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PAGE 7
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAN PUZZLES
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SPONSORED BY
MONDAY, MARCH 23, 2015
ACROSS
1 History chapter
4 Recede
7 Note to self, e.g.
11 Co-ed quarters
13 Stout cousin?
14 Verve
15 Concept
16 Dress (in)
17 Otherwise
18 Tropical timber trees
20 Coated with gold
22 Dawn goddess
24 Acceptable
28 Splendor
32 Form
33 PC picture
34 Morning moisture
36 Facility
37 Disreputable
39 It may say "Home Sweet Home"
41 Motion detector,
e.g.
43 Neither mate
44 Unstable particle
46 Brandy flavor
50 Pinnacle
53 Cranberry territory
55 Old portico
56 Angry
57 Greek mountain
58 Former frosh
59 Put in the mail
60 Profit
61 Chaps
2 Took the bus
3 Vicinity
4 Have breakfast
5 Online journal
6 Start
7 Longest-running TV show
8 Right angle
9 More, to Manuel
10 Indivisible
12 Just stay within your budget
19 "Mayday!
21 — Angeles
23 Norm (Abbr.)
DOWN 1 Tend texts
25 False idol
26 Church section
27 Ante-lope's playmate
28 Fail to hit
29 Rue the run
30 Actress Cusack
31 "Of course"
35 Ashen
38 Second person
40 Swab the deck
42 Batman's partner
45 Protuberance
47 Teensy bit
48 Get by somehow
49 Nobel chemist Otto
50 Venomous snake
51 Bill and —
52 Wife's address
54 "Roscoe"
FOR MORE CONTENT
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SUDOKU
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CRYPTOQUIP
UGHRQE DRCTZ GARQM AGFAKTE
GDS MLTKF HGEMTFUQZZB
FTMQFDTS MTDDKE ELRME:
"CRZ.ZTB RU MLT SRZZE."
Today's Cryptoquip Clue: R equals O
@UNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN
Allman film director: Georgia train crash 'my responsibility'
Film director Randall Miller arrives at the west coast special screening of "CBGB" at ArcLight Hollywood in Los Angeles in October 2013. Miller, the director of an ill-fated movie about singer Gregg Allman said Friday that it's "ultimately my responsibility" that his crew ended up on a Georgia railroad bridge in the path of a freight train that killed a camera assistant.
RUSS BYNUM Associated Press
PAUL A. HEBERT/ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAVANNAH, Ga. — The director of an ill-fated movie about singer Gregg Allman said Friday that it's "ultimately my responsibility" that his crew ended up on a Georgia railroad bridge in the path of a freight train that killed a camera assistant.
"Midnight Rider" director Randall Miller issued a statement to The Associated Press less than two weeks after he pleaded guilty to charges of involuntary manslaughter and criminal trespassing. A judge sentenced him to two years in jail in rural Wayne County, where 27-year-old Sarah Jones of Atlanta died in the train crash Feb. 20, 2014. Six others also were injured.
"It was a horrible tragedy that will haunt me forever," Miller said in a statement provided to The AP by a publicist. "Although I relied on my team, it is ultimately my responsibility and was my decision to shoot the scripted scene that caused this tragedy."
Miller said he hoped his guilty plea had spared Jones' family from the anguish of having to relive the crash at a trial. But he also denied he alone was to blame. He said "a great number of mistakes were made" by his assistants on the film crew, but acknowledged that he had failed to ensure "every safety measure was in place."
"I have taken responsibility
because I could have asked more questions and I was the one in charge," Miller said.
Prosecuters said they had emails from CSX Transportation, which owns the railroad bridge spanning the Altamaha River, showing Miller's crew had twice been denied permission to film a scene on the tracks where the crash occurred.
Miller pleaded guilty March 9, the day a jury was to be selected for his trial. Assistant District Attorney John B. Johnson said Miller and others knew they had been denied permission to access the
railroad trestle because they attempted to rewrite the script to drop the scene they planned to shoot with actor William Hurt — in the role of Allman — in a hospital bed placed on the tracks.
Miller decided to shoot the scene anyway, Johnson said, after the owner of the property surrounding the tracks said the movie crew could access its land. He said Miller and his crew went onto the railroad bridge after mistakenly thinking no more trains would pass that day.
Jay Sedrish, the movie's executive producer, also
pleaded guilty and assistant director Hillary Schwartz was convicted after opting for the judge to decide her case in a short bench trial. Both were sentenced to 10 years on probation for the same charges Miller faced.
Miller also was sentenced to serve eight years on probation following his jail term and was ordered to pay a $20,000 fine. He said he pleaded guilty in part to protect his wife and business partner, Jody Savin, and their children. Charges against Savin were dropped as a condition of her husband's guilty plea.
full-circle. In this 12-minute and seven-second track, Lamar drops the names of historically significant leaders that came before him, including Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela. Lamar samples a rare interview conducted with 2Pac just two weeks before his murder and replaces the original interviewer's voice with his own. Lamar calls himself an "offspring of the legacy you (2Pac) left behind," meaning that Lamar plans to advocate for justice, as 2Pac and many other civil rights activists did before him.
KENDRICK FROM PAGE 6
The metaphor in the poem
is about the transformation of a "caterpillar," someone in a depressed, self-hating state of mind, to a "butterfly," someone who has realized his potential and is using it to create and inspire. At the end of the poem, he says, "although the butterfly and the caterpillar are completely different, they are one in the same," signifying that everyone has potential and is capable of change.
Favorite Line: "The ghost of Mandela hope my flows they prop it/Let my word be your earth and moon and you consume every message/As I lead this army make room for mistakes and depression."
— Edited by Kayla Schartz
LAMAR FROM PAGE 6
second half on this track.
U
second half on this track.
Favorite line: "I'm trapped inside the ghetto and I ain't proud to admit it/Institutionalized I keep runnin' back for a visit."
Along with "i," this is the album's conceptual centerpiece, if there is one. Lamar puts a lot of blame and bad evils onto himself in this track, though he doesn't exactly blame himself directly.
Lamar assumes responsibility for some bad things that have happened to his friends and family, including a good friend
dying while he was overseas and never going to visit him in the hospital. Toward the end of the track he touches on suicidal thoughts and depression and hints at being bipolar as his voice fluctuates and cracks through the last two verses. The track includes the sounds of Lamar gulping alcohol, lips smacking and bottles hitting a tile floor, as if you were right there with him during an emotional breakdown.
Favorite line: "And if those mirrors could talk it would say 'you gotta go'/And if I told your secrets/The world'll know money can't stop a suicidal weakness."
Edited by Kayla Schartz
PHILLIP C. STROZIER Washburn Law, J.D.'14 University of Kansas,'10
W
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Ranked #6 by preLaw and the National Jurist on list of "Largest employment gains by school" - 2014
IN-STATE TUITION FOR RESIDENTS OF:
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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