFL radar
completely.
Briscoe has a lot to prove to see
the field. With so many experienced
receivers dotting the Bengals roster,
Briscoe will have to work hard just
to remain on the roster. If he doesnt
make it with the Bengals, he will get a
chance to impress somewhere else.
But as a sixth-round pick, and
the second rookie receiver selected
by the Bengals, Briscoes window of
opportunity is small. If he doesnt
make an impact early in his career, he
will struggle to make money playing
football professionally. Wide receiv-
ers generally need a lot of time to
develop, and teams wont keep giving
Briscoe chances if he doesnt show
promise in his first couple years.
Not getting selected until the
sixth round is a definite roadblock
that Briscoe will have to maneuver
around. He wont get as much time
to make an impression as earlier draft
picks who have longer starting leases
with their teams.
But Briscoe has the talent to suc-
ceed. Now its just a matter of how
hard he will work to answer the
scouts lingering questions.
Editedby Ashley Montgomery
three
jAYhAWKS
PICKeD IN
Nfl DrAft
Stuckey and
Meier were frst
players chosen
from Kansas.
PAGe 5B
for more photos of spring practice, check out kansan.com/photos/galleries.
BASeBAll
Pitching fails to contain Red Raiders' ofense
Mike gunnoe/KANSAN
Junior shortstop Brandon Macias watches as the ball goes past himafter it went of the side of his glove. Kansas lost to Texas Tech 21-10.
SerIeS fINAl SCoreS
SEE baseball oN pAgE 6B
Check out more photos of the weekend series at kansan.com/photos/galleries.
MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 www.kANsAN.cOM PAGE 1b
CoMMeNtArY
Briscoe
must prove
his worth
in the NFL
throW-out ShoWDoWN
Quarterback battle continues
A
nother NFL draft weekend has
passed and of course all were left
with are memories and lessons
that we all should take into consider-
ation. Well, here are just a few of those
notes.
There Are No experTs
Coming into the draft, Sam Bradford
was the consensus No. 1 quarterback fol-
lowed by Jimmy Clausen. ESPN draft
expert Mel Kiper Jr. had Clausen ahead
of Bradford in his top available players
rankings. NFL.coms Mike Mayock had
Clausen going as the ninth pick to the
Buffalo Bills.
Now heres why they have the draft
and why you and I are as smart as those
two guys: Clausen didnt go until the
second round. Clausen was supposed to
be a top-10 pick, a guy people called a
cant-miss talent.
Well, apparently 47 times, people
passed for some reason or another. The
truth is that Kiper and Mayock may have
insight on what teams will do, but when
it comes down to it you could just put
me and anyone else up there with those
clowns.
Tim Tebow wAs The
ulTimATe impulse buy
As fans of the NFL watched the excit-
ing first round unfold, all of America was
put into shock as the Denver Broncos
drafted Floridas Tim Tebow. Whats
amazing about this is not only did Tebow
go ahead of Colt McCoy and Jimmy
Clausen, but he went to a place where
there are already two rather established
quarterbacks.
I understand if you want to get a quar-
terback to build depth, but to get Tebow
in the first round is a joke. That might
make sense if you have quarterback
issues, but Denver doesnt. My question
to Denver coach Josh McDaniels: Why
do you bring in Brady Quinn and already
name Kyle Orton your starter and then
still draft Tebow in the first round? Can
the Broncos please draft a new coach?
KANsAs plAyers Are goiNg
To mAKe AN iNsTANT
impressioN
The three Kansas players drafted this
weekend will all become an influence on
their teams and are steals in this years
draft.
Wide receiver Kerry Meier was select-
ed by the Atlanta Falcons in the fifth
round. Meier will help a growing Atlanta
offense. He is a jack of all trades on the
offensive side of the ball. He can run,
catch and throw.
Wide receiver Dezmon Briscoe landed
in Cincinnati with Chad Ochocinco and
the rest of the Bengals receivers. The
Bengals finished 24th in the league with
only 195 receiving yards per game last
season. Briscoe should help that.
Safety Darrell Stuckey landed in the
best spot, though, as San Diego picked
him in the fourth round. This is a great
move because the Chargers are a team
thats ready to compete in the AFC, and
they finished last season with a top-
10 defense. Stuckeys ability to disrupt
offenses makes the Chargers secondary
a lot better.
This was certainly an interesting
NFL draft. Hopefully, some lessons
were learned for those who didnt learn
through seven rounds and 255 picks.
Edited by Drew Anderson
2B / sporTs / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / The uNiVersiTy DAily KANsAN / kANsAN.cOM
What to learn from the draft
morNiNg brew
QuoTe oF The DAy
I feel like its the most comfort-
able Ive been at kU so far. com-
ing into my third year, I know
what it takes to play in the Big
12 [conference], so I can prepare
myself for it.
Junior tight end TimBiere after Saturdays
Spring Game
FACT oF The DAy
Biere caught at least one pass in
eight of his 10 games during the
2009 football season.
KU Athletics
TriViA oF The DAy
Q: What is Bieres career long
reception?
A: 33 yards.
KU Athletics
This weeK iN
kANsAs ATHLETIcs
No events scheduled.
TuesDAy
baseball
vs. Wichita state, 7 p.m.
weDNesDAy
softball
vs. Wichita state, 5 p.m.,
7 p.m.
ThursDAy
Tennis
at Big 12 championships,
all day
FriDAy
baseball
at Oklahoma state, 6:30
p.m.
Tennis
at Big 12 championships,
all day
Track
at Arkansas Twilight,
Fayetteville, Ark., all day
sATurDAy
baseball
at Oklahoma state, 2 p.m.
softball
at Oklahoma, 2 p.m.
Tennis
at Big 12 championships,
all day
rowing
at Big 12 championships,
Oklahoma city, Okla., TBA
suNDAy
softball
at Oklahoma, 12 p.m.
baseball
at Oklahoma state, 1 p.m.
Tennis
at Big 12 championships,
all day
ToDAy
sCores
NbA mens basketball:
Miami 101, Boston 92
Boston leads 3-1
cleveland, chicago
cleveland leads 3-1
Dallas, san Antonio
san Antonio leads 2-1
Denver, Utah
Utah leads 2-1

mlb baseball:
kansas city, Minnesota
cincinnati 5, san Diego 4
Washington 1, Los Angeles (NL) 0
Tampa Bay 6, Toronto 0
Baltimore, Boston
seattle, chicago (AL)
Pittsburgh, Houston
chicago (NL), Milwaukee
Detroit, Texas
New York (AL), Los Angeles (AL)
cleveland, Oakland
st. Louis, san Francisco
Philadelphia, Arizona
Florida, colorado
Atlanta, New York (NL)
By Andrew HAmmond
ahammond@kansan.com
twitter.com/ahammradiostar
meNs bAsKeTbAll
Jones travels to
KU for ofcial visit
Five-star recruit Terrence
Jones, a 6-foot-8 forward
from Jeferson High in Port-
land, Ore., arrived in Law-
rence yesterday for a two-day
visit, according to Rivals.com.
Jones, the top unsigned
recruit, few into town sun-
day morning. kansas is the
last school he will visit before
making his decision. He will
announce his choice Friday in
Portland.
Jones has made visits to
kentucky, Oklahoma, UcLA
and Washington. Oregon is
also on his list of interests
while kansas was a recent
addition.
The Jayhawks have already
had commitments from
three-star recruit Royce Wool-
ridge and fve-star recruit
Josh selby for next season.
Corey Thibodeaux
Jayhawks achieve a victory
rowiNg
By eTHAn PAdwAy
epadway@kansan.com
The first novice eight boat
notched a victory over the
University of Minnesota Golden
Gophers first novice boat last
weekend. The victory over the
much more storied Minnesota
program is a testament of the
strength of the future of the pro-
gram and the recruiting advan-
tage the new boathouse brings.
The freshman class was the first
recruited with it having been
completed.
I think it helps a lot because
you have something to show
them, coach Rob Catloth said.
It helps immensely. Last year
we had a chain link fence with
a roof and no locker rooms. The
new boathouse makes all the
difference.
The second novice eight boat
had a lead until it caught a crab,
which means that they were
unable to remove the oar from
the water in a timely fashion and
acts as a break to slow the boat
down. It can be a dramatic shift
in momentum in the middle of
a race.
The race against Minnesota
was a good test in preparation
for the Big 12 championship
next weekend because the Big
Ten is a very reputable rowing
conference.
I think (the Big Ten) is a
lot more established, Lindsey
Lawrence, a senior from
Lawrence, said. Most of the
schools have girls who have
rowed all their lives where as
here girls havent rowed until
college. I think we are catch-
ing up and becoming more and
more competitive and in a few
years we should be on the same
level.
The new boathouse is a big
equalizer for Kansas recruiting
efforts, and it should help close
the gap even faster.
I think it definitely gives us
a little more credit and attrac-
tion because we have one of the
top boathouses in the nation.
Lawrence said.
The Big 12 championships
May 1 in Oklahoma City have
been a focal point all year for
the Jayhawks and now they have
the chance to prove how far they
have come.
I think they are motivated
for it, Catloth said. We have
been looking forward to the Big
12s all year long. It is what we
are shooting for and we look
forward to having the best race
of the year next week.
Edited by Jesse Rangel
Lions pick wideout
as Mr. Irrelevant
Three days after Nebraska
defensive tackle Ndamukong
suh held up a No. 1 Lions jersey
as the second overall pick in
the NFL draft, someone held up
another Lions jersey on stage
at Radio city Music Hall in New
York.
On this one, duct tape cov-
ered the No. 1 in the shape of an
I, honoring Mr. Irrelevant, the
255th and fnal pick in the NFL
draft, Weber state wide receiver
Tim Toone.
Paul salata made the an-
nouncement as he traditionally
does. He is the founder of Irrel-
evant Week, an annual fve-day
bash in Newport Beach, calif.,
for the last man drafted. Why?
To do something nice for no
reason at all.
I think itll be fun,Toone
said. Just having fun with the
whole situation will be a great
opportunity.
But just because Toone is Mr.
Irrelevant doesnt mean he will
be irrelevant. The Lions made
Alabama cornerback Ramzee
Robinson the last pick (255th
overall) in 2007, and after the
parade and banquet and other
events in Newport, he played 19
games for them. He has gone
on to play for the Eagles and
Browns.
McClatchy-Tribune
NFl
proud to be a part
of the tradition for
2
of the
wins
9
Dons Auto
Since 1972
11th & Haskell 841-4833
Dons Auto Center
www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) I-4-11
GRE

LSAT

GMAT

TEST PREPARATION

100097
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon
Tavern
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / SPORTS / 3B
NFL
Sam Bradford will wear Troy Aikmans No. 8 jersey with St. Louis Rams
Mcclatchy-tribune
ST. LOUIS Sam Bradford
wore No. 14 in college, but hes
switching to No. 8.
Yeah, the same jersey number
worn by Dallas Cowboys Hall of
Famer Troy Aikman.
Yeah, the same Aikman that
Bradford was compared to favor-
ably by veteran NFL scout Dave
Razzano.
I think hes a little better than
Aikman coming out because hes
bigger, Razzano said. Hes a little
more mobile. Hes got just as good
if not a better arm. Hes as accurate
as Ive seen. I mean, they dont
come around like him.
Bradford wasnt the biggest
Dallas fan even though he grew up
deep in the heart of Cowboys coun-
try in Oklahoma City. The Steelers
were his team. But Bradford was an
Aikman admirer.
Obviously, he won a lot of
games at Dallas, Bradford said. I
think thats the one stat that a quar-
terback wants to have. Wins. Thats
your goal. Thats the objective of
the team every time you step on the
field. He was very good at that.
Hes from Oklahoma, too.
He went to (the University of)
Oklahoma for a year even though
he didnt stay. So yeah, I just relate
to him a little bit.
If he even comes close to the
career Aikman enjoyed, Rams fans
will relate to Bradford in a big way.
After a dinner with friends and
family Thursday night in New
York, Bradford said he got a good
nights sleep. He flew to St. Louis
on Friday morning, accompanied
by his parents, Martha and Kurt
Bradford. Before his pre-draft visit
last week, Bradford said he had
been to St. Louis only a couple of
times previously as a child.
Its actually been quite a while
since Ive been here, Bradford said
during his introductory news con-
ference at Rams Park. Me and
my Dad came up and watched
the Cardinals play when Mark
McGwire was having that season
(1998).
Bradford also played in a youth
hockey tournament in the Gateway
City. Hard to imagine Oklahoma
City as a hockey hotbed, but
Bradford had a bout of puck fever
as a kid.
Im not really sure how that
happened, Bradford said. I think
I just saw hockey on Sports Center
and thought, You know, that looks
pretty cool. I started skating, and
then skating turned into hockey.
Pretty soon, I just absolutely fell in
love with the game. We were play-
ing hockey almost every weekend
in the winter.
A center iceman, Bradford
doesnt remember much about the
pee wee tourney in St. Louis.
I know that we went in the
Arch, he said.
To the top?
Yeah, it was pretty cool,
Bradford said.
Basketball was another of
Bradfords favorite sports, and
although former Sooners team-
mate and defensive tackle Gerald
McCoy disputes it, Bradford once
dunked on McCoy.
I feel bad throwing it out there,
but it did happen, Bradford said,
smiling.
And one last thing from the
Bradford sports highlight reel: Last
Friday, following his private work-
out with the Rams in Norman,
Okla., Bradford shot a round of 71
in golf.
So yes, Bradford thinks his ath-
letic ability is underrated, particu-
larly when it comes to throwing on
the move in football.
I feel like thats one of the things
that I can really excel at out on
the field, is throwing on the run,
Bradford said. I feel like I can
escape the pocket, move the pock-
et. Create plays with my feet, just
extend the play, and its something
I do very well.
Hopefully, Bradford wont be
running for his life on the foot-
ball field in St. Louis. Perhaps try-
ing to ensure that doesnt happen
too often, the Rams made Indiana
University offensive tackle Rodger
Saffold their first pick in Round 2
of the draft on Friday.
Apartments & Townhomes A a t e t & T h e
by KU Students in 2009
Call Today to Set Up a Tour
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Floor plans, Photos and
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Spacious, Remodeled homes
2, 3, & 4 Bedroom
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Now Accepting Rental Applications
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Now Accepting Rental Applications
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GREAT LOCATIONS
PET FRIENDLY
STUDIO, 1 BR,
2 BR, 3BR
Available for Summer & Fall
Stonecrest
Village Square
Hanover Place
A P A R T M E N T S
Walk to campus! Newer construction!
1014 Mississippi, 1721 Ohio, 1317
Vermont. 2, 3, and 4 BRs. Full kitchen,
W/D, security systems. For details, call
785-841-5444 or email
eddinghamplace@sunfower.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms, Swimming Pool,
Pets Welcome
quailcreek@sunfower.com
785-843-4300
1 roommate needed for a gorgeous 4 bed
3 bath townhome. $310 rent + utilities.
hawkchalk.com/4888
1,2,3,4+ apts, townhomes available
Summer & Fall. Peaceful location, Pool,
pets allowed, pation/balcony, on KU
& Lawrence bus route call 785-843-0011
1-2-3 or 4 BR, W/D included, , owner man-
aged and maintained, pets possible, June
& Aug avail, 785-842-8473, jwampr@sun-
fower.com
The Universitys $10 Windows 7 upgrade
installed for only $35! KU PC Repair:
785 813 1322 or KUPCRepair@gmail.com
For more info see:
hawkchalk.com/announcements
1015-25 Mis.
Remodeled 1&2 BRs
Next to Memorial Stad.
MPM 841-4935
1 and 2 BRs, close to campus, starting at
$490/month. 785-749-7744
1 & 2 BRs avail Aug. W/D, pool, gym, 1
pet ok, deposit specials! Parkway Com-
mons 3601 Clinton Pkwy. 842-3280
$300 off 1st months rent!! Avail Aug 3
bd/2 ba condo. New carpet & tile, spa-
cious master suite. 1st foor w/enclosed
patio. Off street parking on bus route.
Appliances incl. Broadband avail. Water,
garbage and HOA dues incl. 785-979-
2778
$860 2BR 2BA apt for summer sublease!
Covered garage, W/D included, pool, spa-
cious rooms w walk-in closets, tall ceil-
ings, and balcony. Call 913-302-5404 or
913-302-1920. hawkchalk.com/4879
UBS needs book buyers. Run your own
business providing service to students &
get commission for every book you buy.
Requires outgoing personality, attention
to details, mobility and a fexible schedule.
Temporary work period. Must have clear
criminal history. Contact Store Manager at
785-749-5206.
At DST we seek individuals pursuing
challenging careers in a variety of
professional occupational areas, including
information systems and technology,
customer service/call center operations,
fnance, accounting, administration, client
management, and business analysis/
consulting. We encourage our associates
to develop original, creative solutions to
meet the challenges of our internal
operations and our large client base.
Mutual Fund/Corporate Securities
Representatives evaluate, verify, and
process service requests from
shareholders, third-party entities,
institutions, broker/dealer operations, or
client Fund/Stock groups. Associates
research, resolve, and/or respond to such
queries in either written or oral means.
Associates work under direct supervision
with established guidelines.
Various part-time shifts available.
DST offers a complete benefts package,
which includes paid medical and dental
insurance, relocation assistance,
educational reimbursement, and more.
Please apply online at
www.dstsystems.com/jobs
using job req 7985br.
EOE
Earn $1000-$3200/mo to
drive new cars with ads.
www.YouDriveAds.com
Full or part time for summer, general of-
fce work + showing apartments. Please
call 785-841-5797 between 9-5, M-F.
Tall Oaks Conference Center a Christian
camp/retreat center near Linwood, KS is
seeking experienced cooks and food ser-
vice workers for the summer of 2010.
There will be 2-3 part time positions.
These positions would be primarily the af-
ternoon/evening shift and could be com-
bined with some housekeeping duties to
give near full time summer employment.
Email resume to lyle@talloaks.org or call
Lyle at 913-301-3004
BARTENDING. UP TO $300/DAY. NO
EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TRAINING
PROVIDED. 800-965-6520 EXT 108.
Paid Internships
with Northwestern Mutual
785-856-2136
Summer Help needed at Sunfower
Rental. Full-time, must be able to lift 50
lbs. Apply in person - 3301 W. 6th.
Camp Counselors, male and female,
needed for great overnight camps in the
mountains of PA. Have a fun summer
while working with children in the out-
doors. Teach/assist with water sports,
ropes course, media, archery, gymnas-
tics, environmental ed, and much more.
Offce, Nanny & Kitchen positions also
avaliable. Apply on-line at
www.pineforestcamp.com
Faith Roofng Company is looking for self-
motivated, sales minded students with a
3.0 GPA or higher in business or commu-
nications to begin our KU, Work, Study,
Grow program. If you are living in the
Lawrence area throughout the summer
and would like the opportunity to make
thousands of dollars, working part time
please send your resumes to: resumesub-
mit2010@gmail.com
AAAC TUTORING SERVICES IS
HIRING TUTORS FOR THE FALL 2010
SEMESTER. Tutors must have excellent
communication skills and have received a
B or better in the courses that they wish to
tutor (or in higher-level courses in the
same discipline). If you meet these
qualifcations, go to www.tutoring.ku.edu
or stop by 22 Strong Hall for more info
about the application process. Two
references required. Call 864-4064 EO/
AA
1712 Ohio
Large 3&4 BRs
Only $900 & 1080
MPM 841-4935
1125 Tenn
HUGE 3&4 BRs
W/D included
MPM 841-4935
2 & 3 BR Town-homes and Houses.
Available August. FP, garages, 1 pets
ok. Call: 785-842-3280
1st year grad student looking for a room-
mate(s) starting this August! Non-smoker,
allergic to cats, clean, responsible, re-
spectful. 402-841-1323 or cara-
smith@hotmail.com; hawkchalk.com/4873
2 BR, Swimming Pool,
On KU Bus Route
eddinghamplace@sunfower.com
785-841-5444
2 and 3BRs, leasing now and for Aug. For
more info, visit www.lawrencepm.com or
call (785) 832-8728.
2 BR August lease available. Next to
campus. Jayhawk Apts. 1130 W 11th
$600/mo. No pets. 785-556-0713
3 BR, 1 BA, central air, W/D, off-street
parking, 818 Kentucky, 785-842-6618
rainbowworks1@yahoo.com
3 BR sublet for May 30th at the Hawker
Apts. 1011 Missouri St. apt. A12. 785-838-
3377 (apt. phone). Security Deposit $420,
Rent $400, util. $120, Need to fll out app.
& pay sec. dep. 520-395-0353 or 312-
213-8761 or e-mail blumen13@ku.edu
hawkchalk.com/4460
2 female roomates needed for 3 br 2 ba
duplex at 6th and monterey w/d included
rent $400/month available august 1st shu-
pecor@ku.edu hawkchalk.com/4885
3 bdrm, 2 bath condo;
Panoramic view,
$850.00, W/D,
KU Bus Route, 5 min from KU
785-865-8741
3 BR 2 BA. Near downtown & KU.
916 Indiana. $850/mo. Remodeled.
816-522-3333.
4BR 3 1/2BA house for rent. Fenced
backyard. W/D. Central heat and air. Very
spacious. Close to campus. $1400/mo.
Please Call Chris 913-205-8774
4 Bedroom/2 Bath-Only 2 left!!
Newer Construction
eddinghamplace@sunfower.com
785-841-5444
3rd ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR AUG. 1,
Male or Female. $290/mo. + util, 3 BD,
1.5 BA, W/D, garage, fenced yard, 3
blocks from Park & Ride. Pets possible.
620-200-2411 hawkchalk.com/4889
Apt. for rent, perfect for couples, 1 BR +
loft. Garage, patio, FP, skylight, W/D
hookup, granite, slate, and marble hard
surfaces, all new kitchen appliances. No
pets, no smoking. Avail Aug 1. Very nice.
2901 University Drive. $650 mo. 748-
9807 or 766-0244
Applecroft Apts.
19th & Iowa
Studio, 1 & 2 Bedrooms
Gas, Water & Trash Pd.
Move-In Specials Avail.
785-843-8220
chasecourt@sunfower.com

4br, 3ba great summer sublease.
$330/month + ut. Spacious rooms, w/d,
garage, patio, fans and freplace. Please
call if interested (303) 669-8598 or (913)
244-4565. hawkchalk.com/4877
5 Br, 2 BA, central air, W/D, off-street
parking, 820 Kentucky, 785-842-6618
rainbowworks1@yahoo.com
Attention seniors & grad students!
Real nice, quiet 2 BR house close to KU.
Avail. 8/1. Hard wood foors. Lots of win-
dows. No pets or smoking. 331-5209.
Avail. 8/1! 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 2 car garage. All
appliances included. 6 mi. from campus. 5
minutes from Target. 1-4 renters. No pets.
$1150. 785-218-7792.
Attention seniors & grad students!
Real nice, quiet 2 BR Duplex. close to
KU. Avail. 6/1. Lots of windows. Carport.
W/D No pets or smoking. 331-5209. Chase Court
19th & Iowa
1 & 2 Bedrooms
1BR Move-in Special
$300 off Aug. thru 4/30/2010
785-843-8220
chasecourt@sunfower.com
Avail. 8/1. 1BR, 1BA at 1037 Tenn. $325/
mo. W/D, off-street parking. One year
lease. Quiet, non-smoking. Cats OK with
pet rent. 785-550-6812 or 785-842-3510.
Avail. August 1st. 2 BR apt close to
GSP/Corbin, between campus and down-
town. No pets. Utilities Paid. $325/ea per
mo. Call 785-550-5012
Beautiful 2, 3 & 4 BR homes.
Available immediately. We love pets.
Call for details. 816-729-7513
Canyon Court Apartments
NEW Reduced Rent!!
$100 per BR Deposit
Luxury 1, 2, and 3 BR Apartments
W/D, Pool, Spa, Fitness Center
700 Comet Lane
(785) 832-8805
Check us out!
Large remodeled
1,2,3 and 4 Brs
www.southpointeks.com
843-6446
Duplex for rent! 3 BDR 2.5 BATH. 2 Car
Garage. W/D. $350/ per person plus utili-
ties. Avail Aug 1-785-550-4544.
Coolest Apartments in Town! 2BR &
4BR loft apartments in N. Lawrence
located at 642 Locust St. Hardwood
foors
and all modern conveniences. $875 for
2BR and $1575 for 4BR per month.
Available Aug 1st. Call 785-550-8499.
Female needed for 3 story, 2BR/1.5BA for
summer. W/D, parking, central air, close
to campus! $370+util. Wireless internet/ca-
ble. Call/text Meris 785-218-2154
hawkchalk.com/4895
Summer Sublease. 1 br in house at 22nd
and Naismith, very close to campus and
on bus route. W/D, no pets. $263 a month
plus utilities and internet.Can move in May
hawkchalk.com/4886
KU senior looking for a studious, humor-
ous roommate for 5th year. Contact: jd-
k29394@ku.edu; hawkchalk.com/4907
FOR RENT! 3BR, 2BA house-
Updated. 5BR, 3-1/2BA house. $525 per
room! Close to campus, downtown and
stadium- 700 block of Ilinois.
Avail. JUNE 1! 816-686-8868
Roommate needed for August. 2Br/1Ba
$260/mo. DW, W/D, on KU bus route.
Call 785-424-4252. Must like cats and be
somewhat quiet. hawkchalk.com/4900
Large 3 BR 2 BA Duplex. 1 & 2 car
garages, FP, W/D, 785-832-8728,
www.lawrencepm.com
Need female summer subleaser. Very
Close to Campus(10min walk). $390/mo +
approx $75 util. Sarah: 918-946-6632, sm-
salazar@ku.edu; hawkchalk.com/4896
Need girl to take on lease @ The Reserve
next year! $329/mo. You get own br and
ba. Completely furnished. 817-727-3986
for more info. hawkchalk.com/4892
Nice 4 BR 2 BA needs 2 more roommates
for next year. 400/mo, 1000 Hilltop, park-
ing, appliances, furniture. Call Tyler 913
484 2039; hawkchalk.com/4872
Summer Sublease
Female Roommate needed to share 3BR
2BA condo with W/D near campus.
$290/mo. +1/3 util. Avail May 15
Please call 785-550-4544.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: $360-3BR/2BA. In-
cludes: KU Bus Route, Dishwasher,
Washer/Dryer, Pool, Hot Tub, Pet
Friendly, Fitness Center. Call (785) 735
7352. hawkchalk.com/4880
Three Bedroom Townhome Special!
$810 ($270 per person). Avail. in August!
www.lorimartownhomes.com
(785) 841-7849
TWO MONTHS FREE RENT!FEMALE
WANTED. Move in end of May. June &
July rent covered!BR w/ private BA in 2br
2ba apt. $425/mo+utl. call 909-261-8978!
hawkchalk.com4897
STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM
Paid Survey Takers Needed in Lawrence.
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1 BR/1 BA sublease in 2 BR apartment.
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Across from football stadium. bridger@ku.-
edu hawkchalk.com/4878
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4B / SPORTS / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM kANsAN.cOM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / SPORTS / 5B
nsophomore quarterback
conner Teahan entered the game
for one series in the second half
and received the loudest ovation
of any Jayhawk. He nearly threw
an interception and had to call a
timeout on a botched formation
on third down. But Teahan also
showed nice rhythm, leading
Omigie on a 10-yard route and
fnding his receivers hands.
I sawexactly what I wanted to
do. I was just waiting for Omigie
to get out of his route and turn
around and see the ball,Teahan
said. I probably threwit a little
early, but he was turning right
when the ball got there.
n Freshman cornerback turned
wide receiver D.J. Beshears led all
receivers with fve receptions for
38 yards. The ofense ran several
quick receiver screens, helping
speedsters like Beshears, Omigie
and sophomore wide receiver
Daymond Patterson get space in
the open feld.
nFreshman running back Toben
Opurumlooked fne despite a
lower leg injury that has limited
himin past practices. His 1.3
yards-per-carry saturday was
more due to the game setting
than an indication of his ability
or health.
nFreshman running back
Deshaun sands is just 5-foot-7
but can make plays as a running
back, receiver out of the back-
feld or return specialist with his
game-changing speed and shifty
moves.
nFreshman kevinYoung and
junior Quintin Woods showed
good burst of the edge as de-
fensive ends, fnishing with two
sacks each.
nAt the beginning of the sec-
ond quarter, junior quarterback
transfer Quinn Mechampump-
faked, then threwof his back
foot into a crowd of white jerseys.
He was intercepted by backup
kicker and punter John Millsap
(only in the spring game).
Max Rothman
With Gills common use of a
quarterback under center, as
opposed to strictly shotgun for-
mations, the tight end will hold a
more significant emphasis in the
offense.
Bieres the sleeper, junior run-
ning back Angus Quigley said.
Nobody really knows that Biere is
athletic and he can jump. He may
not look like the most athletic guy
in pads, but the guy can play.
Redshirt freshmen wide receiv-
ers Chris Omigie and Christian
Matthews also revealed vertical
skills that could help them carve
out a role in the muddled receiv-
ing depth chart. Omigie caught
four passes for 95 yards, including
a 72-yard touchdown assisted by
Pick.
With 3:29 left in the game and
the White team leading 10-7, Pick
heaved a pass to Matthews by
the right pylon, who then leaped,
went around his defenders body
and snagged the game-winning
37-yard touchdown pass.
It was Picks final stamp on a
public bid for the starting job.
With precise passing, scrambling
creativity (as displayed in brief
stints last season) and budding
leadership that Gill demands, he
may have earned an early leg up
on Webb.
There were a few situations
where I would have liked to see
him get rid of the ball earlier, but
Ill get a chance to watch that on
tape, Gill said. His performance
today was pretty much what he
has been doing all spring.
Edited by Sarah Bluvas
Football (continued from1B)
DARRELL STUCKEY
Before the NFL draft startedThurs-
day, safety Darrell stuckey said he
wasnt going to spend any time worry-
ing about his draft position.
After saturday morning, that wont
be a problemanymore.
san Diego
selected stuckey
with the 12th pick
in the fourth round,
making himthe frst
kansas player se-
lected in this years
draft.
saturday ofcially
capped a produc-
tive collegiate career.
stuckey fnished with 295 career
tackles, the second highest total as a
kansas defensive back. stuckey started
42 of 45 games and recorded eight
interceptions during his career.
After being named
First TeamAll-Big 12 as a
junior, stuckey recorded
93 tackles last season
and was once again
named to the confer-
ences First Teamby the
Associated Press.
stuckey, who is 6-foot-1, 205
pounds, performed well at the NFL
combine in Dallas.
He will once again teamwith line-
backer James Holt, who signed with
the chargers in 2009. He played mostly
on special teams last season.
stuckey and Holt both played on
kansas Orange Bowl team.
KERRY MEIER
Wide receiver kerry Meier was
selected by the Atlanta Falcons with
the 34th pick in
the ffth round of
the NFL Draft, the
165th overall.
Meier was
named to the All
Big-12 second
Teamin 2009. He
was also on the
Biletnikof Award
Watch List.
The last kansas player drafted by
Atlanta was Dave scott in 1976.
DEZMON BRISCOE
Wide receiver Dezmon Briscoe
became the third Jayhawk selected in
the 2010 NFL Draft when the cincin-
nati Bengals picked himwith the 22nd
pick in the sixth
round. He was the
191st player drafted
overall.
Briscoe was
named to the All
Big-12 First Team
after the 2009
season.
The last Jayhawk
selected by cincinnati was ofensive
tackle Anthony collins in 2008.
JUSTIN THORNTON
safety Justin
Thornton posted on
his Facebook page
that he had signed
with the Pittsburgh
steelers. Thornton
had 80 tackles and
one interception for
the Jayhawks last
season.
Jayson Jenks and Clark Goble
Jayhawks spread across the
country with picks in NFl draft
Game notes
Weston White/KaNSaN
Sophomore quarterback Conner Teahan hands the ball of to freshman running back Brian
Burton. Teahan completed one of two passes for 10 yards.
Weston White/KaNSaN
CoachTurner Gill watches a play frombehind the ofensive line during the frst half. An estimated 12,500 fans were in attendance for the annual
spring game Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Weston White/KaNSaN
Defensive coordinator Carl Torbush talks with senior linebacker Justin Springer after a play Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The
blue teamdefeated the white team14-10 in the annual spring game.
Weston White/KaNSaN
Junior cornerback Daymond Patterson runs with the ball on ofense during the spring game. Patterson caught four passes for
15 yards Saturday afternoon.
Weston White/KaNSaN
Senior cornerback Chris Harris reads of a speech during halftime to urge local kids to pledge not to use drugs or alcohol.
stuckey
Meier
Briscoe
Thornton
study hall
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But then Selik hung a slider,
which was pounded over the left
field fence, giving the Red Raiders
a 2-1 edge in the fourth. The arrival
of thunderstorms suspended play
until Sunday morning.
When the game resumed, both
offenses looked a bit sluggish at the
plate until the sixth inning, when
Kansas jumped out in front with a
barrage of runs.
Junior center fielder Brian Heere
launched the first pitch he saw into
the scoreboard in right to knot the
game at 2-2. Then, Stanfield ripped
a two-RBI single, and freshman
infielder Jake Marasco followed
with a two-RBI double, giving
Kansas the 6-2 lead.
Texas Tech wasted little time
pouncing on Kansas bullpen,
retaking the lead with a six-run
seventh inning. The Red Raiders
scored two runs on a double to
left, one more on a single to left-
center and then Jeremy Mayo lifted
a three-run home run to straight
away center field.
The Jayhawks had an answer
of their own in the bottom half of
the inning. After Heere reached
with an infield single, Thompson
crushed a two-run shot over the
wall in center to tie the score at
8-8.
But the Jayhawks bullpen once
again failed to contain the Red
Raiders, who struck for three more
runs in the eighth which all but
sealed the game, as the Jayhawks
went quietly in their final two at-
bats.
To Coach Price, letting Texas
Tech back into game two was the
pivotal moment of the series, as
Kansas had gotten to Texas Techs
ace reliever Chad Bettis.
Once we had that four run lead
off Bettis, we needed to finish game
two, coach Price said. It was cru-
cial that we used him up and didnt
give him the lead back and we
werent able to do it.
In the series finale, it got uglier
even faster for Kansas pitching
staff. The Jayhawks were still pitch-
ing to contact, only more balls
found grassy patches in the outfield
instead of their fielders gloves.
Texas Tech took a commanding
early lead, pounding freshman
Tanner Poppe for eight runs on
eight hits in one and 2/3 innings,
including seven doubles in a seven-
run second inning.
We were behind in the count to
almost every single hitter, and got
into power counts where we had to
throw fastballs, and they did a nice
job of staying on balance, coach
Price said.
The Jayhawks offense did some
damage of their own, getting start-
ed with four sacrifice flies before
junior shortstop Brandon Macias
crushed a grand slam to left-center
field in the sixth inning.
Macias came up again with the
bases loaded in the seventh, and
nearly tagged another one, which
would have brought Kansas within
one run. But Macias got under the
pitch, and despite carrying a bit
in the wind, it was caught at the
fence.
It would have been nice, but it
happens, Macias said. The wind
just stopped blowing.
I was trying to blow it out
myself, try to give it a little extra
wind, Thompson said.
Even as the Jayhawks cut the lead
to 15-10, their bullpen still couldnt
keep the Red Raiders off the score-
board, as they continued to spray
hits all over the outfield. After the
last outs were recorded, the dam-
age was done and the scoreboard
in left showed 21 runs and 24 hits
for Texas Tech.
Hopefully its one of those things
where we were out of rhythm a
little bit and well be able to correct
it next time out, coach Price said.
Edited by Drew Anderson
The Jayhawks surrendered a whopping
12 doubles in Sundays fnale, which tied
the Big 12 record for two-base hits in a
single game.
Kansas pitching staf
After Walzs efort on Friday, the rest of the Jayhawk pitchers
will want to put this series behind them in a hurry. Texas Tech
pounded Kansas bullpen for nine runs on nine hits and game
two, and shelled Poppe and company for 21 runs on 24 hits in the
series fnale.
From the stat book
12
Series to remember
Stanfeld
BaseBall ReWIND
Series to forget
In perspective
6B / SPORTS / MONDAY, APril 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.cOM
KANSAS VS. TEXAS TECH
Sophomore catcher James Stanfeld
Stanfeld, who hadnt recorded an rBi since
March 26 before Wednesdays victory over Mis-
souri, had at least one in each game of the series.
The sophomore went 5-for-10 in the three games
with six rBi, two walks and two runs scored.
After Fridays convincing victory, the Jayhawks looked to be on
the rise in the Big 12 standings. But two losses later and Kansas is
right back in the middle of the pack in the conference. Their 6-8-1
record against Big 12 opponents isnt awful, but the Jayhawks
need to start winning at least two of three in upcoming week-
end series to solidify their status as a team worthy of making a
regional Tournament.
Ben Ward
BaseBall (continued from 1b)
Mike Gunnoe/KaNsaN
Freshman pitcher Tanner Poppe hurls the ball in the frst inning Sunday at Hoglund Ballpark. Poppe went one and two-thirds innings and allowed eight earned runs against in the 21-10 loss toTexas Tech.
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / SPORTS / 7B
Lineup change in fnal
game not successful
BY ANDREW HAMMOND
ahammond@kansan.com
The Jayhawks were down just a
run after the first inning against
Texas Tech Sunday. But while Texas
Tech put up runs at breakneck
speed, the Jayhawk offense stalled.
The Red Raiders scored 21 runs in
the victory.
If the first two games of the
series were any
indication, Kansas
offense was bound
for another slug-
fest. In Saturdays
contest the offense
kept up with the
Red Raiders, but
with fly ball outs
and ground outs
littering Hoglund
Ballpark, the
Jayhawks struggled
to play catch up.
Casey Lytle and Jimmy Waters rose
to the occasion for the Jayhawks
in the first two games of the series
but didnt record a hit in the series
finale.
After the slow start, the Jayhawks
started to pick up the offense in
the bottom of the sixth inning.
Macias hit a grand slam to cap the
inning, putting the Jayhawks back
in the game. Texas Tech kept pace,
though, and kept scoring runs.
We had our opportunities and
we had our chances, we just didnt
capitalize, Macias said.
In the first two games of the
Texas Tech series,
Coach Ritch Prices
lineup change pro-
duced runs from
start to finish.
Sundays finale saw
not only a slow
start by the Kansas
offense but missed
opportunities. Six
runners were left
on base.
Im pleased with
the comeback today,
but we struggled
with pitching early on in the game
and thats what got us in the hole
early, Price said.
Edited by Drew Anderson
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Junior outfelder Brian Heere makes a leaping attempt at a fy ball against the wall in center feld. The Jayhawks stranded six base runners in the 21-10 lose to Texas Tech Sunday.
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Junior outfelder Jimmy Waters rifes the ball to third to try and throwa Texas Tech runner out after tagging up. Kansas lost the game 21-10.
We had our op-
portunities and we
had our chances,
we just didn't
capitalize.
BRANDON MACIAS
shortstop
Senior second
baseman Robby
Price tries to put
down a tag on a
Texas Tech run-
ner Sunday. The
Red Raiders took
two of the three
games in the
series against
the Jayhawks.
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN

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8B / SPORTS / monday, april 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kansan.com
BY Kathleen Gier
kgier@kansan.com
twitter.com/kgier

Senior Kuni Dorn was the last
to emerge from the locker room
before Sundays match against
Baylor. She was greeted by team-
mates and coaches who held flow-
ers and gift bags for the teams lone
senior on Senior Day. Dorn hugged
each teammate and coach and shed
a couple tears as her accomplish-
ments at Kansas were read out over
the loudspeaker at the Jayhawk
Tennis Facility.
It was an emotional day for the
team as Kansas fell to No. 2 Baylor
7-0. The Bears were led by four
ranked singles players and a ranked
doubles team.
Against Baylor, on paper they
are better, but on the court it was
different, Dorn said. We were
really close even if the score doesnt
show it. I am really proud that we
could keep up with them.
Sophomore Kate Morozova faced
Lenka Broosova of Baylor, who is
ranked No. 5 in the nation, and lost
6-4, 6-2.
I think they are a really good
team, of course they are top of the
nation, but I fought hard and I was
trying everything today, but I think
the girl I played was a little bit
luckier, Morozova said. I was try-
ing to play points and everything; I
think I was close.
On Friday, Kansas lost to Texas
Tech 6-1. Morozova won both
her singles and double matches.
Morozova played doubles with fel-
low sophomore Erin Wilbert.
I think I was really lucky that
day, and I think in doubles Erin and
me, we both played well, Morzova
said. I love playing doubles with
her. And in singles I put everything
I could out, so I worked really hard
and I wanted that win for the team
and for myself.
After the weekend the Jayhawks
are 9-14 overall and 1-10 in confer-
ence play while Baylor improves to
24-2 and a perfect 10-0 in confer-
ence. After the match the Bears
were presented the Big 12 regular
season trophy and given conference
champion T-shirts. Both teams will
travel to Austin, Texas for the Big
12 Championship on Thursday.
Edited by Jesse Rangel
TENNIS
Red Raiders beat Jayhawks, spoil Kansas Senior Day
Jerry Wang/KANSAN
Sophomore ErinWilbert launches a backhand during her doubles match against Baylor Sunday afternoon. The Jayhawks lost to the Bears 7-1 and fell to 1-10 in the Big 12.
MLB
associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Jose
Guillen homered and drove in two
runs to support Brian Bannisters
work-through-trouble effort, help-
ing the Kansas City Royals avoid
a three-game sweep with a 4-3
win over the Minnesota Twins on
Sunday.
Guillen hit his seventh homer in
the fifth inning and Bannister (1-1)
escaped a baserunner-filled game
by scattering nine hits over 6 1-3
innings. Kansas Citys beleaguered
bullpen had some shaky moments
before Joakim Soria closed out the
ninth for his fifth save.
Justin Morneau hit his fourth
homer and had a run-scoring
double off Soria in the ninth, but
the Twins stranded 12 runners
four in the last two innings and
couldnt overcome a less-than-stel-
lar outing by Kevin Slowey (2-2).
Guillen has slid comfortably
from right field into the designated
hitters spot following a 2009 sea-
son filled with disappointment and
injuries.
The 33-year-old Dominican
slugger homered in four straight
games from April 11-14 and
entered Sunday tied for first in the
AL with nine multihit games, sec-
ond in total bases (49), third in hits
(25) and fourth in slugging (.690).
Guillen twice doubled in runs
against the Twins Saturday night
and opened
Sundays game
with a sacri-
fice fly in the
first inning.
He later broke
a 2-all tie in
the fifth, lift-
ing a no-doubt
solo shot to
left-center off
Slowey that
landed in the
fountain behind the first section
of seats.
Both teams needed to get some
depth from their starting pitch-
ers after Saturday nights soggy,
4 hour-plus game that lasted 12
innings and featured 14 pitchers,
including two-inning stints by both
closers.
They got it, though neither was
particularly efficient.
Bannister worked a perfect first
and through trouble the rest of
the way.
He got help in the first inning
from third baseman Alex Gordon,
who made a diving stop on leadoff
hitter Denard Spans one-hopper
and threw him out from one knee.
Bannister then
gave up two runs
in the second,
on a shoulder-
high pitch that
Morneau hit out
to right for a
solo homer and
J.J. Hardys run-
scoring single to
left.
The right-
hander kept let-
ting runners reach base and kept
getting outs after that, leaving in
the seventh after Orlando Hudsons
one-out single. Bannister allowed
two runs.
Josh Rupe worked out of a bases-
loaded jam in the eighth and Soria
stranded Morneau at second in
the ninth by striking out Michael
Cuddyer and Jim Thome for his
94th career save, now the most all-
time by a Mexican-born pitcher.
Royals avoid a series sweep
against Minnesota, win 4-3
McclatchY-triBune
RENTON, Wash. _ The Seattle
Seahawks had picked three play-
ers, completed two trades and
coach Pete Carroll had just con-
cluded an interview carried live
on ESPN when the Seahawks
coach ducked his head into the
media room.
Can we get some action in
here? Carroll asked, slapping his
palm on the door for emphasis.
It was just after 10 a.m. Maybe
you had just finished breakfast.
Perhaps you were on a second cup
of coffee. The Seahawks? They
had completed the most active
three hours of the new admin-
istration, giving up a little bit of
draft position to acquire two run-
ning backs: LenDale White from
Tennessee and Leon Washington
from the New York Jets.
The surprises that we pulled
off in the trade opportunities
might have shocked you a little
bit, Carroll said afterward.
It started with White, who was
acquired from Tennessee with
defensive tackle Kevin Vickerson.
The total cost for Seattle? Moving
down seven spots in the fourth
round and nine spots in the sixth
round.
One round later, the Seahawks
nabbed Washington, a Swiss Army
knife of a running back who is as
electric as he is useful. The toll on
that? Seattle gave up a fifth-round
pick for a seventh-round selection
from the Jets.
For a little draft-day erosion,
Seattle landed two backs wholl
compete for playing time.
Theres several different ave-
nues of acquisition that you can
use to improve
your team,
said John
S c h n e i d e r ,
Seattles gen-
eral manager.
This is obvi-
ously a huge,
huge weekend
for us.
One that
had a frenetic
finale after two tradeless days.
Seattle entered the draft with
two of the first 14 picks, mak-
ing the Seahawks power brokers.
But on Thursday and Friday, the
Seahawks held their ground and
filled needs. On Thursday, they
picked a rock-solid left tackle and
dynamic free safety. On Friday,
they waited for Notre Dames
Golden Tate to fall in their lap,
and then waited some more since
they lacked a third-round pick.
No sooner had the fourth
round begun on Saturday than
the Seahawks started making
deals and taking chances. White
faces questions about his attitude
and weight; Washington is com-
ing back from two broken bones
in his right leg. Both players are
under contract for one more year.
Those werent the only risks
on a day in
which Seattle
also drafted six
players over
the final four
rounds.
In the
fourth round,
the Seahawks
chose Oregon
c o r n e r -
back Walter
Thurmond, who is recovering
from a serious knee injury. In
the sixth, they picked Anthony
McCoy, the USC tight end whose
draft stock was undermined by a
positive drug test at the scouting
combine.
The Seahawks did deepen its
stable of running backs this week-
end, just not in the manner most
expected.
NFL
Carroll, Seahawks active in draft
Royals outfelder and
designated hitter Jose
Guillen hit his seventh
home run Sunday, tying
the American League
lead.
The surprises that we
pulled of in the trade
opportunities might have
shocked you a little bit.
pETE carroll
seattle seahawks head coach
NFL
Raiders trade for
Jason Campbell
McclatchY-triBune
The Raiders sent a shot across
the bow of embattled quarterback
JaMarcus Russell on Saturday by
trading for veteran quarterback
Jason Campbell.
The Raiders gave the Washington
Redskins a 2012 fourth-round draft
choice for Campbell, less than a
month after the Redskins traded
for Philadelphia Eagles quarterback
Donovan McNabb.
Campbell, 28, started all 16 reg-
ular-season games for the Redskins
each of the past two seasons. Last
season, he completed 64.5 percent
of his passes for 3,618 yards, with
20 touchdowns and 15 intercep-
tions.
By comparison, Russell, Bruce
Gradkowski and Charlie Frye com-
pleted 52.8 percent of their passes
for 2,875 yards, with 10 touch-
downs and 18 interceptions, for the
Raiders in 2009.
(Campbell) fits for what were
doing, Cable said Saturday. This
games really about opportunity,
catching some breaks and having
good people around you, regardless
of what system youre in.
A phone call from Raiders man-
aging general partner Al Davis
inspired Campbell about going to
a team that has won only 29 games
the past seven seasons.
Throwing in a one-year, $4.5
million extension didnt hurt mat-
ters.
Campbell is slated to earn $3.14
million in 2010. The Raiders are on
the hook to Russell for $9.45 mil-
lion for next season, of which $3
million is guaranteed whether he is
on the roster or not.
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OPEN LATE
AssociAted Press
OKLAHOMA CITY At the
time last summer when Kevin
Durant suggested the Oklahoma
City Thunder should be shoot-
ing for the playoffs this season,
it was considered an outlandish
statement.
But look at them now.
Durant scored 22 points, Russell
Westbrook added 18 points and
eight rebounds, and the Thunder
evened the first-round series
against the Los Angeles Lakers
with a 110-89 victory in Game 4
on Saturday night.
A lot of people didnt expect us
to be here and once we got here,
people were saying we were going
to get swept and a lot of different
things, Durant said. We knew
what we were capable of and how
hard we play every day and how
hard we practice every day.
With those attributes, I think
that we can go far as a team. Its all
on us. We control our own destiny
at this point.
For the second straight game,
the Thunder capitalized on a sig-
nificant edge at the foul line and
on the boards despite the presence
of the Lakers 7-foot tandem of
Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum.
Oklahoma City never trailed
after the opening 5 minutes and
led by double digits for the final
three quarters in a thorough dis-
mantling.
This is as big as a game can
possibly be, Thunder coach
Scott Brooks said. Youre playing
against one of the best teams in
the playoffs on your home floor.
Like I told the guys after the game,
the Lakers did a good job the
first two games. They took care
of their home court. We did the
same thing.
Bynum had 13 points and 10
rebounds, and Gasol also had 13
points to lead Los Angeles. Kobe
Bryant had 12 points after spend-
ing the entire first quarter defer-
ring to his teammates and the
whole fourth quarter on the bench
with three other L.A. starters.
I was managing the game exact-
ly how I wanted to. Unfortunately,
it got away from us, Bryant said.
By them getting out in transition
and getting those buckets, I wasnt
able to do what I normally do at
the end of the game and close
games out.
Lakers coach Phil Jackson stood
by Bryants decision to wait nearly
15 minutes into the game and
until his team was down by 15
to take his first shot, but said It
was a pretty good meltdown in
the second half.
Our expectation is we wanted
to win both of these games and
be done with it. I think thats
every teams mindset coming on
the road being up 2-0, Bryant
said. Its not the reality of the
situation. Weve got a tough fight,
and it should be fun.
Game 5 is Tuesday night in Los
Angeles.
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010 / SPORTS / 9B
Wade scores 46, Heat avoid sweep
AssociAted Press
MIAMI Dwyane Wade isnt
ready for the offseason. Not even
close.
And thanks to another record-
setting effort by their star, the
Miami Heat suddenly have life
in their series against the Boston
Celtics.
Undeterred by talk that this
might have been his final home
game in Miami, Wade set fran-
chise playoff records by scoring 46
points, 30 in the second half, and
the Heat kept their season alive
by beating the Celtics 101-92 on
Sunday in Game 4 of their Eastern
Conference first-round series.
The Celtics still lead 3-1, and get
a second shot at the clincher on
Tuesday in Boston.
But Wade gave the Heat hope.
Quentin Richardson scored 20
points and Michael Beasley added
15 for the Heat, who wasted an
18-point first-half lead before dig-
ging deep to extend the season.
Rajon Rondo led the Celtics
with 23 points. Kevin Garnett had
18 points and 12 rebounds, Paul
Pierce scored 16 and Ray Allen
added 15 for Boston, which was
bidding for its first 4-0 sweep of a
series since 1986.
MILWAUKEE John Salmons
scored 22 points on 9-of-11
shooting and the Milwaukee
Bucks never let up after a hot
start in a 107-89 victory over
the Atlanta Hawks on Saturday
night.
The Bucks shot 68 percent in
the frst quarter and 51 percent
for the game following a three-
day layof and were never seri-
ously threatened after building
a 19-point, frst-half lead.
Atlanta still leads the series
2-1 after two double-digit
victories at home, when the
Bucks looked overmatched
without the injured Andrew
Bogut.
But veteran Kurt Thomas had
eight points, 13 rebounds and
four stitches, rookie Brandon
Jennings added 13 points and
Milwaukee proved that the
Hawks may have to Fear the
Deer after all.
Milwaukee led by as many as
28 in the fourth as the Hawks
shot 39 percent for the game.

Associated Press
Durant, No. 8 Tunder rout
No. 1 Lakers, even up series
2010 NBA PLAYOFFS
Oklahoma City 110,
Los Angeles 89
(Series tied, 2-2)
NEXT GAME:
Tuesday, at L.A.
9:30 p.m., TNT
GAME 4
Saturday,
at Oklahoma City
Miami 101,
Boston 92
(Boston leads series 3-1)
NEXT GAME:
Tuesday, at Boston
6 p.m., NBA TV
GAME 4
Sunday, at Miami
Milwaukee 107,
Atlanta 89
(Atlanta leads series 2-1)
NEXT GAME:
Monday, at Milwaukee
7:30 p.m., NBA TV
GAME 3
Saturday,
at Milwaukee
Milwaukee builds and maintains lead
OTHER
WEEKEND
SCORES
(San Antonio
leads series 3-1)
NEXT GAME:
Tuesday, at Dallas
8:30 p.m., NBA TV
Game 4
Sunday,
at San antonio
San Antonio 92,
Dallas 89
(Utah leads
series 3-1)
NEXT GAME:
Wednesday, at
Denver
TBD, TNT
Game 4
Sunday, at Utah
Utah 117,
Denver 106
(Cleveland leads series 3-1)
NEXT GAME:
Tuesday, at Cleveland
7 p.m., TNT
Game 4
Sunday, at Chicago
Cleveland 128, Chicago 98
(Series tied, 2-2)
NEXT GAME:
Monday, at Phoenix
9:30 p.m., TNT
Game 4
Saturday,
at Portland
Portland 96,
Phoenix 87
(Orlando leads series 3-0)
NEXT GAME:
Monday, at Charlotte
7 p.m., TNT
Game 3
Saturday, at Charlotte
Orlando 90, Charlotte 86


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10B / SPORTS / monday, april 26, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kansan.com
Kansas still winless at home in Big 12 play
SOfTbALL
BY Zach GetZ
zgetz@kansan.com
twitter.com/zgetz
Freshman infielder Mariah
Montgomery said this season has
been frustrating at times. She said
its tougher that Kansas has had
opportunities to win late in the
game most of this season.
Were right there, Montgomery
said. Weve couldve won most of
our conference games that weve
played so far.
After Kansas was swept by Texas
Tech, the team fell to 18-29 (1-13)
and continues to hold its spot in last
place in the Big 12 Conference while
Texas Tech improved to 35-12 (7-8).
Kansas has yet to win a conference
game at home and has an overall
record of 4-9 (0-7) at home.
Though Kansas was able to get
hits, it struggled to move base run-
ners and stranded nine runners
in both games. Montgomery said
it was frustrating to be close, but
unable to score.
We just needed that hit to get
the runners across, Montgomery
said. We just couldnt pull through
and get it.
Kansas has had trouble putting
together a complete game certain
parts of the team shine while oth-
ers remain lackluster. Coach Megan
Smith said it may be part of the
reason the team has had so many
ups and downs.
We just havent had people step
up on a consistent basis, and that
has definitely hurt us, Smith said.
In game one, Texas Tech started
the game with a three-run homer
in the top of the first and added a
run in the third to go up 4-0. But
Kansas would only allow Texas Tech
to get one more hit in the last four
innings.
In the bottom of the fourth
Kansas had the bases loaded with
two outs, but the game was delayed
until the following morning because
of inclement weather. After play
resumed, Kansas scored its first run
on a walk, but grounded out in the
next at-bat, leaving three on base.
Freshman Mariah Montgomery
started off the fifth with a solo
home run, her third in the last four
games. But the Jayhawks failed to
get another base runner as they
fell 4-2 to the Red Raiders, even
though Kansas outhit Texas Tech
six to four.
We did a good job hitting the
ball, senior pitcher Sarah Vertelka
said. We just didnt score when we
had the chance to.
In game two, Kansas took a quick
1-0 lead in the first, but would fail
to score again. Texas Tech overtook
the lead in the third when it rallied
with two outs to score two runs and
left three runners on base. The Red
Raiders added two more runs in the
fifth, and Jayhawks were unable to
bring anyone home, falling 4-1.
Our offense just flat-lined today,
Smith said. Certainly didnt come
to play, and that hurt us today.
Kansas will return to action in a
non-conference home game against
Wichita State 5 p.m. Wednesday
before going to Norman, Okla., to
start a two-game series with No.
13 Oklahoma.
Edited by Becky Howlett
SERIES RESULTS
Game 1:
Texas Tech 4, kansas 2
Game 2:
Texas Tech 4, kansas 1
UP NEXT
Kansas vs. Wichita State
WHEN: 5 p.m. Wednesday
WHERE: arrocha Ballpark,
lawrence
Jerry Wang/KANSAN
Freshman Mariah Montgomery lands a hit at the bottomof the third. The Red Raiders led 4-0 at
the bottomof the fourth Saturday afternoon when inclement weather caused a delay of game.
associated Press
IRVING, Texas Owner Jerry
Jones wouldnt go as far as declar-
ing the Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl
ready following the conclusion of
the 2010 NFL Draft.
But he acknowledged he made
moves with a 2010 Super Bowl run
in mind.
He also said beyond a doubt that
the teams draft that was headlined
by two immediate impact play-
ers receiver Dez Bryant and
linebacker Sean Lee had already
made the Cowboys a better team
than they were at the end of the
2009 season.
Jones said the Cowboys, who
won the NFC East with an 11-5
mark before losing to the Minnesota
Vikings in the divisional playoffs,
are poised to take the next step.
The kind of thing we did with
this draft ... was to maybe address
more quality than quantity, which
logically tells you that, Hey, you
feel pretty good about your team,
Jones said. I think that what Sean
Lee can bring immediately and Dez
and what we can get out of them,
if we havent materially improved
with those guys we are already
pretty excited about, then we did
miss here.
The Cowboys thought so much
of Bryant and Lee that they traded
up in the first and second rounds,
respectively, to secure their services,
to ensure that this draft will be
remembered for the team sticking
to its guns and taking quality over
need.
But the Cowboys work over
the past three days should also be
remembered as another vote of
confidence in tackle Doug Free and
a mulligan of sorts at safety.
Because of the release of tackle
Flozell Adams and free safety Ken
Hamlin, those positions were
considered the teams biggest
positions of need going into the
draft.
The Cowboys addressed them
Saturday with developmental play-
ers in fourth-round pick Akwasi
Owusu-Ansah, a safety out of
Indiana (Pa.), and sixth-round pick
Sam Young, an offensive tackle.
Cowboys approach draf with Super Bowl XLV in mind
NfL
Cofman vies for
KSU quarterback
manHaTTan, kan. at
the conclusion of kansas
states spring practices, no
Wildcat quarterback had
established himself as the
leading candidate for starter.
on saturday, carson cof-
man made his case.
cofman completed 38
of 51 passes for 440 yards
and seven touchdowns
at kansas states annual
purple-White scrimmage at
Bill snyder Family stadium.
cofman, who started the
frst four games of the 2009
season before being re-
placed by former teammate
Grant Gregory, wasted no
time. He hit Brodrick smith
on a 15-yard scoring strike
with 9:57 remaining in the
frst quarter and stayed hot
for the rest of the night.
no other quarterback
threw for more than 73
yards.
cofman credited his
teammates, saying it was
an enjoyable experience for
everyone.
He said confdence
became an issue for him last
season, and hes working to
make sure that doesnt hap-
pen again.
McClatchy -Tribune
bIG 12 fOOTbALL
To see more photos from the Texas Tech matchup visit kansan.com.
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