THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UDK 10 Former Jayhawks return to mentor in kids' camps WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 Birth control pill not always best option Cole Aldrich and Tyshawn Taylor help out at Bill Self's basketball camps. SPORTS | 16 New alternatives to the hormonal pill may attract students' attention, but pill still the top choice. NEWS 16 WWW.KANSAN.COM VOLUME 123,ISSUE 153 Budweiser KING OF BEERS BUDWEISER Shoppers Card rewardzOne MENU 10 ways to start your summer off right Suggestions to making the most of the summertime even if you’re stuck on campus FEATURE 18 I am a professional fitness instructor and trainer. I specialize in various strength training exercises, cardio workouts, and balance training programs to help individuals improve their overall physical health and well-being. I also offer personalized training plans based on individual goals and needs. I am committed to providing high-quality training and guidance to my clients. If you are interested in taking my classes, please contact me directly for more information. PICK your PERK One Month's FREE Rent · iPad 2 $450 VISA Cash Card · Flat Screen TV Plus ZERO Upfront Fee's Hawks Point Living Headlines T 785.891.3255 F 785.891.3258 www.hawkspointcaptures.com 队 1 Cable & Internet INCLUDED · On KU Bus Route · 3 Convenient Locations · Over 20 Floor Plans Sparkling Salt Water Pool · 24-hour Fitness Center · 24-hour Business Center · Game Room · FREE Tanning 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-college, and instead of turning right to the work force find other al er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and appl a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of col- Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 Today's Weather SUNRISE MEDIA Mostly Sunny 9671 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN www.weather.com TABLE OF CONTENTS “ Quote of the Day "What is one to say about June, the time of perfect young summer, the fulfillment of the promise of the earlier months, and with as yet no sign to remind one that its fresh young beauty will ever fade." Gertrude Jekyll scholastic.com one toad can eat 10,000 insects in one summer. Cover photo by Chris Bronson/KANSAN You may not be thrilled to be in classes or on campus this summer, but check out our 10 recommendations to making the summer more fun on pages 10 & 11. Welcome, summer students! Take care that your summer doesn't slip by too fast! The summer session ends in only 36 more class days. Fact of the Day On the cover Opinion 5 KUinfo See what other students on campus are thinking in the Free for All and read commentary on a certain Congressman and his digital habits. Entertainment Try out this week's sudoku while reading your horoscope and this week's cartoon. 11 Read about Jayhawk Motorsports' most recent race finish in the team's formula SAE car. 17 finish KU 36 SAE KU 36 ALARM ON THE RECORD Campus police records from the last week. A driver was arrested for driving under the influence at Naismith Drive and Irving Hill Road on Saturday. A resident of Stouffer-Place apartments reported an iPad stolen May 31 at a loss of $800. An assualt was reported from the basketball court near McCollum Hall Monday. No arrests were made. A desktop computer was reported stolen from Snow Hall May 31 at a loss of $836. A driver was arrested for driving under the influence in the 1800 block of Iowa Street on Sunday. WHEN TO JUICE - when it's hot as $#!@ outside: the Mango Rita when last night was a little TOO fun: the Hangover Blend JUICE STOP you just CAN'T take another greasy burger: the Crosstrainer DOWNTOWN | 23rd & KABOLD | 6th & WAKAFUSA THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Alex Garrison Editor-in-Chief D.M. Scott Assignment Editor Hannah Wise Web Editor Stephanie Schulz Design Chief Louise Krug Copy Chief Contact Us editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785)-864-4810 Advertising: (785)-864-4810 Twitter: TheKansan_News The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr., Lawrence, Kan., 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. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr. KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS nursing is the student voice in radio. Whether it is rock 'n' roll or ragegee, sports or special events, KHNK 7:05 is for you. KUJH 207 Check out KUJH-TV on Kunology of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at tvku.edu. 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Ave. Lawrence Kan., 66045 SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific year tutoring Math science language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu Questions? Call (785) 864-4064 contributing to Student Success 100 KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. FORT WORTH Western Railway District Bank Bank Proit The Western Railway District Bank is a public limited company registered in the United Kingdom with the registration number 1074928. It is authorized to issue financial documents and provide banking services to its members. The bank provides various financial services including lending, overdrafts, and deposit advances. It also offers brokerage services for commercial transactions and investment opportunities. The bank's financial statements are prepared in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standards (FRS) and are publicly available on its website. The bank's board of directors includes members from various backgrounds, including business, law, science, and education. The bank's management team includes experienced professionals who have expertise in finance, accounting, and operations. The bank's financial activities are managed by a team of dedicated staff who work together to ensure the smooth operation of the bank. The bank's goals are to increase the revenue and profitability of the bank while maintaining a high level of customer satisfaction. The bank is committed to providing reliable and efficient services to its members. The bank also strives to maintain a strong financial position and be financially stable. The bank's commitment to transparency and accountability is evident in its financial reporting and governance practices. The bank's dedication to customer service is reflected in its commitment to providing excellent service to its members. The bank's commitment to sustainability is reflected in its commitment to using sustainable resources and reducing its environmental impact. The bank's commitment to innovation is reflected in its commitment to developing new technologies and products. The bank's commitment to quality is reflected in its commitment to providing high-quality services and products. The bank's commitment to customer trust is reflected in its commitment to providing a high level of customer satisfaction. The bank's commitment to regulatory compliance is reflected in its commitment to adhering to all relevant laws and regulations. The bank's commitment to social responsibility is reflected in its commitment to contributing to the betterment of society. The bank's commitment to transparency and accountability is reflected in its commitment to providing transparent financial information. The bank's commitment to customer satisfaction is reflected in its commitment to providing a high level of customer satisfaction. The bank's commitment to innovation is reflected in its commitment to developing new technologies and products. The bank's commitment to quality is reflected in its commitment to providing high-quality services and products. The bank's commitment to customer trust is reflected in its commitment to providing a high level of customer satisfaction. The bank's commitment to regulatory compliance is reflected in its commitment to adhering to all relevant laws and regulations. The bank's commitment to social responsibility is reflected in its commitment to contributing to the betterment of society. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 3 NEWS NEAR&FAR (Warsaw, Poland) NATO and Russia teamed up Tuesday to test their ability to fight terrorism, using a military transport plane to simulate a hijacking over Poland and sending in fighter planes to save it, an official said. It was the first time NATO and Russia, which doesn't belong to the alliance, had conducted such an anti-terrorism exercise together. (Bloomington, Ind.) Police say they suspect foul play in the disappearance of a 20-year-old Indiana University student five days ago, but have little information about what happened to her. Dozens of volunteers headed back out Tuesday looking for signs of Lauren Spierer in the area where she was last seen walking alone about 4:30 a.m. Friday toward her apartment in downtown Bloomington. City police Lt. Bill Parker said investigators have Spierer's cell phone, purse and some keys but that they aren't sure whether she left them behind before she went missing following a night of partying with friends. (Tripoli, Libya) Moammar Gadhafi stood defiant Tuesday in the face of the heaviest and most punishing NATO airstrikes yet — at least 40 thunderous daylight attacks that sent plumes of smoke billowing above the Libyan leader's control. (Shanghi, China) A toxic chemical spilled into a river that supplies drinking water to the scenic city of Hangzhou in eastern China, knocking out supplies to more than half a million people and creating a run on bottled water. A tanker truck carrying 20 tons of carbolic acid overturned late Saturday night. The chemical, also known as phenol, was washed by rain into the Xin'an River about 90 miles southwest of Hangzhou, the city said in a report on its website. (Buenos Aires, Argentina) Stiff winds blew ash from a Chilean volcano Tuesday in a widening arc across Argentina to the capital, grounding most air travel to and from the country. Since airborne ash can severely damage jet engines, Aerolineas Argentinas and Austral, the country's state-owned international and domestic airlines, canceled all flights within Argentina as well as to and from other countries until further notice. At least six international carriers also suspended flights through Wednesday between Buenos Aires and cities in the United States, Europe and South America. SPECIALIZED SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE 804 MASSACHUSETTS 843-5000 LAWRENCE, MA6245 Specialized Sirrus $419.98 There Can Be Only One. - Associated Press If you can have only one bike, the Sirrus might be the perfect choice. Road, path, or gravel...this bike can do it all! 804 Massachusetts St. • Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 • www.sunfloweroutdoorandbike.com report on its needs (Tripoli, Libya) Moammar Gadhafi stood defiant Tuesday in the face of the heaviest and most punishing NATO airstrikes yet — at least 40 thunderous daylight attacks that sent plumes of smoke billowing above the Libyan leader's central Tripoli compound. In late afternoon and as the strikes continued, Libyan state television broadcast an audio address from Gadhafa, who denounced NATO and the rebels challenging his rule. He vowed never to surrender."We will not kneel!" he shouted. THE HOME OF THE HEROES Stonecrest APARTMENTS Henover Place HanoverPlace APARTMENTS VillageSquare APARTMENTS Get your first month rent free 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments and Townhomes Starting at $555/month All properties have pool access and are pet friendly 785-842-3040 village@sunflower.com --- 2 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-college, and instead of turning right to the work force find eth al. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and applauds. a way to prolong to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of col Cote d'Ivoire WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN If unsure, embrace unknown for post-graduation life BY LAURA ERDALL editor@kansan.com This past spring, about 1.65 million young men and women graduated from colleges and universities in the United States. With the nation's unemployment rate soaring, these masses of young people are about to compete in the toughest job market in decades. Soon, if they haven't already, graduates will be on their own and forced to contemplate which graduate school to attend or which city to live in for the foreseeable future. Paul Jury, author of "States of Confusion," decided to take a seven-week road trip to all 48 states after he graduated from Northwestern University, choosing an unconventional post-graduation experience of joblessness. His car broke down every two states, he was stung by a jellyfish in Florida and he drapped his only set of car keys in a snake infested river in southern Missouri. "If you know what you love, go do it," Jury said. "If you don't know, go try something new because no matter what, you'll get a cool story out of it." Chances are that many of the 2011 graduates are feeling the same way Jury did — confused about their direction in life after completing roughly four years of academic work is an undergraduate. What graduates need to know though is that it'll be fine in the end because now they can proudly say that they're in that small percentage of Americans who have earned a college degree, Jury said. ways. So I say go ahead and choose bizarre or interesting jobs because they always give great life stories" lury said. "It's OK to have multiple jobs in the first couple of years after college." jury said. For graduates who have already chosen a path to travel down, there's always helpful advice when it comes to a profession. Megan Hill, associate director at the College graduates have many options, and one that many people tend to ignore is to take any job that is offered to them in the beginning PAUL JURY author of "States of Confusion" "It's OK to have multiple jobs in the first couple of years after college. Graduates who go right into successful jobs don't usually keep them any- adirector of the University Career Center, said that being able to pay attention and listen is very important in an $ _{j} $ workforce. "Observe your surroundings — it'll give you a better understanding of the culture you've been placed into," Hill said. "Also, it's important to dress appropriately and to avoid getting sucked into office drama." No matter what era we are in, the core elements needed in an employ- SEE GRADUATION 115 GOVERNOR Chris Bronson/MANSION FILE PHOTO Recent graduates should branch out and take any job that is offered to them in the beginning. Parkway Commons POOL PARTY! Friday June 10th 1pm-6pm First Management INTEGRATED EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY f Win prizes,hang by the pool and meet your new neighbors! First Management incorporated REAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY PARKWAY COMMON 3601 CLINTON PKWY • 842-3289 HIGHPOINTE 2001 W 6TH ST • 841-8469 BRIARSTON 1008 EMERY RD • 749-7 CANYON CO 700 COMET LANE • B CHASE C 1942 STEWART AVE Hosted by Gambino's Pizza, Wayne & Larry's, Complete Nutrition Celsius Tannery, 3 Spoons, Royal Crest Lanes, Eileen's Colossal Cookies, and Cici's Pizza Luxury 1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments 1/2 Off August Rent and Reduced Deposits KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 10 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming PARKS "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS•GALLER 19 Massauetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | kaylearning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 5 O opinion FREE FOR ALL apps.facebook.com/dailykansan Your logic is faulty. The summer FFA does and will exist without your comment. Saying 'swag' is for tools and dumb chicks. I turn 19 soon. Only one year left to lose that V-card before I'm officially pathetic. My first advice would be don't ask for advice from people in FFA. Your answers will all be people from failed relationships. would you PLEASE wax your hooha for me? On second thought, do it for yourself! Trust me on this. I'm not vain. I'm just really beautiful. Her milkshake brings ALL the boys to the yard. Even the lactose intolerant. My peanut butter intake is directly proportional to how much you love me. PENIS. (Voice of God) I was ready to get married to you two years ago, and this is where we are today... sucks. I hate it when I make milkshakes and boys show up in my yard. So obnoxious. Prolly a good thing you didn't get married then, huh? I hate boys. They always leave me. PENIS! (Voice of God with a Mega-Phone) Mavs all the way. SEX & SOCIETY Cyber cheating just as bad as real thing Once upon a time, we lived in a world in which it was more difficult to cheat. You had to, you know, actually see someone face-to-face, or at least hear the sound of his or her voice to engage in some sort of sexual activity. Prairie Ridge But thanks to the internet, men like Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) can cheat from anywhere they damn well please, with their poor wives a few feet away assuming they are just simply checking Facebook and work e-mail. BY MANDY MATNEY mmatney@kansan.com And yes, in my book, sending sexually suggestive photographs and engaging in sexually inappropriate conversations is cheating. Call me old-fashioned, but deceptively going behind your wife's back to send and receive sexually arousing photographs and take part in sexually inappropriate conversations qualifies as cheating. It's actually kind of worse than cheating; it's lazy, spineless cheating. It requires a few clicks and some erotic electronic communication. On May 27, Weiner's Twitter account posted a link to a sexually suggestive photo of what appeared to be his groin area in gray boxers, directed at Gennette Cordova, a 21-year-old college student. After a week of denying and claiming his account was hacked, the representative finally admitted to more than just dirty tweeting in a press conference on Monday. He admitted to engaging in several "inappropriate conversation conducted over Twitter, Facebook, e-mail and occasionally over the phone" with women he had met online over the past few years. that hackers got into his account, labeling it as a cyber security issue. Then, he finally admitted to not only being a complete social media moron by "accidentally" tweeting, but that he also spent the last few years online engaging in similar sexually explicit conversations, and never actually had sex? But here's the kicker, he claims he never actually had sex with them. So let me get this straight. An elected member of Congress accidently tweeted a picture of his penis, which was supposed to be just for one college student, but instead was momentarily shown to the world. Then he lied, claiming Do these not sound like the actions of an insecure 16-year-old? It looks like Weiner's run for mayor is officially over and his political career is starting a downward spiral towards the drain. It doesn't even matter if he had sex with these women or not (not that I believe him that he didn't). First off, his confession was a week too late. Anyone with half a brain knows that something this scandalous wasn't going to fade easily. The clean-up work would have been much easier if he was honest from the beginning. Most importantly, his pathetically promiscuous actions online also show Weiner is not fit for Congress. Anyone in charge of any sort of serious decisions for the well being of the United States should know how dim-witted online dating, "sexting" and other inappropriate cyber engagements are. The Tiger Woods scandal should have shown cheating men of celebrity status that women aren't afraid to come forward with proof, pictures and a full confession (especially when there is media money involved). This is the Information Age, people. Everything is documented Especially when you're wise enough to do a majority of your cheating on social media websites. It's pretty ridiculous to see a talented politician willing to risk his reputation and career for some sexual attention online. Yes, cheating is easier these days, but it's also easier to get caught. And if Weiner is impudent enough to tweet a picture of his private area for the world to see, I don't really know what other damage he's capable of. He hasn't resigned and continues to say he'll remain in office. But, just like my mom used to always warn me as a teenager, a damaged reputation never goes away. Especially with a name like Weiner. Matney is a senior in journalism from Shawnee. Follow her on Twitter @MandyMatney. LIFE ADVICE This summer, live life as you envision, despite inevitable risks Life is wonderfully delicate. A meteorite could crash through your roof at any moment. You could get hit by a car, or choke on a salami sandwich tomorrow. There are so many variable factors that nothing is ever completely in our control. In the end, the world is a terrifying place. The recent devastation of the Joplin tornado and the tragic shooting death in Costa Rica of Justin Johnston, a student at McLouth High School, have been sad reminders of the briefness of our lives; a frightening realization that our own destruction is as unpredictable as it is imminent. POLICY AND LAW SERVICE BY JESSIE BLAKEBOROUGH jblakeborough@kansan.com But in spite of the dangers and sadness in the world, people still get up every day and live their lives. We do not cower in windowless rooms, counting the possible ways we could perish. Instead we have hopes and dreams and goals. We live for something and that is what makes life so special. This summer, try something new, and be unafraid to experience life. These are the days when we have all the time in the world to make mistakes, to learn, to make some more mistakes and grow from them. Time to cut loose and play. Learn the balance of responsibility to others and your responsibility to yourself to live your life. Make this your summer of love. Your summer of friendship. Your summer of adventure. This summer can be whatever you want it to be. Just be sure to make it yours. Take your future into your own hands. Don't wait for someone to tell you what to do or where to go. Seize all the clichés and days you can! The human spirit is a wondrous thing, I marvel at the courage we all use each day without even realizing it. We are fearless and courageous and optimistic. These are what fuels me to try everything I can, while I still can. Settling leads to missed opportunities. Even though it gets hard to constantly keep putting myself out there and taking chances, I don't ever want to forget that life requires living. Blakeborough is a junior in international business and journalism from Baltimore. WANT TO VOICE YOUR OPINION? contact editor@kansan.com or at (785) 864-4810 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-college, and instead of turning rig' er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and apa way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for PEACE CORPS Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of sol Cote d'Ivoire PAGE6 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HEALTH Birth control pill top choice, but needs improvements BY MEG LOWRY editor@kansan.com The pill is the most popular contraceptive choice with students, said Miranda Myrick, communications director for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, but more than half of women who use it are unsatisfied with its hormones and their effects. Although hormonal birth control is widely used, more than half of women who use it say they aren't satisfied. ANSAN FILE PHOTO Last year, a study published by the Journal of Family Practice found that 57 percent of women using the pill weren't happy with it. Reasons for reported dissatisfaction included depression, decreased libido and health concerns such as blood clots or stroke. Despite the disadvantages, the Food and Drug Administration lists the pill as the most used form of contraception by women in their 20s, even more popular than condoms. "Women use the pill because it allows them to control their own fertility," said Sue McDonald, a registered nurse in charge of the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department's Family Planning and Sexually Transmitted Disease Program. "It's the most popular method, especially for younger women who have not had children vet." The pill works by combining estrogen and progesterone that allows women to control their fertility. The Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department provides contraception to more than 4,000 women a year. "The pill is our most popular contraception," Lisa Horn, communications coordinator for the Health Department. "We offer other services, such as measuring for diaphragms, but those really aren't common anymore." Although the pill is the most common contraception, it is not always the safest or the most effective, according to some health officials. IUD,has a more promising outlook. "Many women experience mood changes or nausea," McDonald said. "More serious, but rare, risks include blood clots and stroke." Since its approval in the 1960s, the science behind the pill has remained relatively unchanged. Additionally, according to the FDA, with typical usage, the pill has an 8.7 percent failure rate. In contrast, a relatively new contraceptive, the intrauterine device, or "The failure rate for the IUD is less than one percent," McDonald said. cent of health care providers offer it to patients. Despite its effectiveness, less than two percent of women who use contraception use the IUD. Only 58 per Mai Hester, a spokesperson for Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that Student Health Services offers the IUD and its insertion. "No matter the kind, there is one huge advantage to female contraception," McDonald said. "And that is controlling fertility, with or without a partner's participation." HOME STOCK KEEP YOUR MONEY All upfront fees waived with savings of $550! ON BUS ROUTE FREE TANNING STUDENT BUSINESS CENTER STATE-OF-THE-ART FITNESS CENTER PET FRIENDLY ABERDEEN 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE KEEP YOUR MONEY All upfront fees waived with savings of $550! ON BUS ROUTE FREE TANNING STUDENT BUSINESS CENTER STATE-OF-THE-ART FITNESS CENTER PET FRIENDLY ABERDEEN 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE mock many doors to a successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreurning ALEXANDRA SMITH KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. many doors to a successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 11 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joyurearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 CAMPUS PAGE 7 Wescoe Hall to get new technology, dining space in summer renovations BY KYLIE NUTT knutt@kansan.com A vital locale for many students, the Underground food court in Wescoe Hall is getting a makeover this summer. Crews have begun an expansion project, but most of the retail food options will remain open. The convi- ence store will temporarily close, but The Pulse coffeshop and food court will remain open. Officals estimate that the project will cost $475,000, which is funded by student fees and will add 140 seats, reduce lines, improve traffic and increase service efficiency. Temporarily, there will be less seating in the space, but it shouldn't be an issue because there are fewer people using it in the summer, said Wayne Pearse, director of facilities at KU Memorial Unions. Next door to the Underground, renovations are taking place this summer in two lecture rooms in Wescoe Hall that will improve technological capabilities by replacing the original walls and seating built in 1974. This is a $500,000 project paid for by tuition funds, Jill Jess, associate director for News and Media Relations at University Relations, said in an email. the classroom environment and capabilities," Jess wrote. Design and Construction Management started construction after commencement on May 23. Work will be completed by the fall semester. "The top priority was to improve Lecture rooms 3139 and 3140 are closed for the summer to upgrade the seating to include a flexible back along with a larger tablet and seat. Both rooms will be provided with three large screens at the front for superior viewing at every seat. Cameras will be positioned around the room to capture video of students and lecturers, which can be displayed on the screens. A large podium will be fixed in each room and will be compatible with the latest technology, such as iPod and Blu-ray players. Across campus, continued construction on the west side of Eaton Hall will disrupt traffic at 15th Street and Naismith Drive. The new Measurement, Materials and Sustainable Environment Center at this location will undergo utility tunnel work, which will continue throughout the summer and is expected to be complete by Aug. 12. Construction in the Underground, in Wescoe Hall, is in full swing. The food courts in the Underground will remain open as crews remodel parts of Wescoe Hall and the expansion will open by the fall semester. Construction will take place in various parts of campus during the summer. DON'S AUTO CENTER 11TH AND HASKELL (785)-841-4833 SINCE 1974 STAY ON THE ROAD WITH THE HAWKS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PRESENTS: BIZZY BONE | LAYZIE BONE | FLESH N' BONE Bone thugs-n-harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR WITH A LIVE BAND SPECIAL GUESTS STEDDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY QUEST GET TICKETS FROM THE GRANADA ONLINE OR BACK AT MASTER.LR TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE HOURS:OPEN AT 8:30PM THEGRANADA.COM IGE Follow @UDKPlay on Twitter and "Like" U.D.K. Play on Facebook for your chance to win tickets! / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-college and instead of turning rig' er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and ap Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of col Cote d'Ivoire rig. al. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 8 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 10 WAYS TO SUMMER FUN Spending your summer on campus may not be everybody's ideal. But with these activities, you can find the bright side to a Lawrence summer. 1 CHECK OUT THE MUSIC SCENE Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.: The venue hosts live music four to six nights a week and houses a spacious patio perfect for summer. Brittany Nelson Hot nights in town still offer various options for checking out live music. Here are just a few: —— The Lawrence City Band: The summer Concert Series takes place every Wednesday night at the William Kelly Bandstand within South Park, at 11th and Massachusetts streets. Jackpot Music Hall, 943 Massachusetts St.: The venue hosts live music five to six nights a week from national touring bands. 2 GET BUFF Instead of trying to survive the heat, consider using the summer months to improve your help. "A person can completely transform their body in 12 weeks," said Chris Medlen, co-founder of Underground Lab Contemporary Fitness, 919 E. 29th St. Medlen suggested setting a tangible goal to work toward, such as running a race or fitting into a pair of skinny jeans. skimny jeans. There are several gyms offering summer memberships, summertime classes and bootcamps. Recreation Services offers a pass for the summer semester, allowing students to take part in an unlimited amount of KU Fit Classes, which include yoga, weightlifting and dance aerobics. Lawrence Athletic Club offers one three month memberships. Students can lose weight and improve health through simple activities such as running outdoors, biking and walking to class. and the BEAT THE HEAT ON THE CHEAP Hannah Davis 3 Don't have reliable cooling of your own? Check out these on-campus hangout spots to soak up A/C: Watson Library/Anschutz Library: Students can take a load off and cool down in the quiet surroundings of these libraries. —— Coffeeshops; Lawrence offers a variety of coffee shops that students can go in, grab a cup of iced coffee and hang out for a bit. Kansas Union. The Kansas Union offers multiple activities. Students can visit Milton's Coffee Shop, The Market, Jaybowl, Salon Hawk, KJHK, the Hawks Nest or the KU Bookstore. Weston Pletcher GET CREATIVE WITH ART CLASSES 4 Take time this summer to work on a new skill or enhance your artistic side by taking a class at the Lawrence Arts Center. Many of the summer classes started this week, but enrollment space is still available, according to the center's website. For more experienced artists, the center also rents out open studios. The open studios cost $180 and last for 12 weeks. The Lawrence Arts Center offers a financial aid program for low-income individuals. — Christy Nutt keep your money keep your money keep your money All upfront fees waived with savings of $450 ON BUS ROUTE NEW UNITS AVAILABLE UTILITIES INCLUDED PET FRIENDLY FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM ey many doors to a successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES In Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 joydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER In Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydteaching UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 9 SAVE UP FOR A FUTURE VACATION 5 Don't give up on vacation dreams just because you're in classes now. There is a two week window at the beginning of August that summer students could use as the last option to escape Lawrence until Thanksgiving. Given the ever-rising cost of gasoline, summer students should begin planning and saving for that vacation now. You will have nothing but free time in early August when students who took the summer off are busy moving back in. If you are looking to stay in the Lawrence area, consider camping. They might not be the most exotic options for Jayhawk fishermen, but both have nearby state parks that are perfect for the cooped-up outdoors type. 5 DOLLARS 627851504A EN 9113 UN 627851504A EN Matt Galloway ENJOY THE FACT FEWER STUDENTS ARE IN TOWN 8 The flood of students leaving for the summer term means one wonderful thing for those of us who've stayed — no longer needing to elbow your way through a thick crowd to get to the bar. Take advantage of the smaller crowd and find a new bar to check out, especially if you can find one with a nice patio so you can enjoy some sun with that beer. Or, better yet, instead of going with the usual PBR or Bud Light, try a new summer drink like a Mojito or a Tequila Sunrise. The Sandbar, 17 E. 8th St., has a bunch of summer drinks to try such as a Hurricane, Bahama Mama or a Shark Attack. — Shauna Blackmon GET WILD WITH OUTDOOR PURSUITS Students, faculty and staff can rent equipment for camping, backpacking, canoeeing and kayaking through in the Outdoor Pursuits at the Ambler Student Recreation and Fitness Center. 10 Clinton Lake is only a twenty-minute drive from campus and offers camping, boating fishing, picnicking and swimming at the beach. Equipment rentals must be made in person and paid in full up to three days in advance. — Kylie Nutt Budweiser BUDWEISER KING OF BEERS Bottled in the United States Produced by Budweiser Brewing Company Made in New York, NY Since 1893 --- DOWN er term ho've way d- bar a BB Budweiser KING OF BEERS LIBERTY HALL accessibility info 644 MASS, 749-1912 (785) 749-1922 Fri June 10 - Thu June 16 MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG13) FRI: 4:40 7:10 9:40 SAT-SUN: 2:10 4:10 7:10 9:40 MON-THU: 4:40 7:10 9:40 6 GET INVOLVED ON CAMPUS — Laura Erdali 9 LIBERTY HALL FRI 4:30 7:00 9:30 SAT NO SHOWS SUN 2:00 4:30 7:00 MON NO SHOWS TUE-THU 4:30 7:00 THE CONSPIRATORS (PG13) 7 ESTABLISH A 'FREEDOM DAY' CULT/INTERNATIONAL/CLASSIC VIDEO Combat summer boredom by taking the opportunity to try out some new restaurants and new global tastes from the comfort of downtown Lawrence. Aladdin Café, 1021 Massachusetts St., offers up Mediterranean food. The fare at Global Cafe, 820 Massachusetts St., is even more broad — it serves breakfast food from all over the globe. It also serves sandwiches, appetizers and drinks from different parts of the world. GET YOUR EAT ON AND CHECK OUT NEW PLACES La Prima Tazza 638 MASSACHUSETTS (785)832-CAFE www.libertyhall.net Even if you're stuck on campus, summer doesn't have to only consist of studying and going to class. Conside joining the Lawrence Ultimate Frisbee Summer League. It begins this week and ends Aug. 2. There's still time to join one of the eight ultimate Frisbee teams. Games take place every Tuesday evening at the Youth Sports Complex located at 27th and Wakarusa streets. The games usually start around 6:45 p.m. Steve Mock, commissioner of the league, said it costs $30 to join and players receive a T-shirt and disk. Anybody who is interested can contact lawrenceultimate@gmail.com for more information. — Monisha Bruner www.libertvhall.net With a whole semester of classes crammed into eight weeks, summer school can get stressful. One "freedom day" a week can help prevent the negative side effects schoolwork has on your sanity. Want to work on your tan? Try the Lawrence Outdoor Aquatic Center. If you're looking for a summer treat, snow cones are also in season for a limited time at Tad's Tropical Sno, 939 Iowa St. Try the "Jayhawk" to show your loyalties. And if you prefer to spend your freedom day in a less social, air-conditioned fashion, pull down your blinds and tune into some TV. Hey, it's your free day. If you want to spend it on the couch, we're not judging you. 康寧 康寧 — Meg Lowry TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy, Sell, or Buy New & Used Textbooks 785-955-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com 1 ! GRE $ ^{ \text{™}} $ LSAT $ ^{ \text{™}} $ GMAT $ ^{ \text{™}} $ TEST PREPARATION That's Right on Target. KU CONTINUING EDUCATION The University of Kansas Register early! Save $100! Test preparation classes now enrolling. ON 100097 www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) - 785-864-5823 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-coll er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and apa way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of col Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for PAGE10 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 POLYNESIAN PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN it's a THREE FOR ALL at R RESERVE ON WEST 31st www.ReserveOnWest31st.com facebook.com/ReserveOnWest31st 2511 West 31st Street Lawrence, KS 66047 785.842.0032 NOW LEASING. AMAZING 3 BED/3 BATH APARTMENTS! • FULLY PURNISHED WITH ALL KITCHEN APPLIANCES • PRIVATE BEDROOMS AND BATHROOMS AND ACCESS TO FABULOUS AMENITIES INCLUDING FITNESS CENTER, COMPUTER LAB, TANNING BED, POOL WITH TANNING DECK AND COMMUNITY-WIDE WiFi! STARTING AT ONLY $419! *PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE* 100 NO Aerial View of the Building. NOW LEASING ADMINISTRATION Roney to leave influential post after eight years Vice-provost of Student Success will remain at the University but begin in teaching post BY D.M. SCOTT dmscott@kansan.com Marlesa Roney, vice provost for Student Success, announced Tuesday that she will resign from her post and go into teaching. DONNA ELLEN ROBINS Roney She will continue working as a vice provost until a replacement is found, when she will become professor of the practice with the School of Education. This non-tenured position is "required by accrediting bodies to provide students access to instruction from individuals active in practice," according to University policy. in 2003, Roney became the first vice-provost for student success at the University, holding the position for eight years. The search process for her replacement will begin in the next couple of weeks, said Joe Monaco, assistant director of communications at the University. The student success department oversees several others and assists students by offering new student orientations, assistance with registration and services such as the writing center. Settled in for summer DALIA FOX Chris Bronson/KANSAN Julia Simmons, a freshman from St. Louis, shows off her desk of her freshly moved in dorm room in Hashing Residence Hall Tuesday afternoon. Simmons and other students were allowed to move into the dorms starting Sunday in preparation for summer school. Simmons used this summer to begin her college career. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. BASKET BALL DRAFT DATE The draft dates are set for the following week. The next draft date is on Tuesday, January 15th. The following draft dates are on Wednesday, January 16th and Thursday, January 17th. The draft dates are set for the following week. The next draft date is on Tuesday, January 15th. The following draft dates are on Wednesday, January 16th and Thursday, January 17th. SUNY N.Y. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER * In Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jaydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE11 E entertainment HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today is a 9 Charm your audience with persuasive appeal. Go ahead and tug on their heartstrings. Gently exert power (not force). Express a possibility, and then an invitation. You get farther than expected. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8 A lucky discovery brings sought-after information. Friends have great suggestions. Don't keep arguing if they're right. And remember: It's not personal. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8 Your common sense and clever wit entertain those around you, even as you may prefer to hide out. Watch out for mechanical difficulties, and let your love out. Today is an 8 CANCER (June 22-July 22) You see things clearly now. There's more money coming your way, if you'll do the work. Review and revise a costly habit you're ready to be done with. Create a new practice. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is on 8 Today is an 8 Connect with a distant friend, and remember that love's the most important thing. Stay close to home and routine, and don't rush it. Slow and steady wins the race. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 Breathe deep in tense moments. Redo it until you get it. Keep your objective in mind, and don't let anyone coax you off track. Compromise may be necessary. Stand firm and be flexible. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 7 What you learn from your introspection today benefits many. Look at the big picture. Resolve a misunderstanding before it happens. All's not as it appears. Conceptis SudoKu By Dave Green 9 2 1 4 3 1 8 2 6 3 1 3 1 6 8 9 5 1 6 6 4 1 8 1 1 9 7 6 5 9 4 7 7 6 7 6 7 6 Difficulty Level ★★★ 6/08 THE NEXT PANEL "I'm cramming for my diet." Nick Sambaluk 6-8 CRYPTOQUIP ES VWFCIWRP JTCHJV SETC- VJHTJEDY FHJCTEHQ UCTP HSSCMJEWDHJCQP. FHPIC EJ'V JEDRCT-QWUEDY MHTC. Yesterday's Cryptoquip: GIVEN THE CHOICE OF EITHER A STEPPING STOOL OR A TALLER DEVICE, I'D PREFER THE LADDER. Today's Cryptoquip Clue: Fagula J CROSSWORD $ \textcircled{2} 0 1 1 $ Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. ACROSS 1 Wood-shaping tool 4 Peruse 8 This and that 12 "Ostenta-tious? —?" 13 Canal city 14 Finished 15 Hostel 16 "No Place That Far" singer 18 Summa-ize 20 Calendar abbr. 21 Sci-fi knight 24 Grit one's teeth 28 Arabian nomads 32 Vocal comeback 33 Lawyers' org. 1 Dutch Room 36 Cage component 37 Bigfoot's cousin 39 1984 Winter Olympics site 41 Word on the street? 43 Lived 44 Bankroll 46 Expiate 50 Minuet-like dances 55 Book spine abbr. 56 Gel in a Petri dish 57 Nevada city 58 Doctrine 59 Frog's hangout 60 List-end ing abbr. 61 — Moines DOWN 1 Eastern potentate (Var.) 2 Finished 3 Galvanizing material 4 Aretha classic 5 Historic time 6 Melody 7 Un-hearing 8 Of cattle 9 Eggs 10 X rating? 11 Day divs. 17 Work unit 19 1977 Steely Dan album 22 — ex machina 23 Relative by marriage 25 Farm fraction 26 Con's weapon 27 Vagrant 28 Puts into words 29 First victim 30 — tat-tat 31 Paddock papa 35 Sun-shade 38 To the center 40 Lustrous black 42 Talk on and on 45 Challenge 47 "Metamor-phoses" poet 48 Schnozz 49 "Desire Under the —" 50 Potential syrup 51 Past 52 Scooted 53 Trawler need 54 "CSI" evidence WANT TO KNOW THE ANSWERS? go to udkne.ws/IWwX14 to see the gallery Today is a 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 | | | 13 | | | | 14 | | | 15 | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | 18 | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | 21 | | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 29 30 | | | | | 31 | 32 | | | | 33 | | | 34 | | | 35 | 36 | | | 37 | | | 38 | 39 | | . 40 | | | 41 | | | 42 | 43 | | | | | | | | 44 | 45 | | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 51 52 | | | | 53 54 | | | 55 | | 56 | | | | 57 | | | | 58 | | 59 | | | | 60 | | | | 61 | | SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 You discover the resources to increase your income. Extra effort leads to a bonus. Go slow to avoid errors, and keep quiet for now. Be mindful of details. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) SAGITTARIUS You feel pushed to take action. Money could be a tender subject today. No need to argue. Get out and have fun. Accept a challenge. Anything's possible. Today is a 7 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep your money stashed, and continue to repay obligations. Get the word out about a great project. Use your connections, and pull some strings. Go over all onions. It's not a good time to gamble. Accept cost-effective solutions. Stick close to home, and study what you need to develop your choices. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) Today is an 8 8 PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 6 Take a deep breath and relax. Change is in the air. Accept coaching from someone you respect. Don't travel or take on a new challenge yet. Get clear about the numbers. / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-coll rigl er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accents people of all majors, and apa way to prolong having to find a job,but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions.She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of col Cote d'Ivoire Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for PEACE CORPS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 12 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPEN SEASON Severe weather ravages region in summer READ MORE ABOUT STUDENTS VOLUNTEERING AFTER SEVERE WEATHER DEVESTATED JOPLIN, MO. Go to http://udkne.ws/19x9k SAFETY During severe weather, students can protect themselves in residence halls and apartments by keeping a disaster kit ready, developing a plan for when sirens go off and practicing taking cover. THE COVER IS HALF-INCHED. Experts say planning before storms hit key to staying safe Chris Bronson/KANSAN PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY CHRISTY NUTT cnutt@kansan.com When severe weather hits, it's important to stay informed and have a plan and disaster kit. Different student living situations, whether in an apartment, dorm or house, call for different plans. house, or can for the emergency management department of Douglas County, said students should seek the lowest level when a tornado warning is issued. The lowest level, preferably an area without windows, provides students the most protection from the storm. Students need to find a place to go it they don't have place like this, Smith said. If students live in an apartment without a basement, they should get to know their neighbors on the bottom levels and make a plan to take shelter in their apartment, Smith said. Students in some of the dorms must think of alternatives, too. Pat Phillips, resident director of Students without a basement should take cover in the center core areas of their home, like a closet or bathroom, said Mark Bradford, chief of the Lawrence Fire Department. This will offer protection from flying debris. Blankets and mattresses can also be used to add extra protection. Naismith Hall, said his dorm doesn't have a basement. The plan there is to take cover in the stairwells and hallways on the lower floors, he said. Practicing a plan and preparing a disaster kit should be done before severe weather strikes, Smith said. "I don't think people understand how quick tornados can form, or how When the sirens sound, students need to take cover immediately. The Douglas County Emergency Management staff sounds the sirens if the National Weather Service issues a tornado warning or if trained weather spotters determine a threat. On the hill, select buildings have voice-emergency warning systems. The system sounds take-cover message when the Lawrence sirens are activated. quick the damage can be done. It only takes seconds," Bradford said. The sirens are designed to alarm people who are outside. People indoors or in their car might not hear the alarms. This is why it is necessary to stay alert to changing weather conditions and plan on how to get information when a tornado watch is issued. Smith said it is important to have multiple ways to get weather information instead of being dependent on just one. The buildings with emergency warning systems give an all-clear A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration all-hazard weather radio is one source for severe weather information. Students can also receive a KU Alert text message in the event of severe weather. message when an official all-clear is announced for Lawrence. It's also important to understand that severe weather is not done after a major tornado passes through, Bradford said. Damaging winds, lightning or even the formation of another tornado often occur after a tornado touchdown. After a destructive tornado, people find themselves in a state of shock, and there are precautions to take to prevent post injuries. Debris, electricity from down power lines and leaking natural gas can become dangerous after a severe storm, Bradford said. "The more prepared we can be through education and training the better we are if the event happens." Smith said. COMMUNITY SERVICE [A photograph of a large fallen tree impacting a building, with workers in the background] Atmospheric science students volunteer in damaged Tuscaloosa Contributed photo by Chris Inmar Atmospheric science students volunteered in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and found that the devastation they saw was much more than their studies prepared themfor. Contributed photo by Chris Inman David Huber thought he was prepared for the devastation that ravaged Tuscaloosa, Ala., when he and ten classmates arrived in the college town on May 23. But the far-reaching destruction caused by an EF4 tornado on April 27 left the meteorology student in awe. "It kind of looked like a postapocalyptic scene," Huber said. "You would drive from one edge of the town to the other, and parts of it looked fine. But once you got to the devastated areas, there was nothing left at all. It was really eerie." BY MATTHEW GALLOWAY mgalloway@kansan.com Huber, a graduate student from Lee's Summit, Mo., was in Tuscaloosa to volunteer and deliver aid to the tornado-ravaged community. He and ten fellow meteorology students helped clean up two leveled homes before returning to Lawrence on May 27. "I was hoping to clean up a little more, but once I got down there, I realized how big of a job it was going to be." Huber said. "It seemed like two houses was a pretty good deal." In total, the atmospheric science students raised $2,400 with the help of local businesses such as Hy-Vee and Orange Leaf. That does not include the drinking water and other supplies the group hand-delivered upon arrival. Mike Robinson, a senior from Emporia, said many on the trip were inspired to volunteer by their years of studying weather patterns. "We all study meteorology, and we've all seen tornadoes, but I don't think we've seen what they can really do," Robinson said. "It was scary to see a tornado of that." magnitude rip through a major metropolitan area. Just as meteorology students, we felt compelled to help out in some way." Garrett Black, a senior from Hutchinson, said he volunteered because he has always had an interest in storm chasing. He said the pictures and videos did not prepare him for the quiet and surreal scene in Tuscaloosa when the group arrived that Monday night. "Seeing the kind of devastation that these tornadoes can cause kind of put us in our place," Black said. "A lot of time we forget these tornadoes are affecting real people, so to see that really meant a lot to us." Seeing the tornado's destruction first-hand was a crucial experience for the students, Huber said, adding that interacting with SERVICE 114 KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES at Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming.com BASKETBALL "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jagdreurning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson POOL PARTY Dip into the Summer in Style June 11th The Connection: Apartment Living Stops Here. Summer School Stress Release 3100 Ousdahl Road, Lawrence, KS 66046 www.connectionatlawrence.com 785.842.3336 --- / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-coll rict er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America.Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities.The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program acco ments people of all majors, and apa way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. the Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of sol- Cote d'Ivoire UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE14 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 YOUR FIRST SUMMER TEST where do you want to live? A 1712 OHIO Large 3&4 BR Great Pricing B EASTVIEW 1015-1025 Mississippi Remodeled 1&2 BR C SOUTH POINTE 2310 W 26th 1-4 BR D JACKSONVILLE 700 Monterey Way Newer 1&2 BR E HANOVER 14th & Kentucky 2 BR, 1.5 Bath, Garage F GRANDVIEW Near 6th & Iowa Large 2 BR G WOODWARD 611 Michigan 1.2,3 BR, Washer/Dryer H COUNTRY CLUB 512 Rockledge Newer 2 BR, 2 Bath I THE WOODS 630 Michigan Large 2 BR ...at least it's multiple choice www.midwestpm.com (785) • 841 • 4935 Contributed photo Garrett Black (left) and Mike Robinson (right) work to clear away debris in Tuscaloosa, Ala., along with other atmospheric science students, who said their understanding of weather patterns helped inspire them to want to help out. SERVICE CONTROL Contributed photo SERVICE CONTINUED | 12 perspective. "It kinds of brings to life what we forecast," Huber said. "Sometimes when you're looking at a weather map you don't realize how devastating something can be just by looking at the red and greens." The students worked with Samaritan's Purse, a religious non-profit organization that has been aiding Tuscaloosa since the disaster. The first victim they aided had no basement and was taking shelter in a hallway when a large tree fell on his house. The group left the day after another devestating tornado swept through the city of Joplin, Mo., on May 22. families who lost everything put their jobs as meteorologists into perspective. IF YOUR FRIENDS JUMPED OFF A CLIFF, WOULD YOU? don't go with the pack. call or e-mail to reserve textbooks today BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy Sell & Beat New & Great Textbooks 705-956-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS uw@beatthebookstore.com WEDNESDAY Summer WEAR AWESOME Human Design UNIVERSITY KANSAN It's summer for us too. ENJOY! WEDNESDAY Summer WEBRIT AWESOME UNIVERSITY KANSAN many doors to a successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.442.4900 | jaydreunting "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 12 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785-842-4900 | joydreaming. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE15 No summer break for the student KU ARIZONA STATE Chris Bronson/KANSA Alex Long, a graduate student from Andover, takes a break between classes to make some note cards for his summer class at Watkins Library Tuesday afternoon. Tuesday marked the first day of summer classes at the University. Courses continue throughout the summer and offer students an opportunity to complete needed courses to complete their degrees at an accelerated rate. With 7 locations all over town... We've got Lawrence covered CHERRY·HILL PROPERTIES Eddingham Place Apartments 785-841-5444 www.ApartmentsLawrence.com GRADUATION CONTINUED 14 ee are the same in any profession — reliability and good communication skills, Jury said. Ashley Miller, a senior from Overland Park, will have more than a college degree by the end of the summer. By then, Miller will also be taking a one-way plane ticket to Nantes, France, where she'll be alongside another teacher in a classroom. "I'll be working with the teaching assistance program for seven to nine months teaching English to middle school or high school students," Miller said. Miller became interested in the job after learning about it while studying abroad in Angers, France, two years ago. "They haven't placed me in an academy yet, so at the moment I don't even know where I'll be living or how long I'll be staying." Miller said. "It's frightening and exciting all at the same time." For Alex Jorawsky, a senior from Overland Park, finding a job after graduation was also not a problem. Majoring in engineering and environmental science, Jorawsky landed a job as a manufacturing manager at Plastikon Heath care. "I was the fifth employee to be hired out of 200. I run eight-hour shifts five days a week and so far I have no complaints, which makes me feel pretty lucky," Jorawsky said. A survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers reveals that for the first time since 2007, employers are reporting a double-digit increase in their spring hiring projections. The future is looking not all that bad for the 2011 college graduates. Whether a graduate is taking his or her parent's couch, entering the world of work in a less-than-ideal position or on a cross-country road trip, many who have been through the process already say, in the end, things work out. I will be happy to help you. MBA "Avila's accounting curriculum enhanced my analytical thinking and introduced me to various concepts and theories which allowed me to not only think outside the box, but to also consider various alternatives before making a final decision." Kristyn Hawkins MBA in Accounting, 2006 Financial Accounting Analyst, Sr. Honeywell FM6T Find out how an Avila MBA can make you more marketable in today's work force. Call or e-mail JoAnna Giffin at 816-501-3601, or JoAnna.Giffin@avila.edu. A AVILA UNIVERSITY Opening Doors 11901 Wornall Road, Kansas City, MO avila.edu/mba·mba@avila.edu·816-501-3601 Sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet I will look for a black square with four white squares inside it. 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they want to do post-college and instead of turning rig! er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach For America, said the program accepts people of all majors, and ana way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Like Teach For America, the Peace Corps is another way for Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because he did not have a clear direction for his future at the end of sol Cote d'Ivoire WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE16 S sports Weekly sports Trivia Q: How many steals did LeBron James record as a teenager in the NBA? ? A:202 bballone.com "What should I do? Should I make you laugh? Should I read you a soulful poem? Shoot me with your words. You may cut me with your eyes, but still like air, I will rise." WW—LeBron James Fact of the Day Quote of the Day BASKETBALL LeBron and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar are the only players to win a pair of MVPs by the age of 25. — jockbio.com ! Chris Bronson/KANSAN See more sports 18 Baseball Read about MLB draft-picks Colton Murray and T.J. Walz. See how the recent Jayhawk football coach's retirement will affect the team come the fall season. 19 Football 19 Former KU players advise campers ALEXANDRIA Former KU basketball player and current NBA player Cole Aldrich speaks to an estimated 700 children at the first summer session of Bill Self's Basketball Camp. Aldrich gave advice and answered questions. The camp is offered to children between 8-18 and continues until June 9. BY HANNAH DAVIS editor@kansan.com Success requires hard work from the individual, but one also needs love and support from friends and family. Tyshawn Taylor said when he acknowledged the help and impact of the people who surround him. This summer Taylor and other basketball players are ready to give back. "My coaches have helped steer me in the right directions both personally and athletically my entire life. I look up to that, and I've always wanted to go into coaching. This week has been a crash course in coaching and motivation." Taylor said. Taylor is working as a coach and mentor for boys ages eight to 18 at Bill Self's fourth annual Summer Basketball Camp. Taylor works with the youngest athletes, a demographic with notoriously short attention spans. The campers greeted Taylor like a celebrity. "I've got the eight and nine-year-olds." Taylor said: "I've got to tap back into my eight-year-old self. That's the best way to get through to them." "When coach Self introduced me to the campers, they all started screaming and asking for autographs. It reminds you of what impact basketball can have on young people. I remember being that kid." Taylor said. Seven-hundred adolescent boys shuffled into the Horejsi Family Athletic Center this past Monday afternoon to hear from a NBA basketball player and member of the 2008 national championship team, Cole Aldrich. Aldrich, a former all-academic and all-American, answered questions from the young hopefuls and urged the boys to focus on academics. "Only a handful of this 700 is going to go on to play collegiate ball," Aldrich said. "That is why it is so important to do well in school. That accomplishment will help you for the rest of your life." Aldrich answered ten questions, including, "What happened to your tooth?" and "How much do you get paid?" Taylor wasn't the only basketball idol the campers worked with. Jeric McCoy drove his son from their home in Burlington to Lawrence for the camp this summer for the fourth year. its all worth the smile on his face," he said. "It is something he looks forward to all year, and he's a better boy for it." McCoy's son, J.J., along with the other boys, work on skills on and off the court. Campers are expected to make their beds, clean their rooms and be in bed by lights out, and failure to do so results in loss of free time. Coach Steve Henson addressed practical issues before introducing Cole Aldrich to the adolescent boys. The next round of the sold-out camps begins June 12. "Fellas, we've had some complaints about your smell. I walked into Naismith today and it smelled like an ammonia factory. Let's take showers, we're paying the water bill this week, so take multiple showers if you must," Henson said. FISHER Chris Bronson/KANSAN Former center Cole Aldrich practices with men's basketball coach Danny Manning during a shootaround session Monday afternoon in the first session of Bill Self's basketball camp. The camp is offered to children and continues until June 9. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIE 801 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming C "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER Air Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE17 CLUBS Jayhawk Motorsports place in two competitions BY WESTON PLETCHER wpletcher@kansan.com The Jayhawk Motorsports club looks ahead after capturing consecutive ninth-place finishes in two national events, the Formula Hybrid and the Formula SAE Michigan competitions. Robert Sorem, the team adviser, was ecstatic with his team's performance and finish in the Hybrid competition. This is the first time the University of Kansas has designed and built a car for the Formula Hybrid competition, which was held from May 1-4 in Loudon, N.H. "For it being our first time running in the Hybrid competition and not knowing what competition would be like, it was very exciting. We learned a lot and had we known what we know now after the competition, we would have changed a couple things;" Sorem said. Ultimately, the team would have liked to finish in first place, but a top 10 finish is something the school of engineering can use to its advantage. Rimel was the team's leader, overseeing 20 seniors and 25 volunteers. "Taking the step forward to compete in both the SAE and Hybrid competitions this year was a very big step for the Jayhawk Motorsports organization. It took a large commitment and immense effort from a number of dedicated students," said Abby Rimel, a 2011 graduate. "Placing in the top 10 internationally at both competitions was very exciting." In the Formula SAE Michigan competition, which was held May 11-14 in Brooklyn, Mich., the Jayhawk team finished ninth out of 121 registered teams and fifth among qualifiers from the U.S. The competitions were broken up into static and dynamic events, and the scores from each event determine the final standings. In the SAE competition, the University received first place in the autocross division, which is a 60-second race around obstacles with speeds reaching 70 mph. Their time was 15 seconds faster than the best time from last year's competition. The team also finished fourth in presentation and eighth in endurance. "It is a great reflection of the University and the KU School of Engineering," Rimel said. "This level of performance will keep the bar high for future years of Jayhawk Motorsports teams." "At competitions, a lot of things have to go very right to do well. It is a mixture of preparation, a competitive vehicle, good drivers, a cohesive team and a little luck for competition to go well." Finishing in the top 10 wasn't a shock for Rimel. The team had high expectations for the event. "We were confident that the team would build competitive vehicles for competition," Rimel said. "At competitions, a lot of things have to go very right to do well. It is a mixture of preparation, a competitive vehicle, good drivers, a cohesive team and a little luck for competition to go well." ABBY RIMEL 2011 graduate The Jayhawk team now has its sights set on the Formula SAE California competition held in Fontana from June 15-18. "Testing is back in full swing during the coming weeks to tweak and prepare the SAE vehicle for the competition," Rimel said. "We are very much looking forward for a chance to take the top spot in California." Sorem said the competition will be stiff in California, as all of the tops schools will be at the competition on June 15. "We know the best schools will be there, both internationally and from the United States. Most of the teams from the U.S. are undergraduate level, whereas the international teams are mostly graduate students," Sorem said. For Rimel, as a graduate, the competitions exercise a number of skills needed for her fast-approaching career. "The project has taught our team so much about teamwork, deadlines,the design process, manufacturing and enduring a high stress environment with very high expectations in place. This project has been an incredible experience and an absolute honor to be a part of," she said. 3 what's black and white and has an online cousin? THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN U.D.K. Play f t 1196124 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what the er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. rig! al. PEACE CORPS Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 18 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BASEBALL Colton Murray and T.J.Walz continue ball careers in the Major Leagues BY HANNAH WISE hwise@kansan.com Although the baseball team finished their season on May 23 with a 10-6 loss to Kansas State, right-handed pitchers junior Colton Murray and senior T.J. Walz will continue their baseball careers in the Major Leagues. A. Both were drafted Tuesday, June 7 in the second day of the MLB draft. Murray was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies as the last pick in 13th round and was the 142nd pick overall. The Oakland Athletics picked up Walz as the 15th pick of the 15th round and 466th overall. Murray made 20 appearances playing for the layaways, eighteen of which Murray MILKY PARKS He concludes his career at Kansas with a 3.89 ERA over the course of 80 games. He tallied 11 saves, the fourth most career saves in the school record books. Walz were from the bullpen. On his career, Walz holds the school Walz led the Jayhawk pitching staff with 85 strikeouts in 90 and 2/3 innings in the 2011 season. He went 6-5 in 14 starts and finished with a 3.97 ERA. records for innings pitched (328 1/3), games started (50), strikeouts (307). He also tied the record for career wins at 26. Walz was also drafted in the 50th round after his junior season but declined to continue playing with the Jayhawks. The baseball team will wait to hear from KU signees Cody Kukuk and Connor McKay after they were drafted in the seventh and 24th rounds respectively. Kukuk was selected by the Boston Red Sox and McKay by the Colorado Rockies. Bullard The draft concludes Wednesday with the final 20 rounds. See Kansan.com for additional draft updates throughout the day. Sophomore Kevin Kuntz of Tulsa, Okla., tags out a would-be base stealer in the first game of the double header between Kansas and AAMU on May 15 at Hoglund Ball Park. The final score was 19-3 in favor of Kansas. KANSAN FILE PHOTO KANSANCLASSIFIEDS HOMES housing SALE for sale SALE announcements M - jobs 785-864-4358 ji ID ... HAWKCHALK.COM textbooks CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM JOBS BECOME A BARTENDER. UP TO $300/DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. 800-965-6520 EXT 108. 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Remodeled homes 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Models Available View plans, pricing, and amenities @ sunriseapartments.com View plans, pricing and amenities @ sunriseapartments.com or call 841-8400 hauukchalk.com successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. FORT WORTH "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2011 PAGE 19 ← FOOTBALL Defensive coordinator coach retires after 35 years in game BY MATTHEW GALLOWAY mgalloway@kansan.com Defensive coordinator Carl Torbush retired from the Kansas football coaching staff June 1 after announcing that he had been diagnosed with low-grade prostate cancer. "I don't know exactly how long it will take to get cleared up, but I've got a strong faith." Torbush said in a press conference Tuesday afternoon. Torbush said he expects to make a full recovery and will stay in Lawrence to receive his treatment. Cornerback coach Vic Shealy will replace Torbush as defensive coordinator, with defensive line coach Buddy Wyatt being promoted to codefensive coordinator. "It's tough under these circumstances to be sitting up here with Carl going through what he's going through, but he's a good man and a good football coach," Wyatt said. Upon learning of the diagnosis, Torbush decided retirement was in his family's best interest, he said. He informed head coach Turner Gill of his diagnosis and his decision three weeks ago. "The toughest thing was going in and talking to him," Torbush said. "It was kind of like getting ready to go into the principal's office. I really didn't want to go in there, but I had to breathe deep and go in there to do what I needed to do. And that was a tough, tough meeting." Gill said he was initially shocked at the news and worried about the health of a man he considers a mentor and a friend. "When you're talking about health, you have to put all the other selfish things away," Gill said. "I'm more concerned about his health and making sure he's going to be OK. That was a more important thing to me." Torbush joined the coaching staff prior to last season when Gill was announced as the new head coach. "Even though it's been a short term here, it's been a very, very important term," Gill said. "I appreciate what he's all about and I know that he is a person that will continue to have KU in his heart and in his mind." Torbush also vacated his additional position as linebackers' coach, a void Gill said he hopes to have filled by the end of the week. Torbush has coached for more than 35 years, including head coaching positions at Louisiana Tech (1987) and North Carolina (1998-2000), according to the Athletics Department. With Shealy, the defense is being left in good hands, Torbush said. He feels the team is more athletic than last season as a whole and expects the program to rebound soon. "I know the word patience is not really in the English vocabulary anymore, but that's what I think needs to happen," Torbush said. "A couple more years of recruiting here and you are going to see some great things happen." Chris Bronson/KANSAN FILE PHOTO First National Bank. AS ALL THLETICS.COM KU ANS OTR Defensive coordinator Carl Torbush announces his retirement last week at a press conference at the Anderson Family Football Complex. Torbush retired due to health reasons, and he had more than 35 years of experience in coaching football. 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W/ DJ GTRAIN SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY QUEST the Granada 1020 MASSACHUSETTS, LAWRENCE, KS 66044 GET TICKETS FROM THE GRANADA ONLINE OR TICKET MASTER TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE DOORS OPEN AT 11:30PM THEGRANADA.COM IGE Bone thugs~n~harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR WITH A LIVE BAND the Granada JUNE 13 THURSDAY Greek Fire (ex members of Story of the Year) The Runaway Sons Various Blonde ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY $10 FACE FACE LAUGH LAUGH NOAA ADVANCE TRIBAL RELATIONS 图 3 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later; some studen know what they want t. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Gina Littlejohn, the campus PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire rig! al Submit your Summer Photos! to WeeklySpecials@kansan.com and see your photos in next week's Jayplay In Photo: VISCOM in Two Rivers Wisconsin. Doin' some old school Typography WEEKLY SPECIALS M THURSDAY $15 T Mudstomp Monday $2 W Girl Prov $2 H NO CONTROL: Bad Religion Cover Band $3 F Face to Face - $20 U Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. M Medium 12" 2 topping Pizza & 2 Drinks for $8.99 T 2 10" 2 topping Pizzas & 2 Drinks for $12.99 W .375 Special sm. 1Topping Pizza, $3.75 med. 1Topping Pizza, $5.99 lg. 1Topping Pizza, $7.99 H Large 16" 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Drinks, $13.05 F Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. S Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. U $21.99 2-Large, 1-Topping Pizzas and Free Wheat Stix M $12.99 Large anything, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad T $14.99 2 Medium 2-Topping Pizzas, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad W $14.99 X-Large 5-Topping or Specialty, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad H Roll the dice, get a double for 50% off entire ticket, if not 25% off carryout and dine-in. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad F $19.99 Large Specialty & Large 1-Topping, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad S Buy Any Large or X-Large Pizza got the 2nd pizza 1/2 price (equal or lesser value) WEEKLY SPECIALS Submit your Summer Photos! to WeeklySpecials@kansan.com and see your photos in next week's Jayplay In Photo: VISCOM in Two Rivers Wisconsin. Doin' some old school Typography U Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. M Medium 12" 2 topping Pizza & 2 Drinks for $8.99 T 2 10" 2 topping Pizzas & 2 Drinks for $12.99 W .375 Special Sm. 1 Topping Pizza, $3.75 med. 1 Topping Pizza, $5.99 lg. 1 Topping Pizza, $7.99 H Large 16" 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Drinks, $13.05 F Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. S Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. U $21.99 2-Large, 1-Topping Pizzas and Free Wheat Stix M $12.99 Large anything, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad T $14.99 2 Medium 2-Topping Pizzas, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad W $14.99 X-Large 5-Topping or Specialty, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad H Roll the dice, get a double for 50% off entire ticket, if not 25% off carryout and dine-in, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad F $19.99 Large Specialty & Large 1-Topping, $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad S Buy Any Large or X-Large Pizza get the 2nd pizza 1/2 price (equal or lesser value) "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4909 | jagdreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK Buy groceries for on-campus sustenance NCAA Outdoor Championships total wrap up Prepare for your school day by purchasing snacks in bulk and preparing simple meals. NEWS 110 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 Ten track and field athletes return from Iowa with new school records SPORTS | 15 2 WWW.KANSAN.COM VOLUME 123,ISSUE 154 CITY CYCLING Stay lean and green This summer, join the trend of students using bikes to get mobile and save cash as gas gets more expensive, these people use pedal power. 10 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what they are going to do. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire rigl al: PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 Today's Weather THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 图示为海龟在海上游泳的场景。 8664 On the cover Sunny TABLE OF CONTENTS Thursday 8471 Scattered Thunderstorms Scattered Thunderstorms Despite the heat, a growing number of students are riding bikes — choosing sweating up hills over sweating over gas prices. Check out page 6 to learn more about getting starting riding bikes and how to maintain them. Cover photo by Chris Bronson/KANSAN Friday 9174 Partly Cloudy CHECK KANSAN.COM DAILY FOR MORE STORIES weather.com Quote of the Week "A doctor can bury his mistakes but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines." Frank Lloyd Wright a Opinion: Condoms are classy Columnist James Castie is anti-STIs, pro-safe sex. Check out the reasons why. Fact of the Week Average house size has doubled in the US since the 1970s. 5 — bikeroute.com 9 Mike Getto, assistant KU football coach from 1929-1939 and 1947-1950, brought the Jayhawk back to his hometown of Jeannette, PA, where it was adopted by the high school and remains their Can you hear me now? KUiinfo Sports coverage includes stories on the volleyball team's trip to Europe. Sports: Track, volleyball and more The World Health Organization says cell phones can be harmful to your health. Most students say they don't care. 7 15 FIRST AID CENTER ON THE RECORD CAMPUS POLICE RECORDS SHOW: a DUI arrest on Monday at Irving Hill Road and Naismith Drive. an open-container arrest on Monday in the 1200 block of Oread Avenue. a DUI arrest on Sunday in the 1400 block of Jayhawk Boulevard. an open-container arrest on Sunday in the 1400 block of Alumni Place. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN D. M. Scott Assignment Editor Brooke Abney Business Manager Stephanie Schulz Design Chief Hannah Wise Web Editor Matt LaBuda Sales Manager Malcolm Gibson News Adviser & General Manager Jon Schitt Sales & Marketing Adviser Contact Us Louise Krug Copy Chief Contact Us editor@kansan.com editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) 864-4810 Twitter: TheKansan_News Become a fan of The University Daily Kansan on Facebook Facebook. t f The University Daily Kansas is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr., Lawrence, Kan., 66045. The University Daily Kansas ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and examdays and weekly the summer session excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansas, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sumside Dr. 2017 KIDS KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS KHIK is the student voice in radio. Whether it's rock 'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events. KHOK 7.5 for you KUJH Check out KUJH-TV on knology of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've other news. Also see KUJH- Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at tv.ku.edu. In the swing of things high school and remains their immacot to this day. 12000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Ave. Lawrence Kan...6045 NOT Chris Bronson/KANSAN Cole Hambolton, a Lawrence resident, returns a serve from his friend at the tennis courts Tuesday afternoon outside Watkins Health Center. Tennis courts are free to the public and parking is free on the weekends and on the weekdays begins at 4 p.m. --- successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. THE GAME OF Basketball BASKETBALL The game of basketball is a sport that involves two teams, each with 12 players, competing to score points by shooting the ball into the basket. The objective is to score the most points during the game. Each team starts with an equal number of shots. The first player in each team attempts to shoot the ball from the basket. If the ball goes into the net, the player scores one point for their team. If the ball goes out of the basket, the team fails to score. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins. The scoring system is based on the number of points scored by each team. A team with 6 points wins, a team with 5 points wins, a team with 4 points wins, and so on. The game is played on a court with a net dividing the playing area. The ball can be thrown or kicked from the net. The players must try to reach the net and prevent the opponent from scoring. The game ends when the net is broken, and the winning team scores the most points. The scoreboard shows the current score and the time remaining in the game. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS·GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE 3 LOCAL BRIEFS PARKING Fines for violations to increase in August Students beware — parking fines are set to increase this-coming fall. Starting Aug. 1, all fines will increase by at least $5. Fines that will increase by $5 include expired meters, wrong zone tickets and no valid permit. Fines for other offenses will increase more. Tickets that warrant a greater fine will have a greater increase, said Margretta de Vries, parking commission's secretary. The ticket for blocking a fire lane will increase by $35. The ticket for wrongfully parking in a handicapped spot will increase by $50. Forged, altered or stolen parking permits will receive the most severe increase. Starting next year the cost of the permit that was forged, altered or stolen will be added to the $100 fine. This will make the fine for a forged gold permit $385, $100 for the fine and $285 for the cost of the gold permit. Since August, the department issued 20 tickets for forged tickets, de Vries said. The additional money will go into the regular parking budget that pays for a variety of things from wages to snow removal in parking lots. The increase will help mend the gap in the parking department's decreasing revenue. The last across-the-board increase was in 1997 when parking increased all fines by $5, de Vries said. Christy Nutt CRIME Few changes following shots fired near campus Staff at the Oread, 1200 Oread Ave., and Lawrence Police Department have kept security much the same after gunshots were fired outside the hotel's Cave nightclub earlier this month. "We feel like we are doing a good job with security," Nancy Longhurst, general manager for the Oread, said. There are cameras inside the nightclub and five security guards on duty whenever the Cave is open, Longhurst said. Lawrence police have not added additional patrol officers to the area, Sgt. Matt Sarna, a spokesman for the Lawrence police, said. "We don't put additional officers at a location just because of one incident," Sarna said. The shots were fired outside of the Cave nightclub near 12th and Indiana streets around 2:15 a.m. June 5. No one was injured. No suspects have been linked to the shots. Lawrence police are still investigating. "Be careful when you are out drinking. Always know your surrounding and who you are with," Sarna said. Christy Nutt FUNDING Med Center wins grant for new drug research The University of Kansas Medical Center is one of five medical schools from around the country to receive a nearly $20 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. The Medical Center found out today that over the next five years it will receive a $19.8 million grant that will help drug research throughout the region. The grant is a Clinical and Translational Science Award from the NIH. Richard Barohn, chairman of the KUMC department of neurology, and Lauren Aaronson, professor in the KU School of Nursing and department of health policy and management, were the lead investigators for the grant. The application process was open to all 120 medical schools around the country and it was narrowed down to 60 until today when the University of Kansas found out they would be one of five recipients of the grant. "We knew the medical schools like Harvard and Yale had good track records, so we had to prove to the NIH that we also have a good track record." Barohn said. "We knew we were a bit of an underdog, but at the end of the day we were one of the five schools." The research will be open to researchers from the Lawrence campus, Wichita, and surrounding region schools, Barohn said. The NIH developed the program in 2006. Every five years the University of Kansas Medical School will be eligible to reapply for the infrastructure grant. Weston Pletcher PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER WHEN TO JUICE - when it's hot as $#!@ outside: the Mango Rita you just CAN'T take another greasy burger: the Crosstrainer when last night was a little TOO fun: the Hangover Blend DOWNTOWN | 23rd & KASOLD | 6th & WAKARUSA JUICE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PRESENTS: BIZZY BONE | LAYZIE BONE | FLESH N' BONE Bone thugs-n-harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR WITH A LIVE BAND SPECIAL GUESTS STEDDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY QUEST SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH the Granada GET TICKETS FROM THE GRANADA ONLINE OR TICKETMASTER TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE DOORS OPEN AT 8:30PM. 1020 MASSACHUSETTS, LAWRENCE, KS 66044 THEGRANADA.COM IGE Bone thugs~n~harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR SPECIAL GUESTS STEDDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN SPECIAL GUESTS STEEDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY GUEST SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH the Granada GET TICKETS FROM THE GRANADA ONLINE OR TICKETMASTER TICKET IS ALREADY AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE DOORS OPEN AT 10:30AM 1020 MASSACHUSETTS, LAWRENCE, KS 66044 THEGRANADA.COM IGE the Granada . a live talk show DARK TIME with JAY MAUS TICKETS ONLY $1 TONIGHT! JUNE 17 SON VENEZUELA latin dance | merengue | salsa | calipso DOORS OPEN AT 9PM 高 SALSA Son Venezuela Friday June 17 9pm Grandes 18+ MERENGUE CALIFORNIA LATIN DANCE SALSA JUNE 30 FREDDIE McGREGGOR FARID JAZZI SCHOOL OF KINGSTON JULY 13 CHRIS WEBBY Be the first to know about upcoming shows and events! Like the GRANADA THEATER on Facebook - Follow @thegranada on Twitter 1. / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Gina Littlejohn, the campus campaign coordinator for Teach PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire college. ar righ al: PAGE 4 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 NEWS NEAR&FAR (Miami, Fla.) The suspected leader of a Colombian cocaine cartel had planned to plead guilty Tuesday to a drug conspiracy charge, but opted at the last minute to go to trial instead because the deal prosecutors offered meant he would likely die in prison. (St. Petersburg, Russia) Two leaders of a neo-Nazi gang were sentenced Tuesday to life in jail for a rash of hate killings that terrorized minorities in Russia's second-largest city. An exasperated U.S. District Judge Patricia Seitz warned Jaime Alberto Marin Zamora that the latest continuance in his case — the third — would be his last. largest city. The St. Petersburg City Court said Alexei Voevodin and Artym Promkohrenko headed a gang that enlisted Russian supremacists and football fans aged 16 to 22 who preyed on non-Slavs with dark skin or Asian features, kicking and stabbing them to death. The court also sentenced another 10 gang members to up to 18 years in jail for their roles in dozens of attacks over three years. (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) A landless peasant activist was killed by a gunshot to his head outside his home in Brazil — the fifth murder in a month likely tied to the conflict in the Amazon. (Souza, se for-s set-caja pes lic (Tunis, Tunisia) Tunisia's deposed president will be tried in absentia next week on charges of embezzlement and drug trafficking, an The June 20 trial — the first of many for a range of charges — will be open to the public, said Justice Ministry spokesman Kadhem Zine El Abidine. Zine El Abidine Ben Ali could face between five to 20 years in prison if convicted. GRE $ ^{\mathrm {T M}} $ LSAT $ ^{\mathrm {T M}} $ GMAT $ ^{\mathrm {T M}} $ TEST PREPARATION That's Right on Target. KU CONTINUING EDUCATION The University of Kansas ION 100097 Register early! Save $100! Test preparation classes now enrolling. The latest quakes — the strongest of which was 6.0 in magnitude — left tens of thousands without electricity on a winter night when temperatures approached freezing. By afternoon, around 7,000 households were still without power. The power company Orion said it was providing generators to fill some of the can. O (Wellington, New Zealand) Power was mostly restored to New Zealand's quake-damaged city of Christchurch on Tuesday after strong aftershocks brought down more buildings and killed a nursing home resident. Water supplies were also compromised, and Mayor Bob Parker was encouraging people to boil their water. www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) · 785-864-5823 Associated Press MEDICAL SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR BIKE BASIC SPRAVENSETTTE WE MODEL LANDING GENERAL vibram twelvingere® The Treksport for men & women. $99.98 Get Fit In The Foot $99.98 Get Fit In The Foot. Get as close as possible to barefoot walking, running, or hiking with new options from Vibram and Merrell! 804 Massachusetts St. • Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 • www.sunfloweroutdoorbike.com successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 410 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 TECHNOLOGY PAGE 5 Students ignore warnings of cell phone radiation risks BY BRITTANY NELSON bnelson@kansan.com Every morning, Kellen McMahon wakes up to his buzzing iPhone on his pillow. As he heads out the door to start a new day, he always makes sure his cell phone is with him. And he doesn't plan to change that habit — even if it may be dangerous. The World Health Organization announced recently that cell phones are a "possible carcinogen" that may cause cancer. Cell phones are now in the same category as lead, engine exhaust and chloroform. This recent finding may especially affect young people who have had cell phones from an early age. For people who talk on their phones more than text, the reactions are still the same. "There's a lot of things that cause tumors and there's not that much evidence," McMahon, a junior from Overland Park, said. "I'll still use my phone all the time." Sarah Freijat, a senior from Overland Park, talks on her Blackberry Storm for almost five hours per day. She said that she thinks this finding is "stupid." "I won't even think about it after this," she said. Freijat, like McMahon, also uses her cell phone as an alarm clock and keeps it on her pillow every night. "The news comes out with something new that causes cancer every other week — cats, Diet Coke, and reusable water bottles," she said. Students polled on Kansan.com agreed with Freijat's lack of concern and assumption that the warnings don't apply to them. "As technology develops, they can fix the problem." McMahon said. But experts at the World Health Organization advise people to take precautionary measures such as using a hands-free headset, keeping the mobile phone away from the body and not using the cell phone in a car without an external antenna. Still, McMahon and others say they're not concerned. "We won't have to worry about this for years," McMahon said. Research in the possible side effects of cell phone radiation have made headlines but hasn't changed the habits of many students despite the warnings, the habits of keeping phones nearby are still prevalent. KEEP YOUR MONEY All upfront fees waived with savings of $550! ON BUS ROUTE FREE TANNING STUDENT BUSINESS CENTER STATE-OF-THE-ART FITNESS CENTER PET FRIENDLY ABERDEEN 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE All upfront fees waived with booking AppStore NEW CAMERA / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, son. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Four years of degree later, son know what the college, anr rigl al Gina Littlejohn, the campus coordinator for Teach a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechem because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE6 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 TRANSPORTATION THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN To save money, get on your bike. Here's how. BY SHAUNA BLACKMON sblackmon@kansan.com Caroline Dickinson used to drive all the time — to work, to go out with friends, anywhere she could. Now, with gas at almost $4 a gallon, she has changed her motorist ways and started finding other means to get around. "I like riding bikes because I get to save the planet," Dickinson, a junior from Olathe, said. "I'm not driving a super heavy car around everywhere just to move me from place to place." Dickinson hasn't always been environmentally conscious, but after living in Lawrence for a few years, she converted. For more than two years, she drove the three miles to her Starbucks job. Now she is trying to make the trip by bike as often as possible. When she does drive, Dickinson motors around in a 2007 Toyota Yaris, which gets about 39 miles to the gallon. But even with good gas mileage, it isn't fiscally feasible for her to drive anymore. Dickinson isn't alone. As gas prices rise so does transportation creativity. The past few weeks, local bike shops have seen an increase in business as riders pull old bikes out of storage for the first time in years. Some are even buying new bikes. Area bike shops saw a similar trend in 2008 when gas reached a national average of $4.11 a gallon. "2008 was such a whirlwind, it was insane for us," Adam Hess, a Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop bike mechanic, said. "People start seeing the bottom line on their monthly expenses and try to find a way around that's cheaper." Brian Shay, the owner of The Re-Cyclery, primarily a used bike shop at 315 N. Second St., said in 2008 there was a 25 to 30 percent increase in sales. He's hoping this year will be similar. "I've already seem a lot of people cleaning out their garages and sheds bringing their bikes in to get fixed," he said. REPAIR OR UPGRADE? Tweet of the week LeBron? Selby? Overrated? Drop us a line @UDKplay Tweet of the week LeBron? Selby? Overrated? Drop us a line @UDKplay successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. uoff Those rescuing abandoned bikes from storage still need to do a few checks before riding. "Tires are usually the biggest things and cables and chains tend to rust up," Shay said. At The Re-Cyclery and Sunflower Bike Shop, 804 Massachusetts St., those replacements can be relatively inexpensive. Shay said for about $100 a $550 bike can be as good as new. If repairing an old bike isn't an option, Aaron Miller, also a Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop bike t mechanic, said consumers should ask a few questions before buying a new one. Road surfaces, distance and transporting materials are all factors. "There has been a growing trend in hybrid-style bikes, lighter weight and simplified bikes meant for paved use," Miller said. "There isn't really any one bike that is the bike for beginners or commuters, but these newer hybrid-style bikes are definitely the most ideal for just getting around." A new hybrid bike at Sunflower starts at about $400. The Re-Cyclery doesn't usually have many hybrids but it does have used road bikes, which can be just as good for riding on paved roads, Shay said. Because most of The Re-Cyclery's bikes are used, the starting price is about $150. ROAD RULES In addition to repairs and replacements, Hess said cyclists need to understand that riding a bike in traffic isn't like driving a car. "You can't be an offensive bike rider. The biggest thing I see is KU Biking to campus not only saves money, but also gives a daily dose of exercise and makes getting around campus easier. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER & I9 Massachusetts | Lawrence, K | 785.842.4900 | joydrearning ORGANIZATION OF BASKETBALL LEAGUE WEEKLY NEWS WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8 WEEK 9 WEEK 10 RECORDING OF WINNERS WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8 WEEK 9 WEEK 10 BASKETBALL TEAMS WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8 WEEK 9 WEEK 10 PLAYOFF MATCHES WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8 WEEK 9 WEEK 10 "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER A10 Massachusetts | Lawrence, Ks | 785.842.4909 | joyarearning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE7 people who try to assert themselves on the road but it just doesn't work. Don't assert yourself. You're at the mercy of huge, slower stopping vehicles around you." The city requires cyclists to obey all traffic laws. Cyclists can ride on either the street or the sidewalk, except for Massachusetts Street where bikes are not allowed on sidewalks. Lawrence has a few bike trails, but most are not helpful to commuters. However, cyclists can plan a route using a city bike map, which gives information on traffic flow and speed. Maps can be found online or at any bike shop. The two main pitfalls of riding to work are bad weather and transporting materials. Most bikes have rack components, which can hold a variety of different sized bags. It might not even be a bad idea to stash a rain jacket in there just in case. According to Trek bicycle manufacturer, 40 percent of trips are within two miles of the home and 25 percent are within one mile. Depending on the route, it might take a little longer to reach a destination by bike than by car but in some cases it can actually be quicker. "You can skip the delays, that's what I like about bikes." Hess said. "You are never sitting behind somebody waiting on somebody else, you can go your own way." While biking might require some extra effort, the benefits quickly add up. Switching from a four-mile car commute to bicycle will save about 66 gallons of gas per year, keep 51 pounds of carbon monoxide out of the air, and burn 36,000 calories over the course of a year, the equivalent of 10 pounds in fat, according to the Trek website. "We are a society build on cars not bicycles," Hess said. "But the more people we can get riding bikes,the more positive effects we will see as far as people buying things locally and urban areas becoming smaller, more village-like." Parking With high prices to keep cars fueled and maintained, bicycling is becoming a much cheaper investment for transportation. Chris Bronson/KANSAI CAMPUS Untrue ideas about buildings abound BY MONISHA BRUNER editor@kansan.com Are you scared to walk through the Campanile? Are you convinced that Wescoe Hall was meant to be a parking garage? Do you tell people that Strong Hall was built backwards? If so, you are an enabler of campus myths. Several false and misunderstood myths are spread throughout campus, but here's a guide to several to help separate fact from fiction. MYTH 1: If you walk under the Campanile before you graduate, you won't get that diploma. Who can honestly say if this myth is true or false? According to carillon.ku.edu the Campanile was built in 1950 as a memorial to KU students' families who died in World War II. Some students believe if you enter into the Campanile before you graduate, you will not graduate. One brave soul, Ariana Olivas, a senior from Andrews, Texas, dared to test this myth. Olivas said she just wanted to go look inside of the Campanile. Later, a friend said, "You can't do that, you won't graduate." Her friend said she was told about the myth by a guide while on a campus visit. Olivas said she 'is nervous about the experience, "I kind of don't believe it, but I already walked through it, so I hope it's not true." MYTH 2: Wescoe Hall was designed to be a parking garage. This myth is misunderstood. According to the 1966 University of Kansas application for a construction grant, Wescoe Hall was designed to be a building for the Humanities Department. In 1966, the University applied for a construction grant to build the department. This building was needed to give academic space to free the graduate programs from the buildings they were in. The application for the grant said there would be "two five-story classroom buildings, a high-rise office administration building, and a concourse connecting the first five levels of the building." According to documents in the Spencer Research Library, later in 1967, then-Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the building would now be 25-stories and the lower five-story wings would have many windows and be a comparable size to Strong Hall. In late November architects added an underground parking garage to accommodate 150 cars, a student mail center, and a 300-student electronic classroom lab. In March 1968, the building was cut from 25 stories to 15. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor at the time, said with limited funding available they questioned if the original plans were realistic. After several redesigns of the building, the state paid the architects for SEE MYTHS 18 IF YOUR FRIENDS JUMPED OFF A CLIFF, WOULD YOU? don't go with the pack. call or e-mail to reserve textbooks today BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy New & Used Textbooks 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@baatthebookstore.com A YES MBA avila university "Avila's accounting curriculum enhanced my analytical thinking and introduced me to various concepts and theories which allowed me to not only think outside the box, but to also consider various alternatives before making a final decision." Kristyn Hawkins MBA in Accounting, 2006 Financial Accounting Analyst, Sr. Honeywell FMST MASTERS IN BUSINE Find out how an Avila MBA can make you more marketable in today's work force. Call or e-mail JoAnna Giffin at 816-501-3601, or JoAnna.Giffin@avila.edu. AVILA UNIVERSITY Opening Doors A 11901 Wornall Road, Kansas City, MO avila.edu/mba · mba@avila.edu · 816-501-3601 Sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet 周(贰) / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, some students do not know what the er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Gina Littlejohn, the campus instructor for Teach The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because right al. PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire PAGE8 MYTHS CONTINUED 17 their time and hired new architects in the summer of 1969 to redesign the building. The new architect plan was four-stories high and priced higher than the previous plans. The new architect's plan included the parking garage but was cut for cost and made into offices. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 MYTH 3: There was a tunnel from Bailey Hall to the Kansas Union. According to the National Register of Historic Places, was constructed in 1899 on what was then the far west end of campus. The national register has every detail of the building, what it is made of (limestone) to remodeling history. In 1956 the building was remodeled to add a new front entry and stairway, roof, and floors. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN morial Union frame was built in 1926. Additions to the building were made in 1950, 1958, and 1970. In the 1956 December issue of KU Alumni Magazine the column titled "A day in the life of a student union man" said there are six floors in the Kansas Union. The article mentions the bowling alley, bookstore, cafeteria, living room, and ballroom. There is no mention of a tunnel in the historic data for either building. This myth is false. MYTH 4: Strong Hall was built backwards. This myth is false, but Strong Hall was not built the way its original architect designed. According to documents in the Spencer Reserch Library, by 1904 Fraser Hall was too small to house everything and the University needed a new building for administrative offices and science classes. Architect M.P. McArdle designed a building with an emphasis on natural lighting provided by skylights and large windows. In 1909 the state gave the University money to build Strong Hall, but only enough for the east wing. The east wing was not complete until 1911. The west wing was built in 1908 and the center was built five years later. The photo (right or left) is how Strong Hall looked in 1922. In 1940 the four way entrance on the north side of Strong Hall was replaced with a new front entrance because the balcony and stairway were badly cracked. The building was always designed to face Mount Oread. Oracle Contributed photo Spencer Research Library An artist rendering of plans for a much-taller Wescoe Hall show the truth in the oftquoted "myth" that the building was originally supposed to be bigger. keep your money keep your money All upfront fees waived with savings of $450 ON BUS ROUTE NEW UNITS AVAILABLE UTILITIES INCLUDED PET FRIENDLY FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM leasing office located at: 2300 Wakarusa Drive // 785.838.4800 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. ey keep your money All upfront fees waived with savings of $450 ON BUS ROUTE NEW UNITS AVAILABLE UTILITIES INCLUDED PET FRIENDLY FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM leasing 785.838.4800 AppStore successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY 9 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jagdlearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 519 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydrearing THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE 9 O opinion FREE FOR ALL apps.facebook.com/dailykansan I'm so tired of being bitter about relationships. I've been single for nearly two years now and haven't had a single girl take interest in me. I am decent looking, have good morals and a steady job. What gives? Hmm.I have a feeling that you think you're a better catch than you actually are. Maybe you just need to get out there? And don't friend zone... That's a big problem with men these days. They friend zone and then it's donezo. Damn, having sex with my flashlight makes me gay? Meh. Maybe I can get some more action playing both sides of the field. More like Captain Desperate of the U.S.S. Relentless. I've never had a blowjob. To my bestest friend: The only time you disappoint me is when your batteries run out. But then you make up for it with extra jolts of pleasure. This drink is to you Mr. Purple. My problem is that I'm kinda shy. I can't just walk up to a girl.I've got to have a lead-in of some sort, usually a joke or something like that. Today is Lebron James Day. That means everyone gets to leave 12 minutes early. Since when has FFA turned into an episode of 'Dr. Phil'? Summer school sucks. There is only one girl in my class and she is really not all that hot. This is going to hinder me in the sex department big time. No shame in safe sex, so stop STI spread SEXUALITY Douglas A. Walker The first weekend in June is the KC Gay Pride in Kansas City, an internationally-celebrated festival for LGBTQAs in mostly urban areas. However, this year instead of walking around with my shirt off, drinking Diet Coke and flirting with strangers, I was helping to keep Kansas City STI-free. Aside from my primary volunteer duties of testing and counseling for HIV, I spent the closing hours of Pride Sunday passing out the remaining estimated 3,000 safer-sex kits. Passing out condoms and lubricant to strangers was actually a great time; however, not surprisingly, reactions to offers ranged from enthusiasm to disgust and from boldness to shyness. Contrary to popular belief, Pride is fairly diverse, with many straight singles and couples, older and younger folks, Hispanics, blacks, whites—you name it. And, regardless of age, race, perceived sexuality or sex of the BY JAMES CASTLE icastle@kansan.com person, many responded with excitement toward the random handout, often bluntly declaring they "love to have sex" or that they "may need this tonight." I love this reaction because it reinforces the idea that sex is not a bad thing. We know most people have sex, but it's not socially acceptable or "appropriate" to discuss, and people who do show a likeness for sexual activity are assumed to have lots of sex with lots of different people and are susceptible to names such as slut, whore, skank, etc. Many others followed this normative behavior when offered free safer-sex materials, making faces of disgust that read, "Oh, we don't do that!" or blushing and giggling out of embarrassment, even if they were snogging with the person next to them just a couple of minutes prior. Perhaps some people were honest in claiming they don't have sex or having sex at that time would be against their beliefs. But, if their reactions were—as I would expect the case to be for most —in fact following the established norms in contradiction to their actual behavior, then we have a problem. When sex is constructed as negative, people are deterred from accepting condoms in public or purchasing them at a store because they may be embarrassed, or they may be trying to live up to the standards of what constitutes a "good" person, avoiding any behavior that may conflict with that social image, such as condom use, which could imply they like to have sex (and are thus seen as "skanky"). Pretending to not like sex and avoiding taking or buying condoms to accomplish the image of "good" person is just pure idiocy. And there is no reason to feel shy about people knowing you use condoms. Condom use demonstrates a concern for your safety and the safety of others; a prudent person engages in safe sex. In a college environment, where STIs are isolated and spread rapidly amongst younger people, it's important to reject an understanding of sex as a negative construct and embrace a more intellectual and considerate approach, one which understands sex to be common practice and latex barrier use to be important in that practice. James Castle is a senior from Stilwell in political science and human sexuality. SOCIETY Blame attitudes and behavior for sexual assault, not women The world celebrated along with the Egyptian protestors when Hosni Mubarak stepped down from his 30-year rule in February. A euphoric bubble encompassed the Middle East, inspiring and fueling further revolutions. News organizations praised social media for its part played in the revolutions and images of triumphant crowds and cheering youth were plastered all over the internet and TV stations. But that euphoria was tainted for 18 female protestors who were arrested in Tahrir Square on March 9. According the Amnesty International, a human-rights group, during their detainment, the women were beaten and given electric shocks. MEREDITH PAVELLE For 17 women, the mistreatment did not end there. They were subjected to strip searches, forced to submit to virginity tests and threatened with prostitution charges. BY JESSIE BLAKEBOROUGH jblakeborough@kansan.com The purpose behind these tests was to protect authorities in case any of the women claimed they were raped during their detainment. The military denied all accusations of virginity tests until June 1 when an unidentified Egyptian military general acknowledged the tests occurred. The unnamed general told CNN, "The girls who were detained were not like your daughter or mine. These were girls who had camped out in tents with male protesters." God-freaking-forbid. These women were out protesting alongside their male counterparts for freedom from a dictatorship-like oppression. Surely, the only reason a woman would be out in the streets of a dangerous protest is to sell herself to the men. This brings a whole new level of insult. The fact that the authorities who arrested these women claim that because the women weren't virgins they couldn't be raped is ridiculous, sexist, idiotic. I could go on for days about the injustice of the implications of that claim. Virgins aren't the only ones who can be victims of rape and sexual assault. Amnesty International considers the general's response sexist and legally absurd. This is basically the same argument that a girl who dresses in tight clothing is "asking for it." No woman, anywhere in the world, is asking to be raped. To suggest otherwise is so completely offensive I cannot even begin to address such moronic comments in this column. In situations like this it is easy for the rest of the world to sit back and look shocked, perhaps shaking a head and summoning up a few sympathetic words. But hypocrisy doesn't sit well with me either. Virginity testing might not happening in the U.S. but that doesn't mean that sexism and other behaviors that hint of inequality aren't real problems for American women. Still, we see sexist behaviors run rampant on campus - students objectify women and use derogatory terminology. Sexism is here, it's just not as easy to spot as it was forty years ago. Blakeborough is a junior in international business and journalism from Baltimore. WANT TO VOICE YOUR OPINION? contact editor@kausan.com or at (785) 864-4810... 1 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one Four years s degree later, so know what college. righ al; er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because A. Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 10 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FOOD COSTS Eat this, not that. Prepping lunches off-campus saves dough BY KYLIE NUTT knutt@kansan.com As the summer semester begins and food prices remain high, one way to save money may be to avoid buying food on campus. When buying items at a grocery store, it's best to buy in bulk to get the most for your money. Instead of buying one 20-ounce Coca-Cola bottle on campus for $1.26 in the Underground or $1.25 in a vending machine, it's cheaper to buy a six pack of 24 ounce Coca-Cola bottles for $4.69. In the end, you will be spending an average of 78 cents per bottle plus tax, and gaining 4 more ounces. Soda, bottled water, salads, cookies, chips granola bars and iced coffee were compared in on-campus dining locations and an offcampus grocery store, the Dillons at 4701 West 6th St. Some students are finding this to be the better route. Luke Underwood, a senior from Overland Park, has been buying a soda, pizza and breadsticks from Pizza Hut on campus for lunch so far this summer. He realized he is paying about $15 a week for two lunches. "But really the cheapest is just making your own salads and stuff like that, and just bringing it up to school." Underwood said. Tunde Bakare, a junior from Woodbridge, Virginia, agreed with Underwood. Bakare spends about $9 three times a week for on-campus lunches. Because this summer is Bakare's first semester on campus, he found out fast he will be spending about $27 a week or $216 for 24 lunches for eight weeks during the summer. While some students prefer to save money by buying food off campus, others don't mind paying the price for convenience. Quentin Chediak, a sophomore from Topeka, goes to the Underground about once a week to buy a coffee at the Pulse coffee shop and a sandwich from Brellas Sandwich Crafters. saltwheat from Britans soils. Chediak watches what he spends at the Underground and tries to eat at Mrs.E's when he has more time in between classes because his meal plan there has been paid for already. Milk's Favorite Cookie OREO 6 COOKIES NET WT. 2 (Z)157g) CHOCOLATE SANDWICH COOKIES Chris Bronson/KANSAN ON-CAMPUS VS. OFF-CAMPUS FOOD PRICES 20 ounce bottle of Coca-Cola purchased on campus $1.25 Coca-Cola Six pack of 24-ounce bottles of Coca-Cola purchased off campus $4.69 77 cents per bottle plus tax gaining four more ounces Coca-Cola successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 419 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydrearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE 11 Here's some recipes for cheaper at-home versions of popular fare CRANBERRY SPINACH SALAD INGREDIENTS 1 (6 ounce) package fresh baby spinach 1/2 cup chopped pecans, toasted 1/2 cup dried cranberries 1/3 cup olive or vegetable oil 3 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons red wine or balsamic vinegar 1 tablespoon sour cream 1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard DIRECTIONS In a bowl, combine the spinach, pecans and cranberries. In a jar with a tight-fitting lid, combine the remaining ingredients; shake well. Drizzle over salad and toss to coat; serve immediately. AllRecipes.com [Image of a bowl with dried leaves inside.] ICED COFFEE DIRECTIONS Brew a pot of fresh coffee using 2 tablespoons of dark-roasted ground coffee per cup. Transfer the hot coffee to a carafe or pitcher. Let the coffee stand at room temperature for 3 to 5 hours, or refrigerate it until cold, about 1 1/2 to 3 hours. Fill a tall glass with ice cubes. Pour the chilled coffee into the glass. Stir the coffee to equalize its temperature. Add milk if you like. eHow.com --- Sun Chips GARDEN SALSA and multigrain snack DASANI THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PRESENTS: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PRESENTS: BIZZY BONE | LAYZIE BONE | FLESH N' BONE Bone thugs-n-harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR WITH A LIVE BAND SPECIAL GUESTS STEDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY QUEST GET TICKETS FROM THE GRANADA ONLINE OR REQUEST MASTER IN KEN ALCIA VAIL AT BEATRAGE DETROIT, NY 48229 THEGRANADA.COM UK ALL DAY IGE Follow @UDKPlay on Twitter and "Like" U.D.K. Play on Facebook for your chance to win tickets! BIZZY BONE | LAYZIE BONE | FLESH N' BONE Bone thugs-n-harmony 2011 RESURRECTION TOUR WITH A LIVE BAND STEDDY P. W/ DJ GTRAIN LONELY HEARTS CLUB DUTCH NEWMAN + JOHNNY QUEST SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH THE Granada GET IN TO STORY THE GRANADA ONLINE ON IKNAMASTER IKENA MAYADE AT BUX DACE DOOR OPEN AT 6 PM 1020 MAISSAHUETTS, LAWRENCE, KS 69034 THEGRANADA.COM LK ALL DAY IGE Follow @UDKPlay on Twitter and "Like" U.D.K. Play on Facebook for your chance to win tickets! 1. 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, sc know wh er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America.Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in lowincome communities.The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire p m gr in ca Wo be me ca WEDNESDAY,JUNE 15,2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE12 Johnson County police to get new'ear cams'to record interactions ASSOCIATED PRESS OLATHE — Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears, in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. "It's a double-edged sword," Taser International Inc. spokesman Steve Tuttle said. "If there is something that is bad (done by police), it will catch it and still protect the public. It's a neutral observer." The cameras, called AXON also provide an evidence chain and help officers fill out paperwork more quickly, said Sgt. Paul Nonnast of the chariff's off "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish." Johnson County is the only SGT. PAUL NONAST Johnson County Sheriff's office of the sheriff's office. Fred Blocks "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish," Nonnast said. A spokesman for the company that makes the devices said the camera also protects the public. department in the Kansas City area to buy the cameras and one of only 16 in the country, although 100 departments are testing them. Tuttle said. "This is a game changer," he said. "Police and suspects behave better when they know it is being recorded." Johnson County Sheriff's Dept. Sgt. Paul Nonnast demonstrates on of the TASER Axon video system cameras. Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. being the units cost about $1,700 each and about $1,300 more a year to store the digital video, The Kansas City Star reported. Johnson County deputies are REMARKABLE ENGAGEMENT! SMOKING SEGARS PROHIBITED! GRAND DRAMATIC SPECTACLE! STEP BACK IN TIME AND ENJOY THE THEATRE OF YESTERYEAR Celebrate the Kansas Sesquicentennial in Downtown Lawrence KANSAS SUMMER THEATRE 2011 DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS Tempted, Tried & True A Comic Melodrama by Bill Johnson ed ue 7:30 p.m. July 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8, 9, 10, 2011 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1 at the Lied Center Box Office, 7854-2887, and online at www.kutheme.com and ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available in a cash only basis — at Liberty Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the public, $10 for高校 students, faculty and staff senior citizens, and $5 for K-12 students. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Senate Activities Fee. The University Theater's 2010-11 season is sponsored by the KU Credit Union. STUDENT SENATE stores it on a Taser website. Video can't be altered by police and can be set to save for specified times. using them in domestic violence calls, on SWAT teams, for warrant searches and to document sobriety tests. The ear camera plugs into a chest unit that connects to a police radio and to a belt computer with a video monitor. It can be mounted on the helmet of a traffic officer, who could show a driver his violation. If a driver throws something out the window, the officer can also use it to get a GPS location. And at the end of the shift, the officer plugs the gear into a docking station that encrypts the video and "We have a solid evidence trail, a chain of custody," Nonnast said. The new product grew out of Taser's popular stun weapon. It had a camera on it but the camera came on only when officers used the Taser, Tuttle said. That led to the idea of a camera on sunglasses or a hat and then to the new product. The camera can also be held to see around corners or into attics. TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy, Sell & Rent New & Used Textbooks 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific peer tutoring, Math, science, language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu Questions? Call (785) 864-4064 contributing to Student Success ...contributing to Student Success THE ACADEMY OF CINEMATIC ART WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jagdrearing Basketball Wisconsin State University Basketball Team The Wisconsin State University basketball team is a highly competitive team that plays in the NCAA. The team has won numerous championships and has a strong record of success. The team's players are known for their athleticism, dedication, and teamwork. The team plays at the Wisconsin State University Basketball Complex, which is located on the campus of Wisconsin State University. The Wisconsin State University basketball team is a highly competitive team that plays in the NCAA. The team has won numerous championships and has a strong record of success. The team's players are known for their athleticism, dedication, and teamwork. The team plays at the Wisconsin State University Basketball Complex, which is located on the campus of Wisconsin State University. 2 "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 817 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jogdreaming PAGE 13 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN E entertainment HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today is a 7 A potentially prosperous possibility beckons. Research and make plans, listing actions. Talk to friends and family to get other views, and then sit with the information a bit. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today is a 7 Don't spend what you don't have yet. Do the homework before you make suggestions. A difficult situation is teaching you something. Learn what you need to know. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Today is a 7. Lay low and play it cool today. Business is building in intensity, and will only pick up, so get what rest you can. Don't fret. It will all work out. CANCER (June 22-July 22) Today is a 7 Make sure you know what's requested before doing the work. Present your view. Constant communication is beneficial. Finish up a big project, and then celebrate. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7 Self-discipline's the best kind. Let the guilt go. Rumors may not match facts, so double-check before accepting. Get clear instructions to save time and money. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7 Keep an objective point of view, and check it out from various angles. You have the concentration, so indulge your curiosity. Ask a friend with experience. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) The moon is going through an eclipse in your third house, making for some intensity in communications. Write it all down, and make sense of it later. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 7 Today is a 7 Don't go crazy while shopping. Consider options carefully, and proceed with caution. Count your cash, and choose priorities. Check the schedule to avoid confusion. SAGITTARIUS JAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 Conflicts threaten to stop you. You have the resources to handle it. You have a winning argument. Keep emotion out of it. Be patient with yourself and others. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) Today is a 7 After all that reflection, you'll find out what's needed. Expect differences of opinion. Your heart is in the work. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 7 Interaction glitches can happen. Friends mean well but may not understand. Don't rely on Facebook to get your thoughts across. Think it over, and speak directly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 6 If you're doubting yourself today, focus on others instead. You could start a family project. Get out of your own head, and listen to your crew. They're here for you. CRYPTOQUIP 6-15 R T Q X G L Q B Z G Y X LC W Q Y X F Q X Z C B E Q K Z F Q B J US Y K Z J CF Q B H C I Q Z T Y X U, Y R C S K W HGJ TQ RGH BQ-ICBHQ-ESK. Yesterday's Cryptoquip: IF AN EMPEROR KICKS SOMEBODY OUT OF THE COUNTRY, I'D SAY HE'S PERFORMING A BANISHING ACT. Today's Cryptoquip Clue: T equals H THE NEXT PANEL "I thought the saying went, 'the best way to live well is revenge." Nick Sambaluk smart, living. Call about our pick your perk special and no up front fees Limited vacancies unlimited FUN Close to Campus Pet Friendly FREE Tanning Poolside Wi-Fi 24 Fitness Center Hawks Pointe hawkspointeapts.com 785.841.5255 1 --- / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, st know wh college. righ al: er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Gina Littlejohn, the campus a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire pɪ m gr in ca Wr be mc ca WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 12 Johnson County police to get new 'ear cams' to record interactions ASSOCIATED PRESS OLATHE — Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears, in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. "It is a double-edged sword," Taser International Inc. spokesman Steve Tuttle said. "If there is something that is bad (done by police), it will catch it and still protect the public. It's a neutral observer." Fred Steinhar/AP Photo The cameras, called AXON, also provide an evidence chain and help officers fill out paperwork more quickly, said Sgt. Paul Nonnast of the sheriff's offi Johnson County is the only "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish." SGT. PAUL NONAST Johnson County Sheriff's office Johnson County Sheriff's Dept. Sgt. Paul Nonnast demonstrates on of the TASER Axon video system cameras. Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. of the sheriff's office. department in the Kansas City area to buy the cameras and one of only 16 in the country, although 100 departments are testing them, Tuttle said. "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish," Nonnast said. "This is a game changer," A spokesman for the company that makes the devices said the camera also protects the public. he said. "Police and suspects behave better when they know it is being recorded." Johnson County deputies are The units cost about $1,700 each and about $1,300 more a year to store the digital video, The Kansas City Star reported. REMARKABLE ENGAGEMENT! SMOKING SEGARS PROHIBITED! GRAND DRAMATIC SPECTACLE! STEP BACK IN TIME AND ENJOY THE THEATRE OF YESTERYEAR Celebrate the Kansas Sesquicentennial in Downtown Lawrence KANSAS SUMMER THEATRE 2011 DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS or Tempted, Tried & True A Comic Melodrama by F. J. Anderson ed ue 7:30 p.m. July 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8, 9, 10, 2011 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1 at the Lied Center Box Office, 7854-62847, and online at www.kutheme.com and Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available — on a cash basis at Liberty Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the public, $10 for KU students, faculty and staff and senior citizens, and $$ for K-12 students. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate ActivityFee. The University Theatre's 2010-11 season is sponsored by the KU Credit Union. KU CREDIT UNION A PROMOTIVE FOR THE ENTREPRENEURS OF KU STUDENT SENATE using them in domestic violence calls, on SWAT teams, for warrant searches and to document sobriety tests. And at the end of the shift, the officer plugs the gear into a docking station that encrypts the video and stores it on a Taser website. Video can't be altered by police and can be set to save for specified times. The ear camera plugs into a chest unit that connects to a police radio and to a belt computer with a video monitor. It can be mounted on the helmet of a traffic officer, who could show a driver his violation. If a driver throws something out the window, the officer can also use it to get a GPS location. "We have a solid evidence trail,a chain of custody," Nonnast said. The camera can also be held to see around corners or into attics The new product grew out of Taser's popular stun weapon. It had a camera on it but the camera came on only when officers used the Taser, Tuttle said. That led to the idea of a camera on sunglasses or a hat and then to the new product. TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy, Sell & Rent New & Used Textbooks 705-959-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific peer tutoring Math, science, & language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu Questions? Call (785) 864-4064 To Student Groups ...contributing to Student Success Mary Ann Crawford successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joyofturning HISTORY OF BAYSIDE BASKETBALL **HISTORY OF BAYSIDE BASKETBALL** BAYSIDE BASKETBALL is a highly competitive basketball team based in Bay Area, California. The team has been named "Bay Area All-Star" twice and "Bay Area All-Time" once. They have a strong record of winning championships and have been named to the National Basketball Association (NBA) multiple times. The team was founded in 1986 by four former Bay Area high school players. Over the years, they have grown from a small group of young players to a well-established team with a strong presence in the NBA. BAYSIDE BASKETBALL has played a significant role in the development of Bay Area basketball. They have helped to improve the skills of many young players and have contributed to the growth of the sport. BAYSIDE BASKETBALL is known for its fast pace, aggressive play, and outstanding performance. They are one of the top teams in Bay Area basketball and are considered a key part of the Bay Area sports scene. BAYSIDE BASKETBAL "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson PAGE 13 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN E entertainment HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today is a 7 A potentially prosperous possibility beckons. Research and make plans, listing actions. Talk to friends and family to get other views, and then sit with the information a bit. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today is a 7 Don't spend what you don't have yet. Do the homework before you make suggestions. A difficult situation is teaching you something. Learn what you need to know. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Today is a 7 Lay low and play it cool today. Business is building in intensity, and will only pick up, so get what rest you can. Don't fret. It will all work out. CANCER (June 22-July 22) Today is a 7 Make sure you know what's requested before doing the work. Present your view. Constant communication is beneficial. Finish up a big project, and then celebrate. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7 Self-discipline's the best kind. Let the guilt go. Rumors may not match facts, so double-check before accepting. Get clear instructions to save time and money. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7 Keep an objective point of view, and check it out from various angles. You have the concentration, so indulge your curiosity. Ask a friend with experience. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 7 SCORPIO (0ct. 23-Nov. 21) The moon is going through an eclipse in your third house, making for some intensity in communications. Write it all down, and make sense of it later. SCURPID (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 7 Don't go crazy while shopping. Consider options carefully, and proceed with caution. Count your cash, and choose priorities. Check the schedule to avoid confusion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 Conflicts threaten to stop you. You have the resources to handle it. You have a winning argument. Keep emotion out of it. Be patient with yourself and others. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 7 After all that reflection, you'll find out what's needed. Expect differences of opinion. Your heart is in the work. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) Today is a 7 Interaction glitches can happen. Friends mean well but may not understand. Don't rely on Facebook-to get your thoughts across. Think it over, and speak directly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 6 If you're doubting yourself today, focus on others instead. You could start a family project. Get out of your own head, and listen to your crew. They're here for you. CRYPTOQUIP 6-15 R T Q X G L Q B Z G Y X LC W Q Y X F Q X Z C B EQ K Z F Q B J US Y K Z J C F Q B H C I Q Z T Y X U, Y R C S K W HGJ TQ RGH BQ-ICBHQ-ESK. Yesterday's Cryptoquip: IF AN EMPEROR KICKS SOMEBODY OUT OF THE COUNTRY, I'D SAY HE'S PERFORMING A BANISHING ACT. Today's Cryptoquip Clue: T equals H THE NEXT PANEL "I thought the saying went, 'the best way to live well is revenge." Nick Sambaluk smart. living. Call about our pick your perk special and no up front fees Limited vacancies unlimited FUN Close to Campus Pet Friendly FREE Tanning Poolside Wi-Fi 24 Fitness Center Hawks Pointe hawkspointeapts.com 785 841 5255 --- 图 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Four years of ch degree later, so know who college. right alr a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in lowincome communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Cote d'Ivoire Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because PEACE CORPS --- pr m gr in ca We ber me ca- WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE 14 ODD NEWS Two nab doughnuts, not dough, in robbery HYANNIS, Mass. --- Police say masked and armed men in Cape Cod thought they were nabbing a bag of dough. They did just not the kind they wanted. | | | | 7 | 2 | 9 | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 7 | | | | 5 | | | | | 1 | 8 | | | | 9 | 2 | | | 7 | | | | | | | | 8 | | 9 | | | | | | | | 5 | | | 8 | 5 | 4 | | 2 | 6 | 3 | | | | | | 3 | | 1 | | | | | | | 1 | | | | 4 | | | | | | 2 | 9 | 6 | 5 | 1 | | | Three Hyannis men are facing armed robbery while masked charges after police say they robbed a Dunkin' Donuts with knives and a hatchet on Wednesday and only ended up with a bag of doughnuts. According to police, the men demanded a paper bag that was in one of the worker's purses, mistakenly believing she was carrying cash from the day's receipts. But police say the men never looked inside. Difficulty Level ★★★ The men were captured on video and police were able to track them down on Thursday. Arrested were 19-year-old Nicholas Mercurio, 21-year-old Lukas Peterson and 20-year-old Charles liffe. 20-year old the ordeal in It was unclear if any had attorn- neys. By Dave Green Conceptis Sudoku Angry birds on attack against police officers EVERETT, Wash. — Officers at a Seattle-area police department have found themselves in a flap with some unusual suspects — an angry flock of birds. suspects in the attacking police in the parking lot of an Everett Police De- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN parkment precinct station. They've been swooping down and dive-bombing the officers as they walk to and from their cars. Zinged. "They're like velociraptors," Johns said. Lt. Bob Johns said he recently was flanked by the aggressive birds and, "got zinged." sad. One officer used his siren to try to scare away the crows, but it didn't work. The birds responded by decorating his car with droppings, The Daily Herald reported. reported State Fish and Wildlife Department biologist Ruth Milner said the birds are simply protecting baby crows that have been kicked out of the nest and are learning to fly. learning to fly. "All they're doing is defending their nest," Milner said. Associated Press With 5 locations all over town ... We've got Lawrence covered Eddingham Quail Creek Parkway Townhomes Campus West The Oaks Cherry CHERRY·HILL PROPERTIES Eddingham Place Apartments 785-841-5444 www.ApartmentsLawrence.com CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Rebuff a masher 5 Tavern 8 Large-mouth fish 12 Green land 13 Expert 14 Aware of 15 Precede in time 17 Ollie's partner 18 Fashion 19 Eye surgery tools 21 Hollywood clashers 24 Has the skill 25 Open a bit 28 Impetuous 30 Promptly 33 Solo of "Star Wars" 34 "Inferno" writer 35 Shock and — 36 Pismire 37 Sax range 38 Region 39 Right angle 41 Duel tool 43 Tilted typeface 46 More ironic 50 Hayworth or Moren 51 Eland, for one 54 The same in a bibliography 55 Regret 56 Pressing need? 57 Antitoxin 58 CSI evidence 59 Egg container? DOWN 1 The Req and the Black 39 Right angle 41 Duel tool 43 Tilted typeface 46 More ironic 50 Hayworth or Moreno 51 Eland, for one 54 The same, in a bibliography 55 Regret 56 Pressing need? 57 Antitoxins 58 CSI evidence 59 Egg container? DOWN 1 The Red and the Black 2 Dryer collection 3 Bohemiar 4 Device used on apples 5 Sheepish remark? 6 Performance 7 Fishing-line holder 8 "Blame It on the — Nova" 9 Insect's sensory organs 10 Celebrity 11 D.H. Lawrence's "— and Lovers" 16 B.A., e.g. 20 Liniment target WANT TO KNOW THE ANSWERS? go to udkne.ws/ihwPMb to see the gallery @ 22 Exam format 23 Health, in Le Havre 25 "Eurekal!" 26 One of the Brady bunch 27 Aardvark 28 Halt 31 Hooter 32 Drench 34 "Persistence of Memory" artist 38 European capital 40 Camel's cousin 42 Ram's fan? 43 Colored eye part 44 Ocean motion 45 Jack or queen 47 Bygone times 48 Long narrative poem 49 Landlord's due 52 Sister 53 Afternoon gathering 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 | | | 13 | | 14 | | | 15 | | | 16 | | 17 | | | 18 | | | | 19 | 20 | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 21 | | 22 | 23 | 24 | | | | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | | | 34 | | 35 | | | 36 | | | 37 | | 38 | | | | 39 | 40 | | 41 | 42 | | | | 43 | 44 | | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | | | 51 | 52 | 53 | | | 54 | | | 55 | | 56 | | | 57 | | | 58 | | 59 | | | IT'S SUMMER. A/C FEELS GOOD. MAKE SURE YOURS DOESN'T GO OUT Schedule your appointment today on our Facebook Lawrence Automotive Diagnostics Inc. --- 2568 Four Wheel Dr | LawrenceAutoDig.com | 785-842-8685 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY 819 Massachusetts | Eawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming 1 "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson **ANNOUNCEMENT** The above notice of hearing will be made by the **SPEAKER** Mr. R. C. Hargreaves, Esq., Esq., has requested that the hearing be held on Friday, the 29th of October at 10:00 a.m. in the Courtroom A at the University of New York at St. Andrew's. Mr. Hargreaves is seeking to have the hearing reviewed and a decision made regarding his claim against the U.S. Government. He alleges that the Department of Justice (D.O.J.) has unlawfully entered into an agreement with him to accept payment for the cost of the hearing. Mr. Hargreaves claims that the D.O.J. has used the hearing as a means to enforce its order against him, and that he has been given the right to sue the U.S. Government. Mr. Hargreaves also requests that the hearing be adjourned until the D.O.J. can provide a final opinion on the matter. He has also requested that the hearing be adjourned until the D.O.J. can provide a final opinion on the matter. Mr. Hargreaves also requests "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE15 / NCAA OUTDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS WRAP UP S sports Weekly sports Trivia ? Q: Who ran the first four-minute mile? A: Roger Bannister sptimes.com ” Quote of the Week "When it comes to sports I am not particularly interested. Generally speaking, I look upon them as dangerous and tiring activities performed by people with whom I share nothing except the right to trial by jury." Fran Lebowitz Fact of the Week Wilma Rudolph was the first woman to win three gold medals in the Olympics. She was born prematurely and survived polio as a child. ! — lkwldp.org See more sports 17 Kickball Read about local kickball league Kaw Valley Kickball and the adults getting back in touch with their childhood selves. 18 Volleyball Read about the volleyball team's recent trip to Rome from the eyes of senior Allison Mayfield. Athletes earn honors, set records Twelve track and field athletes competed in Ames, Iowa, June 8-11. Ten returned to Kansas with All-American honors. The Kansan reports their results and feelings following competition. BY HANNAH WISE hwise@kansan.com Ten track and field athletes returned to Lawrence as All Americans after the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Ames, Iowa. The women's 4x400 meter relay team of freshman Diamond Dixon, sophomore Denesha Morris, junior Shayla Wilson and senior Kendra Bradley finished eighth in the nation with a school record time of 3:33.00 minutes. All four earned All-American honors. Dixon also was awared the All-American first team distinction for her 400 meter sprint. All of the Kansas field athletes were awarded All-American honors. Freshman Johann Swanepoel earned first team in the pole vault. Freshman Jessica Maroszek was awarded first team in the women's discus. Sophomore Andrea Geubelle earned honorable mention in the long jump and first team in the triple jump. Sophomore Mason Finley earned first team honors in the shot put. Sophomore Heather Bergmann was awarded first team in the javelin throw. The distance runners also earned awards. Senior Donny Wasinger earned second team honors in the 1500 meters after a controversial semi-final race. The controversy arose after Wasinger found himself in three-person fall in the race. He was allowed to race in the finals after coachies discussed the fall with race officials. Junior Rebeka Stowe was awarded first team honors for her performance in the 3000 meter steeplechase. Track and field athletes will continue to train for the National Outdoor Championships June 22-26 in Eugene, Ore. Day 1 - Wednesday, June 8 WOMEN'S RESULTS 400 Meters (Semifinals) 2. Diamond Dixon, 51.64 (Qualified for finals) Long Jump 21. Andrea Geubelle, 5.99m (19-8.00 ft.) Discus Throw 8. Jessica Maroszek, 53.03m (173-11 ft.) MEN'S RESULTS 400 Meters (Semifinals) 16. Kyle Clemons, 46.11 Javelin Throw 5. Johann Swanepoel, 72.24m (237-0 ft.) Discus Throw 3. Mason Finley, 60.16m (197-4 ft.) 1000 1006 1028 Senior Kendra Bradley (left) and freshman Diamond Dixon (center) sprint in the KU Relays April 23. Bradley and Dixon, along wth Shayla Wilson and Denesha Morris, were a part of the school-record 4x400 relay team that took 8th at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. SKANDI Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN file phot Sophomore Mason Finley throws in the shot put last year. He placed fifth with a throw of 18.94 meters (62-01.75 feet). Finley earned All American honors in shot put. Day 2 - Thursday, June 9 WOMEN'S RESULTS 3,000-Meter Steeplechase (Semifinals) 5. Rebeka Stowe, 10:07.90 (Advances to finals) 4X400-Meter Relay Kansas (Bradley, Morris, Dixon, Wilson), 3:33.31 (Advanced to Finals) Javelin Throw 7. Heather Bergmann, 49.14m (161-2 ft.) MEN'S RESULTS 1,500 Meters 21. Donny Wasinger, 3:57.85 (Advanced to Finals) } School Record Day 3 - Friday, June 10 WOMEN'S RESULTS 400 Meters (Finals) 3. Diamond Dixon, 51.88 Triple Jump 8. Andrea Geubelle, 13.06m (42-10.25 ft.) **MEN'S RESULTS** Shot Put 5. Mason Finley, 18.94m (62-01.75 ft.) SEE TRACK | 16 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, so er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus a way to prolong having to find a job,but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because CLOSE UP Cote d'Ivoire Cote d'Ivre PAGE 16 TRACK CONTINUED | 15 Day 4 - Saturday, June 11 WOMEN'S RESULTS 3,000-Meter Steeplechase 7. Rebeka Stowe, 10:07.73 4X400-Meter Relay 8. Kansas (Bradley, Morris, Dixon, Wilson), 3:33.00 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MEN'S RESULTS 1,500 Meters (Finals) 14. Danny Wasinger; 3:55.63 School Record } FINAL POINTS STANDINGS Women 23. Kansas - 13 points Men 18. Kansas - 14 points KANE 12 Free Run 1023 adidas NEBRASKA 10 Lady's 1732 adidas Mike Gunnee/KANSAN file photo Junior Rebeka Stowe, pictured, right, last year, finished seventh in the 3000 meter steeplechase at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. pr me gr in car We best mo ca- KANSANCLASSIFIEDS housing 785-864-4358 SALE for sale announcements ... HAWKCHALK.COM Jobs textbooks textbooks CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM JOBS HOUSING HOUSING BECOME A BARTENGER. UP TO $300/DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. 800-965-6520 EXT 108. Housecleaner, part-time $1230 @ 1100 Louisiana St. 2, stbks north of campus. Large 3 bd apt. in Victorian house + 3 CAR DRIVEWAY. Water pd. No pets. Call 785-766-0476 for showing. Half off August Rent! Luxury 1.283 BR Apts, Quiet location, large rooms, pool, WD. 785-842-3280 HOUSING Housecleaner, part-time $10/hour, plus tips. Seeks energetic, punctual, responsible, friendly individuals. Professional cleaning experience required and must have car (mileage reimbursed). Call Avena Natural Cleaning Services at 841-3134 for application. www.AvenaClean.com 1 roomate needed for 3 bd apt above Chipote at 9th&Mass Only $400/month + utilities Call Alex @ 913-484-1444. Fall Semester Lease: 4 BR or 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 Car Garage, make offer, near KU. Call (785) 814-3849 Available August '11: Studio App. ($315) One BD Apt. ($420) Close to KU, Call Tom. @ 785-550-0426 Now Leasing for Fall 1-4 Bedroom Houses and Apartments. Great Rates. 785-842-7644. www.gagemgmt.com $385. Roommate needed for next school year. Close to campus. Chase Court Apts. Email: nord kyle@gmail.com ANNOUNCEMENTS woodrowbrook meadowbrook Bob Billings & Crestline 785-842-4200 2 and 3 Bedrooms Apts. & Townhomes Available Summer & Fall Close to KU, 3 Bus Stops Regents Court 19th & Mass Furnished 3 & 4BR Apts Leasing for August 2011 W/D included Ride the Meadowbrook bus to KU See Current Availability, Photos & Floor Plans on Our Website www.meadowbrookapartments.net Sunrise Place Sunrise Village Sunrise Place Sunrise Village Apartments and Townhomes Sunrise Place Sunrise Village Apartments and Townhomes Spacious, Remodeled homes 2,3,&4 Bedroom Models Available View plans, pricing, and amenities @ sunriseapartments.com or call 841-8400 TRAFFIC-DUI'S-MIP'S DONALI INJURY Student legal property residence issues divorce, criminal crimes TOWN Laws offices of DONALI G. STROLE Donald G. Strole 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center Stonecrest First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly Washer/Dryer (785) 842-5040 village@sumflower.com HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center Life got you down? We can help. 785.841.2345 Talk to a counselor today. Open 24/7. Always free. www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us Like us on facebook HanoverPlace APARTMENTS First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@sunflower.com Village Square APARTMENTS First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@villageflower.com ANNOUNCEMENTS LUXURY LIVING AT AFFORDABLE PRICES Ranch Way Townhomes on Clinton Parkway 2 & 3 Bedroom $760-$840 ½ off deposit* PAID INTERNET Gage Management 785-842-7644 | www.gagesgmt.com Free-of-charge counseling is available at GaDuGi SafeCenter for anyone who has experienced sexual violence. Services are provided by a licensed clinical professional counselor and trauma specialist. To schedule an appointment contact Susan Miller, LCPC, (785)843-8985, ext 370 or counselor@sunflower.com GaDuGi SAFECENTER hawkchalk successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4909 | pagemaking PARKS RULES 1. The first rule is to not enter into any agreement without prior written consent from the person who is making the agreement. 2. Any agreement made by one person cannot be entered into without consent of another person. 3. Any agreement made by two or more persons cannot be entered into without consent of each person involved in the agreement. 4. Any agreement made between two parties cannot be entered into without consent of both parties. 5. Any agreement made between three or more parties cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 6. Any agreement made between a third party and a fourth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 7. Any agreement made between a fifth party and a sixth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 8. Any agreement made between a seventh party and a eighth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 9. Any agreement made between a ninth party and a tenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 10. Any agreement made between a eleventh party and a twelfth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 11. Any agreement made between a thirteenth party and a fourteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 12. Any agreement made between a fiftieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 13. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 14. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 15. Any agreement made between a fiftieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 16. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 17. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 18. Any agreement made between a fiftieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 19. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 20. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 21. Any agreement made between a fiftieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 22. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 23. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 24. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 25. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 26. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 27. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 28. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 29. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 30. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 31. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 32. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 33. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 34. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 35. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 36. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 37. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 38. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 39. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 30. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 31. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 32. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 33. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 34. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 35. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 36. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 37. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 38. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 39. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 40. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 41. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 42. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 43. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 44. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 45. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 46. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 47. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 48. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 49. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 50. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 51. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 52. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 53. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 54. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 55. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 56. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 57. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 58. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 59. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 59. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 59. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 60. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 61. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 62. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 63. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 64. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 65. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 66. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 67. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 68. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 69. Any agreement made between a f五十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 69. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 69. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 70. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 71. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 72. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 73. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 74. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 75. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 76. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 77. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 78. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 79. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 79. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 79. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 80. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 81. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 82. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 83. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 84. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 85. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 86. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 87. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 88. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 89. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 89. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 89. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 90. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 91. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 92. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 93. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 94. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 95. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 96. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 97. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 98. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 99. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 99. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 99. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 100. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 101. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 102. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 103. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 104. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 105. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 106. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 107. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 108. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 109. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 110. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 111. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 112. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 113. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 114. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 115. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 116. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 117. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 118. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 119. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 120. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 121. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 122. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 123. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 124. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 125. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 126. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 127. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 128. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 129. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 130. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 131. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 132. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 133. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 134. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 135. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 136. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 137. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 138. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 139. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 140. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 141. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 142. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 143. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 144. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 145. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 146. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 147. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 148. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 149. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 150. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 151. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 152. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 153. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 154. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 155. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 156. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 157. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 158. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 159. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 160. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 161. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 162. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 163. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 164. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 165. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 166. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 167. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 168. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 169. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 170. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 171. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 172. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 173. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 174. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 175. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 176. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 177. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 178. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 179. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 180. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 181. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 182. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 183. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 184. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 185. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 186. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 187. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 188. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 189. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 190. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 191. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 192. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 193. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 194. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 195. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 196. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 197. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 198. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 199. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 200. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 201. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 202. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 203. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 204. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 205. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 206. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 207. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 208. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 209. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 210. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 211. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 212. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 213. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 214. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 215. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 216. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 217. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 218. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 219. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 220. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 221. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 222. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 223. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 224. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 225. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 226. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 227. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 228. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 229. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 230. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 231. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 232. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 233. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 234. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 235. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 236. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 237. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 238. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 239. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 240. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 241. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 242. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 243. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 244. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 245. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 246. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 247. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 248. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 249. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 250. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 251. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 252. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 253. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 254. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 255. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 256. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 257. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 258. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 259. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 260. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 261. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 262. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 263. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 264. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 265. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 266. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 267. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 268. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 269. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 270. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 271. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 272. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 273. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 274. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 275. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 276. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 277. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 278. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 279. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 280. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 281. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 282. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 283. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 284. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 285. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 286. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 287. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 288. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 289. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 290. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 291. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 292. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 293. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 294. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 295. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 296. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 297. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 298. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 299. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 200. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 201. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 202. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 203. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 204. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 205. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 206. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 207. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 208. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 209. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 210. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 211. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 212. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 213. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 214. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 215. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 216. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 217. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 218. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 219. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 220. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 221. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 222. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 223. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 224. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 225. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 226. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 227. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 228. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 229. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 230. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 231. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 232. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 233. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 234. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 235. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 236. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 237. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 238. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 239. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 240. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 241. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 242. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 243. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 244. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 245. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 246. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 247. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 248. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 249. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 250. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 251. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 252. Any agreement made between a nineteenth party and a twentieth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 253. Any agreement made between a f七十ieth party and a sixteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 254. Any agreement made between a seventieth party and a eighteenth party cannot be entered into without consent of each party involved in the agreement. 255. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 89 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 765.842.4900 | jayareau.mn "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE17 CLUBS Kickball, other recreational sports attract kids at heart BY SHAUNA BLACKMON sblackmon@kansan.com The game was tied 0-0. His team was unable to steal the lead, but for Paul Santos, it didn't matter. "It was one of those epic things where I just felt fantastic, I did my job" he said. Paul Santos, a 2004 graduate, loves playing sports. As a kid, he played soccer, baseball, basketball and tennis. These days, he doesn't let his age stop him from enjoying the sense of accomplishment and joy he gets from throwing or kicking a ball around. Through the city, the Kaw Valley Kickball League, and Bleeding Kansas Dodgeball, which he started in 2009, Santos is able to continue playing some of his favorite sports. For Santos, the best part of playing these games is the social aspect. [Image of a basketball game under floodlights with spectators watching from the stands.] throughout the year. Volleyball is the most popular sport, with 150 teams during the spring and 195 during the summer and is offered co-ed or women only. you meet people who work at bars, people who work at restaurants, scientists," he said. "You meet so many people you never would have otherwise met." Bob Stanclift, the adult sport supervisor says that after a nationwide ten-year decline in participation, the past two or three years there has been a resurgence. He says he is seeing more and more college students on the field. Bleeding Kansas is following the same pattern. The parks department of the city organizes leagues in basketball, dodgeball, kickball, softball and volleyball "Playing sports has helped people get active who didn't think they have certain skill sets," Stanclift said. "It's more of a social thing than a physical thing for most people. Usually players spend more time tailgating than actually playing or practicing." Most of the games aren't too physically demanding, and anyone can join, despite skill level. Some teams are more competitive than others so anyone can find a level they are comfortable with. At a kickball game, fans and players alike enjoy themselves. The Lawrence Parks Department organizes leagues in kickball, as well as basketball, dodgeball, softball and volleyball throughout the year. "It's very rewarding to be involved with people who are there on their own time and enjoy it." Stanclift said. "It's healthy for people to be out and social." First Management INCORPORATED f Chase Court POOL PARTY! EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY SADDLEBROOK 625 FOLKS RD • 832-8200 PARKWAY COMMONS 3601 CLINTON PKWY • 842-3280 HIGHPOINTE 2001 W 6TH ST • 641-8468 Friday June 17th 1pm-6pm Win prizes, hang by the pool, and meet your new neighbors! Luxury 1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments 1/2 Off August Rent and Reduced Deposits Hosted by Gambino's Pizza, Wayne & Larry's, Complete Nutrition, Celsius Tannery, 3 Spoons, Royal Crest Lanes, Eileen's Colossal Cookies, and Cici's Pizza BRIARSTONE 1008 EMERY RD • 749-7744 CANYON COURT 700 COMET LANE • 832-8805 CHASE COURT 1942 STEWAHT AVE • 843-8220 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes. and on degree later, so. know wha. college. righ al: a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus The Peace Corps was an attract- tion option for Wiechman because PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN pr mɪ gr in car We bes mo ca- PAGE18 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 The Bottleneck 123 New Hampshire St - Lawrence Kr Saturday, June 18th Dirtfoot Friday, July 1st Truckstop Honeymoon Saturday, June 25th Swinging Utters Commissio Friday, July 1st Truckstop Honeymon Thursday, July 7th The Windup Birds w / Here to Stay / Radio Free TV Saturday, July 9th The Tardis with WWE / Numbr Nine Hard Wednesday, July 13th Blind Pilot Saturday, July 23rd RX Bandits w/Maps & Allases Find us on Facebook for concert announcements, giveaways, and more! www.thebottlenecklive.com f CROSSROADS KC A TIME AT MICOON & A GRINDERS PRESENTED BY MILLER LIFE WED 15 OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW THU 17 GROSSROADS BLUES TEST W LL LEO & THE BLUE INFURNALS JUNE TRYCKY TRAINING & THE DRIVERS & MORE! SECTION 8 24 W MAC MILLEN / LL / KD DKN SAT 25 MISSouri CHANSAW GRASSACRE featuring: CORNMEAL / SLIT LP RYTIELD THE WILDERS / MOUNTAIN SPROUT TUE JULY 7 MATISYAHU w/THE WAILERS TUES 30 ELVIS COSTELLO & THE IMPOSTERS WED 2 UMPHREY'S McGEE w/ quixotic TWENTY EIGHT GOMEZ WEEK 10 BENFOLDS WIENTON CHEN VOLLEYBALL TW21 497's we COWBOY MOUTH THROSE DARLINGS WE'RE GOING TO COME BACK THE 19 CINDERELLA WHAT WERE YOU THE DREAK GIRLS TUE 22 BELA FLECK & THE CREATIVE GRUCE LADDER & BRUCE HORNSBY & THE MAKERSMAN Team competes, sightsees on Italian tour TOP 27 O.A.R. w.son fcc NITTY GRUTTY 5 DIRT BAND w BRENWER & SHIPLEY JOHN BUYLER PRO 9 W/MAMA KAN 10 JONNY LANG 10 II GREY & MOFRO BY WESTON PLETCHER wpletcher@kansan.com WED 17 YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND WED AUG YONDER the trip proved to be successful as the Jayhawks returned home with a 5- and 2-record from the tour. THE RADIO TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND TICKETS AVAILABLE AT GRINDERS IN jeep.www.CROSSROADSKC.COM www.CROSSROADSKC.COM SAT AUG TVON The volleyball team recently returned from a 12-day European tour that included international competition. The team was also lucky enough to visit some of the beautiful cities in Italy. for us. They treated us to a meal after one of our games and we talked about the differences between playing and living in Italy versus playing and living in the United States", Mayfield said. "It was neat talking to someone who lives on "We didn't speak much Italian and they didn't speak much English, but still, volleyball is volleyball." Allison Mayfield, an outside hitter and a senior from Overland Park, was neat talking to someone who lives on the complete said the trip was beneficial for more than just her volleyball skills. "It was a really unique experience to play in all the different cities," Mayfield said. "We didn't speak much Italian and they didn't speak much English, but still, volleyball is volleyball." The team was able to experience some unique environments during its stay in Europe and experience some game-day traditions that teams from the United States aren't accustomed to. "After one of the games, we went to this company who set up a host team formerly treated." HAIR ACADEMY $7 HAIRCUTS ALWAYS $20 HI-LITE EXTRA W/ LONG HAIR 3 FOR HAIR $18 FEATHERS VOTED BEST SALON TOP OF THE HILL, 2005-2010 ALL SERVICES PROVIDED BY STUDENTS UNDER SUPERVISION OF EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS. 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 14471 METCALF | 2429 IOWA ST. 913.402.4700 | 785.749.1488 ZHAIRACADEMY.COM 1000 MONTEREY WAY Stonecrest APARTMENTS Hanover Place HanoverPlace APARTMENTS 200 HANOVER PLACE (1) VillageSquare 850 AVALON RD. Get your first month rent free 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments and Townhomes Starting at $555/month *All properties have pool access and are pet friendly* 785-842-3040 village@sunflower.com other side of the world and hear their perspective on things." ALLISON MAYFIELD Senior outside hitter rolls around. The team played in seven unique venues during the tour. Some venues were half outside with a fence and another with a dome. Seven away games will benefit the team tremendously by the time conference play "The competition was the best early on, but we got a sense of the style and I think what was good about it is we got to play in a different gym every night under different conditions," coach Ray Bechard said. "You have to adapt to play well on the road and when you get seven different opportunities to do that in a short period of time, I think it's really good." Mayfield said the trip allowed the team members to get much closer because they weren't allowed to use cell phones or have internet access. The fact that the team has already has seven matches under its belt means they have played seven more than any other Big 12 team. It may not seem like that much of an advantage, but team chemistry is a must during a long season. "Having almost the whole team together without any distractions OPENS FRIDAY 9:30 ONLY SAT NO SHOWS SUN 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 MON 4:30 7:00 9:30 TUE: NO SHOWS WED-THU 4:30 7:00 9:30 POTICHE (R) LIBERTY HALL accessibility info 644. MASS 749-1912 (785) 749-1972 Wed June 14 - Thu June 23 MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG13) WED-FRI: 4:40 7:10 9:40 SAT-SUN: 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40 MON-THU: 4:40 7:10 9:40 THE CONSPIRATORS (PG13) WED-THU: 4:30 7:00 9:30 MUST CLOSE THU JUNE 16 LIBERTY HALL CULT/INTERNATIONAL/CLASSIC VIDEO La Prima Taza 638 MASSACHUSETTS 902-541-6722 GOOD CAFE www.libertyhall.net successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joytheearning A. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jaydreaming THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 PAGE 19 allowed our team to come together; Mayfield said. Of course, playing volleyball wasn't the only thing those on the trip experienced. The team was able to sightsee in historic cities in Italy and Switzerland. Mayfield said some of the utilities were just as interesting. "In the bathrooms, you never knew what you were going to get. Sometimes they had toilets, sometimes they had toilet seats and sometimes there were no toilets but a hole in the ground," Mayfield said. This trip will leave a lasting impression on the team, their coach said. They will have memories forever of playing against competition from Europe and visiting international landmarks. These are opportunities that don't come by very often. If the trip is any indication of how next season will be, it looks promising for the Kansas volleyball team. "I think we got progressively better as the tour went along," Bechard said. Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN file photo KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS MISSOURI 15 Mike Gunnoe/RANSAN file photo Senior outside hitter Allison Mayfield makes a kill at Horeisi Family Athletics Center in September. Mayfield recorded 14 kills in the 3-1 victory over Missouri. DON'S AUTO CENTER 11TH AND HASKELL (785)-841-4833 GET ON THE ROAD. STAY ON THE ROAD. Eudora 9 Lawrence 14 Don's Auto 14 THE COLOUR OF ROME Volleyball team members pose for a picture in Rome. The team had time to take in Italian culture as well as compete during its European tour, which lasted from May 29 to June 9. Contributed photo YOUR FIRST SUMMER TEST where do you want to live? A 1712 OHIO Large 3&4 BR Great Pricing B EASTVIEW 1015-1025 Mississippi Remodeled 1&2 BR C SOUTH POINTE 2310 W.26th 1-4 BR D JACKSONVILLE 700 Monterey Way Newer 1&2 BR E HANOVER 14th & Kentucky 2 BR, 1.5 Bath, Garage F GRANDVIEW Near 6th & Iowa Large 2 BR G WOODWARD 611 Michigan 1,2,3 BR, Washer/Dryer H COUNTRY CLUB 512 Rockledge Newer 2 BR, 2 Bath I THE WOODS 630 Michigan Large 2 BR ...atleast it's multiple choice www.midwestpm.com (785)·841·4935 MIDWEST PROPERTY MANAGEMENT / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, so know what college. r rigb alk er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. DFACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 18 WEEKLY SPECIALS Submit your Summer Photos! to WeeklySpecials@kansan.com and see your photos in next week's Jayplay Best Wishes to Acacia in Oklahoma! successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas Your Neighborhood KU IN OVERLAND PARK. Submit your Summer Photos! to WeeklySpecials@kansan.com and see your photos in next week's Jayplay Best Wishes to Acacia in Oklahoma! successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY 517 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 786.842.4900 | joydnaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 12 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.843.4900 | joydhanning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK JUST HOW SAFE ARE YOU IN LAWRENCE? Lawrence police are asking for more money and resources, which may affect campus. But stats show crime is actually down. NEWS I 18 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 cegretex Sport Sunscreen SPF 50 mineral sunblock water resistant medium coverage spray-on lotion 3.4 FL OZ (100 mL) The FDA wants to help you take care of your skin. New regulations have changed the language of sunscreen-bottle labeling. Will it make a difference? NEWS I 8 WWW.KANSAN.COM a hit but at what cost? Smoking hookah remains popular, but experts say the practice can be even more dangerous than cigarette addiction. NEWS | The Connection at Lawrence SAVE OVER $1000 RATES AS LOW AS $398 3100 Ousdahl Lawrence, KS 66046 785.842.3336 www.savectionlawrence.com SIGN TODAY AND CHOOSE FROM 100 Dollars Cash KNOLOGY UPGRADE KU SEASON TICKETS *Bouled time of offer* freq ID vpn box for 1 year football game basketball 1 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and on degree later, so know what college. righ al; er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America.Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities.The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Gina Littlejohn, the campus DFACE CORPS Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire A PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 Today's Weather 8160 Afternoon showers Thursday 83 63 Partly cloudy TABLE OF CONTENTS Friday 83 65 Isolated thunderstorms weather.com KU1nfo KU and Harvard are the only universities that have had two alumnae elected to be governor. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas and Jane Dee Hull of Arizona are both Jayhawks. Sports madness. KANSAS 10 21 Commentary and coverage. Even more at Kansan.com/sports. 20 Unlike button. Couples who mix their ups and downs with the publicity of social media such as Facebook are statistically more likely to break up, IRL. Busted? Here's some things you should know. 12 State laws regarding driving under the influence are set to change July 1. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DUI 941 The University of Kansas POLICE KU Public Safety Office On the cover Everybody knows smoking is bad for you. So why do so many students still smoke hookah and not think it counts? See full story on page 6. Cover photo by Chris Bronson/KANSAN Quote of the Week "Any man who does not like dogs and want them about does not deserve to be in the White House." Calvin Coolidge Fact of the Week The first American president to support the concept of Father's day was President Calvin Coolidge in 1924. — wilstar.com T T T ON THE RECORD KU public safety officers responded to: - A theft within Allen Fieldhouse on Friday night. - Reports of smoke in a power transmitter near Dyche Hall likely caused by an animal Friday afternoon. CONTACT US CHECK KANSAN.COM DAILY FOR MORE STORIES editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) 864-4810 Twitter: TheKansan_News Become a fan of The University Daily Kansan on Facebook 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Ave. Lawrence Kan., 66045 f ET CETERA MEDIA PARTNERS The University Daily Kansas is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr., Lawrence, Kan., 60045. 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. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 2015 Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunside Dr. Check out KUJH-TV on Knology of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at ku.edu. KUJH KHIK is the student voice in radio, when its rock 'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHIK 90.7FM for you. SO.7 KJHW Alex Garrison Editor-in-Chief D. M. Scott Assignment Editor Hannah Wise Web Editor Stephanie Schulz Design Chief Louise Krug Copy Chief STAFF Amanda Sorell Copy Editor Brooke Abney Business Manager Matt LaBuda Sales Manager Malcolm Gibson News Adviser & General Manager Jon Schlitt Sales Adviser successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. ALPHONSIDE "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson GENERAL PROJECT FOR THE REBUILD OF THE CITY OF BARRICA DOCUMENT NO. BARRICA, JULY 2015 IN CONSTRUCTION AND IN USE FROM AUGUST 2016 TO DECEMBER 2017. THE GENERAL PROJECT FOR THE REBUILD OF THE CITY OF BARRICA IS A SYSTEMATIC REPLACEMENT OF ALL THREE LEVELS OF THE BUILDING IN BARRICA. THE PROJECT IS DESIGNED BY THE ORIGINAL ARCHITECT OF THE CITY OF BARRICA, NADIR BERHAMI, AND MANUFACTURER TOM HUBER, WHO MAKES THE MATERIALS USED IN THE PROJECT. THE PROJECT IS EXPECTED TO BE COMPLETED IN 2023, WITH THE FOLLOWING OBJECTIVES: 1. **REBUILD THE MAIN BUILDING**: - The main building will be rebuilt with new materials and construction techniques to create a more sustainable and resilient structure. - The roof will be replaced with a new, durable material such as steel or aluminum, which can be recycled or repurposed. 2. **REBUILD THE ADJacent Buildings**: - The adjacent buildings will be reconstructed using the same materials and construction techniques as the main building. - The windows and doors will be replaced with new glass or steel, which will allow for better light penetration and insulation. 3. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 4. **REBUILD THE EASTERN CENTER**: - The eastern center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 5. **REBUILD THE SOUTHWEST CENTER**: - The southwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 6. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 7. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 8. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 9. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 10. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 11. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 12. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 13. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 14. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 15. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 16. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 17. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 18. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 19. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that complements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 20. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 21. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 22. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 23. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 24. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 25. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 26. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 27. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 28. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 29. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 30. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 31. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 32. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 33. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 34. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 35. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 36. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 37. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 38. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 39. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 40. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 41. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 42. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 43. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 44. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 45. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 46. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 47. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 48. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 49. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 50. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 51. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 52. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 53. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 54. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 55. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 56. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 57. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 58. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 59. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 60. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 61. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 62. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 63. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 64. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 65. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 66. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 67. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 68. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 69. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 70. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 71. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 72. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 73. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 74. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 75. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 76. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 77. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 78. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 79. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 80. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 81. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 82. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 83. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 84. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 85. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 86. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 87. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 88. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 89. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 90. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 91. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 92. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 93. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 94. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 95. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 96. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 97. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 98. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 99. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 100. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 101. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 102. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 103. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 104. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 105. **REBUILD THE NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 106. **REBUILD THE WESTERN CENTER**: - The western center of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 107. **REBUILD THE EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 108. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 109. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 110. **WESTERN CENTER**: - The western corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 111. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 112. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 113. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 114. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 115. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 116. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 117. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 118. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 119. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 120. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 121. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 122. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 123. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 124. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 125. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 125. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 126. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 126. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 127. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 127. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 128. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 128. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 129. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 129. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 130. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 130. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 131. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 131. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 132. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 132. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 133. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 133. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 134. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 134. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 135. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 135. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 136. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 136. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 137. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 137. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 138. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 138. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compplements the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 139. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 139. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 140. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 140. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 141. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 141. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 142. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 142. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 143. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 143. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 144. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 144. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 145. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 145. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 146. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 146. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 147. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 147. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 148. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 148. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 149. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 149. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 150. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 150. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 151. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 151. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 152. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 152. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 153. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 153. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 154. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 154. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 155. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 155. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 156. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 156. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 157. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 157. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. 158. **EASTWEST CENTER**: - The eastwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban design. - The street layout will be重新规划, with a focus on pedestrian traffic and efficient traffic flow. 158. **NORTHWEST CENTER**: - The northwest corner of the city will be reconstructed with new landscaping and architecture that compines the existing urban "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS·GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 3 NEWS NEAR&FAR Members of Zetas drug cartel go to El Salvador to acquire weapons (Mexico City, Mexico) — El Salvador's president says members of the Zetas drug cartel have gone on scouting missions to his country in an attempt to obtain weapons from corrupt police officers and soldiers. President Mauricio Funes says there are a lot of weapons left over from El Salvador's 12-year civil war and that the flow of guns there is "shocking." Funes said Tuesday after a meeting with Mexican President Felipe Calderon that the Zetas have not settled in El Salvador like they have done in Guatemala but said some local gangs are working for them. Mexican drug cartels have been increasingly moving to Central America as Mexico cracks down on them. Funes said there needs to be a regional approach to fighting drug cartels in Central America. Ugandan president accused of lying about age to avoid cutoff (Kampala, Uganda) — Ugandan opposition groups are accusing the longtime president of lying about his age to avoid constitutional age limits. Free Uganda Now leader Brenda Nabukenya said Tuesday during a demonstration in Kampala that President Yoweri Museveni is 73, not in his mid-60s as he claims. She says he is trying to avoid the 75-year-old cutoff for 2016 presidential candidates. Nabukenya says the group consulted school records and Museveni's former teachers and longtime acquaintances. Museveni has long been vague about his age, saying he was born around 1945 and is either 66 or 67. Museveni seized power in 1986 and is now in his 26th year in office. 1900 and is now in its 20th year in office. Presidential spokesman Mande Minte Kuntu said the leader has always declared his true age and that the group has no capacity to make "appropriate investigations," and is only seeking publicity. Chin her su The o said i the res ing. The said mos More to die if reservoirs overflow and flood China (Beijing, China)Heavy rains in eastern China have put more than 660 reservoirs at risk of overflowing, an official said Tuesday. Rain-triggered floods have swept parts of eastern and southern China this month, leaving at least 175 dead and 86 missing and causing 35 billion yuan ($5 billion) in direct economic losses, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs. An official at the media department of the Anhui Water Resource Department said water levels at more than 660 reservoirs in the province were above the warning level. Like most Chinese officials, she would give only her surname, Zhao. The official Xinhua News Agency also said in a Chinese-language report that the reservoirs were in danger of overflowing. The Anhui flood control headquarters said most of the reservoirs — more than 620 were small, and that only three were large. Associated Press keep your money keep your money keep your money All upfront fees waived with savings of ON BUS ROUTE NEW UNITS AVAILABLE UTILITIES INCLUDED PET FRIENDLY FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE $450 APPLELANE APARTMENTS LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM j LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM leasing office located at: 2300 Wakarusa Drive // 785.838.4800 Asset Campus Houss 1.5 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, so Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wichman because er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America.Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities.The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Gina Littlejohn, the campus Cote d'Ivoire PEACE CORPS know who college a PAGE4 LOCAL BRIEFS CAMPUS Air conditioning should cool campus all summer All buildings on campus will have air conditioning throughout the summer between 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., Brett Edwards, HVAC supervisor, said. Occupied rooms should maintain a temperature of 76 degrees. Unoccupied should maintain a temperature of 85 degrees. Most research facilities are an exception to this rule and the maximum temperature is 74 degrees year around. After April 1, air conditioning systems are controlled by outside air temperatures above 60 degrees. During after hours or on the weekends, special events that are being held in any building should contact 785-864-4770 to request air conditioning for the specific times the building is being occupied. The call will go to a dispatcher who will then put them in contact with the HVAC person on call. WORRIED ABOUT NOT HAVING AIR CONDITIONING? Here is a complete list of rooms with no classes scheduled for summer that should have air conditioning off: Robinson 154,155,156,159 Budig 120,130 (110 Budig will be in use this summer) MS 104,105,106,107 Strong Hall 307, 309, 335, 337, 339 342, 356 358 Smith 7,100,107,108,206,208 Summerfield 401,403,426,427, 428,501,503,505,507 Laura Erdall THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAY & SUNDAY UDK WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAVID & ANGELA UDK Buy groceries for on-campus sustenance Pressure for new school are by purchasing packages in the local supermarket, online. NEWS 10 NCAA Outdoor Championships total wrap up Set track and field athletes return to time with new school rosters. UPW121 10 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 WWW.AANCAN.COM VOLUME 153, ISSUE 154 9107281465 What's Black & White and has an Online Cousin? THE ARTS Play promises plenty of laughs and charm KANSAN.COM The Kansas Summer Theatre will present "Dirty Work at the Crossroads," or also titled "Tempted, Tried and True," a comic melodrama by Bill Johnson. Performances are at 7-30 p.m. July 1-10 at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. The play is directed by Kip Niven, a 1968 graduate. The play is a classic good versus evil story. The characters include Nellie Lovelace, an innocent country girl; Adam Oakhart, the stalwart and blacksmith's son and Munro Murgatroyd, the villain. Munro is a married man but pursues an affair with innocent Nellie. Munro displays his evilness when he poisons Nellie's mother, drives Adam to drink and blackmails other citizens. Monisha Bruner Tickets are $10 for students, faculty, staff and senior citizens, $12 for the public and $5 for K- 12 students. Tickets can be purchased at the Lied Center Box Office, 785-864-2787, online at www.kutheatre.com and through Ticketmaster, www.ticketmaster.com. On the night of performances tickets can be purchased at Liberty Hall, one hour before showtime. The play "is very over-the-top." Niven said, according to a University media release. "I think the audiences will have a terrific time hissing the villains, laughing at the comic sidekick, weeping along with the heroine and cherring the hero and heirine as justice triumphs over evil." CAMPUS Hefty tuition increase will start fall semester The Board of Regents approved a $26 million tuition increase on Thursday, June 16, on all public state universities, including the University. Starting this fall, in-state tuition will increase by 5.5 percent to $222 per credit hour and in-state first-time tuition for incoming freshmen will increase by 5.6 percent to $245, where it will stay for four years. schools in Kansas per credit hour is $1,418 for in-state tuition. The combined total for all state Those students already in a tuition compact will not see increases this fall. Jack Martin, deputy director of University Communications, said that state budget cuts, dropped classes and an increased cost of health insurance and utilities are the main culprit. He also said increases are required to keep up teaching quality. "We need to retain talented faculty and staff members," Martin said. Brittany Nelson ADMINISTRATION Grad dean to become new vice-provost University officials named Sara Rosen, dean of graduate studies and professor of linguistics, as the new senior vice provost for academic affairs, starting July 25. Rosen will replace Barbara Romzek, who served as an interim for the position since August 2009. Rosen was selected by an internal search process and chosen by Provost Vitter and a team of administrators, said Jack Martin, director of university communications. "She was the best fit for the position." Martin said. According to the office of the provost website, Rosen will be responsible for academic and administrative policies and budgets, developing and tracking performance indicators, establishment STAY ON THE ROAD WITH THE HAWKS DON'S AUTO CENTER 11TH AND HASKELL (785)-841-4833 SINCE 1974 of goals, reporting to the Kansas Board of Regents and for a variety of academic programs to enhance the academic mission. As senior vice provost for academic affairs Rosen will report to the provost. Joshua Rosenbloom, associate vice chancellor for research, will become interim dean of graduate studies while the university begins the search for the dean of graduate studies, Martin said. There are six vice provosts who work directly under the provost. Christy Nutt Businesses attempt to plan for power losses A recent power outage left more than 5,000 Lawrence residents without electricity and forced local businesses to close for more than three hours. The outage, which occurred Friday, June 10, was caused by a switch failure at a Westar Energy substation located at 6th and Kentucky St. "Friday afternoons are a busy time for us," Steve Prososki, owner of the Yacht Club Sports Bar and Grill, said. "So that is lost business." The restaurant, which uses a gaspowered fryer and grill, stopped serving food during the outage. Cork and Barrel, a liquor store located at 9th and Mississippi St., was able to remain open because they had a plan in place in case of a power outage. "We have manual credit card machines," manager Brendan Dowle said. "In case something like this happens, we don't want to lose business." In 2009, the average Westar customer experienced 1.3 outages lasting an average of 118 minutes. This month, Lawrence residents have experienced three power outages. "You can't really plan when this kind of thing is going to happen." Dowble said. "Businesses can't control it, so the need to have a plan in place or they are going to lose money." — Meg Lowry successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 9 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jayjarearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 449 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | kaydeearning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 5 RECREATION Costly outdoor gear cheap at rec center The Outdoor Pursuits program makes it easy for students to get outside. A two-person tent costs $3 per day or $9 per week to rent. Check out Kansan.com for more information. BY CHRISTY NUTT cnutt@kansan.com Programs at the Ambler Student Recreation Fitness Center offer tools to get students and faculty active outside. Students and faculty can rent equipment for camping, hiking, canoeing, kayaking and Frisbee golf through the Outdoor Pursuits program. The rock climbing wall is also part of the program. Groups can also get active outside while developing skills as a team at the Adams Campus Outdoor Education Center. Outdoor Pursuits doesn't provide the type of workout you will get on a treadmill, but it lets students relieve stress by getting outside and exercising in a cost effective way, said Mike Dickey, assistantdirector of the program. The program makes expensive items like tents, sleeping bags, backpacks, kayaks, canoes and even propane stoves available for students and faculty to rent. "It's nice to have the option to rent equipment at an affordable cost," Ben Fishman, a senior from Overland Park, Kan., said. "Somebody who wants to try it out for the first time can come and rent a backpack and go backpacking somewhere or they can rent a canoe and if they like it enough to get involved they can go down to Sunflower (Outdoor and Bike Shop) and purchase stuff," Dickey said. A two-person tent costs $3 per day or $9 per week, and tents and canoes are the most popular items for students to rent, Dickey said. To rent equipment, students must make a reservation in person and pay in full at that time. Students have to be current members of the Ambler Student Recreation Fitness Center to rent equipment. Students who want to rent but aren't enrolled in summer classes must purchase a summer membership. "Those who are taking classes in the summer are paying a fee for it," Dickey said. The Outdoor Pursuits staff asks students to return the equipment in the same condition they rented it in. Students can get hit with a $15 cleaning fee if equipment is returned dirty. Dickey said students don't need a Although the 42-foot-climbing wall is indoors, it is still considered part of the Outdoor Pursuits program. "The equipment is really nice and kept in good condition," Fishman said. Hartman said, many students avoid paying the cleaning fee by using hoses, drains and rags that the program provides at its office before returning the rented gear. friend with them to try the wall and that the Outdoor Pursuits staff does a good job of making the experience relaxed and fun. Different student and community groups use the Adams Campus to improve their abilities as a team. "People don't try the climbing wall because they are intimidated to try something so different by themselves, but they shouldn't be. The staff will take care of everything," Hartman said. The challenge course is more mental than physical to get group thinking together to solve problems Dickey said. The course is made of 12 "challenges" with names such as Wild Woozy and Trust Fall. All 12 challenges are considered low element, meaning they are no higher than four feet off the ground. Groups learn how to communicate with each other differently because the challenge course is testing their team performance outside of the regular office environment Dickey said. WEDNESDAY Summer WEIRD AWESOME UNIVERSITY KANSAN It's summer for us too. ENJOY! ONCE LATER WEDNESDAY Summer WEBRITE AWESOME UNIVERSITY KANSAN 1 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, so. know what college, e' college. e' rigb al: er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wichman because a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Gina Littlejohn, the campus PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 HEALTH Hookahs aren't as harmless as you think BY LAURA ERDALL ierdall@kansan.com Kelsey Connolly, a junior from Stilwell, Kan., enjoys the occasional hookah smoking with friends on Massachusetts Street. The atmosphere in the hookah bar is filled with excitement. The room she sits in is decorated with antique hookah pipes and the blissful sound of Indian music rings through her ear drums as the mouthpiece is passed to her. She wraps her lips around the hookah pipe, filling her lungs to full capacity. When she finally exhales, lungs empty of the mint-tinted smoke. She lowers her body into her seat feeling relaxed and a slight buzz as she pesses the hookah pipe to the next person. "I only do it once in awhile, so I enjoy it when I do, but I've heard that a single session of hookah smoking can equal up to the volume of smoking a lot of cigarettes," Connolly said. "But it is fun and relaxing and it doesn't leave a nasty taste in your mouth." Many people believe hookah to be less dangerous than cigarette smoking, but experts say that hookah smoking has the same, if not more, harmful effects as cigarette smoking. The hookah is a water pipe used to smoke specially made tobacco that is available in a variety of flavors. According to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, this traditional smoking method originated in ancient Persia and India and has been used for centuries. However, in the last few decades, hookah smoking has become quite popular on college campuses across the United States. The charcoal, which is placed at the head of the hookah pipe, is used to light and keep the tobacco burning during the smoking session. Kimber Richter, associate professor of preventive medicine, said that the charcoal produces high levels of carbon monoxide, which prevents a person from not getting enough oxygen, and therefore makes their heart work harder. "The myth that water filters out harmful chemicals in hookah isn't true," Richter said. "Even after it has passed through water, the hookah smoke still contains high levels of toxins, it doesn't filter out chemicals, just cools them." Smoking sessions can last anywhere from 30 minutes to a couple of hours depending on the situation. Edward Ellerbeck, chair of the department for medicine, said that hookah smoking delivers nicotine and is at least as dangerous as cigarette smoke, especially when it comes to secondhand smoke. YOUR FIRST SUMMER TEST where do you want to live? 1712 OHIO Large 3&4 BR Great Pricing EASTVIEW 1015-1025 Mississippi Remodeled 1&2 BR SOUTH POINTE 2310 W 26th 1-4 BR JACKSONVILLE 700 Monterey Way Newer 1&2 BR HANOVER 14th & Kentucky 2 BR, 1.5 Bath, Garage. GRANDVIEW Near 6th & Iowa Large 2 BR WOODWARD 611 Michigan 1,2,3 BR, Washer/Dryer COUNTRY CLUB 512 Rockledge Newer 2 BR, 2 Bath THE WOODS 630 Michigan Large 2 BR ...atleast it's multiple choice www.midwestpm.com (785) • 841 • 4935 There are just as many toxins in hookah smoke as in cigarette smoke. SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific peer tutoring, Math, science, & language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu Questions? Call (785) 864-4064 ...contributing to Student Success 101 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER in Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jayorearning.com THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 7 43 in hookah smoke as cigarette smoke but there have not been a lot of studies on the health effects of smoking hookah. However, there have been studies of babies born to women who smoked one or more water pipes a day during pregnancy. "During this nine-month study, babies tend to have lower birth rates and have a higher risk for different respiratory diseases," Richter said. Sharing a hookah is also dangerous because it may increase the risk of transmitting certain diseases through the mouthpiece. The juice in the mouthpiece is very similar to chewing tobacco in that it gives the same exposure to oral cancers. "People don't realize how unsanitary hookah smoking really is," Richter said. "You don't know how well pipes are cleaned, so it's like you're doing hookah with everybody. It's the same concept as kissing a stranger or sharing the same spoon." Hookah can be incredibly addictive and deadly if it's used daily and for long periods of time. Hookah smoking can also be considered training wheels for cigarette smoking and the use of other tobacco forms. "If you don't want to take in toxins knowingly, you'll avoid smoking a lot of hookah," Richter said. AUTHENTIC MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE Aladdin Cafe OPEN شعاع العربية اللADDIN CAFE Sharing a hookah, at such social gathering spots as Aladdin Cafe, 1021 Massachsetts St., may increase the risk of transmitting certain diseases. CAMPUS 5,4,3,2 ... 1, Tweetup! Student to participate in NASA event next month On July 8, Tristan Moody will bear witness to the end of an era. He and 149 citizen journalists won a contest to travel to NASA, tour top-secret facilities and watch the final launch of the space shuttle Atlantis. This will be Moody's second visit to the Kennedy Space Center. He and his wife visited NASA's headquarters during their honeymoon. "She wanted to go to Disneyworld and I wanted to go to the Kennedy Space Center. Florida was the perfect destination," Moody said. Moody, a Lawrence native who is pursuing his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering, hopes to find postgraduate work while at the Tweetup event. He ordered new business cards to hand out to potential future employers and colleagues. "Working at NASA is my dream job. It probably isn't the best place to apply considering they are laying off 5,000 people after July's final launch," Moody said. Moody recognizes the historical significance of his visits. The opportunity and the event are bittersweet. "In an era of budget deficits, NASA was one of the first to go on the chopping block, it is a remarkable but truly sad day," Moody said. Hannah Davis PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER BIRD HEAVEN CHECK OUT KJHK-TV'S EXTENDED INTERVIEW WITH TRISTON MOODY go to http://udkne.ws/jfCkkw to watch Hannah Davis' video. And check out our earth- bound Twitter feed @TheKansan_ News. @ LIBERTY HALL accessibility info (785) 749-1972 6444 MASS. 749-1912 Wed June 22 - Thue June 30 EVERYTHING MUST GO (R) OPENS SUN JUNE 26!! SUN: 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 MON-WED: 4:30 7:00 9:30 THU : NO SHOWS MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG13) WED-FRI: 4:40 7:10 9:40 SAT-SUN: 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40 MON-THU: 4:40 7:10 9:40 POTICHE (R) WED-THU: 4:30 7:00 9:30 MUST CLOSE THU JUNE 22! LIBERTY HALL CULT/INTERNATIONAL/CLASSIC VIDEO 3 La Prima Taza 638 MASSACHUSETTS (785) 832-CAFE www.libertyhall.net udk Tweet of the week Remember that one crazy night in #Lawrence...? Shoot us a tweet! Best story gets a spot in next weeks paper. Drop us a line @UDKplay t 1 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, so know what college. 9 righ al Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Gina Littlejohn, the campus PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because Cote d'Ivoire THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 8 New sunscreen labels aim to better educate public BY HANNAH DAVIS hdavis@kansan.com It's a balmy Friday afternoon in June. The sun is high and a smattering of clouds offer minimal shade for the swimmers and sunbathers around the pool at Tuckaway apartment complex, 2600 West 6th St. Kelly Flynn and Kate Johnson, both seniors, wade in the pool for their daily post-class ritual — working on their tans. In spite of years of data demonstrating the correlation between skin cancer and sun exposure, vanity trumps caution. trumps caution. "This sounds horrible, but I would rather look good now than worry about a possibility of cancer way in the future." Flynn said. Johnson agreed. Johnson agreed. "It's that whole being young, dumb and having an invincible mindset," she said. That mindset may be common, but the Food and Drug Administration is making it easier than ever to see the dangers in sun exposure by changing the language of sunscreen. Reynold Tan, an interdisciplinary scientist at the FDA, said he hoped the newly announced standards for sunscreen labeling would better educate the public about the importance of skin protection. "There are a lot of words used in sunscreen marketing that have been redefined," Tan said. "And the language companies use to market their products is going to come under greater scrutiny." Newly prohibited marketing words include sunblock, waterproof, sweat-proof and any SPF above 50. "Sunblock' implies that a person is completely protected from harmful rays. That simply will never be the case," Tan said. Rather than hailing a product as waterproof or sweatproof, sunscreens must be labeled water- or sweatresistant and the amount of time the product lasts must be listed next to the claim of resistance. No product can claim to last for more than two hours. Currently, the term broad-spectrum can be found on many sunscreens. New regulations define - broad-spectrum as a sunscreen that protects against both UVA and UVB rays. Only broad-spectrum sunscreens aid in cancer and premature aging risk reduction. Flynn and Johnson had brought three different sunscreens ranging from SPF 4 to 15 to the pool with them. Flynn only uses sunscreen if she is burnt from the day before. "My main motivation is avoiding pain or a goofy tan — it is less about the health benefits." Flynn said. This is not effective, Tan said. This is not effective, nor does it "Tanning oils or anything less than an SPF 15 will prevent burns only; they do not adequately protect the skin from the UVA and UVB rays." Tan said. Patty Quinlan, supervisor of nursing at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that, during her 24 years treating college students, she has seen serious burns from the sun. serious burns from the "Students come in with blisters all over their body. The pain is enormous." Quinlan said. In severe cases a person may feel nauseous, lightheaded, weak and feverish. Quinlan compared severe sunburns to burns sustained from curling irons or flames. BOTTLE curring spots of burns. "Sunburns are like any other burn. They cause cell necrosis," Quinlan said. said. Cell necrosis, the premature death of cells and living tissue, causes irreversible and long-lasting damage to the skin. Although skin cancer is relatively rare in people between 20 and 26, accounting for less than 1 percent of skin cancer cases, damage done during those years increases the risk of a cancer diagnosis later in life. risk of a cancer trigger. Increasing rates of skin cancer and new information on the harmful effects of UVA rays recently prompted the FDA to act. According to the Skin Cancer Foundation, about 90 percent of nonmelanoma skin cancers are associated with exposure to UVA rays from the sun. Treatment of nonmelanoma skin cancers increased by nearly 77 percent between 1992 and 2006. The FDA suggests people apply a liberal amount of sunscreen, which is about the size of a golf ball. They also recommend reapplying sunscreen every two hours. People should avoid extended exposure between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., wear long sleeves, hats and sunglasses. are the most at ease. Students such as Flynn and Johnson don't have to sacrifice their bronze glow for their health. Sunscreen still allows the skin to develop color. The process may be slower, but experts say it's better for your health. "These precautions should be taken every day all year round. Many people think they only need sunscreen while at the pool in the middle of August," Tan said. "That is not the case." While no one is exempt from the dangers of sun exposure, people with fair skin, a family history of cancer and high rates of exposure to the sun are the most at risk. Kelly Flynn's tanning habits of using low-SPF sunscreen are dangerous, according to FDA standards. OUT WITH THE OLD, IN WITH THE NEW New standards approved by the FDA change labeling language on sunscreen to help better inform consumers. The broad spectrum can include almost anything. SUNSCREEN BEFORE Broad Spectrum • Water Proof • Sweat Proof • Sunblock SPF can go as high as 80. 80 SPF SUNSCREEN BEFORE Broad Spectrum • Water Proof • Sweat Proof • Sunblock 80 SPF The broad spectrum can include almost anything. SPF can go as high as 80. SUNSCREEN BEFORE Broad Spectrum • Water Proof • Sweat Proof • Sunblock 80 SPF SUNSCREEN AFTER Broad Spectrum • Protection against UVA and UVB rays. • Sweat resistant • Water resistant • Length 50 SPF SUNSCREEN AFTER Broad Spectrum • Protection agianst UVA and UVB rays • Sweat resistant • Water resistant • Length 50 SPF Sweat reistant rather than sweat proof (same with water) The length is required to be labeled. Only SPF 15 and above can claim to reduce the risk of cancer and premature aging. No SPF can be higher than 50. Stephanie Schulz successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jaydreaming THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE9 FITZPATRICK SKIN TONE CHART FITZPATRICK SKIN TONE CHART Type 1 NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS REDDISH TO VERY FAIR. Doesn't tan, only burns Skin tends to freckle. Type 2 NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS FAIR. Easily burns, tans with difficulty. Develops freckles in sun exposed areas. Type 3 NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS BEIGE. MOST COMMON SKIN TYPE. Can burn and gradually tans. Type 4 NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS A DARKER BEIGE. Rarely burns and easily tans. NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS BROWN. Very rarely burns and tans easily. NATURAL SKIN COLOR IS DARK BROWN. Never burns and tans very easily. Type 4 - The inability to get a sunburn does not mean you are exempt from skin cancer and early aging. Broad-spectrum sunscreens will protect skin from cancer and aging. — skincancer.org With 5 locations all over town... We've got Lawrence covered Eddingham Quail Creek Parkway Townhomes Campus West The Oaks CHERRY·HILL PROPERTIES Eddingham Place Apartments $300 Off! Call for Details 785-841-5444 www.ApartmentsLawrence.com Reader of the week ? Get caught reading the UDK. Be in the Paper. Win awesome prizes. Starting Now! 1 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree latex. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Cote d'Ivoire Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. 27135408 --- The Peace Corps was an attrac- college. 2 right al: Cote d'Ivoire WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN entertainment ODD NEWS PAGE 10 PLYMOUTH, Mass. — Graduates of a Massachusetts high school who received diplomas this month containing spelling errors are getting corrected versions — plus an apology. Spelling errors wreck high school diplomas The diplomas handed out to 263 Plymouth North graduates on June 4 had the word "for" spelled "fro" while the word "and" was spelled "ans." School officials signed all of them without noticing. School officials will sign them and mail them this week. Principal Kathleen McSweeney told The Enterprise of Brockton that Jostens, the Minnesota company that printed the diplomas, sent new ones. Jostens also sent a letter of apology, saying the mistake was human error made as the company transferred artwork to a new computer system. Housecat steals items from neighbors' homes SAN MATEO, Calif. — A prolific cat burglar has stolen hundreds of precious possessions from homes near San Francisco. But the burglar really is a cat. But the burglar really is a Dusty, a 5-year-old feline from San Mateo, has taken hundreds of items during his nearly nightly heists. Owner Jean Child tells the Sun Francisco Chronicle he has pilfered gloves, towels, shoes and more since she adopted him from the Humane Society. Dusty has a special love for swimsuits. Neighbor Kelly McLellan says he stole her bikini on two separate trips. Associated Press 6-22 CRYPTOQUIP GIX MSYX OXJUXO S MRJAVRO XFF-ZSOXE EAOI AQ GIX OISHX VY S OKXXUX ZSQE QSLXE OHSQAOI SJLKXG. 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"The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS•GALLER 410 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4700 | joydrearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY WANSAN 华东理工大学建筑工程学院 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 201 HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 Consider long term objectives for career and family. If you could have anything, what would you want? Where would you be, and with who? It's more about the question than the answer. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today is a 7 Put aside distraction to reveal poorly hidden falsehood. Pay attention to the man behind the curtain. Procrastinate later. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Get a second opinion, before you put down the deposit. Do you really need it? Romance is better tomorrow or the next day, so plot a gift patiently. Take it easy. CANCER (June 22-July 22) Today is all 8 Avoiding a responsibility can take more effort than actually just doing it. Use your imagination to creatively express the outcome you most desire. Prepare for a test. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is an 8 Before taking action, check the facts. Go for efficient efforts that take big ground. Keep scratching tasks off the list, and reward yourself well at the end of the day. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today in Give in to artistic self-expression today, in any media you choose. The garden? A creative project? Whatever you do, fill it with imagination and flair. Today is an 8 LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) It's time to put the work aside and focus on your relationships. Delegate tasks to your team. This may seem like it takes longer, but it's building future speed. Today is a 6 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a U Give in to the temptation to spend time in contemplation at home. Indulge yourself with a bubble bath or your favorite solitary distraction. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is Today is a 7 Plan a vacation for the next four weeks, preferably with family. Don't go into debt, though. Good planning saves a bundle. Don't travel yet. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 7 Keep your money stashed, and continue to repay obligations. Get the word out about a great project. Use your connections, and pull some strings. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 Watch out for sand traps that leave you spinning your wheels. Distractions and indulgences could get you off track. Choose wisely. Postpone an excursion. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) CROSSWORD Today is an 8 Take a deep breath and relax. Change is in the air. Accept coaching from someone you respect. Don't travel or take on a new challenge yet. ACROSS 1 Break suddenly 5 $ dispense 8 Actress Sorvino 12 Luxurious 13 Carnival city 14 Prayer ending 15 Not domestic 17 Bridge 18 Checked out 19 Old Portuguese money 21 Praise in verse 22 Carpet style 23 Sapporo sash 26 Lab goings-on (Abbr.) 28 Dada artist Max 31 Weaponry 33 Antiquated 35 Of planes and such 36 Phi Beta — 38 Meadow 40 Rotation duration 41 Steals from 43 Latin 101 word 45 Sesame Street's Oscar, e.g. 47 Superactive person 51 Guns the engine 52 Begged 54 Sheltered 55 By way of 56 Locate 57 Physiques, slangily 58 Novelist Radcliffe 59 Crazes DOWN 1 Skewer 2 Iditarod terminus 3 Venomous vipers 4 Pic 5 Erte's style 6 Dead heat 7 Fashions 8 Eyelash enhancer 9 Attacked verbally 10 Peruse 11 — Domini 16 Cincinnati team 20 That boat WANT TO KNOW THE ANSWERS? go to udkne.ws/kpGT5I to see the gallery 23 Erstwhile acorn 24 Support system? 25 Made better 27 Under the weather 29 Spanish Mrs. 30 Gift from Santa 32 Husband and wife 34 Very inexpressive 37 1970 Jackson 5 hit 39 — nitrate 42 Hindu destruc tion god 44 Switch type 45 Snatch 46 Move, in Realtor-speak 48 Met melody 49 Repair 50 Prob- ability 53 Hr. fraction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 | | | | 13 | | | 14 | | | | 15 | | | 16 | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | | | 19 20 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | 21 | | | 22 | | | | 23 24 25 | | 26 | | 27 | 28 | | 29 30 | 31 | | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | | | 36 | | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | | | | | 41 | | 42 | 43 | 44 | | | 45 46 | | | | 47 | | 48 49 50 | 51 | | | 52 53 | | | | | 54 | | | 55 | | 56 | | | 57 | | | 58 | | 59 | | | | Conceptis SudoKu By Dave Green | | | 2 | 3 | 7 | 4 | 6 | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 1 | | | | | 7 | | | 4 | | | 2 | | | | 9 | | 2 | | | 6 | | | | 8 | | 5 | 3 | | 8 | 9 | 1 | | 7 | | 6 | | | | | | | 5 | | 7 | | | | | | | 3 | | | 9 | | 3 | | | 2 | | | | | 8 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 5 | | 6/22 Difficulty Level ★★★ MBA "Avila's accounting curriculum enhanced my analytical thinking and introduced me to various concepts and theories which allowed me to not only think outside the box, but to also consider various alternatives before making a final decision" Kristyn Hawkins MBA in Accounting, 2006 Financial Accounting Analyst, St. Honeywell FM6T Find out how an Avila MBA can make you more marketable in today's work force. Call or e-mail JoAnna Giffin at 816-501-3601, or JoAnna.Giffin@avila.edu. A AVILA UNIVERSITY Opening Doors 11901 Wornall Road, Kansas City, MO avila.edu/mba - mba@avila.edu - 816-501-3601 Sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet 1. / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. the end of college planning Four years of classes and one degree later, so know what college. right al: a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. PEACE CORPS Cote d'Ivoire Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attract the option for Wiechman because WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 12 New law to change DUI punishments TOYOTA DUI offenders will face different penalties and sentences under a new statewide law. The law will go into effect on July 1. Find out more about this story on Kansan.com. BY MONISHA BRUNER mbruner@kansan.com A new statewide law changing punishments for driving under the influence will go into effect July 1. Defense attorney Brian Leininger said that there are two major changes to the law. Under the new law, all DUI offenders will be required to install an ignition interlock device in their vehicle for a year. The offender will bear all costs associated with the ignition interlock device. Another change includes how far the state can look into an offender's background. Previously, the state would look at a person's entire record. After the law goes into effect, the state can only go back as far as 2001. Nothing before that will be used against an offender. Jay Norton, an attorney from Kansas City, said if a driver tests as having blood alcohol content between 08 and .15, he or she will be required to serve a 30-day suspension of license, followed by 180 days or six months of driving with an ignition interlock. Ignition interlocks may be mandated for other sentences, including: open container, minor in possession/consumption and habitual violator statute. Those convicted of any of these will have to serve 45 days of the suspension first, then the Department of Revenue will reinstate the license and they will use the interlock. Bill Larzalere, the University's chief litigation attorney, said that this is actually a good thing. Under the present law, if you have been A huge change in the bill is that state DUI records are being expunged or swept clean after 10 convicted of a DUI, your license is suspended for a year and you can't operate a vehicle at all. Under the new law, one can drive as long as they have the ignition interlock device, he said. vice, he said. Interlock devices are sold through private companies. Smartstartinc.com has a different installation price for each state. For Kansas, the installation fee and first-month lease is $123 and after that, $73 a month. There is a $35 fee to uninstall your device. One year using the device would cost $961. "If you do get pulled over, if you're really drunk and have prior offense, I would tell them not to take the breath test," he said. years, Larzalere said. years, Larszke, Norton said DUI convictions and diversions before July 1, 2001, do not count as previous convictions. Larzalere said that he would advise students to not drink and drive at all but if they find themselves in the situation, to not incriminate themselves. The less that's in the report the less they have to convict you, he said. If they have not said anything, did not take a field test, etc, the officer has no report on them besides that When you are pulled over, the police can't make students take the field sobriety test, Lazalere said. He would encourage students not take the field test. However, refusing the Breathalyzer is a crime. "Don't say I've only had two beers," Larzalere said. he pulled them over for whatever reason. Take the Breathalyzer at the station; however, the police officer is required to give you two forms to read and sign. "Students who came in they were using the old forms, and if they used the old forms and not the new ones then that breath test isn't valid," Larzalere said. The forms are called DC27 and DC70. When students fill out the DC27 they have 10 days to request a hearing. Leininger said that if students do get pulled over and they are a first time offender, the best thing to do is not to be rude or belligerent. Of course the best rule is to not drink and drive. Always have a designated driver, friend or call SafeRide at 785-864-4644. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 219 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreurning LAKERS "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.642.4900 joydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 13 STUDY ABROAD Students are prohibited from visiting some of the countries on the map Sue Lorenz, director of the study abroad program, has in her office. Currently, 34 countries have State Department travel warnings. 1984-1985 Committee to rethink banned countries BY MATTHEW GALLOWAY mgalloway@kansan.com Sue Lorenz, the director of the study abroad program, has a map of the world painted onto a wall in her office. Since she took her position two years ago, she has often looked at the map and counted the number of countries within social or environmental chaos to which the University of Kansas is barred from sending students. The University prohibits the study abroad program from sending any undergraduate students to countries with travel warnings issued by the U.S. State Department. However, Lorenz said her department is discussing the creation of a committee to explore changing the university policy. "There are movements and other kinds of things happening around the world that cause us various problems," Lorenz said. The current policy applies not only to the study abroad program but to several other traveling entities at the college. It is designed to put safety first in every conceivable situation. Graduate students and faculty can petition to have exceptions issued in certain situations, but those occurrences are rare. "Traditionally the precedent is that we do not send students to countries where there are State Department advisories, period." Hodgie Bricke, assistant vice provost of international When a tsunami hit eastern Japan on March 11, the State Department issued a travel warning that applied to the entire country. Following university policy, the study abroad program moved to withdraw all KU students from the country, even those far from the area of impact. Shortly after the students were ordered to flee Japan, the State Department lifted the travel warning. The ordeal in Japan spurred the study abroad program's desire to examine the University's wide-sweeping policy, Lorenz said. "The policy is pretty direct in what it says right now," Lorenz said. "There is some discussion about whether the University's upper administration should decide whether they should implement a more complex policy that might allow for sections when dealing with undergraduate students." The committee would not operate out of the study abroad office, Lorenz said, and it would be composed of upper administration officials, legal experts and faculty members with a familiarity of some of the troubled countries currently barred. Thirty-four countries are on the State Department's travel warnings list, including Mexico. The study abroad program suspended its partnership with Puebla, Mexico, last summer even though the areas most affected by the drug cartels are much further north, Lorenz said. Under a new zoning policy, the study abroad department could petition for an exemption in the case of Puebla. Under the new proposal, a committee would be asked to review a situation and decide the best course of action. Any officials on the committee must be willing to meet on a moment's notice, Lorenz said. "They would have to act very quickly in a situation like we had in Japan, because it isn't an on-the- ground political situation that might develop or intensify over time, it's something that is right there," Lorenz said. Students studying abroad who do not adhere to evacuation requests must withdraw from school. "In terms of emergency work, we will do that when we need to do that," Lorenz said. "But we want to reduce the chances that something other than the daily thing like a sprained ankle or a broken arm will happen to you, because those things are very difficult to deal with. We want to maintain the minimal risk and the most efficiency in helping students." There is a certain comfort level in trusting State Department declarations, Lorenz said. "It's a decent thing to pin to" Lorenz said. "They tend not to act precipitously and without investigation." COUNTRIES WITH STATE DEPARTMENT TRAVEL WARNINGS The State Department issues travel warnings to recommend that Americans avoid the risks and dangerous conditions in that country. These are the most recent travel warnings. — travel.state.gov 1. COTE D'IVOIRE 06/16/2011 2. PHILIPPINES 06/14/2011 3. BURUNDI 06/01/2011 4. YEMEN 05/25/2011 5. SYRIA 04/25/2011 6. UZBEKISTAN 04/25/2011 7. MEXICO 04/22/2011 8. BURKINA FASO 04/19/2011 9. NIGERIA 04/15/2011 10. COTE D'IVOIRE 04/14/2011 11. IRAQ 04/12/2011 12. LEBANON 04/04/2011 13. ALGERIA 03/16/2011 14. MAURITANIA 03/11/2011 15. AFGHANISTAN 03/08/2011 16. MALI 03/02/2011 17. ERITREA 02/27/2011 18. LIBYA 02/25/2011 19. PAKISTAN 02/02/2011 20. HAITI 01/20/2011 21. CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC 01/14/2011 22. NIGER 01/12/2011 23. NEPAL 01/12/2011 24. SUDAN 01/07/2011 25. KENYA 12/28/2010 26. SOMALIA 12/27/2010 27. SAUDI ARABIA 12/23/2010 28. CHAD 12/08/2010 29. GUINEA 12/03/2010 30. CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE 11/25/2010 31. COLOMBIA 11/10/2010 32. IRAN 10/08/2010 33. KOREA, DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 08/27/2010 34. ISRAEL, THE WEST BANK AND GAZA 08/10/2010 1 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attract-ment in Gillem, Jean because er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Cote d'Ivoire Four ye degree late PAGE 14 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN O opinion FREE FOR ALL apps.facebook.com/dailykansan GayU is a party school. Anybody that wants a quality education goes to Mizzou. Is that where you went? Looks like they should focus a little more closely on spelling. Mizzou is for trash, STDs and inbred Ozark hicks The Gayhawks are a one-sport school. Mizzou is the entire package, bro. MIZ FKU! KU ranked last in big 12 athletics. Haha! Yeah, Mizzou is TOTALLY the entire package. Out of all their sports combined, they have a grand total of ONE national championship since the school was started, and it was over 50 years ago...pathetic much? Haha at the Missouri idiot. Come on now, Kansas has 12 national titles and Missouri has two. I would say come back when you have won a National Championship in something relevant, but we would never see you again. If you aren't residing in California, Texas or New York, you probably shouldn't wear a fedora to the pool. If you're not going to pull my hair and spank my rear, don't bother trying to sleep with me. How come no girls think I am hot? This sucks. I should have gone to K-State, those women are too ugly to have standards. ri never name my daughter Kiki because I don't want her to be a whore. 图示题解 Romney positive presence as candidate I'm not going to make it any secret that I'm not particularly impressed with the pool of Republican presidential candidates for 2012, but I commend Mitt Romney for his courageous stance on the war in Afghanistan. POLITICS At a time when such forward thinking is unpopular within his party, Romney has made the choice to act responsibly in advocating for the removal of troops from the ground in Afghanistan in as quick of a process as possible. At last week's Republican debate, Romney expressed that he felt that Afghanistan had taught the U.S. a lesson: that we cannot fight other nation's wars in order to spread democracy. As this sentiment has echoed throughout the years, particularly since the Vietnam War, I hope that this time, Romney is right. Sen. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina, among many other Republicans, has criticized Romney's position on the war. On Sunday's NBCs Meet the Press, while claiming the war is primarily about fighting terrorism instead of spreading democracy, Graham questioned Romney's attempt to win the GOP nomination with such a leftist attitude toward the war. BY KELLY COSBY kcosby@kansan.com Indeed, Romney's position is slightly more liberal than expected, sliding further to the left than President Obama on the issue. But Romney gets it right when he states that the war is not truly about fighting terrorism anymore. Obama's failure to remove troops from Afghanistan more quickly could be considered somewhat of a compromise as he deals with an uncooperative Congress at times, but nevertheless, it is a bit disappointing. Unfortunately, as Romney is taking the appropriate position on the war that is nonetheless unpopular with Republicans and conservative voters, Graham may be right in commenting that this could hurt his chances of winning the GOP nomination. However, this issue may weigh less with those voters than the economy and their perception of what needs to be done. In that case, Romney's war perspective might not hurt him too much. wnat simultaneously frightens and pleases me about public opinion after the first couple of debates is the fact that Michele Bachmann is being considered a possible serious contender. Her poise and eloquence in some instances during the debate have caused many to look at her more favorably. My plea is that voters remember Bachmann's agenda before they start to think she might appear to be reasonable. Her comments about education and social policy are intensely outlandish and demonstrate no understanding of what freedoms and protection of human rights are about. However, if Bachmann were to capture the hearts of Republicans enough to win the GOP nomination, I wouldn't be all that disappointed. Yes, that would mean a larger number of Americans could be duped by her well-spoken exterior than I thought, or even that many Republicans have begun to entertain thoughts of agreement with some of the more absurd aspects of her agenda. But I still have the faith in my country that if she were the GOP nominee, there would be no way she could win the presidency. This would mean an easier route for Obama's reelection, which is the best option I can see on the horizon. Cosby is a senior in English and political science from Overland Park. CHECK KANSAN.COM DAILY FOR MORE STORIES @ weets of the week DivaOfDiversity Michelle T. Johnson @TheKansen_News I'm so witty, people around me much are required to wear Depends. #KU Alumni. brendanallen Brendan Allen @TheKansan_News if you browse my tweets you'll experience incessant, sublime mirth coupled with powerful convulsions of questionable origin **aunimaceudo** Alex Bamiaceo Why is the free for all today all about desperate singles and awful summer flings? #kansan Tweet us your opinion to @kansanopinion GUEST: SPORTS ADMINISTRATION BY ZACHARY GRAHAM editor@kansan.com Student athletes deserve dollars With the mushroom cloud now dissipating over the remains of Ohio State football (my alma mater), it is time to start thinking of ways to allow student athletes to benefit financially from their collegiate status. The NCAA does not allow student athletes to use their name or position on campus to gain benefits ordinary students may not receive. That is why when you buy a KU basketball jersey there is no name on the back, or if you play an NCAA video game the players are identified by numbers. But entities such as the NCAA, ESPN athletic departments, merchandise distributors and EA Sports are able to generate substantial profit from these same athletes. Are there ways to allow athletes to be openly rewarded? how much interest is to tuition? Student-paid tuition is one proposal. But tuition going to athletes is not an option because that money should be going to expanding dining centers, improving campus WiFi and general University upkeep. It would be a hard sell to raise tuition to pay athletes when universities, including our own, are steeply raising tuition to cover the lack of state aid. Couldn't the athletic department directly pay them? Sure. But how do you navigate the logistics? Do you pay just football and men's basketball because they bring in the most money? Would starters make more than reserves? Would a KU football player be paid the same amount as an Oklahoma football player? Would it be like major league baseball, where the most resourceful athletic departments lure athletes with dollar signs? The simplest way is to let athletes get rewarded however they want. If someone offered to pay you $1,000 for a signed basketball, would you turn it down? Of course not. Why should a student athlete? Graham is a a doctoral candidate in exercise science from Lawrence. WANT TO VOICE YOUR OPINION? contact editor@kansan.com or at (785) 864-4810 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.642.4900 | joydreamina THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 15 TRENDS Like the shoes, students snap up Toms sunglasses BY SHAUNA BLACKMON sblackmon@kansan.com With so many businesses struggling, it's unusual to see one thriving — especially a business that gives away half of its inventory. Toms shoes has gained rapid popularity, especially on college campuses. When someone buys a pair of Toms shoes, the company sends a pair to an impoverished child. The popular brand is now expanding and selling eyewear that encompass the same giving principle. For every pair of glasses someone buys, someone overseas receives glasses, surgery or another form of eye treatment to help improve or restore their vision. The company chose eyewear because, like having shoes, it affects many other aspects of a person's life and is easily solvable, according to the Toms website. Available solutions, including medical treatment, prescription eyeglasses or a 15-minute cataract surgery, could impact 80 percent of people afflicted with vision impairment and blindness," said the site. The only place to find the new Toms sunglasses is at Shark's Surf Shop, 813 Massachusetts St., or the Toms website, which offers a virtual try on. By either using a webcam or uploading a picture, customers can see what they would look like wearing any of the different styles. Chris Cox, the owner of Shark's, said the first day the sunglasses were available Toms website crashed from so much traffic. An employee of Shark's, Erica Friedheim, said the first day Toms sunglasses were available at the store a Toms representative came and sold a bunch of the glasses. The glasses are sold for about $145. Though that may be out of many college students' budgets, Friedheim said that price isn't unusual for designer sunglasses. The cheapest glasses Shark's carries are $65, but some of the more expensive can be in the $200 range. Bailey Perkins, a senior from Wichita and owner of seven pairs of Toms shoes, has been trying to get the on-campus Toms group started back up since its disintegration last year with the graduation of many of its members and officers. While the group was in full swing, it sponsored events such as "One Day Without Shoes," during which people tried to experience what those without shoes face every day. TOMS The group also sponsored a visit from the company founder Blake Mycoskie in 2010 and concert by 1990s teen boy band Hanson. Though the initial frenzy surrounding Toms has died down, Friedheim said she thought that, as soon as the word about the sunglasses is out, they would be as popular as the shoes. Toms now sells sunglasses with the same philanthropic business model as shoes. For every pair sold, the company will give sight to a person in need. WANT TO LEARN MORE? Studentrs interested in a club devoted to Toms can email: tomskulawrence@gmail.com KEEP YOUR MONEY All upfront fees waived with savings of $550! ON BUS ROUTE FREE TANNING STUDENT BUSINESS CENTER STATE-OF-THE-ART FITNESS CENTER PET FRIENDLY ABERDEEN 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE AppStore Apple Cards GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four ye degree late kn cc ri er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attract- for Weichman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE16 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN What type of alternative works for you? BRITTANY NELSON bnelson@kansan.coom I lie on a narrow bed as I anxiously await thin needles to be pierced all over my body. Right before my acupuncturist put the first one intomy foot, she said, "This one will hurt the worst." A tiny pinch later, and it was in. A wave of relief flushed through me as I realized this was going to be no big deal. Being an acupuncture- virgin, I slowly started to feel more relaxed as the kind acupuncturist made small talk and the thin needles were sending meinto a tranquil haze. Call me crazy. But in my quest for alternative medicine, I'm not alone. The National Health Interview Survey defines alternative, or com- KANSANCLASSIFIEDS HOME housing SALE for sale announcements ... 785-864-4358 Mega Mouth HAWKCHALK.COM ... jobs textbooks CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM JOBS Full time teacher position for early education program. Send resume to: Children Learning Center, 205 N Michigan, Lawrence, KS 66044 or email c15@sunflower.com. EOE. Housecleaner, part-time BECOME A BARTENDER. UP TO $300/DAY. NO EXPERIENCE NEGESARY. TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. 809-965-6527 EXT 108 General office work plus showing afts. FT or PT between 9:00-6:00, M-F. Must be avail. to work PT this fall. Please call 785-841-5797 Housecleaner, part time $10/hour, plus tips. Seeking energetic, punctual, responsible, friendly individuals. Professional cleaning experience required and must have car (mileage reimbursed). Call Aveena Natural Cleaning Services at 841-3134 for application. www.AVEaenAClean.com HOUSING Fall Semester Lease: 4 BR or 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 Car Garage, make offer, near KU. Call (785) 814-3849 $1230 @ 1100 Louisiana St. 2 blks north of campus. Large 3 bpt apt. in Victorian house + 3 CAR DRIVEWAY. Water pd. No pets. Call 785-766-0476 for showing. HOUSING $385. Roommate needed for next school year. Close to campus. Chase Court Apts. Email: nord.kyle@gmail.com Now Leasing for Fall - 1-4 Bedroom Houses and Apartments. Great Rates. 785-842-7644. www.gagemgmt.com 920 TENNESSEE BRI/82RA Near KUDowntown, W/D, DW Hardwood Floors, pets ok Call 785-843-0011 1 roommate need for 3 bd apt above Chipote at 9th&Mass. Only $400/month + utilities. Call Alex @ 913-484-1444. HOUSING Half off August Rent! Luxury 1,283 BR Apts. Quiet location, large rooms, pool, W/D. 785-842-3280 Available August '11: Studio Apt. ($315) One BD Apt. ($420). Close to KU. Call Tom @785-550-0426. ANNOUNCEMENTS 1213 KENTUCKY 6BR/JBA Newly Remodeled, Near KU/Downtown Walk-in closets, Hardwood Floors Energy Efficient Appliances Call 854-843-0011 THE BIRD'S WAY meadowbrook Bob Billygge & Crestone 785-842-4200 2 and 3 Bedroom's Apts. & Townhomes Available Summer & Fall Close to KUJ, 3 Bus Stops Regents Court 19th & Mass Furnished 3 & 4BR Apts Leasing for August 2011 W/D included Ride the Meadowbrook bus to KU See Current Availability Photos & Floor Plans Do Our Website www.meadowbrookapartments.net Sunrise Place Sunrise Village Apartments and Townhomes Spacious, Remodeled homes 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Models Available View plans, pricing and amenities @ sunriseapartments.com or call 841-8400. TRAFFIC-DUFI'S-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/legislation issues in DONALD G. STROLE The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center Life got you down? We can help. 785 841 2345 785. 841.2345 PARIMENTS First month free rent Pool Access Pet Fees Waterer Wadder Dryer (785) 842-3640 village@tnpower.com Talk to a counselor today. Open 24/7. Always free. Stonecrest www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us Like us on facebook HanoverPlace First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@outdoorkw.com VillageSquare APARTMENTS First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@sunflower.com ANNOUNCEMENTS LUXURY LIVING AT AFFORDABLE PRICES Ranch Way Townhomes on Clinton Parkway 2 & 3 Bedroom $760-$840 ½ off deposit PAID INTERNET H Gage Management 785-842-7644 | www.gagemgmt.com Free-of-charge counseling is available at GaDuGi SafeCenter for anyone who has experienced sexual violence. Services are provided by a licensed clinical professional counselor and trauma specialist. To schedule an appointment contact Susan Miller, LCPC, (785)843-8985, ext 370 or counselor@sunfower.com GaDuGi SAFECENTER hawkchalk.com successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. I AM NOT A GAME PLAYER. I AM A FAN. I AM A BOSS. I AM A POWERFUL FAN. I AM A SUCCESSFUL FAN. I AM A CAREFUL FAN. I AM A RELAXED FAN. I AM A DISTURBED FAN. I AM A DISAPPOINTED FAN. I AM A DISGUSTED FAN. I AM A DEATHED FAN. I AM A MONEY-BACK FAN. I AM A LOSING FAN. I AM A HAPPY FAN. I AM A CONSEQUENTIAL FAN. I AM A REPEATED FAN. I AM A CHANGE FAN. I AM A NEW FAN. I AM A RETURN FAN. I AM A LEAVE FAN. I AM A STOP FAN. I AM A FINAL FAN. I AM A STOPPER FAN. I AM A TIME-STOPPER FAN. I AM A TIME-TERMINATO "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE17 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 plimentary medicine as "a group of diverse medical and health care systems, practices, and products that are generally not considered part of conventional medicine." This includes many different remedies and practices, such as homeopathy, herbs, acupuncture, yoga, meditation, hypnotherapy and massage. Eastern cultures have been using complimentary medicine for centuries and the trend has been increasing in United States since 1990. In 1997, researchers found that alternative medicine use had increased 50 percent since 1990. That number has remained steady until 2002, however yoga and herbal remedy use have increased. According to a 2007 survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 38 percent of adults use alternative medicine; the most popular being acupuncture, yoga, massage, meditation, and herbal remedies such as echinacea, flaxseed oil and ginseng. HOLISTIC LIVING: Austin Swick, a junior from Claremont, Calif., said that he rides his bike to work and school every day. He cooks healthy food and uses herbal and homeopathic medicine for his allergies. He lives what he calls a "holistic lifestyle." Swick said after his allergy shots did not help him, he looked elsewhere. "Bee pollen is more condensed than honey and is great for combating allergies," Swick said. "Holistic remedies and herbs are way more budget-friendly than going to the doctor. I occasionally use pain relievers, but mostly stick to herbal remedies." But living holistically not only involves herbal remedies, it involves a lifestyle change. "Our society's perception of time is a key reason why so many people are unhealthy. They want to grab food on-the-go when people don't realize how inexpensive and easy it is to eat healthy. I buy common food staples in bulk and cook," he said. When eating on campus, Swick avoids processed foods and sticks to fresh produce and sushi. Swick also mentioned in order to receive nature's benefits, people have to be willing to change their diets and habits."You can't just take a Vitamin C when you're sick, you have to take it every day. People don't want to cross over and experiment with a new kind of lifestyle, but you have to take that risk." Acupuncture has been around for centuries and is still practiced today. Originating in China, acupuncture involves placing thin needles in the skin at certain pressure points that increases the body's chi, or energy flow,Gina Halsey, Lawrence acupuncturist, said that acupuncture is great for treating pain and enhancing the immune system. "Acupuncture can work as a replacement for pain medication. It works in a different way; it doesn't just mask the pain, it resolves it." Acupuncture treats many different ailments, the most common being headaches, chronic pain, asthma, and surgery and injury recovery. Acupuncture also helps other things such as insomnia, anxiety, fertility, and irritable bowel syndrome. ACUPUNCTURE: HYPNOTHERAPY: Hypnotherapy doesn't involve needles, medication or herbs — it involves the mind. According to the International Medical and Dental-Hypnotherapy Association, hypnosis involves the subconscious mind to remain awake when the body and conscious mind are in a relaxed neutral state. This "awake" subconscious mind is able to receive suggestions to make changes. Stephen L. Griffeth, Ph.D, said that hypnotherapy is great for quitting smoking, insomnia, anxiety, acute pain and fibromalygia, among numerous other complications. Griffeth said hypnosis is great for smokers wanting to quit because it has a 90 percent success rate, where as gums and patches only have a five to 10 percent success rate. --- Acupuncture involves placing thin needles in the skin at certain pressure points that increases the body's chi, or energy flow. it's a it's a THREE FOR ALL at R RESERVE ON WEST 31st www.ReserveOnWest31st.com facebook.com/ReserveOnWest31st 2511 West 31st Street Lawrence, KS 66047 785.842.0032 NOW LEASING AMAZING 3 BED/3 BATH APARTMENTS! • FULLY FURNISHED WITH ALL KITCHEN APPLIANCES • PRIVATE BEDROOMS AND BATHROOMS AND ACCESS TO FABULOUS AMENITIES INCLUDING FITNESS CENTER, COMPUTER LAB, TANNING BED, POOL WITH TANNING DECK AND COMMUNITY-WIDE WiFi! STARTING AT ONLY $419! *PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE 50 W. 10th St. 100 VENEZUELA BARCELONA MADRID SAN FRANCISCO TORONTO MILAN PITCHER WESTERN CAPITAL NEW YORK CHICAGO LOS ANGELES MEXICO CITY SOUTH BEND HARLEY-FALLS ATLANTA CHICAGO LOS ANGELES MEXICO CITY SOUTH BEND HARLEY-FALLS ATLANTA CHICAGO LOS ANGELES MEXICO CITY SOUTH BEND HARLEY-FALLS ATLANTA *PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com --- As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job,but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions.She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attrac- tion to Meiji Manhwa because Four yes depren late kn co ri Cote d'Ivoire WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 18 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LOCAL Police ask for funding, but support unclear BY KYLIE NUTT knutt@kansan.com The Lawrence Police Department is asking for an additional $1.2 million to add to the 2012 budget to add resources in order to reduce crime rates. In recent budget meetings the 2010 Benchmark City Survey was used as evidence to support the request. The survey is used as a measurement tool for police departments around the country who choose to be a part of the survey to evaluate their communities. Lawrence was ranked 27th out of 28 cities in aggravated assault/battery, arson, auto theft, burglary, homicide, rape, robbery and theft, according to the 2010 Benchmark City Survey. The Overland Park Police Department compiles the data and makes it available for police departments to set goals and objectives. Lawrence Police Chief Tarki Khatib requested $1.2 million to add one detective, 10 officers, three sergeants and $102,008 in equipment according to a May 9 memorandum to City Manager David Corliss. The department held a budget hearing meeting last Tuesday, June 14, to discuss what resources the department would like to add, Sgt. Matt Sarna, a spokesman for the Lawrence police, said. "We're asking for more resources to try to get those numbers down," Sarna said. "We can only do so much with what we have on the street right now. If the city approves the department's funding request, the money will be generated through an increase in property taxes. The survey shows Lawrence's violent crime has decreased to 3.6 per 1,000 people and property crime has also decreased to 47.4 per 1,000 people, according to the 2010 Benchmark City Survey. 2009's statistics were 4.8 per 1,000 people and 48.3 per 1,000 people respectively, according to a Mar. 29 memoran- we've got a level of crime in Lawrence and it's a little higher than it should be per capita." ARON CROMWELL Mayor of Lawrence dum to Corliss. "We've got a level of crime in Lawrence and it's a little higher than it should be per capita," Mayor Cromwell said. "We have challenges in Lawrence with a lot of different types of crime. Property crime rates are high and in some cases, are unsolved." Cromwell says the most important resource to add is more officers, along with equipment upgrades and a new facility. The new facility is not in the proposed 2012 budget, but the department is considering their options because of extensive upgrades the Law Enforcement Center and the Investigations and Training Center would need. The department would prefer all three law enforcements to be in one central location near Fire Station No.5, on the corner of 19th and Iowa streets. This means the University's Office of Public Safety and the Douglas County Sheriff's Office could possibly join the department. Even so, the true relationship between crime rates and feelings of safety can be difficult to gage in a community. "We feel safer than I think maybe we are," Cromwell said. The community rated police services at 83 percent in the 2011 Citizen Survey, which is higher than the 2007 survey. They indicated a significant increase in customer satisfaction from 2007 to 2011 of feeling safe downtown after dark. City Commissioner Mike Amyx said that, as the city begins the budget process, they will look at each city department when deciding whether to allocate the $1.2 million to the Lawrence Police Department. The city commissioners will consider the responses of the community and the people in various city departments. They will also make sure the highest of priorities are met, Amyx said. The 2012 budget will be finalized by the city commissioners later this year. First Management INTERNATIONAL Canyon Court POOL PARTY! Friday June 24th 1pm - 6pm Win prizes, hang by the pool, and meet your new neighbors! Canyon Court POOL PARTY! Friday June 24th 1pm - 6pm Win prizes, hang by the pool, and meet your new neighbors! Hosted by First Management Inc., 3 Spoons Yogurt, Pizza Hut, Papa John's Pizza, Freddy's Frozen Custard, Celsius Tan, Royal Crest Lanes & Eileen's Cookies! Luxury 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments HALF OFF AUGUST RENT and Reduced Security Deposits! KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY 4D Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydrearing THE GARDEN f THE WEEKEND SUNDAY, JULY 25TH, 1963 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 800 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydreamline "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 19 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.1900 | joyarearning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 19 the numbers Lawrence Benchmark Survey crime rates in 2009 and 2010 Crime rates in Lawrence have decreased since 2009, but are still above the national average per 1,000 citizens, according to the Benchmark Survey. The survey measures crime rates in various cities across the country as a way for police departments to improve their communities. Lawrence police have asked for more funding, but The Kansan has found crime rates are down or relatively low when compared to that of other cities. More information on this at Kansan.com/news. NATIONAL AVERAGE LAWRENCE 2009 LAWRENCE 2010 TOTAL CRIME 33.6 55.2 47.4 VIOLENT CRIMES 2.7 5.0 3.6 PROPERTY CRIMES 31.0 50.2 43.7 BURGLARY 5.5 8.2 5.7 DOMESTIC VIOLENCE 5.5 9.6 8.6 THEFT 15.1 23.7 22.0 AGGRAVATED ASSAULT 1.7 2.7 2.5 BURGLARY 5.5 8.2 5.7 LOOKING FOR MORE DETAILS ABOUT CRIME RATES AND THEIR IMPACT? We have more details on the controversy and on measuring how safe you really are. Go to kansas.com/news to check it. @ out. Lonnie's Recycling, Inc. GET MONEY FOR YOUR METAL RECYCLABLE ITEMS Mention join coupon and receive an extra $0.99 per pound on aluminum cans! 501 Maple St (785)-841-4855 GRE $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $ LSAT $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $ GMAT $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $ TEST PREPARATION That's Right on Target. KU CONTINUING EDUCATION The University of Kansas Register early! Save $100! Test preparation classes now enrolling. ON 100097 O The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St *Lawrence Ki* www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) • 785-864-5823 Saturday, June 25th Swinging Utters w/ Continental Thursday, July 7th The Windup Birds Were to Stay / Radio Free TV Wednesday, July 13th Blind Pilot Saturday, July 23rd RX Bandits w/Maps & Atlases www.thebottlenecklive.com f Find us on Facebook for concert announcements, giveaways, and more! CROSSROADS KC 417 1E Bts KSCG MGRINDERS PRESENTED BY MILLER LITE FRI JUN 24 SECTION 8 W/MAC MILLER/LL B/KID INK SAT JUN 25 MISSOURI CHAINSAW GRASSACRE featuring: CORNMEAL / SPLIT LIP RAYTIEF THE WILDERS / MOUNTAIN SPROUT & MANY MORE! 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TRU SEP 1 TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND Jeep TICKETS AVAILABLE AT GRINDERS IN ICC, THE BOTTLECKEK IN LAWRENCE WWW.CROSSROADSKC.COM 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Cote d'Ivoire a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Four yea degree late The Peace Corps was an attract for Wichman because WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 20 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RELATIONSHIPS Facebook use magnifies, causes trouble in couples BY MEG LOWRY mlowry@kansan.com When it comes to Facebook and relationships, it's complicated. More than sixty percent of the 500 billion people who use Facebook have a relationship status listed on their profile. The site offers ten status options: single, in a relationship, it's complicated, engaged, married, divorced, widowed, separated, in a civil union and in a domestic partnership. Facebook has been included in an increasing number of divorce cases, according to the American Academy of Matrimonial lawyers. The effects Facebook has on relationships, however, aren't so simple. "By definition, the format of the internet allows for problems to happen in a relationship more easily," said Kristine Johnson, a psychologist at Christian Psychological Services, 3510 Clinton Place. In the U.S., only thirty-nine percent of Facebook users are listed as Johnson explains that Facebook can highlight already existing problems. "single." The majority of users, then, are in a relationship that may be impacted by their social networking. A person typing on a laptop. "If someone is struggling to be honest, for example, the internet offers a new outlet ters a new outlet for that," Johnson said. Carson Levine, a senior, has been dating her boyfriend Drew for a year. A few months into their relationship, she said, they became "Facebook official." A study conducted last year by Nielsen, an online analyst, found that in one month an average 135 million people will visit Facebook. "I just figured if we didn't put it up, it would be weird," Levine said. "I thought it meant he was embar- Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN "If someone is struggling to be honest, for example, the internet offers a new outlet for that." or more than 70 percent of American Internet users. Those who visit the site spent seven hours a month on it, compared to the average 2.5 hours a month on Google. KRISTINE JOHNSON Psychologist rassed by me. Looking back, it seems a little ridiculous." When a couple "links" on Facebook, the status change is posted to their walls and to their friend's news feeds, making the change public knowledge. "I was going to be "I was going to be leaving town for a few weeks, and I think it made him feel a little better to know our relationship was public," Levine said. Whether a couple chooses to make their relationship Facebook official or not, Johnson said communication is key. "Technology can really reduce intimacy and understanding between people," Johnson said. "It can lead to a whole new host of problems." According to the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, an increasing number of divorce cases have been including Facebook as evidence of infidelity. Photographs, messages and wall posts have all been presented in the courtroom by slighted lovers. HAIR ACADEMY $7 HAIRCUTS ALWAYS $20 HI-LITE EXTRA W/ LONG HAIR 3 FOR HAIR $18 FEATHERS VOTED BEST SALON TOP OF THE HILL, 2005-2010 ALL SERVICES PROVIDED BY STUDENTS UNDER SUPERVISION OF EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS. 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 14471 METCALF 2429 IOWA ST. 913.402.4700 785.749.1488 ZHAIRACADEMY.COM the platform as they do with just being a really bad choice." Levine agrees. Johnson said social media can create an outlet for infidelity, but isn't necessarily the cause. "If you one hundred percent trust the person that you are with and know you have the same feelings for each other, I don't see why it would be a problem," she said. "But if you are insecure in your relationship, it will be an issue." "There is an idea that the internet is an efficient platform for secrecy," Johnson said. "But situations like that don't have as much to do with Last year, thirty-seven percent of relationship status updates were pages being changed to "single." The update instantly alerts friends, family, co-workers and acquaintances of your heartbreak. "It would suck for a while, I think," Levine said. "But at the end of the day, it's just Facebook." when it's hot as $#!@ outside: the Mango Rita when last night was a little TOO fun: the Hangover Blend you just CAN'T take another greasy burger: the Crosstrainer night OO fun: r Blend JUICE STOP 6th & WAKARUSA CHECK KANSAN.COM DAILY FOR MORE STORIES We're not just around weekly on trees, we're around all the time on the web and social media with exclusive stories, videos and interaction with you. Check it out. TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy, Sell, & Beat New & Used Textbooks 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com @ TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy Sell & Best New & Used Textbooks 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 419 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joydlearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 419 Massachusetts | Lawrence, RI | 785.842.4900 | joydreaming THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 21 S sports SEE MORE SPORTS BASKETBALL 123 Former men's basketball players teamed up for a scrimmage for a good cause — last week's Roundball Classic in honor of children's cancer, held in Kansas City. GAMEDAY FEUD? Weekly Sports Trivia Q: What is the 'green room' in the NBA Draft? A: The NBA's top 15 draft picks are invited to sit in the green room with their families to wait for their selection and to shake the commissioner's hand. — espn.com Quote of the Week "Both invited to green room, 1 step closer to my dream!! #hardworkingpaysof F.O.E." — Marcus Morris via Twitter @KansasTwin22 Fact of the Week Over their careers at Kansas, Marcus and Markieff Morris played for 2,611 and 2,100 minutes total respectively. kuathletics.com --- Athletes in ESPN kerfuffle MY MIKE VERNON mvernon@kansan.com It started out as a joke of sorts, a way to stay entertained during the painfully long offseason. Two wide receivers on the Kansas football team, senior Daymond Patterson and junior A.J. Steward, released their first video of a series on Vimeo, titled, "D.P. & A.J. Take On KU," in which the two faced off in a soccer showdown with with sophomore goalie Kat Liebetrau and sophomore defender Brittany King. What it turned into landed the receivers plenty of airtime on ESPN's College GameDay, and became much more than a way to kill time and bring smiles to Kansas fans' faces. The video opens with 27 seconds of outtakes, as Patterson and Steward attempt to film their introduction, but end up making each other laugh over and over again. The following six minutes and 25 seconds of the video include the shootout, an extraordinary amount of trash-talk, and a collision that was heard around the college football world. After Patterson deflected a shot to clinch the victory for "D.P. & A.J," the two receivers, as expected, began to celebrate. Patterson screamed and began to trot from the goal. Steward placed his shirt over his face and on top of his head, and ran at a decent speed straight into a cameraman, sending both Steward and the cameraman onto the turf. Laughter ensued from both parties, and the clip promptly landed the video a spot on College GameDay. Mark May, the well-known ESPN personality and commentator on the show that day, did not take the video with jest. He went on to call the football players out, and suggested they take on the basketball team instead — something D.P. and A.J. had planned for their next video. Instead of staying mum on the criticism from May, the two released a response video on Vimeo, in which they held a fake press conference responding to May. In the video, Patterson and Steward made it clear they did not appreciate May's comments and, keeping things in jest, they extended a challenge to May. "We'll debate you in any sport, any topic that you want to do," Patterson said. "We'll change the show just for you from D.P. and A.J. take on KU to D.P. and A.J. take on Mark May." Steward added a quip of his own, "Mark, we're coming for you." Sure enough, the next episode of College GameDay featured the press conference from Patterson and Steward and a response from May. The message from Bristol, Conn., was clear. "Let's go ahead and debate any sport you'd like." May said. "It could be badminton, it could be basketball, it doesn't matter, because you know what? I accept your challenge." 6 Ben Pirotte/KANSAN FILE PHOTO Wide reciever Daymond Patterson runs past Oklahoma State cornerback Andrew McGee in a November file photo. GUEST COMMENTARY: NBA DRAFT Smaller teams need extra help BY NICK SCHWERDT editor@kansan.com With the 2011 NBA Draft only days away, team executives are preparing crucial decisions that will affect their franchise for many years to come. Most teams will likely draft a player whose career will not be defined by his success, but rather by what they will fail to accomplish. There's added pressure for smaller-market teams to maximize their draft potential. While big cities can attract star-free agents due to their media exposure, small market teams must rely on the draft. Come on, who wants to end up in Milwaukee? Paul Pierce and the 2007 Celtics ended the season with a 24-58 record — good enough for 2nd worst in the league. They were in dire need of a "game-changer," as they had whiffed on several pervious draft picks. Gerald Green 18th overall in 2005, aye carumba! The Celtics ended up with the fifth overall pick. To avoid repeating draft failures it traded its selection in exchange for Ray Allen from the soon-to-be Thunder. They then orchestrated a trade to acquire Kevin Garnett from the Timberwolves. The "Boston Three Party" was born. SEE COMMENTARY 122 THINK THE MORRIS TWINS WILL STAY TOGETHER IN THE NBA? Follow coverage of the 2011 NBA Draft at Kansan.com throughout the rest of the week. KANSAS 22 KANSAS 21 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Four yea deprive late kn co rii er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attract- tor for Weichman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 22 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dig it: Libero, recent grad Manda honored in team hall of fame MEG LOWRY mlowry@kansan.com Although she walked down the hill and concluded her time at the University of Kansas last month, 2011 graduate Melissa Manda will remain at the university, for a long time on the women's volleyball Wall of Fame. Manda, a Wichita native and human biology major, earned the award for most digs in a career, totalling 1,457 digs in four seasons. She surpassed Ill (Dorsey) Hall, who previously held the record with 1,338. During her junior season, Manda became the 10th player in Jayhawk Volleyball history to make 1,000 digs. Concluding the season with 1,165 digs, she knew that the record was within her reach. "It was definitely in the back of my mind," Manda said, "But it wasn't the first thing I was striving for. I just wanted to play well." At the start of her senior season, Manda was 174 digs shy of Hall's season. She ended the season with 292. Manda's place on the Wall of Fame marks the end of a successful career. As a freshman and sophomore, Manda played in every match as Kansas's starting libero. By the end of her freshman year, she had the 4th most digs in a single season in school history. Her sophomore year, she helped Kansas win its first senior night match since 2004 with 19 digs against Baylor. IT'S SUMMER. A/C FEELS GOOD. MAKE SURE YOURS DOESN'T GO OUT. In October, Manda will move to Spain to teach English for eight months. She plans to attend medical school when she returns. KANSAS KANSAS Manda says there's a good chance Brianne Riley, a sophomore libero from Naperville, Ill., will break her record before she graduates. Like Manda, Riley had an impressive freshman season, totalling the 8th most digs in a single season with 403. Lawrence Automotive Diagnostics Inc. Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN Mike Gumnoe/KANSAN Senior defensive specialist Melissa Manda bumps the ball against Missouri last year. Manda had 7 digs in the Jayhawk victory over the Tigers. "I'm not too worried about someone beating me," Manda said. "All I care about is that KU is winning and doing well." 2868 Four Wheel Dr | LawrenceAutoDlg.com | 785-842-8694 REMARKABLE ENGAGEMENT! SMOKING SEGARS PROHIBITED! GRAND DRAMATIC SPECTACLE! STEP BACK IN TIME AND ENJOY THE THEATRE OF YESTERYEAR Celebrate the Kansas Sesquicentennial in Downtown Lawrence KANSAS SUMMER THEATRE 2011 DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS or Tempted, Tried & True A Comic Melodrama by Bill Johnson ed ue 7:30 p.m. July 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8, 9, 10, 2011 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1, at the Lied Center Box Office. 785/684-2747, and online at www.kutheatre.com and Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available on a cash only basis – on a cash only basis Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the public, $10 for KU students, faculty and staff and senior citizens, and $5 for K-12 students. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. The University Theatre's 2010-11 season is sponsored by the KU Credit Union. ucketmaster KU CREDIT UNION STUDENT SENATE COMMENTARY CONTINUED | 21 Three teams were affected in these trades and each drove down MONTANA Bag It Up. Great packs for all your summer travels from Gregory, Deuter, and Osprey! SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR PARKS 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 www.sunfloweroutdoorandbike.com market teams it exchanged with were forced to rebuild their franchise from the ground up, via the draft. While the Thunder was able to draft a nucleus of solid, young players, Minnesota continued to make atrocious draft-day selections, assessing talent worse than Rebecca Black's manager. very unique lanes. Boston constructed its championship team through trades, but, the small Last offseason, LeBron crushed the hearts of Cavalier faithful when he "took his talents to South Beach." Let's be honest, if the Cavs were a high school boy, and Lebron a chick, he'd be way out of Cleveland's league. Can you really blame him for running off to tropical Miami? Supermodels in g-strings vs. Lake Erie and... does it even matter? There's a reason the whole country empathized for Cleveland: it never had a chance. Cleveland has the #1 and #4 picks in this year's draft and it must perform well in order to fill the void from Prince James. If it drafts well, it could wind up like the Thunder, back in the conference finals in a matter of years. Or, it could take Minnesota's route and continue to throw millions down the drain just to watch its lottery picks flop like a dying tuna fish. The clock's ticking Cleveland choose wisely. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIE Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 joyurearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jaybrearning.com "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2011 PAGE 23 BASKETBALL Players wow audience for good cause BY KATHLEEN GIER kgier@kansan.com Jeff Graves started with a dunk, Cole Aldrich hit hookshots and Scot Pollard showed up with sideburns and his signature samurai hair. These were the familiar sights at the third annual Rock Chalk Roundball Classic. "It felt like I was rejuvenated," Graves said. "It is so much like a cloud nine to come back here because everyone makes you feel welcome." On Thursday, June 16, however, these former Jayhawks were not looking for another victory. Instead, they were playing for a cause. The Jayhawk Radio Network and 1320 KLWN organized the event to raise money and awareness for local families affected by children's cancer. The event was at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Mo. This year, the event focused on "Baby Jay" Jayden Souter. She was diagnosed with a stage 3 Wilms' Tumor in 2008. She underwent chemotherapy before losing her battle earlier this year. "The least I feel we can do is come back for something bigger than basketball," Jeff Hawkins said. "We were all here to support Jayden." With a roster that boasted more than 20 former basketball players from three different coaching eras, the event offered something for every fan. The silent auction featured jerseys, a tour of the Ford Center in Oklahoma City with Nick Collison, a basketball signed by coach Bill Self and boxing shorts signed by "Vicious" Victor Ortiz, who is the current Welterweight Champion. Event coordinator Brian Hanni released an early estimate that said the event raised around $19,500 for the Souter family. "Kansas bas- "Kansas basketball is pretty powerful in this state and obviously in this town so to be able to come back and give back like this is not only gratifying, it is fun," Brett Ballard said. graduate Tyrel Reed, defeated the Red Team 114-102. Throughout the game, Reed and Brady Morningstar, who was on the Red Team, entered a shootout, tossing up 3-pointers that found the basket from every angle on the court. Aldrich, who is now an Oklahoma City Thunder forward, wowed the crowd with dunks on several trips down the floor and Pollard entertained the crowd throughout the game. The Blue Team, led by 2010 "Kansas basketball is pretty powerful in this state and obviously in this town so to be able to come back and give back like this is not only gratifying, it is fun. The roster changed through the BRETT BALLARD Former men's Basketball player weeks leading up to the event and was not finalized until the day of the game. The Blue Team featured Ballard, Reed, Pollard, Billy Thomas, Stephen Vinson, Jeff Carey. Greg Gurley, Jeff Graves and Moulaye Niang. The Red Team featured Hawkins, Ortiz, Morningstar, Aldrich, Russell Robinson, Lester Earl, Brennan Bechard, Joel Branstrom and Brad Witherspoon. RUCK CHAK JACKON 22 Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN Cole Aldrich dribbles over Bryce Crowell Thursday at the Roundball Classic. Crowell got a chance to play by winning a game of knockout before the game. apartments and townhomes FIT FOR STUDENTS. three great locations VILLAGE SQUARE HANOVER PLACE STONECREST 1, 2, & 3 BR | pet friendly | pool access MCCULLOUGH DEVELOPMENT Rental Properties VILLAGE@SUNFLOWER.COM | (785)-842-3040 Stonecrest Village Square Hanover Place APARTMENTS VILLAGE SQUARE HANOVER PLACE Hanover Place STONECREST / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school,some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. The Peace Corps was an attraction for Wichman because a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Four year degree later kn co ri Cote d'Ivoire WEEKLY SPECIALS U Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. M Medium 12" 2 topping Pizza & 2 Drinks for $8.99 T 2.10" 2 topping Pizzas & 2 Drinks for $12.99. 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Hope you had as good of a time as we did! -University Daily Kansan Staff RUDY'S PIZZERIA H Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. M Medium 12" 2 topping Pizza & 2 Drinks for $8.99 T 2 10" 2 topping Pizzas & 2 Drinks for $12.99. W .375 Special sm. 1 Topping Pizza, $3.75 med. 1 Topping Pizza, $5.99 lg. 1 Topping Pizza, $7.99 W Large 16" 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Drinks, $13.05 F Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. S Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. U $21.99 2-Large. 1-Topping Pizzas and Free Wheat Stix* M $12.99 Large anything. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad T $14.99 2-Medium. 2-Topping Pizzas. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad W $14.99 X-Large 5-Topping or Specialty. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad N Roll the dice, get a double for 50% off entire ticket, if not 25% off carryout and dine-in. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad F $19.99 Large Specialty & Large 1-Topping. $4.99 Small 10" 1-Topping and Drink OR Mini 7" 1-Topping and Mini Salad S Buy Any Large or X-Large Pizza get the 2nd pizza 1/2 price (equal or lesser value) successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 519 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joyhearne.com "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK Basketball football soccer oh my! WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 A sports roundup from the week, including recruiting and drafting news. SPORTS I 22 Celebrating with a bang Almost all fireworks are illegal within the city limits, but holiday events will still allow you to celebrate in style NEWS I 15 DRAGON EGGS WARNING DRAGON EGGS WARNING DRAGON EGGS WARNING WWW.KANSAN.COM VOLUME 123,ISSUE 156 Forget what you HEARD Hip hop holds weight in the Heartland FEATURE 12 / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attracti tion for Wichman because Cote d'Ivoire Four yea degree let kn co ri PAGE 2 Today's Weather 9475 Mostly Sunny WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 Thursday 10176 Windy RAVEN RUNNING HAVING BROKEN FEET BRIEF Friday 97 74 Mostly Sunny weather.com KUinfo Only four freshmen/sophomores have ever left KU early for the NBA. Three of them are currently with the Memphis Grizzlies. TABLE OF CONTENTS 图 2-13 调味料颗粒 The rising use of bath salts as an amphetamine has unknown risks. 6 Bath salts new, dangerous drug A. 11 Kansas City abortion clinic first to lose license Gov. Sam Brownback approves new regulations cause controversy between those in the health care and political community. 20 Follow rules so you can land that job HE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Smart advice that provides information on how to hear the magic words "you're hired." On the cover A rapper performs as part of an April 20 show at the Granda Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St. The hip-hop scene in Lawrence is thriving. More about it on page 12, in next week's Kansan and on Kansan.com. Cover photo by Travis Yanyi/KANSAN and on Kanson.com. Cover photo by Travis Young/KANSAN Quote of the Week "This land is your land." — Woody Guthrie Fact of the Week — census.gov Thirty-one places have "liberty" in their names. The most populous one as of April 1, 2010, is Liberty, Mo. (29,149) Iowa, with four, has more of these places than any other state: Libertyville, New Liberty, North Liberty and West Liberty. STAR ON THE RECORD KU public safety officers responded to: - A domestic battery occurred in Stouffer Place Apartments at about 2 a.m. Monday. Officers made an arrest at the scene. - A minor was caught in possession of alcohol just after midnight on Sunday in the 1400 block of Ohio Street. - Someone sprayed graffiti on Learned Hall sometime on Thursday. CONTACT US ET CETERA 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Ave. Lawrence Kan.,66045 editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) 864-4810 Twitter: TheKansan_News Become a fan of The University Daily Kansan on Facebook t f The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr., Lawrence, Kan., 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-9467) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday fall, break spring, break and exams and weekly during the summer session including holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 2015 Dole Human Development Center, 100 Sunshine Dr MEDIA PARTNERS Check out KUJH-1v on kniology of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansas and other news. Also see KUJH's at tvku.edu. KHIK is the student voice in radio. Whether it's rock 'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHIK 9.75M for you. KUJH GOZ njha Alex Garrison Editor-in-Chief D. M. Scott Assignment Editor Hannah Wise Web Editor Stephanie Schutz Design Chief STAFF Louise Krug Copy Chief Brooke Abney Business Manager Matt LaBuda Sales Manager Malcolm Gibson News Adviser General Manager Jon Schlitt Sales Adviser successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. 2 "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 3 CRIME Two students victims of armed robbery on campus Thursday BY IAN CUMMINGS icummings@kansan.com Douglas County prosecutors have charged two men, including a 23-year-old Fort Leavenworth soldier, with aggravated robbery following the reported mugging of two University of Kansas students early Thursday morning. Capt. Schuyler Bailey, a KU Public Safety Office spokesman, said the students told police that two men, each armed with a handgun, robbed them at 1:40 a.m. Thursday on campus, just west of the campanile. University of Kansas Public Safety officers arrested Brandon Huggins, 23 and Michael Gerald, 21, 20 minutes later after they were detained by officers of the Lawrence Police Department. Huggins and Gerald each face four felony charges, including two charges of aggravated robbery and charges of conspiracy to commit robbery and aggravated intimidation of a witness. Bailey said the students were robbed of wallets, cash, phones and clothing. Police also siezed a plastic baggie containing marijuana, but no charges in connection with this have yet been filed. A third person present at the scene, who remained inside the suspects' vehicle during the incident, has not been arrested and police believe he was not involved in the robbery. A spokesperson for Fort Leavenworth confirmed that this third person and Huggins were both soldiers posted at fort, but that there was no record to indicate Gerald was in the military. According to jail records, Hug gins was released from the Douglas County Jail Saturday after posting a $60,000 bond. Gerald remains in custody at the jail, with bond set at $75,000. The suspects are next due in court Thursday for a preliminary hearing. The Douglas County Sherriff's Office has declined to release photos of the suspects, citing the needs of an ongoing investigation. Thursday's robbery is the first to occur on campus this year. Statistics provided by the Public Safety show that there have been 14 robberies on campus in the past ten years, including eight in 2009. Alex Garrison contributed reporting to this story. 2000-2003: 0 2008: 1 ROBBERIES ON CAMPUS 2004:1 2009:8 2005-2006: 0 2010: 0 2007:3 KU Public Safety Office CHECK BACK ON KANSAN.COM @ for continuing coverage of this story, including reports from court appearances. IF YOUR FRIENDS JUMPED OFF A CLIFF,WOULD YOU? don't go with the pack all or e-mail to receive tekskivs today BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Bay St. Helena New & Local Bookstore 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@beatthebookstore.com [ ] Change of plans means in-hospital wedding ODD NEWS State Deputy Jury Commissioner John Cavanaugh said last week that the state will not proceed with serving a criminal complaint against Michael Wylie. The late Georgetown resident was issued a notice to serve on jury duty five years ago but at the time he was in hospice care and had terminal cancer. He died a few months later but the commission continued to send letters about his failure to report. ERIE, Pa. — A love-sick Pennsylvania couple ended up getting hitched in a hospital chapel after the groom tumbled down a set of stairs on their wedding day. He's been dead for five years. The Erie Times-News reports Derek and Cassy McBride were married Saturday at Saint Vincent Health Center because Derek took the wrong kind of plunge a few hours earlier. The wedding appeared doomed when tests showed Derek McBride had three broken ribs and a punctured, collapsed lung. stepped up, decorating the chapel with medical glove balloons and bows made of gauze. Guests were told the beach wedding was scrapped. Cassy McBride, whose maiden name was Messenger, wore her gown. Derek had one too — a hospital one, under his tuxedo. Derek McBride hopes to be released soon. But family and Saint Vincent nurses Man discovers one way to get out of jury duty GEORGETOWN, Mass. — A Massachusetts man facing a criminal complaint for failing to appear for jury duty apparently had a good excuse. Wylie's family says they tried to tell authorities that he had died but officials say the family never sent a death certificate. Associated Press Tweet of the week udk In a few days, we're riding a bottle rocket to the moon! How are you celebrating America? LAST WEEKS RESPONSE OF CHOICE GeeGe @UDKplay I was a freshman visiting my friends at KU. I hopped on my friend's back and he face planted the both of us in mud. t 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college span. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. The Peace Corps was an attraction for Wichman because Cote d'Ivoire Four yee degree let kn co rit PAGE 4 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 NEWS NEAR&FAR Pope tweets for first time and gives blessing (Vatican City, Italy) Pope Benedict XVI on Tuesday tweeted for the first time, announcing the launch of a Vatican news information portal Warden allegedly supplying inmates with arms (Caracas, Venezuela) — Venezuelan authorities have arrested a prison warden for allegedly supplying an arms and explosives to inmates staging deadly riots over the past 11 days. Benedict's tweet read: "Dear Friends, I just launched News.va Praised me our Lord Jesus Christ! With my prayers and blessings, Bene- self by tapping an iPad, said Thaddeus Jones, an project coordinator and an official with the Pontifical Council for Social Communications. Moments later the pope sent the tweet. The 84-year-old pontiff was then shown the portal and its features in greater detail. The portal www.news.va for the first time aggregates information from the Vatican's various print, online, radio and television media. It's the latest effort by the Vatican to bring its evangelizing message to a greater, Internet-savvy audience and follows forays into Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Jones described him as "interested and impressed," and "clearly enjoying it." The country's attorney general says warden Luis Aranguen was arrested Friday along with a National Guard captain whose unit patrolled the Rodeo II prison. The two men were charged with corruption, criminal association and supplying arms and explosives to inmates. dictus XVI." Authorities also arrested the subdirector of an adjacent prison for facilitating arms and explosives and illegal drug trafficking. Benedict put the site online him Venezuelan soldiers have battled inmates at the facility, leaving at least one inmate and two soldiers dead. The bodies of another five inmates have also been removed from the prison. Trafficking GRE™ LSAT™ GMAT™ TEST PREPARATION That's Right on Target. KU CONTINUING EDUCATION The University of Kansas Register early! Save $100! Test preparation classes now enrolling. MAT™ TION 100097 O www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) • 785-864-5823 (Manila, Philippines) — The Philippines has pledged to intensify its battle against human trafficking and welcomed a U.S. State Department report crediting its recent efforts to combat the problem. The country has been upgraded to Tier 2 in the annual U.S. Trafficking in Persons report, indicating it does not fully comply with minimum standards to eliminate trafficking but is making progress. Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said Tuesday the Philippines is committed to ensuring that Filipino workers overseas are given full protection and to strengthening its efforts against human traffickers. Presidential spokesman Edwin Lacienda also welcomed Monday's report, which noted a rise in convictions of offenders to 25 from nine the previous year. China to track pandas record every ten years (Beijing, China) — China has counted its 1.34 billion people and now is giving pandas a turn. After conducting a census of its human population last year, China is about to start a once-every-10-years count of pandas in the wild. particular in the NW. The China Daily said Tuesday more than 60 trackers have been trained at Wangling National Reserve in the southwestern province of Sichuan. Director of the reserve's administrative bureau Chen Youping was quoted by Xinhua News Agency as saying they will collect panda dropoffs for DNA analysis. That will allow zoologists to track individual pandas and accurately estimate the population. Almost 1,600 wild pandas were counted in the last census. The endangered species native to China is threatened in the wild by a loss of habitat, poaching and for being poor breeders. Report indicates Aborigines need help from country (Canberra, Australia) — Fabian Brown, known among Aborigines by his tribal name Jabangardi, is usually jobless, added to alcohol and has been in and out of prison since he was 17. His story is all too common among Aborigines in Australia's Outback. A parliamentary report last week called the situation a national crisis, noting the imprisonment rate for indigenous Australians has soared 66 percent in the past decade. At the time of white settlement in 1788, the Aborigine population was estimated to be as high as 1 million. Their numbers crashed dramatically because of new diseases, brutal treatment from colonists, the loss of traditional lands as well as social and cultural disintegration. The report underscores how little progress Australia has made — despite more than 40 years of targeted federal policies — in lifting up a section of its population that is beset by crime, poor health, domestic violence and alcoholism while living on the fringes of society. Associated Press successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 765.842.4900 | joydrearrin "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 5 LOCAL BRIEFS Food prices will increase at the Underground, The Market, Crimson Café and other on-campus dining locations next week, making it more expensive to eat on campus. Campus food prices rise to a 2 percent maximum CAMPUS KU Dining Services will increase food prices a yet undisclosed amount on July 5. The maximum increase this year will be 2 percent, but some prices may decrease or remain the same, said Alecia Stultz, assistant director of retail operations for the Kansas Memorial Unions. Each year KU Dining Services compares food prices with its competitors to determine an appropriate market rate. This year food prices will increase because of oil and crop prices, Stultz said. The increases will be higher than in past years. In 2010 food prices increased 1.5 percent and in 2009 they remained the same. Kylie Nutt LAW Jurisdiction ruling means changes in 'FIJI' lawsuit Paralyzed former student Matt Fritzie's civil lawsuit against Phi Gamma Delta's national organization and its housing corporation were declared out of the jurisdiction of a Missouri judge on June 24. Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Brian Wimes did allow a civil case against David Smith, a fraternity trustee, to proceed. The trial is scheduled to begin in July 2012. Fritzie, a former freshman pledge from Stilwell, was injured during an alleged hazing incident at a Sept. 17 party at the fraternity. The suit filed on Fritzie's behalf alleged he was permanently paralyzed diving into a makeshift pool. Michael Ketchmark, the attorney representing Fritzie, said Smith acted irresponsibly by enabling the fraternity's actions. "It is our position that he was acting as an agent of the fraternity," Ketchmark said. "Beyond that, we're going to explore what other options we have with respect to the two other defendants." The University put Phi Gamma Delta on a two-year probationary period on Oct. 8 after determining the fraternity's practices amounted to hazing. However, the University stopped short of linking the incident involving Fritzie to hazing. Matt Galloway Man resists arrest in Summerfield, ends up in altercation with police CRIME An altercation between Public Safety officers and a criminal trespassing suspect left two officers with minor injuries. Officers responded to Summerfield Hall late Monday night after a housekeeping employee reported suspicious activity by a man, who later refused to give his identity or age. When officers issued a trespassing citation, the man refused to sign it and then later resisted arrest. During his altercation, two officers received minor injuries and one used pepper spray to subdue him, Capt. Mark Witt said. Officers then transported the man, who was later identified as 49-year-old Troy John Frank, to Douglas County Jail, where he remained as of Tuesday night. Witt said the housekeeping employee was not harmed. Alex Garrison EVEN MORE STORIES SERVED UP FRESH DAILY Check Kansan.com, @TheKansan_News on Twitter and like us on Facebook for breaking news and on-campus information. PARKING Union garage to get card payment system A new system is being installed at the entrances and exits of the Mississippi Street parking garage, which will eliminate the coin payment stations. This will allow people to pay for parking Students will no longer need to dig for grimy coins in their back seat to pay for parking at the Kansas Union garage. Soon, all they will need is a credit or debit card. with a credit card when they exit. This fall, newly installed gates will prevent drivers from escaping the garage without paying. This new system also ensures that students will no longer receive tickets at this location. First Management teamed up with the Parking and Transit department to "A lot of people who park without paying get a ticket and then have to pay the parking plus the $20 ticket," said Donna Hultine, director of the Parking and Transit department. reconstruct the garage on June 3. Everyone involved came together to ensure a more efficient way of paying for parking. "It will be perfect," Hultine said. "Fingers crossed." Every Tuesday afternoon meetings are held in the Kansas Union to discuss the ongoing project. The construction will be completed by Aug. 1. Aliza Chudnow and Neyan Gambhir apartments and townhomes FIT FOR STUDENTS. three great locations VILLAGE SQUARE HANOVER PLACE STONECREST 1, 2, & 3 BR | pet friendly | pool access MCCULLOUGH DEVELOPMENT Rental Properties VILLAGE@SUNFLOWER.COM | (785)-842-3040 Stonecrest Village Square Hanover Place APARTMENTS VILLAGE SQUARE HANOVER PLACE Hanover Place STONECREST [ ] / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | Result | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college sonic Four year degree later er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attracta-tion for Wienchman because a way to prolong having to find a job,but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Cote d'Ivoire THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 Risk and danger in snorting bath salts BY MONISHA BRUNER mbruner@ku.edu The first hit, about a gram and a half, is painfully snorted through one nostril. About 10 to 15 minutes later, eyes dilate, the heart races, muscles tense, teeth clench and everything is euphoric. erything is captivating. In control and feeling enhanced, Tyler, who asked to use only his first name, received his first hit of bath salts from a friend at a rave dance party. party: "It's like you slammed 12 pots of coffee," Tyler said. "The high lasted 12 to 13 hours. It definitely gives you that up and that continuous up to where it keeps you up. My senses were very enhanced." The hazardous drug cleverly disguised by the street name of "bath salts" is a highly hallucinogenic drug, said Jenny Donham, education teacher at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Bath salts are not intended to actually be something you put in your tub. The powder substance is packaged under the name "bath salts" to sidestep drug laws. As of Friday, it will be illegal in labeling on the package warns, "Not for human consumption," but according to American Association of Poison Control Center people are snorting and injecting bath salts. The University of Kansas Hospital Poison Control Center reported it received two emergency calls last week after bath salts were abused. The control center had 17 calls since this January, according to the KU Poison Control Center. To address the bath salt issue, Kansas lawmakers banned the sale and use of the basic elements in the bath salts, as well as a plethora of chemicals used to prevent manufacturers from simple transitioning compounds, said Tom Sloan (R-Lawrence). complications from bath salts, and if they did, she will send them to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Kansas to sell or buy bath salts. If you are buying them online and you are found, you will be convicted, Sloan said. St u d e n t Conduct Officer Nicholas Kehrwald said the current alcohol and drug policies established for campus will apply to bath salts. Donham said "Not enough is known about it, it's very dangerous to mess around or take in a substance that not enough is known about and is not intended for human consumption." JENNY DONHAM Education teacher at Watkins Memorial Health Center Donham said that bath salts are stimulants and similar to amphetamines such as meth and crack. She said symptoms included stimulation, rapid heartbeat and hallucinations. Donham said she has not been made aware of any students coming into Watkins with how long the substance stays in your body; however, we have seen some information that shows that even with a first time use the effects can be in the body up to several days after using the substance. Not enough is known about it, it's very dangerous to mess around or take in a substance that not enough is known about and is not intended for human consumption." "It goes into your system immediately," Donham said. "I'm unsure Tyler said he doesn't plan to use bath salts again. He said that there is not enough known about the drug and the risk for him is too high. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UDK THE UNIVERSITY ABOUT KANSAN UDK Buy groceries for on-campus sustenance Prepare to get your school day to be packed with cereal, pasta and peppers from home. (WGSL) NCAA Outdoor Championships total wrap up On track and final outdoor event live with any current team. (SPRSEL) WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011 WWW.KANSAN.COM VOLUME 12A, ISSUE 154 What's Black & White and has an Online Cousin? 1234567890 KANSAN.COM TYPICAL FRESHMAN SAVES AN AVERAGE OF $145.88! BEAT THE BOOKSTORE Buy sell & Best New & Used Textbooks 785-856-2870 1741 MASSACHUSETTS ku@bsetthebookstore.com Chris Bronson/KANSAN Aside from their intended use, bath salts can be snooted to have the same effect as amphetamines such as meth or crack. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. NORTH BAY BASKETBALL OF RICH CLARKSON THE NORTH BAY BASKETBALL OF RICH CLARKSON IS A COMMON FUN FACT IN THE UNITED STATES. IT IS A GREAT SPORT FOR ALL AGES, AND IS AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THE CIVILLIARY AND LEAGUE OF BASKETBALL. THE NORTH BAY BASKETBALL OF RICH CLARKSON IS A COMMON FUN FACT IN THE UNITED STATES. IT IS A GREAT SPORT FOR ALL AGES, AND IS AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THE CIVILLIARY AND LEAGUE OF BASKETBALL. THE NORTH BAY BASKETBALL OF RICH CLARKSON IS A COMMON FUN FACT IN THE UNITED STATES. It is a great sport for all ages and is an essential part of the civiliary and league of basketball. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 810 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joyful learning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 7 ALTERNATE NAMES FOR BATH SALTS Arctic Blast Bayou Ivory Flower Bloom Blue Magic Blue Silk Bolivian Bath Bonsai Winter Boost C Original Cloud 10 Cloud 10 Ultra Cloud 9 Cotton Cloud Dynamite Dynamite Plus Energizing Aromatherapy Powder Euphoria Gold Rush Hurricane Charlie Ivory Fresh Ivory Wave Ivory Wave Ultra Lady Bubbles Lunar Wave Mr. Nice Guy Mystic Ocean Snow Pure White Red Dove Route 69 Scarface Snow Day Snow Leopard Tranquility Vanilla Sky White China White Dove White Girls White Horse White Knight White Lightning White Rush Wicked X Wicked XX Zoom SALT — doctoroz.com BATH SALT NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION FACTS ON BATH SALTS Calls at poison centers: U. S. poison centers have taken 2,237 calls regarding toxic products marketed as "bath salts" so far this year. Poison centers took 302 calls in 2010. American Association of Poison Control Centers Consequences for using or distributing bath salts: Distribution and possession with the intent to distribute is a severity level 3 drug felony for a first offense; a level 2 for a second conviction or if the offender is over 18 and distribution or intent to distribute occurs on or within 1,000 of school property; and a level 1 for a third conviction. Tom Sloan, Senate Representative for 45th District Possession is a class A nonperson misdemeanor for a first conviction and a severity level 4 felony for a subsequent conviction. Consequences of using in the dorms: Students who violate this policy will be subject to sanctions which could include completion of an approved drug, alcohol rehabilitation program, disciplinary warning, probation, suspension and expulsion from the University. For more info on levels visit the University's policy on its website. ku.edu KEEP YOUR MONEY All upfront fees waived with savings of $550! ... ON BUS ROUTE FREE TANNING STUDENT BUSINESS CENTER STATE-OF-THE-ART FITNESS CENTER PET FRIENDLY ABERDEEN a b 785.838.4800 // liveatlawrence.com 2300 WAKARUSA DRIVE App Store ) Pencil / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Four year degree later Cote d'Ivoire The Peace Corps was an attract- 力 for Wiechman because PAGE 8 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS Will new cigarette warning labels work? BY SHAUNA BLACKMON sblackmon@kansan.com "SMOKING IS BAD" We hear it from friends and family. We are reminded in public service announcements that second-hand smoke is similar to child abuse and the coughing and shortness of breath after climbing a flight of stairs. Even cigarette packs discourage the use of the very product they con- Now, the Food and Drug Administration is requiring all cigarette packaging and advertisements to contain graphic warnings against the dangers of tobacco products. Will grotesque images drive home the message that smoking is bad? THE WARNINGS The words and images make up the most significant change to cigarette labels in more than 25 years. These new warnings must cover 50 percent of a cigarette pack and 20 percent of advertisements, making it difficult if not impossible for companies to keep their original style or design. Before September 2012, the food and Drug Administration will require every cigarette pack to feature grusome pictures, such as ones that depict a mouth ravaged by gum cancer or someone blowing smoke in an infant's face. The images, which are paired with health warnings and the 1-800-Quit-Now helpline, are required under the 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius said that while she hopes these images will affect all smokers, a major motivation is to prevent young people, especially those under 18, to ever start. "With these warnings, every person who picks up a pack of cigarettes is going to know exactly what risk they're taking." Sebelius told reporters earlier this month, according to the White House website. "These labels are frank, honest and powerful depictions of the health risks of smoking and they will help encourage smokers to quit, and prevent children from smoking." Thirty-nine other countries have already adopted a similar program, many with even more gruesome pictures than these proposed in the U.S. IS THIS LEGAL? Tobacco companies have to front the bill for the new product warnings. Philip Morris, the country's largest tobacco company, and R.J. Reynolds, maker of some of the country's best-selling brands such as Camel, Kool, Winston and Salem, have raised complaints against the new bill. "Any government requirement that compels a private entity to carry a message not of its own choosing raises constitutional concerns." Phillip Morris representatives wrote in a federal court document. The courts ruled in 1985 that not all speech is of equal First Amendment importance. Because certain types of speech, including commercial speech, have "less value" than others, they are not entitled to the full protection of the First Amendment. Nonetheless, commercial speech has become more protected since the 1970s, said Mark Johnson, media lawyer and chair of the advisory board of The University Daily Kansan. Advertisements have to be for a legal product and have to be truthful, as long as companies uphold those two things, the government cannot ban it, only restrict it. "Restrictions that work have to be very carefully focused on specific products," Johnson said. "Tobacco is the main target of advertising restrictions now." Aurelius EFFECTIVENESS Last year, major tobacco companies sued and the U.S. District Court in Kentucky had a split-decision but sided with the FDA on keeping the warning labels and many other aspects of the proposal. Some of the FDA's proposed changes were struck down as unconstitutional, such as a ban on color advertising, most were upheld. A Centers for Disease Control study found in 13 out of 14 countries which require similar warning labels on cigarette packs, 25 percent of smokers said they might consider quitting after they saw the graphics. In six of those countries, more than 50 percent said they were considering quitting be- Some smokers say the new warning labels will not affect their behavior. KANSAN FILE PHOTO ILLUSTRATION O'KEEVER Summer WEDNESDAY WEER! AWESOME HUMP DAY UNIVERSITY KANSAN It's summer for us too. ENJOY! successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS•GALLERIES 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 joydreaming "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 9 cause of the warning labels. There is no research, however, to indicate how many people actually quit smoking because of the warnings. Tobacco is one of the leading causes of preventable death in the U.S. and costs approximately $200 billion per year in medical costs and lost productivity, according to a CDC estimate. However, smokers are also some of the most overtaxed citizens who contribute heavily to both federal tax revenues and GDP. In Kansas, .79 cents of every pack goes to taxes, according to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. In 2008, Kansas collected $118,253 from cigarette taxes and $16,575,613 nationwide. It is uncertain yet how the new warning will affect smoking numbers in the future. The overall smoking rate for adults is 19.6 percent. For 18 to 24 year olds the number raises to more than 25 percent. And, according to the CDC, the smoking rate for college students 18 to 24 and in Kansas is 26.4 percent. Katie Longofono, a senior from Topeka and a smoker for the last four years, said that, while the new cigarette displays are gruesome, they probably won't deter her from smoking. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 "If you're addicted to something pictures aren't going to stop you," she said. "You're going to do it regardless." GRAPHIC IMAGES These pictures, provided by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday, June 21, 2011, show seven of nine new warning labels cigarette makers will have to use by fall 2012. Photos by Associated Press WARNING: Cigarettes cause strokes and heart disease. 1-800-QUIT-NOW BRAND 1-800-QUIT-NOW WARNING: Cigarettes cause fatal lung disease. 20 Classic A Gigavettes 1-800 QUIT NOW WARNING: Cigarettes cause cancer BRAND 3D Garra A Cigarette * WARNING: Smoking can kill you. WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. 1-800-QUIT-NOW 1-800-QUIT-NOW WARNING: Cigarettes cause fatal lung disease. BRAND 24 Urs A Goghett WARNING: Tobacco smoke causes fatal lung disease in nonsmokers. LUCKY QUIT NOW BRAND 24 Urs A Goghett BRAND 20 Classic R Cigarettes WARNING: Tobacco smoke causes fatal lung disease in nonsmokers. BRAND 20GenA Opencris WORK HOME TOBACCO SMOKE CAN HARM YOUR CHILDREN 1 BOOK OUT NOW BRAND 2013las A Organizer keep your money J All upfront fees waived with savings of ON BUS ROUTE NEW UNITS AVAILABLE UTILITIES INCLUDED PET FRIENDLY FURNISHED OPTIONS AVAILABLE $450 LIVEATLAWRENCE.COM APPLELANE APARTMENTS leasing office located at: 2300 Wakarusa Drive//785.838.4800 App Store Facebook Amazon.com Amazon Books / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college manic Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. 1. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. The Peace Corps was an attraction for Wichman because Four ye depon on kn co' rij Cote d'Ivoire THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN O opinion FREE FOR ALL apps.facebook.com/dailykansan This tension between us in our sex class is ridiculous. Just say something to me! Hormones out of whack at this school. That's why I go to KU. I'm moving to Hawaii to go to graduate school. I will miss Kansas. Does that make me a wierdo? Orgy, Southpark, 9 p.m. Be there. I'M DRUNK. Wow. College kids getting drunk. How novel. Congrats. "Excelling at K-State is worse than sucking at KU"-Josh Selby to Jacob Pullen Iaco Bell was the wrong answer. I have to go sit on the toilet for a couple hours Sororities have plenty of good looking tacos. And some pretty bad looking ones, lol. How many ethnic stereotypes does it take to screw in a light bulb? As many as necessary to reinforce my prejudiced assumptions. I pay for sex... with a groupon. You probably don't even think about me anymore but just so you know, I still really miss you. Bullshit, I f*cking hate you. Laws violate reproductive health rights ABORTION Last week, New York took an important step toward an equal society, one in which the state protects the human rights of its citizens. Unfortunately, Saturday morning, the state of Kansas was also in the New York Times, but for a far less-encouraging reason. The new string of abortion laws, in particular the license law, passed by the state legislature are already having a detrimental affect on important and necessary clinics in the state. the said. The New York Times reported of the three abortion clinics in Kansas, two are expected to be denied renewal of their license. Planned Parenthood said it would probably happen even if the clinics met the requirements seeing as the main goal of the legislation is to shut down the clinics. I am very happy to be a part of this project. I will continue my efforts to improve the quality of education and promote research in this area. I am grateful for your support. Talk about embarrassing. There was our state in all its anti-reproductive-health-rights glory, side by side with New York's leap forward in LGBT rights. BY KELLY COSBY kcosby@kansan.com before the fetus can sustain life on its own), the state cannot pass limitations that interfere with a woman's right to privacy, including the right to have an abortion. The legislators can argue all they want that this is protecting maternal health and that it is strictly about having adequate safety standards, but frankly, that's not of the least importance in regard to these politicians' and interest groups' agenda. It is clear that the only purpose for these new limitations is to shut down the clinics in Kansas. This is a blatant violation of reproductive health rights. The Supreme Court has ruled in previous cases regarding state abortion laws that before viability (meaning Whether or not you support the legality of abortion, those are the facts. This is what the Court has ruled, and states should be adhering to those standards, especially given that this is an issue of the right to privacy. The state is quite obviously attempting to circumvent the rulings of the Court by passing these laws under the guise of safety regulations. These are not minimum standards for safety, and they are simply being used as means to an end: closing clinics. this has been obvious since the passage of these laws, but now the effects are becoming very real. The Aid for Women clinic in Kansas City, Kan, was denied its application to continue abortions Friday. This was before an inspection had even been performed, and so it was simply unable to meet some of the unnecessary standards imposed by new laws without the support of any funding. With its license discontinued, the clinic to close. Planned Parenthood understands all too well the disconnect between enforcing strict limitations on clinics while also providing no federal funding. The legislature has removed all family planning funding from Planned Parenthood in an effort to undermine the clinic's ability to provide services to women, from legal abortions protected within the right to privacy to other vital services such as family planning counseling and birth control. Time will tell if the Kansas government can get away with evading protections on privacy rights specified by the Court. Cosby is a senior in English and political science from Overland Park. LAW New York's marriage equality symbol of more tolerant climate The legalization of same-sex marriage in New York is not just another step toward lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) equality; it is evidence that, perhaps, legislative processes are becoming a more viable institution through which to secure the rights of LGBs. in 2004, Massachusetts began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples after the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ruled that denying same-sex marriages conflicts with the due process and equal protection clauses in the U.S. Constitution. KANSAS California was second to follow, but, after the Supreme Court of California's May 2008 decision in favor of marriage equality, an initiative overriding this decision was placed on the upcoming ballot as a state constitutional amendment literally, with the title, the Eliminate Rights of Same-Sex Couples to Marry Act. (At least they were forthcoming in claiming to take away the "rights" of a group.) This amendment, commonly called Proposition 8 or BY JAMES CASTLE jcastle@kansan.com "Prop 8," passed. In October 2008 and in April 2009, the Supreme Court of Connecticut and the Iowa Supreme Court respectively ruled in favor of same-sex marriages. These four states (including California, albeit briefly) all achieved marriage equality through judicial processes, a venue typically used when an issue cannot be supported by a majority. cannot be supported by a majority. On June 24, the New York State Assembly was able to push its same-sex marriage legislation through the Senate, and the second state body passed the bill with a 33-29 vote. New York is the third state to pass such a bill through legislative processes (following new Hampshire and Vermont), though it is the first highly populated state to do so. In a highly populated state, it can be reasonably assumed that the population and its government more closely resemble the population of the country as a whole than do states with small populations. If a state as dense as New York can indeed succeed in passing a bill allowing same-sex marriage, it may also be possible that, rather than more State Supreme Court rulings, we see more success in passing same-sex marriage measures in other large states (provided U.S. Supreme Court never rules on same-sex marriage), as well as other pro-gay measures in New York. pro gay measures in New York Perhaps we are witnessing a change in the political climate since the California initiative just three years ago, and it is that same-sex rights legislation fares much better in 2011. Even the federal administration has shown signs of exhaustion on gay rights issues. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates supported the repeal of Don't ask; Don't Tell (DADT) in 2010, and Barack Obama, only a few months ago, announced his apathy toward the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) defend the 1980s. Although I believe marriage should be an exclusively religious institution and that only rights and benefits are important (The Kansan, March 3, 2011), marriage equality is no doubt a symbol of a more democratic and tolerant political climate. That we are now seeing this equality achieved through negotiations and the support of a majority of elected officials in big states says a lot about how much our culture has changed, and how much it is changing.. — which federally defines marriage as a union exclusively between one man and one woman and allows states to reject same-sex marriages from other states — refusing to defend the 1996 law in court. James Castle is a senior from Stilwell in political science and human sexuality WANT TO VOICE YOUR OPINION? contact editor@kansan.com or at (785) 864-4810... successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERY 19 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | adjutearning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 19 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jaydrearing THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 11 STATE New regulations shut Kansas abortion clinic BY BRITTANY NELSON bnelson@kansan.com Although abortions are legal in the state of Kansas, they may not be accessible beginning July 1 because of strict inspections of Kansas abortion clinics. Aid for Women, in Kansas City, Kan., already has a revoked license that takes affect Thursday. The state's new abortion clinic policy has stirred up controversy for prochoice advocates. According to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), the room where the abortion is performed has to be between 68 and 73 degrees and needs to be 150 square feet, that includes fixed cabinets that comes with a janitor's closet of at least 50 square feet. The provider must keep 13 types of drugs on hand and have blood pressure cuffs available, among some other requirements. The patients also must remain in the recovery room for two hours after the procedure. These specific requirements do not apply to regular hospitals and surgical clinics. Gov. Sam Brownback said the law was enacted to provide a safe environment for women at these clinics. Others disagree. M. Jeffrey Pederson, office manager and CEO of Aid for Women, is outraged about the new law. "It is like saying, 'Yes, you can drive, but only a Lamborghini is allowed.' It would be nice to have an ultra-luxurious hospital-like setting," he said. Aid For Women is the first to have its license revoked under the new law. Among other things, the tile on its floor and the size of the recovery area did not meet state requirements. Aid for Women is the smallest of the three abortion clinics in Kansas, and do not have the resources to adhere to the new regulations, Pederson said. "With this new regulation, one-third of our clinic would be devoted to recovery," Pederson said. He also said he expects the other clinics to fail inspection as well. "If women in Kansas want abortions, they're going to have to drive to Omaha, Denver, Tulsa or St. Louis." Pro-life advocates think the new law will provide a safe environment for women. Joe Viviano, vice-president of Students for Life at KU, supports the new law. "I think (Gov. Brownback) has a very strong concern for women," Viviano said. "There is a concern for the nature of abortion clinics. Hospitals don't have a history of violating regulations. In clinics, there are untrained staff and unsterilized equipment in use." Earlier this year, Kansas doctor Herbert Hodes, who performs abortions, said there were five deaths in the past five years due to abortions. He retracted his statement, but Kansas Healing Arts Board-licensed abortionists said there were five deaths, although three did not occur on Kansas soil. Democratic Socialists,doesn't agree with the new law. Jackie Sewell, president of Young "I think closing a clinic is not going to decrease abortion rates," Swell said. "Without these clinics available, it's more of a hassle for women and I really don't think it does any good to close them. People will find alternative ways whether or not they are safe." Kathy Guth, nurse practitioner at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said health practitioners want to make sure their patients are safe. She said the tests on all medical clinics should be standardized. "I do agree that there should be some type of regulation," Guth said. "I just hope that the new regulation isn't so one-sided. Hopefully, all practices will have the same test." Pederson, whose career is now on hold, said he hasn't decided if Aid for Women will test the new law in court. "It doesn't affect me personally, but we're putting our lives on the line," he said. Lonnie's Recycling, Inc. GET MONEY FOR YOUR METAL RECYCLABLE ITEMS Mention this coupon and receive an extra penny per pound. on aluminum cans! 501 Maple St (785)-841-4855 Englewood Medical Clinic New laws for abortion providers in Kansas, including this one in Wichita, will come into effect on Thursday. Clinics are fighting the new regulations. Chris Bronson/XANSAN Lonnie's Recycling, Inc. 90K grant to fund student's research RESEARCH "Unfortunately, liver transplants are very hard to obtain," Mangus said. "You have to meet very specific criteria and a lot of patients aren't eligible for these transplants." BY WESTON PLETCHER wpletcher@kansan.com Her goal is to improve a treatment called hepatocyte Mangus tan, Kan., recently received a $90,000 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, which will allow her to conduct liver regeneration She will research ways to use moldable, injectable substance that helps treat liver ailments. There aren't any good treatment options right now for patients with liver cancer. The curative procedure now is to have a liver transplant, she said. Emily Mangus fell in love with the liver organ when she was a junior in college at Kansas State University. Now as a University of Kansas doctoral student, she is conducting groundbreaking liver research at the University of Kansas as a doctoral student. Mangus, who is from Manhat- "I did some research on an innovative procedure for liver cancer patients and now I want to improve technology for those patients," Mangus said. research. "This technique right now is, instead of transplanting an entire liver, they'll just transplant individual liver cells and this technique isn't very efficient," she said. "What I'm trying to do is find an alternative way to deliver cells to the liver." Mangus will conduct her research under the guidance of Cory Berkland and Michael Detamore, associate professors of chemical and petroleum engineering. Her research will also be in association with the University of Kansas Medical Center. Z HAIR ACADEMY $7 HAIRCUTS ALWAYS $20 HI-LITE EXTRA W/ LONG HAIR 3 FOR HAIR $18 FEATHERS VOTED BEST SALON TOP OF THE HILL, 2005-2010 ALL SERVICES PROVIDED BY STUDENTS UNDER SUPERVISION OF EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS. 2 CONVIENient LOCATIONS 14471 METCALF | 2429 IOWA ST. 913.402.4700 | 785.749.1488 ZHAIRACADEMY.COM transplantation — where individual liver cells are transplanted into the liver — which is an emerging and potentially curative liver procedure. This procedure has a few limitations and concerns that Mangus is trying to address. "She will be the first one to create this type of material," Detamore said. "She has the chance to be one of the first ones to use it for a liver regeneration application. She brings a new idea for new material for the new application, which we're trying to come up with as a team, but it is spearheaded by her efforts." starting at: $89.98 Rain, rain come again another day. patagonia Marmot SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR BIKE 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 www.sunfloweroutdoorandbike.com starting at: $89.98 Rain, rain come again another day. patagonia Marmot SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR BIKE 901 HARVARDWAY 400-6000 LICENSE PLANET SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE BOUNDARY LANDSCAPE GARDENS, CAMPAIGN / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college manic er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job,but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions.She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Four year degree later Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. kn co' rig The Peace Corps was an attracta-tion for Wichman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 12 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FOUR-PART SERIES Same beat, different dance BY CALVIN MCCONNELL editor@kansan.com Hip-hop holds weight in the Heartland Today: The Professor Next week: The Poet Nicole Hodges Persley asks her students how homosexuality shows up in hip-hop culture. Can they hear feminism or peaceful expressions of "blackness" in the music once known for misogyny and rape culture? Educated in Los Angeles before directing programs at the Hip Hop Archives at Harvard, Hodges Persley has brought the music's academic study to stereotypically white, conservative Kansas. Bryan O'Brien throws his lanky arms in the air, cocks his head toward the ceiling and releases a rhythmic cadence from his chest. Standing behind the microphone at the Mirth Cafe, 745 New Hampshire St., downtown on a Friday night, he couldn't have imagined those Vanilla ice verses he memorized in elementary school in North Dakota would lead to this. Week 3: The Promoter James Baker bobs his head to a jazz-infused beat as he and a sweaty, eclectic audience in downtown Lawrence get a full serving of Midwestern hip-hop. A white male from a suburban background, he's smack in the middle of the music's target audience, but the 22-year-old self-proclaimed "hipster" promoted tonight's concert and has a vested interest in its success. I n the 1985 guide to the music genre entitled "Fresh: Hip-Hop Don't Stop," Harlem rapper and hip-hop pioneer Kurtis Blow wrote, "Maybe one day, when I'm old, people will finally realize that rap is here to stay." hip-hop creators and consumers are increasingly a blend of all races and backgrounds. The genre has diffused globally and exponentially, becoming a major commercial force in fashion, dance and music, including in Lawrence, a small, largely Caucasian town. nomenon that surrounds it has come a long way since the South Bronx's DJ Afrika Bambataa outlined the four pillars of hip-hop: Emceeing, DJing, break-dancing and graffiti writing. The art moved from improvisational performances at parties in New York neighborhood centers to breakdancing or "breaking" and "freestyle" "Maybe one day, when I'm old, people will finally realize that hip-hop is here to stay." Week 4: The Dancer Kurtis Blow Chelsea Ybarra's feet slide across the Robinson Dance Studio floor, her limbs are flowing and her step is in-sync — she's hip-hop and she's "on" tonight. Her skin is painted green as she performs an interpretative dance to Kid Cudi's "Embrace the Martian," living a dream that's literally and conceptually far from her hometown of Ulyssess. More than a quarter century later, it's safe to stay it stuck around. Far from the predominantly ethnic and economically-marginalized urban centers hip-hop calls home, and farther from the violent streets in New York City and Los Angeles from which the genre burst onto the popular stage, the promotion, study and performance of hip-hop is influencing an interesting mix of lives right here in the Heartland. The music and the cultural phe- It stood for ethical and moral trials almost annually, spending its thirty-year history defending usage of the words "ho," "bitch" and other degrading epithets while surviving criticisms for perpetuating a culture of violence, drugs and death in inner-cities. battles on city blacktops and to the pains of disgruntled youth rapping "gangster" rhymes about deplorable urban-living conditions. Today, the movement at its core is strongly African-American, but National acts have visited here for decades, playing sold-out shows at venues such as the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. The local scene, most prominent in the early 2000s when groups like Archetype and Soundso good represented a strong hip hop culture on and off campus, is getting stronger. All the while, hip-hop in the Heartland is popping up in unsuspecting places. WEEKEND LOOTTH, HALLOWEEN ROCK successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLERIES 210 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joystreaming successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER by Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joyarearning THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE13 TALIB KWELI JAY-Z EDAN QUASIMO MADLIB LAST POE 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM --- Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college panic. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assign- Four year degree later The Peace Corps was an attrac- Cote d'Ivoire WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE14 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Professor "Are you going to take all of the sexism out of literature? Out of film? You have to have a critical perspective. We have to look at the work for the works' sake. Gender is one determining factor." From Harvard to The Hill with books, beats and rhymes Hodges Persley, assistant professor of theater, has brought her own ideas about the often despicable depiction of women in commercial rap to the University. As part of a growing group of hip-hop academics, her scholarly work focuses on everything from hip-hop elements in African-American solo theatre to feminist roles in creating and critiquing modern rap lyrics. The syllabus for her course, "Hip Hop in Popular Culture", warns that the class will play songs with explicit lyrics and delive into exactly what purpose they serve. For students here in the Midwest the subject matter can be fascinating. Hodges Persley effectively takes what is on most iPods in the room and examines the works in an academic setting — raw content and all. "We talk about it openly in my classes. Do you filter the work of Miles Davis? I think we have to give the artist a little more credit. They know what they're saying," she said. One of the purposes of the class is to ask students to look at the larger picture, and not focus on just the provocative lyrics in hip hop, but what message might the artist be trying to communicate and why so in that fashion, Hodges Persley said. Julia Barnard, who took Hodges Persley's hip-hop course in Fall semester 2010, said the professor explained that hip-hop is a way to read the society we live in. "We are showing that the Midwest has a presence in hip hop and has for a long time," Hodges Persley Nicole Hodges Persley, assistant professor in theater, brings a hip-hop flair to her classes. "For example, it says something about our society that one of the most popular musical forms rose out of the African-American community, a community historically subjected to institutional and cultural discrimination," she said. The marriage between hip-hop and academia was consummated nearly three decades ago but is hardly common knowledge. Hodges Persley has played an integral role in the partnership between books, rhymes and beats. She serves as one of the founding program directors for the Hiphop archives, established at Harvard in the early 2000s, and completed a PhD dissertation on "Africanamericaness" in hip-hop theatre and performance at the University of Southern California in 2008. She published essays on hip-hop in publications such as "Chicken Soup for the African-American Soul" and "Icons of Hiphop: An Encyclopedia of the Music and Culture." Since 2009, she's been in Lawrence, which is an interesting culture twist for a woman who grew up outside Detroit and spent most of the her life on the coasts. The student response to the hip-hop professor on campus? Her popular class has been wait-listed and, because of the demand she's working to develop another course, and focusing on how hip-hop has shaped youth movements abroad. All of this is part of Hodges Persley's efforts to bring the University, with a minority population barely over 20 percent, to the forefront of hip-hop academia. at Harvard for a gathering called "Author Meets the Critics," where author Tracey Sharpley-Whiting discussed her book "Pimps Up Ho's Down: Hip Hop's Hold on Young Black Woman," she said she did her best to represent her new home on the range. "We are showing that the Midwest has a presence in hip hop and has for a long time," she said. "And I'm hoping that KU is going to push itself to be on the cutting edge." This semester, Hodges Persley is on research leave working on her new book, "Remixing Race and Ethnicity: Sampling Blackness in Hip-Hop Performance." By the time it is complete, she will have traveled to France, England and multiple spots in the United States to investigate performance practices of hip-hop theatre and performance art. Hodges Persley has also spent time in West Africa and other countries where, she said, she sees hip-hop culture seeping into a long list of traditions. piling into a long list of traditions. "The biggest thing that hip-hop does for me is it opens up artistic opportunities of reaching across borders," she said. Her work with the music and its movement in the academic arena came after working as a professional actress and performer in Los Angeles. She holds credits in numerous films and television shows and is known by her colleagues and students for adding the artist's perspective to the usual academic theoretical frameworks. Marcyliena Morgan, professor of African and African-American Studies and Executive Director of the Hip Hop Archive at Harvard, said Hodges Persley creativity is what sets her apart. "Her understanding of high art is so important," she said. Morgan added that she thought the Midwest would give Hodges Persley necessary inventive wiggle room. "It's not something where the script is written. It's a question of what's going to come out of it." The next time Hodges Persley teaches the 'Hip-Hop in Popular Culture' course will be Spring 2012. Editor's note: This article is the first of a fourpart series offering a small sample of hip hop's story in the Heartland. The Kansan's next three issues will feature profiles of James Baker, Chelsea Ybarra and Bryan O'Brien. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 817 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | jayfearring --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE15 COMMUNITY Fireworks show blasts off safely BY LAURA ERDALL lerdall@kansan.com Gary Saathoff takes the mortar, a long pipe made of cardboard, and places it directly into the dirt. Next, the shell, which consists of a paper tube filled with stars and black powder, is placed into the pipe. He lights the fuse that fires a lift charge that launches the shell out of the mortar. When the firework reaches its desired height, the time fuse lights the bursting charge, causing the shell to explode. The explosion ignites the outside of the stars, which begin to burn with bright showers of sparks. The tremendous booms that the crowd hears are made of the rapid release of energy into the air. Saathoff, president of the Lawrence Jaycees, has stood directly under the Fourth of July fireworks show since 1983, where he and a group of volunteers hand-light display fireworks for the residents of Lawrence. This Fourth of July, Saathoff and nine other members of the Lawrence Jaycees will set off a fireworks display from a levee pit behind Johnny's Tavern North, 410 N. Second St. Matt Llewellyn, treasurer of Lawrence Originals, a group of locally owned, non-chain restaurants, will host a festival in Watson Park at 3 p.m. that will include food, drinks and live music. The event will run through the fireworks performance, which is expected to begin at about 9:45 p.m this Monday. "Before the fireworks display starts, many people move across the street to Constant Park to watch the fireworks because it eliminates the trees and it's easier to see the Lawrence Jaycees light them off." Llewellyn said. For Lawrence's show, radio station Lazer 105-9 will choose the 45-minute American-themed music set with no commercial breaks. The display usually lasts 45 minutes, but it takes several months to prepare. The Jaycees meet with Western Enterprises, a firework company in Carrier, Okla., to decide on the best show that they can give during the Fourth of July celebration. Saathoff said the size of the show also may be different this year. He said the group has raised about $13,000 this year,$2,000 more than last year's show, and the Lawrence Originals contributed $5,000 to the extravaganza. Since it raised more money, the fireworks display will be bigger, and will be firing off new and taller shells this year, but the Lawrence Jaycees don't know exactly what they'll deliver to the audience. "The larger shells are equivalent to half a stick of dynamite and during the finale we will shoot off around 1,100 shells," Saathoff said. That's 550 sticks of dynamite. In 1913, an explosion of 530 sticks nearly destroyed Uniontown, Pa., a town of about 13,000 residents at the time, making this year's finale comparable to that explosion. During the show, there is always one member of the Lawrence Jaycees guarding the shells in trashcans to keep them from exploding prematurely. A safety meeting is scheduled 30 minutes before the firework show to go over procedures and guidelines if anything were to go wrong during the celebration. The construction on a new hydroelectric plant on the North bank of the Kansas River in May brought minor issues for the Lawrence Jaycees. "We just had to move certain items from the fenced in area," Saathoff said. "Fire marshals from the Lawrence fire department have to approve and inspect the site before any celebrations can begin anyways." The Lawrence Jaycees use airtight lids to keep the shells concealed and wear ear plugs, eye protection, long pants and cotton shirts for safety purposes. "In the last 28 years that I've been working on the fireworks show in Lawrence, there have been close calls but no injuries," Saathoff said. "That says a lot about what we do." ACCEPTABLE ITEMS FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATIONS PARTY POPPERS: A very small item of an explosive string device that is usually pulled to ignite. SNAPPER: Small paper wrapped item which, when dropped,the device explodes SNAKES, GLOW WORMS: produces a snake-like ash upon burning SPARKLERS: Stick coated with pyrotechnic material that ignites to produce sparks lawrenceks.org DON'S AUTO CENTER 11TH AND HASKELL (785)-841-4833 GET ON THE ROAD. . STAY ON THE ROAD. Eudora 9 Lawrence 14 Don's Auto 14 --- Reader of the week Get caught reading the UDK. Be in the Paper. Win awesome prizes. Starting Now! ? / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four yea degree late kno co rie er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. The Peace Corps was an attract- ion for Wiechman because - Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 14 WEDNESDAY JUNE 29 2011 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 16 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN President's military reduction affects student troops BY HANNAH DAVIS hdavis@kansan.com Aaron Razak knows the toll military service takes on a family. Razak is pleasant and outgoing. He stands well over 6-feet tall, with sparkling blue eyes and a muscular build. Razak earned his VFW designation through his service in South Korea, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. "For six and a half months, my mom never missed a phone call from me during my deployment," Razak said. Now that Razak, a senior from Hays, lives in Lawrence, it takes his mother several days to return a phone call, a sign that her mind is at ease. Although there still remains more than 1.3 million American troops stationed throughout the world, President Obama announced last week that about 33,000 American troops in Afghanistan will return home by August 2012. home by August 2014. Lt. Col. John Clark wasn't surprised when the President announced plans to reduce the number of troops in Afghanistan as America's longest running war continues to drain public morale and the national budget. "The writing has been on the wall," Clark said. "The American public is tired and concerned with issues at home." Clark, a West Point graduate and director of admissions and scholarships for the ROTC program, served in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2010. Clark was happy for military families, and urged Americans to remain patient. Clark, who was a combat advisor to the Afghanistan National Army, said troop reduction in Afghanistan relieves stress on military deployments. Units will have more time to train prior to deployment and soldiers will have longer at home to recharge. remain patient. "Progress in Afghanistan is always two steps forward and one step back. It's easy to focus on the negative but we are continuing to make progress." "We are doing more across the globe than we have ever before, all with less than 1 percent of the American population enlisted," Clark said. KANSANCLASSIFIEDS JOBS BECOME A BARTENGER. UP TO $300/DAY NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.TRAINING COURSES AVAILABLE. 800-965-6520 EXT 108. Full time teacher position for early education program. Send resume to: Children Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan, Lawrence, KS 68044 or email c15@sunflower.com EOE. General office work plus showing aps. FT or PT between 9:00-10:00, M-F. Must be avail, to work PT this fall. Please call 785-841-5797 Looking for 25-30 indv. for apt cleaning/ painting. Must be avail. 7/30 to 8/1. Call 785-843-0011 Jr. Web Programmer - Proficient in html, css, php JavaScript Added value if knows photoshop, flash, joomla, CS3. Must be able to form products efficiently. Excellent and detailed writing skills in documentation C, C++, Python, Bash, xml not required but beneficial. hr@microtechcomp.com HOUSING 1 roomate needed for 3 bd apt above Chipotte at 9h&Mass. Only $400/month + utilities. Call Aix @ 913-484-1444. Fall Semester Lease: 4 BR or 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 Car Garage, make offer, near KU. Call (785) 814-3849 Available August '11: Studio Apt. ($315) One BD Apt. ($420), Close to KU. Call Tom @ 785-550-0426. Half off August Rent! Luxury 1,283 BR Apts. Quiet location, large roms, pool, W/D. 785-842-3280 $385. Roommate needed for next school year. Close to campus. Chase Court Apts. Email: nord kyle@gmail.com HOUSING Now Leasing for Fall 1-4 Bedroom Houses and Apartments. Great Rates. 785-842-7644. www.gagemgmt.com 929 TENNESSEE SBR/2BRA near KU/Downtown, WD, DW Hardwood Floors, pets ok Call 785-843-0011 1213 KENTUCKY 6B8/BA Newly Remodeled, near NKU/Downstairs Walk-in closets, Hardwood Floors Energy Efficient Appliances Call 785-843-0011 Roommate Needed for August! 3 BR/1 Bath house located right by the stadium - the biggest room with two awesome roommates could be yours! Call (402) 981-6378 for more details. 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Photos & Floor Plans on Our Website www.meadowbrookapartments.net HOUSING First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@sunflower.com HanoverPlace Sunrise Place Sunrise Village Apartments and Townhomes Spacious, Remodeled homes 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Models Available View plans, pricing, and amenities @ sunriseapartments.com or call 841-8400 APARTMENTS First month free rent VillageSquare First month free rent Pool Access Pet Friendly (785) 842-3040 village@sunflower.com TRAFFIC-DUIS'-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matter/residency issues on behalf of student The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G.Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation ANNOUNCEMENTS Free-of-charge counseling is available at GaDuGi SafeCenter for anyone who has experienced sexual violence. Services are provided by a licensed clinical professional counselor and trauma specialist. To schedule an appointment contact Susan Miller, LCPC, (785)843-8985, ext 370 or counselor@sunflower.com GaDuGi SAFECENTER HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center Life got you down? We can help. 785. 841.2345 Talk to a counselor today. Open 24/7. Always free. www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us Like us on facebook hawkchalk successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. MARKET BASED JEREMY DAVIS DURANTE, A. M. SANTO CRISTINA LAS MAYORAS DE CALIFORNIA MARKET BASED JEREMY DAVIS DURANTE, A. M. SANTO CRISTINA LAS MAYORAS DE CALIFORNIA "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 814 Massuchu Sets | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 joydreaming THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 17. Even with the withdrawal from Afghanistan, more than 1.3 million troops will remain deployed around the globe. Kyle Brown, the president of KU's Collegiate Veterans Association, served in Afghanistan once already and will return next year regardless of the troop withdrawals. According to the Department of Defense, 70,700 troops will remain in Afghanistan following the withdrawals. Scott Boland, a veteran of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and a member of the Collegiate Veterans Association, served in Afghanistan in 2002. "There will be less families at home worrying about loved ones overseas but there are still families sitting at home worrying and there always will be," Razak said. Boland, a senior from Shawnee, understands the nation's desire to exit Afghanistan but worries a premature exit will damage America's legacy in the Middle East. Boland, who was a 20-year-old Pfc. while in Afghanistan, played a part in this chapter of American history, however small, he takes pride in his legacy. "You want it to turn out well in the end. How Afghanistan is remembered reflects on me; I was there," Boland said. All three men stressed the importance of remembering Americans serving overseas. A thank you or an American flag waving in the sky meansa lot to Clark. "My heart swells every time someone stops me in the Hyvee when I'm in uniform to say thank you," Clark said. Razak, treasurer for the Collegiate Veterans Association, echoed that sentiment. "You say thank you to someone who opens a door for you. What do you say to someone who has risked their life or has lost a limb? Thank you is all you can say and it is enough." TOTAL TROOPS UNITED STATES AND TERRITORIES: 1,137,716 EUROPE: 79,940 FORMER SOVIET UNION: 162 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC: 44,537 NORTH AFRICA, NEAR EAST, AND SOUTH ASIA: 5,785 SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: 1,731 WESTERN HEMISPHERE: 1,958 TOTAL WORLDWIDE: 1,429,367 TOTAL IN/AROUND AFGHANISTAN AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2010: 103,700 (Includes Deployed Reserve/National Guard) — Department of Defense UCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific peer tutoring. Math, science, language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu questions? Call (785) 864-4064 contributing to Student Success EAST STUDENTS ARE READY TO LEARN. KU CO KY Scott Boland (left) and Aaron Razak (right) are two current students at the University of Kansas who have both served overseas while in the military. YOUR FIRST SUMMER TEST where do you want to live? A 1712 OHIO Large 3&4 BR Great Pricing B EASTVIEW 1015-1025 Mississippi Remodeled 1&2 BR C SOUTH POINTE 2310 W 26th 1-4 BR D JACKSONVILLE 700 Monterey Way Newer 1&2 BR E HANOVER 14th & Kentucky 2 BR, 1.5 Bath, Garage F GRANDVIEW Near 6th & Iowa Large 2 BR G WOODWARD 611 Michigan 1,2,3 BR, Washer/Dryer H COUNTRY CLUB 512 Rockledge Newer 2 BR, 2 Bath I THE WOODS 630 Michigan Large 2 BR ...at least it's multiple choice www.midwestpm.com (785) 841-1005 www.midwestpm.com (785)·841·4935 MIDWEST PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attrac tion for Wichman because er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Cote d'Arc a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Four yeardegree later --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 ] entertainment Conceptis SudoKu By Dave Green 9 3 6 1 3 9 7 5 4 5 2 1 8 7 6 4 1 4 3 1 4 1 8 7 9 4 6 4 8 6 7 7 6 4 4 1 3 1 PAGE 18 THE NEXT PANEL 6/29 Difficulty Level ★★★ My horoscope says the stars will align perfectly for me to watch an eclipse. HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 Today is all about Money's coming in, so set some aside for household priorities. Provide excellent service, and accept a generous offer. Others are saying nice things about you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9 Your intelligence and curiosity spark an obsession to learn. Follow the high road, and practice a valuable skill to move forward faster. Stand for what's right. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8 Today is an 8 Do what you promised, or be in communication to change the agreement. This just works. Go by the rules you set to gain respect and wealth. Accept a tip. CANCER (June 22-July 22) Today is a 9 Follow up on all leads for a hot new assignment. Accept a generous offer. You're golden. Good fortune shines on you, but it can disappear just as quickly. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 Provide motivation, and everyone wants to play. Keep the goal clearly in sight, and follow the rules to get to it. The job's more fun than you expected. Today is a 9 Today is you have great friends and more to discover. Cherish your time together, and invent excuses to gather. They teach you everything you need to know. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 Today is an 8 Today is on providing exceptional ideas. Go ahead and be proud. After paying bills, splurge on something nice you've been wanting. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 9 Structure gives you great strength. A clean and dust-free working space allows for greater ease and speed. Travel goes well now, as does research. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 Focus on productivity and growth, whether in your business or in your garden. Your intuition's excellent. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 9 Past work draws admiration, even if being really busy keeps you from noticing. Make your routine more cost effective. Call in reinforcements if needed. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) Today is a 9 today is a 3 The more precision you put in the details, the more profit. Keep up the action, and more work and money come in. Positivity is infectious. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is an 8 today may be a great day to learn from your elders. Interview someone about their past. A loved one helps renew your faith. Soak up practical advice. Saddlebrook POOL PARTY! f First Management INCORPORATED EQUAL HOUSING EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Friday July 1st 1pm-6pm Win prizes, hang by the pool. and meet your new neighbors! SADDLEBROOK 625 FOLKS RD • 832-8200 Luxury 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments 1/2 Off August Rent and Reduced Deposits PARKWAY COMMONS 2801 CLINTON PWY • 842-3280 Hosted by Domino's Pizza, Wayne & Larry's, Complete Nutrition, Celsius Tannery, 3 Spoons, Royal Crest Lanes, and Eileen's Colossal Cookies HIGHPOINTE 2001 W GTH ST * 841-546D BRIARSTONE 1008 EMERY RD • 749-7744 CHICAGO 1942 STEWART AVE. • 845-367-0000 successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS•GALLERY 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 hours learning "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 19 CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Rotating part 4 Existed 7 Deep-sea predator 8 Move to one side 10 Adversary 11 The external world 13 News crew member 16 Work with 17 Judicial apparel 18 "— was saying, ... 19 Sheepish comments 28 Irving Berlin's "Blue —" 30 Afternoon social 33 13- Across' offering 36 "A Streetcar Named Desire" role 37 Bracelet adornment 38 Short fishing line 39 Slight amounts 40 James Bond, e.g. 41 Pigpen DOWN 1 Mino- taur's home 2 Pinnacle 3 Pertaining to a city election 4 7-Across e.g. 5 Jam ingredi- ents? 6 A size too small, maybe 7 Individuals 8 Uppity sorts 9 Battlefield prioritiza- tion 10 Ostrich's cousin 20 A long time 21 Choir's rendition 23 Cheney's successor 25 Salamander 26 Sell WANT TO KNOW THE ANSWERS? 12 Ruhr Valley city 14 Wander 15 "— the season ..." 19 Cudgel 20 Toss in 21 Shimon of Israel 22 Workout garb 23 Milwaukee product 24 Entomologist's subjects 25 Promptly 26 Spreading fast on YouTube 28 Drag (Var.) 29 “An American in Paris” star go to udkme.ws/f9hhnS to see the gallery 27 Raw rocks 30 Sycophant 31 Blunders 32 $ dispenser 34 Sawbucks 35 Terrific, in rapspeak Her class starts in 15 minutes. | | | 1 | 2 | 3 | | | 4 | 5 | 6 | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 7 | | | | | 8 | | | | 9 | | | 10 | | | | | | 11 | | | | | 12 | | 13 | | | | | 14 | | | | | | | 15 | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | | | 18 | | | | | | 19 | | | | | | 20 | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 21 | 22 | | | | 23 | 24 | | | | | | 25 | | | | | 26 | | | | | | | | 27 | | | | 28 | 29 | | | | 30 | 31 | 32 | | 33 | | | 34 | | | | | 35 | | | | | | 36 | | | | | | 37 | | | | | | | 38 | | | | | 39 | | | | | | | | 40 | | | | 41 | | | | | | N Sleep Late.Walk to Class. Smart.Living. - Close to Campus - Upgraded Apartments - granite countertops and wood flooring - Poolside Wi-Fi - Pet Friendly - 24 Hour Fitness Center - 24 Hour Business Center - 24 Hour Game Room - FREE Tanning - Laundry Notification System HAWKS POINTE L PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED BY 1421 W. 7th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044 campus apartments® 785.841.5255 --- d www.hawkspointeapts.com A Home / GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college manic. Four yea degree late kn co ris er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. The Peace Corps was an attract- tion for Wichman because Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 20 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Advice to increase your employment luck BY CHRISTY NUTT cnutt@kansan.com With the national unemployment rate hovering at 9.1 percent, finding a job after graduating can be a daunting experience. NO SMOKING experience. Not for Derek Kauffman. Kauffman started his job as morning producer of KTTC-TV News in Rochester, Minn., one week after graduating in May. Kauffman said whenever he had down time during his final semester he updated his electronic portfolio so employers could see his work. A little luck, a lot of confidence and luck got him hired, Kauffman said. specifically to the company;" Johnson said. "It is the little things like this that set you apart." Kauffman, employers and experts offer advice on landing a job after graduating. Donna Johnson, CEO of Pinnacle Technology, Inc., 2721 Oregon St., said the cover letter is the selling point. After more than 30 years of hiring, Johnson said only 1 in 100 cover letters she receives are addressed to a person and the company. Making the resume interesting and accessible to prospective employers is most important, Kaufman said. "Make your cover letter targeted most important, Kudrinkar said. Ann Hartley, associate director of the University Career Center, said every employer has a different opinion about what makes a good resume. Resumes should include the basic information the employer is looking for in a clear way and describe your experiences in details that highlight your skills, Hartley said. Chris Bronson/KANSAN The University Career Center offers advice on resumes, interviews, networking and more. Hartley said networking is essential to separating yourself from the pack of applicants. "You're not going to get anybody to look at your resume or call you for an interview if you don't somehow make a connection with them." Hartley said. hear a speaker and possibly meet them or you can go and listen to a panel of employers and then make some contact with them, or the career fair is the obvious one," Hartley said. tennal employees. Hire them "Take advantage of any kind of career event where you can go in and An easy way for students to make a personal connection with employers is to attend campus events involving potential employers, Hartley said. Mark Stogsdill, vice president of HMA Architects, 200 Mesa Way said getting involved helps students network. "Put yourself in situations where you might run into a job opportunity." Stogsdill said. portunity, begged Johnson said being formal is not just dressing well to the interview but also making your voice mail message appropriate, keeping e-mails professional and cleaning up your social network sites. "In a business setting, e-mail is very formal, but people forget this," Johnson said. Many employers, including Johnson, look at candidate's social networking sites. "If you're not embarrassed to have you mom or dad look at it, you're probably OK." Hartley said. Also, don't volunteer information about yourself unless the employer asks. Hartley said. "Just stick to their agenda," she said. 20¢ Walk into the interview prepared with extra copies of your resume, sample material and knowledge of the company, Johnson said. SCI-FI JULY Saturday July 9, 2011 Book Signing: 12:45-1:45 PM Including the winners of the John W. Campbell & Theodore Sturgeon awards, featuring the authors: - Robin Wayne Bailey - Karin Rita Gastraich - Kij Johnson - Eric T. Reynolds The career center offers mock interviews to help students practice for the real thing. The practice interview is recorded with a webcam so the student can watch his or her performance afterward. If students are nervous they might not notice they are being fidgety, but seeing it on the webcam they can fix it, the Career Center's Hartley said. - M.C. Chambers - Geoffrey A. Landis - Tessa Gratton - Mary A. Turzillo Many employers want specific examples to prove you have the required skill set. Students should think of examples that would be appropriate to - Dale R. Cozort - James Gunn - Ian McDonald - Nathaniel Williams - Christopher McKitterick - Sheila Williams - Elizabeth Anne Hull LIBERTY HALL accessibility info 644 MASS. 749-1915 (785) 749-1972 Wed June 29 - Thu July 7 - Bradley Denton Readings of Frederik Pohl short work (guest readers) 1:30-4:30 PM LIMITED RUN !! OPENS TUE JULY 5 !! TUFE THUR 4:30 7:00 9:30 --- FORKS OVER KNIVES $ ^{(\mathbb{R})} $ MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG13) wED-TURO : 4:40 7:10 9:40 FRI- TURO : 4:30 7:00 9:30 SAT- TURO : 4:20 7:00 9:30 MON- 2:20 4:30 7:00 TUE- TURO : 4:20 7:10 9:40 @ Jayhawk Ink // Level 2 in the Kansas Union THESE EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AUDIO DIVISION OF THE KU BOOKSTORE 705-844-431 EVERYTHING MUST GO (1) THESE EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC KUBOOKSTORE.COM WED: 4:30 7:00 9:30 MUST CLOSE WED JUNE 29 ! LIBERTY HALL SANITARY CARE CULT/INTERNATIONAL/CLASSIC VIDEO La Prima Tazza 638 MASACHUETTS www.libertyhall.net "If you are not involved in the conversation you have really handicapped yourself," HMA Architects' Stogsdill said. use before going into the interview, Hartley said. 785-864-4431 "If there are possible negatives in your background think about how you are going to address them in a positive way," Hartley said. said. Pinnacle Technology's Johnson said the worst thing an interviewee can do is sit and stare at her without being interactive. "I want to know your brain is working. You have got to be engaging," she said. The interview is only one step in the hiring process. Hiring can take weeks or even months. Reminding employers that you are still interested in the job can separate you from the pack. "Unless you get a 'hell no' it is OK to occasionally inquire about the same job!" HMA Architects' Stogsdill said way, Hartley said. Do research on what a typical salary is for the position you are applying for before the interview. This way you can offer a fair range if the employee asks about your expected pay, Hartley said. In general, though, avoid bringing up salary at the first interview because it can leave the impression that all you care about is money. Hartley said. If a job opening does become available and someone has asked numerous times about it, employers can't help but think of them, Stogsdill said Graduate Kauffman said he was persistent at calling to check on his application status because he really wanted a chance to get the job. A job interview is a chance for you to interview the employer as well. "The best advice I can give is don't give up. You can always improve," Kauffman said. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS•GALLERY 812 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | joychearnhe MARCH 1918 A report of the game between the University of Kentucky and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The University of Kentucky won the game with a score of 75-63. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill won the game with a score of 74-62. Both teams played an intense game, with the University of Kentucky scoring many points in the first half, while the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill scored many points in the second half. The University of Kentucky was able to score more points than the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, resulting in a decisive victory for the University of Kentucky. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 21 SAFETY Emergency phones still needed BY KYLIE NUTT knutt@kansan.com Seventy-eight tall poles with a yellow box and red button that read "emergency phone" are located throughout campus as safety devices. The emergency phones are located in high-traffic areas for emergency and non-emergency use, in case someone needs urgent help or simply directions or information. The phones are easy to locate at night because they light-up blue at the top of the pole. "Just like in a big classroom you should locate the exits," Capt. Schuyler Bailey of KU's public safety office, said. "You should do the same thing with emergency phones." In the 1970s college campuses across the nation were installing emergency phones for safety purposes and the University followed in the same footsteps. There were not many evening classes at the University at the time, buildings usually closed around 5 p.m. and cell phones were not common, Bailey said. Emergency phones were an easy way for people to contact the police when in need of help. Each phone cost around $780 when they were first installed, but phones that were later installed cost more, Bailey said. If you are in an emergency or simply need information, such as new to the University or unfamiliar with a building, locate an emergency phone and let dispatch know what you need. Dispatch will answer the call by saying something similar to "9-1-1 dispatch, how may I help you or what is your emergency?" The person at the other end of the line will explain the situation and at the same time an officer is on their way to the location if one is needed. Ashleigh Merritt, a junior from Goddard, said she would try to locate an emergency phone first be- WONDERING WHERE THE PHONES ARE ON CAMPUS? go to www.kansan.com @ cause it would take too long to make a phone call. Andrew Genova, a junior from St. Louis, agrees with Merritt to locate an emergency phone, but said he has not noticed many where he walks. Cell phones have decreased the usage of emergency phones for emergency purposes, but are used mainly for the purpose of information. The KU Office of Public Safety receives less than an average of 175 calls a year. Each phone costs $20 for the monthly phone bill, which costs around $18,720 for 78 emergency phones a year. This money comes out of the department's budget, but some are paid by different departments, such as housing, if they are close-by. Although the emergency phones are not used as often as they have been in the past, they will remain where they are and in service in case there ever is an emergency. The last emergency phones added are at the Park and Ride lot on west campus, but no more will be added. "It's a nice visual tool in the overall package of security," Bailey said. "If you see that blue light, you know if I had too, I could call the police." Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN Emergency phones can be distinguished by a yellow box, a red button, and the top of the pole that lights up blue. With 5 locations all over town... We've got Lawrence covered Eddingham Quail Creek Parkway Townhomes Campus West The Oaks CHERRY·HILL PROPERTIES Eddingham Place Apartments $300 Off! Call for Details Eddingham Place Apartments $300 Off! Call for Details 785-841-5444 www.ApartmentsLawrence.com The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St • Lawrence Ks Thursday, July 1st Truckstop Honeymoon Saturday, July 23rd RX Bandits w/Maps & Atlases Thursday, July 7th The Windup Birds w/ Here to Stay / Radio Free TV Wednesday, July 13th Blind Pilot Find us on Facebook for concert announcements, giveaways, and more! www.thebottlenecklive.com f BOULEVARD CROSSROADS KC 417 I 18th St KKGMC ATGRINDERS TRU TUN 30 ELVIS COSTELLO & THE IMPOSTERS w/ LARKIN POE SAT JULY 2 UMPHREY'S McGEE w/ QUEXOTIC JUL 7 MATISYAHU w/THE WAILERS FRI U8 GOMEZ w/MIKE DOUGHTY GOMEZ w/MIKE DOUGHTY THU JUL 21 TUE JUL 19 BEN FOLDS w KENTON CHEN SUN IUL 10 CINDERELLA W HAMMERLORD THE DEAD GIRLS OLD 97'S W COWBOY/MOUTH/THOSE DARLINES /ROBERT ELLS FRI JUL 22 TOP JUL 26 SNOOP DOGG WED JUL 27 O.A.R. w SOJA FRI AUG 5 NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND w BRERWER & SHIPLEY SNOOP DOGG BELA FLECK & THE ELECTROCUTICAL SENSE BUILDUP WITH BRUCE HORNSBY & THE NOSEMAKERS TUE AUG 9 JONNY LANG wJJ GREY & MOFRO JOHN BUTLER TRIO W/MAMA KIN WBC AUG 17 YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND SAT AUG 27 TV ON THE RADIO w!!! TRU SEP 1 TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND TICKETS AVAILABLE AT GRINDERS IN Jeep KC, THE BOTTLE LENECK IN LAWRENCE WWW.CROSSROADSKG.COM GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college manic. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. Four year degree late The Peace Corps was an attract- ation for Wichman because a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. Cote d'Ivoire PAGE 22 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S sports Weekly Sports Trivia Q: How much is the FIFA's Women's World Cup trophy worth? — espn.com A: $30,000.The cup itself has a green serpentine marble base,and the spiral and football are made with pure silver covered with 23-carat gold and white gold. "I am building a fire, and everyday I train, I add more fuel. At just the right moment, I light the match." Quote of the Week — Mia Hamm Fact of the Week Germany and the U.S. both have two Women's World Cup trophies but have never met in the finals. espn.go.com MORE SPORTS, UPDATED MORE FREQUENTLY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 News for more. Make your voice heard at Kansan.com or by engaging with The Kansan and Kansan sports on Twitter. Follow @TheKansan_ News for more. BASKETBALL Jayhawks flock into NBA BY TIM DWYER tdwyer@kansan.com Markieff Morris was born roughly seven minutes before Marcus. seven times before he Some twenty-one years later, he was selected in the 2011 NBA Draft roughly seven minutes before Marcus. Funny how things work out sometimes. Markieff went No.13 to the Phoenix Suns. Marcus was the better college player, an All-American, the Big 12 Player of the Year. Based on college production, he should've gone first. But he didn't, and he couldn't have cared less. "Man, it probably meant more to me than it meant to him when he went," Marcus said. "He's just my best friend, so I want him to do well." The emotion wasn't far from the surface for Marcus as his brother was called. They shared a hug and a secret handshake while both shed tears of joy. I will do my best to be a role model for you. Minutes later, Markieff sat with a headset on, in the middle of a radio interview when NBA commissioner David Stern stepped to the lectern and announced Marcus as the next pick. He stood, raised a fist in the air and broke into a wide smile as his brother walked across the stage. "Once I was called, I still had a little, you know, a little pressure on me waiting for my brother to be called," Markieff said. "Once he was called, it just came off." if just came on. Both twins walk into situations where they can contribute immediately. Phoenix is heavy on guards, but light in the frontcourt. Markieff's strengths — defense, rebounding, stretching the floor — should get him in the rotation immediately. Maybe the best news for him, though, is the presence of a pair of established veterans in Steve Nash and Grant Hill. Julio Cortez/ASSOCIATED PRESS "I hope they are ready for me to pick their brains, because I'm going to follow those guys around all day" he said. Marcus won't have any vets with the reputation of Nash or Hill, but he will have the tutelage of Kevin McHale, one of the all-time great NBA post players and the current coach of the Rockets. Markieff, right, and Marcus Morris embrace each other after they were picked No. 13 and No. 14, respectively, during the NBA basketball draft, June 23 in Newark, N.J. Markieff was picked by the Phoenix Suns while Marcus was picked by the Houston Rockets. "From Manning to Kevin McHale, two of the best," Marcus said. "It's definitely amazing for me and amazing for my family, and I'm just ready." "I'm going to see him a lot." Marcus said. "I hope I don't have to guard him or he doesn't have to guard me, but basketball is basketball, and we With the twins going to separate teams in the Western Conference, they'll play against each other for the first time in their careers. And they'll play each other often, four times in the first season. are both competitive guys. We're both going to get after it." Josh Sellay, who had been projected by a late first or early second round selection, slipped all the way to the 49th pick, winding up in Memphis with former layhawks Xavier Henry and Darrell Arthur. COMMENTARY Yes, football will have limelight BY MIKE VERNON mvernon@kansan.com With fans of the NFL trembling at the sheer thought of losing their season, they will need a replacement, and that professional football "stand-in" comes in the form of the less talented, just as exciting, little brother — college football. While NFL lovers thoroughly enjoy watching their Chiefs, Vikings, Rams, Bears, or whoever thetheing they love more than that is simply watching football. They crave to watch their football on TV, and the place they'll go to find it will be Saturday as opposed to Sundays. And there is little reason they won't be just as entertained when tuning in to watch football a day earlier. The atmosphere, even on television, is more electric and exciting. The thrill the upset also reigns supreme over the parody-filled NFL. Sure, the B.C.S is a magnet for controversy, but its purpose — to give the best regular season in sports — is often achieved. Teams in title-game contention can drop out of the race to finish number one after just one loss. The result: every week of college football action is filled with teams. giving their all and playing must win football. While most fans of the NFL most likely watch some college football, they may not normally tune in as obsessively as they will this year. obessively as they will really. A major shift in the football landscape could be held in the fantasy sports world as well. A major business, NFL fantasy football will most likely, be non-existent this year. College football, on the other hand, is likely to see droves of fans turning their heads to the college game. At Kansas, the result of a world without the Chiefs and a world with only the Jayhawks can only benefit the attendance in Lawrence. Fans who may only buy tickets to one or two Chiefs games a year may fill the void of losing their annual. trip to Arrowhead by making a trip to Lawrence. Even if the attendance doesn't see a sizeable increase, the amount of television viewers and games on television may get a boost this year. Sports talk in larger markets, such as Kansas City, is sure to shift from the Chiefs and the NFL to the Jayhawks, Wildcats, and Tigers and college football. college football The added attention can only benefit schools across the country. With the shift from pro-football to college football seeming inevitable for this season, teams need to capitalize on the opportunity at hand. Kansas football, all eyes will now be on you throughout the region. and this time, there will be no Chiefs to take the pressure off. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 810 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 haydrearning UNIVERSIDAD MAYORAL DE BATIMBA METODO DE VIVO A continuación se presenta una breve descripción de los eventos que han acontecido en el partido de basketball. 1. Acción de la jugadora: El jugador se levanta del baloncesto, agarre un palmo y hace el salto hacia la hoop. 2. Baloncesto: El jugador es atacado por la corona del baloncesto, lo que le causa la pérdida de peso. 3. Escrito: El jugador hace un ataque con el palmo, pero no consigue la corner, lo que le cause la pérdida de peso. 4. Correr: El jugador arranca del baloncesto y coloca el puntero en el tapete del baloncesto. 5. Salto: El jugador arce el baloncesto hacia la hoop, que les hace daño al jugador. 6. Interruption: El jugador interruga el partido con un gol o un ataque. 7. Retiro: El jugador retira de la pantalla de la sala. 8. Fallecer: El jugador muere de pie después de la partida. Nº 1 Nº 2 Nº 3 "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 619 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.642.4900 | joydreaming THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2011 PAGE 23 FOOTBALL Roster adds two talented recruits BY MIKE VERNON mvernon@kansan.com Two of the main focuses of the 2012 recruiting class — offensive lineman and fast athletes — got attended to when both Brian Beck- PLEASE SEE MORE PHOTOS. Beckmann mann and Derek Keaton decided to end their recruitment and commit to Kansas. Beckmann, an Overland Park native and Blue Valley West High School senior, decided to answer Coach Gill's scholarship offer from April and officially become a Jayhawk. The offensive tackle is the highest ranked guard in the state. With a 6'6, 310 pound frame, it's easy to see why the Kansas coaching staff has been very excited about Beckmann's potential. While he has played at left guard in high school, it is Keaton, out of Camden, Ar., gave a verbal commitment to the Jayhawks' over scholarship offers from Ole Miss and Missouri State Arkansas has reportedly been interested as well. At Camden Fairview high school, Keaton had 62 reception for 974 yards (15.7 y.p.c). He also had 67 rushes for 497 years (7.4 y.p.c). A dual threat player, Keaton spends most of his time on the offensive side of the ball, at wide receiver and running back, with a small amount of time at cornerback. The question as to what side of the ball Keaton will end up playing for the Jayhawks remains up in the air. Quite simply, he can do it all and the coaching staff is very excited because of it. expected that his large size will land him at right tackle for Kansas. Beckmann is a Scout.com three-star recruit from Overland Park. With limited roster openings, the coaching staff must have faith he will perform. Rated a three-star by Scout.com, Beckmann picked Kansas over instate rival, Kansas State. With a limited amount of scholarships available for the 2012 class, the coaching staff can be very picky about who they offer scholarships to this early in the year. It speaks volumes that they were confident enough in Keaton and Beckmann to extend an offer their way, and the two will be a nice fit at two needed positions for Kansas. Eagle PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER IT'S SUMMER. A/C FEELS GOOD. MAKE SURE YOURS DOESN'T GO OUT. Schedule your appointment today on our Facebook page or on our website! Lawrence Automotive Diagnostics Inc. 2858 Four Wheel Dr | LawrenceAutoDlg.com | 785-842-8865 IT'S SUMMER. A/C FEELS GOOD. MAKE SURE YOURS DOESN'T GO OUT. Schedule your appointment today on our Facebook page or on our website! Lawrence Automotive Diagnostics Inc. 2858 Four Wheel Dr | LawrenceAutoDiag.com | 785-842-8665 MLS Sporting Kansas City beats out Chicago Fire KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Milog Stojcev and Kei Kamara scored goals a minute apart in the second half of Sporting Kansas City's 3-0 victory against the semipro Chicago Fire PDL on Tuesday night. Kansas City has not lost in four appearances — three Major League Soccer matches and Tuesday night's game — in the new Livestrong Sporting Park. Sporting will host the Richmond Kickers, a USL Pro team, on July 12. Richmond upset MLS' Columbus Crew 2-1 earlier Tuesday. Kansas City won the U.S. Open Cup in 2004, but has not made it past the quarterfinals since. Teal Bunbury put Kansas City up early, scoring in the third minute on an assist from Luke Sassano. Stojcev made it 2-0 in the 58th minute and Kamara scored on a diving header in the 59th to make it 3-0. Kansas City fielded a mix of starters and reserve players against Chicago, which is affiliated with the MLS club but plays in the semipro Professional Development League. Associated Press FIRE 18 A referee gives Chicago Fire forward Gaston Puerari a yellow card after he tripped Sporting Kansas City forward Kei Kamara, bottom, during an MLS soccer match and the official opening of Livestrong Sporting Park, June 9, in Kansas City, Kan. Shane Keyser/AP PHOTO REMARKABLE ENGAGEMENT! SMOKING SEGARS PROHIBITED! GRAND DRAMATIC SPECTACLE! STEP BACK IN TIME AND ENJOY THE THEATRE OF YESTERYEAR Celebrate the Kansas Sesquicentennial in Downtown Lawrence KANSAS SUMMER THEATRE 2011 DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS or Tempted, Tried & True A Comic Melodrama by Bill Johnson 7:30 p.m. July 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8, 9, 10, 2011 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1, at the Lied Center Box Office, 785/864-2787, and online at www.kutheatre.com and Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available — on a cash only basis — at Liberty Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the public. ATLANTIC RAILWAY General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1, at the Lied Center Box Office, 785/864-2787, and online at www.kutheatre.com and Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available — on a cash only basis — at Liberty Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the $10 for KU students, faculty and staff and senior citizens, and $5 for K - 12 students. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. The University Theatre's 2010-11 season is sponsored by the KU Credit Union. STUDENT SENATE KU UNIVERSITY THEATRE The University of Kansas KU CREDIT UNION A COMPANY OF SECTORAL FINANCIAL PARTIES ticketmaster GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario the end of college manic. er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America. Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in low-income communities. The assignment lasts for two years. Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. the compute The Peace Corps was an attract- tion for Wichman because --- Four yea degree late kn co rir Cote d'Ivoire WEEKLY SPECIALS Keep ‘em Coming! Send your pics to weeklyspecials@kansan.com and see them in next weeks paper! U $1.99 Domestic Beer M $1.99 lime margaritas T $1.99 lime margaritas W $5.99 JUMBO margaritas H $11.99 pitchers F $3.50 peach, strawberry, mango, margarita S $10.99 lime margarita pitchers U $21.99 2 Large 1-Topping Pizzas and Free Wheat Stix M $.5 Mini 7" Pizza and Drink with Student ID 5-10. Dine in/ Carry out only. T $5 Mini 7" Pizza and Drink with Student ID 5-10. Dine in/ Carry out only. W $5 Mini 7" Pizza and Drink with Student ID 5-10. Dine in/ Carry out only. G $5 Mini 7" Pizza and Drink with Student ID 5-10. Dine in/ Carry out only. F $19.99 Large Specialty & Large 1-Topping S Buy Any Large or X-Large Pizza get the 2nd Pizza 1/2 price (equal or lesser value) RUDY'S PIZZERIA U Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. M Medium 12" 2 topping Pizza & 2 Drinks for $8.99 T 2 10" 2 topping Pizzas & 2 Drinks for $12.99 W .375 Special sm. 1Topping Pizza, $3.75 med. 1Topping Pizza, $5.99 lg. 1Topping Pizza, $7.99 H Large 16" 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Drinks, $13.05 F Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. S Buy 1 small, get a 1 topping small for $4. Buy 1 medium, get another medium for $6. Byu 1 large, get another large for $8. Aint nothin like chowin down on some kabobs in the Summer. WEEKLY SPECIALS Keep ‘em Coming! Send your pics to weeklyspecials@kansan.com and see them in next weeks paper! Aint nothin like chowin down on some kabobs in the Summer. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. FRAMEWOODS • GALLER successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. successful future. KU EDWARDS CAMPUS The University of Kansas YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD KU IN OVERLAND PARK. "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER 819 Massachusetts | Lawrence, KS | 785.842.4900 | framewoodsgallery.com "The Shot" by Rich Clarkson FRAMEWOODS • GALLER