Volume 125 Issue 114
kansan.com
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UDK
the student voice since 1904
PAGE 8
Jayhawks win a weird one
BANG FOR YOUR BUCK
GRANTED A CHANCE
University students receiving Pell Grants defy national trend of low graduation rate among recipients
MARSHALL SCHMIDT
mschmidt@kansan.com
Staci Krutsinger came from a single-parent household, and when she was applying to attend the University, her older sibling was already attending college.
"That made it more stressful to not only succeed, but harder to be financially stable. too." she said.
However, Krutsinger, a December 2012 graduate from Lee's Summit, Mo., was able to use Pell Grants, federal scholarships based on financial need, to pay for her geology degree. She also used her Pell Grant to achieve certification to teach 6th to 12th grade earth and space science from the UKAnTeach program, and she now works as a substitute teacher in Ft. Bragg, N.C., where she lives with her husband.
"Without the Pell Grant, I would be at least $15,000 more in debt," Krutsainger said.
Other Pell Grant beneficiaries, according to the University's Office of Institutional Research and Planning (IRP), are not as successful. Full time University students receiving Pell Grants have shown to be less likely to graduate than students who do not receive grants.
After six years, 47.5 percent of freshmen receiving Pell Grants entering the University in the fall of
2005 or 2006 completed a degree. The graduation rate for their classmates was nearly 62.8 percent.
This year, 4,536 University students, approximately 15 percent of the total student population, received Pell Grants, the office reported.
market opportunities limited and returned to school to improve their skills," The College Board's report said. "Too many students lack the information and guidance needed to make the best choices about what and where to study."
The University has set standards
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PELL GRANT GRADUATION RATES
2005
2006
2005
• 501 full-time, first-time freshmen receiving Pell Grants
• 4-year graduation rate: 19.4 percent
• 5-year graduation rate: 37.3 percent
• 6-year graduation rate: 44.1 percent
2006
• 469 full-time, first-time freshmen receiving Pell Grants
• 4-year graduation rate: 23.9 percent
• 5-year graduation rate: 44.3 percent
• 6-year graduation rate: 51.2 percent
The lower degree completion rates among Pell Grant recipients at the University is part of a national trend, according to a recently published study by the nonprofit College Board Advocacy and Policy Center, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The study said that many nontraditional students — students 25 years or older — now receive the grant. The study also noted that many recipients are simply not ready for college-level work.
"Many workers found their labor
to have Pell Grants renewed to help ensure that students stay on track. The satisfactory academic progress standards, include completion of at least 24 hours each academic year at the University and maintain a 2.5 cumulative GPA, according to the University's Office of Financial Aid and Scholarships.
"Even though I couldn't qualify and didn't get any other scholarships, I still had a set standard to uphold to make sure I could get that money," Krutsinger said.
Jon Heaver, a junior from Sterling
Heights, Mich., is another student, like Krutsinger, who has bucked the trend. Heaver qualified for his Pell Grant based on low family income and high ACT score. Heaven is on track to graduate next year with a degree in music education.
"It had allowed me to spend less time worrying about paying for college, and more time to focus on my studies." Heaver said.
Since Heaver does not need to work while in school, he has been able to travel around the country as a gigging musician.
"Due to the fact that I have had time to travel and make music around the country, I already have a number of job opportunities coming my way, in both the U.S. and the U.K." Heaver said.
Heaver has already been asked to apply for a music director position.
Brandon Woodard, junior from Topeka, is also taking advantage of the financial assistance provided by a Pell Grant while serving as vice president of Student Senate.
"I would not be able to attend KU if it weren't for the grant, and because of this, I've been able to get involved outside of the classroom," Woodard said. "The Pell Grant has provided me with an opportunity to afford a post-secondary education."
Edited by Nikki Wentling
S
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Jon Heaver, a junior from Sterling Heights, Mich., would not be able to play in the KU Marching Jayhawks, the KU Wind Ensemble or the KU Symphony Orchestra without the financial assistance of Pell Grants. As a successful Pell Grant recipient, Heaver defies a national trend of Pell Grant recipients struggling in their studies.
SOAKING UP THE SUN
TULIP FLOWER PARK
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Mackenzie Eveland, a junior from Louisburg, Eyestone, a junior from Manhattan, and Lauren Wooden, a junior from Overland Park, sit at the Chi Omega fountain on Tuesday, April 30. Tuesday saw a high of 82 degrees.
CAMPUS
Minister ends 22-year career
KRISTA MONTGOMERY
kmontgomyery@kansan.com
When asked whether or not he'd ever considered a "normal" job, Thad Holcombe just laughs.
"No, I love this one so much," Holcombe said. "It isn't 'normal' but it's cool."
Holcombe, Ecumenical Campus Ministries at the University of Kansas since 1991, will retire this month, leaving behind a legacy of community and
minister of
Holcombe
social justice. Gustin Bova, a student leader at the ECM, describes Holcombe as a "benficent hustler." and it's not hard to see why.
"Thead has contributed a love and passion for humanity and justice that he just can't keep to himself," said Jillian Strobel, a recent graduate. "It's gone viral."
Professor of Environmental Studies Kelly Kindscher said Holcombe has given students an opportunity to get involved with issues that are important to them. Veggie Lunch, Alternative Breaks,
It was at the Faith Forum, a weekly open faith discussion, that recent graduate Cody Jackson got to know Holcombe better.
"To see how radically accepting he is as a human being and the effect he has in the community — I don't think can be overstated, because this is a radical place," said Jackson.
"There's always going to be more questions," Holcombe said. "If you ever get settled, I get worried."
the Fair Trade Committee, Faith Forum and the Sexuality Education Committee are several of the student-led groups held at ECM addressing those issues. For Holcombe, faith has a lot to do with the questions brought up by these issues.
Amy Thompson, a junior, remembers being immediately welcomed by Holcombe the first time she attended the Thursday Veggie Lunch as a freshman.
"A lot of students come in here not because they're looking for God, but because they want to engage and do something about the concerns that they have," Holcombe said. "For me that's the moving of the spirit."
"I told him I was an atheist," Thompson said. "I was kind of testing him to see if he would, like, shun me or something. To Thad, I was a person, not just an atheist."
For Holcombe, even a conversation can reflect God. He says he's felt that presence throughout his time at ECM.
The 108-year heritage of ECM won't end with Holcombe's retirement, although it's clear he will be dearly missed as a friend and leader.
"It's a big part of why he does what he does, and how he sees the world," Free said. "I'm not a Christian, but I feel so comfortable here. I feel like we can share the same values and act on things for similar reasons, and it's wonderful."
"He is leaving us with a legacy of resilience, resistance and the know-how to move forward," Strobel said.
Ali Free, a junior, says that
Index
CLASSIFIEDS 7 CRYPTOQUIPS 5 SPORTS 8
CROSSWORD 7 DPINION 5 SUDOKU 8
Holcombe talks about his faith in a way that doesn't exclude any other belief.
Edited by Alyssa Scott
All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Don't forget
Today's Weather
We forgot.
Night t-storms. 60 percent chance of Wind Stc at 20 mph.
---
HI: 71
L0: 38
A tragic end to the sunshine.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY BANSAN
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news
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DAILY KANSAN
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What's the weather, Jay?
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan..
60645
— wunderground.com
Winter Wonderland
Rain and snow showers, 50 percent chance of rain WNW winds at 10 mph.
Thursday
HI: 42
LO: 30
Saturday
Rain and snow, 70 percent chance of rain. N winds at 21 mph.
Rain and snow showers, 30 percent chance of rain. NNW winds at 16 mph.
Cloudy with a chance of meatballs.
Penguin
Friday
HI: 40
L0: 36
Prepare for a wintery mix.
Yeah, that actually says snow.
Wednesday, May 1
CALENDAR
C
**WHAT:** Visual Art Scholarship Show & Open Studios
**WHERE:** Art and Design Building
**WHEN:** 2 to 4 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Check out student artwork with the Scholarship Exhibition on the third and fourth floors and open studios throughout the building.
**WHAT:** Corey Smith
**WHERE:** Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St.
**WHEN:** 7 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Tickets are $15 to $20 for this live country music show.
WHAT: Corey Smith
Thursday, May 2
WHAT: UC Forum: "Homelessness in Lawrence"
WHERE: Ecumenical Campus Ministries
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
ABOUT: Presenter Brad Cook will discuss "the history of homeless services in Lawrence, causes of homelessness, barriers to getting out of homelessness and changes due to the moving of the shelter out of downtown."
**WHAT:** Cosby Sweater
**WIRE:** Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
**WHEN:** 8 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Catch electronica act Cosby Sweater at this all-ages show.
**WHAT:** "Desert of Forbidden Art"
**WHERE:** Spencer Museum of Art auditorium
**WHEN:** 5 p.m.
**ABOUT:** This documentary tells the story of a treasure trove of banned Soviet art worth millions of dollars stashed in a far-off desert in Uzbekistan. Admission is free.
WHAT: 2013 Dole Lecture: IKE's Legacy
WHERE: Dole Institute of Politics
WHEEN: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
ABOUT: Brigadier General Carl Reddel,
executive director of the Eisenhower
Memorial Commission, will discuss
the 34th president's legacy.
Friday, May 3
**WHAT:** Lawrence Region Antique Automobile America Swap Meet
**WHERE:** Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St.
**WHEN:** 1 to 11 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Antique auto enthusiasts will be coming to Lawrence from all over the country, looking to buy and sell hard-to-find parts and accessories. The event is free, but parking is $5.
**WHAT:** Point B Dance Carnival Featuring the AIM Dance Company
**WHERE:** Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
**WHEN:** 7 to 9 p.m.
**ABOUT:** The AIM Dance Company of Point B Dance will present a new work called "Hide and Seek," dedicated to the survivors of the Holocaust, at its fifth annual Dance Carnival. Tickets are $10 to $13.
Saturday, May 4
**WHAT:** Lawrence Region Antique Automobile America Swap Meet
**WHERE:** Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St.
**WHEN:** May 3-5, 1 to 11 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Antique auto enthusiasts will be coming to Lawrence from all over the country, looking to buy and sell hard-to-find parts and accessories. The event is free, but parking is $5.
WHAT: Spring Arts and Culture Festival
WHERE: Spencer Museum of Art
WHEN: 1 to 3 p.m.
ABOUT: The sixth annual Spring Arts and Culture Festival will feature live music, art-making activities for participants of all ages, and art for sale from local and student artists. The event is free to the public.
KATIE MCBRIDE kmcbride@kansan.com
Group looking to create food pantry for students
College students aren't known for having the healthiest diets. It's common to find them munching on the cheapest food they can find, or maybe just anything they can scrounge up from their pantry or from the various sources of free food passed out on campus. A lesser known fact is that there are actually students who have a real problem struggling to pay for food.
KU Fights Hunger is an organization of students, faculty and staff members who have an interest in hunger issues both locally and beyond the Lawrence community. The group helps bring people from around campus together to collaborate on raising awareness on hunger issues, and to figure out ways to help those in need.
KU Fights Hunger is currently conducting an online survey that it's asking anyone connected with the University to fill out. It will collect data about the number of people struggling to pay for food. This would also help to determine how great the need is for a food pantry on campus that would be available to whoever is living in a food-insecure environment.
Amanda Schwegler, assistant director of the Center for Civic and Social Responsibility, said a proper diet and good nutrition are essential for young college students who are not able to study as well or perform at their best if they're not getting
Red Lyon Tavern
enough quality food to eat.
to college, you must be able to afford to eat also,' but there are plenty of folks who need some help to get through the college years."
Other campuses have shown initiatives to start food pantries, showing that there are those in college who are struggling to live in a food-secure environment.
Schwegler said students who eat cheap foods that lack important nutritional value may end up hurting their performance in the classroom; KU Fights Hunger hopes it can make sure students are able to get the kind of food they need to do their best work.
Looking forward, KU Fights Hunger will decide upon its plans for the food pantry once all the results of the survey have been collected. The group will also try to get more people involved in the organization by promoting Hunger Awareness Month in October.
"There's the long-standing joke of students only eating Ramen noodles and macaroni and cheese in college because that's all they can afford to eat," Schwegler said. "I think a lot of people think, 'Oh, you're going
Edited by Tyler Convoer
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Saturday, May 4, 2013
A recycling fee applies for computer monitors ($10) and televisions ($15). Cash or check only. No charge for other electronics. A maximum of 10 boxes of confidential documents will be shredded and recycled at no charge.
Items accepted for recycling: Confidential Documents, Computer Monitors, Desktops, Laptops, Keyboards, Other Peripherals, Printers, Copiers, Scanners, Fax Machines, Telephones, Hand Held Devices, Televisions, VHS/DVD Drives, Small Appliances (Microwaves and Toaster Ovens) and Household Batteries.
RECYCLE ME!
MAY 4th
Rain or Shine
Lawrence Electronic Recycling Event & Document Shredding
Not Valid with any other offers
75¢ Off Any Sub
The City of Lawrence invites residents and small businesses to recycle unused or obsolete electronic equipment and securely shred confidential documents.
9 am to 1 pm
Free State High School NE Parking Lot 4700 Overland Dr.
City of Lawrence
PUBLIC WORKS
WASTE REDUCTION & RECYCLING
Fire
For further information call 832-3030 or visit www.LawrenceRecycles.org
1814 W.23rd Lawrence, KS 843-6000
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
Fights
ts plans
all the
we been
will also
involved
oromot-
month in
PAGE 3
Convoer
CRIME
THE GIRL WITH THE RING
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Amanda Knox, left, speaking during a taped interview with ABC News' Diane Sawyer in New York. Last month, Italy's highest criminal court overturned her acquittal in the 2007 slaying of British student Meredith Kercher and ordered a new trial. The interview aired yesterday coinciding with the release of her memoir, "Waiting to Be Heard."
Knox talks with Sawyer about 'surreal' experiences in Italian murder trial
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — Amanda Knox says in an interview that what happened to her was "surreal but it could have happened to anyone."
The Seattle native told ABC News' Diane Sawyer in an interview airing Tuesday night that "I want the truth to come out. I'd like to be reconsidered as a person."
In March, Italy's highest criminal court overturned Knox's acquittal in the 2007 murder of British student Meredith Kercher and ordered a new trial for Knox, 25. Italian law cannot compel Knox to return for the new legal proceeding.
Knox told Sawyer the high court's decision was "incredibly painful" and she felt as if she had to crawl through another field of barbed wire after reaching what she thought was the end.
She said she was aware of being
labeled a seductress, she-devil and other names in the media, but she said "they're wrong."
"I was in the courtroom when they were calling me a devil," she told Sawyer in interview exccerpts posted online. "It's one thing to be called certain things in the media, and it's another thing to be sitting in a courtroom fighting for your life while people are calling you a devil.
Italian prosecutors have said Knox, who was an exchange student studying in Perugia, Italy, and her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollicito killed Kercher in a drug-fueled sex assault involving a third man.
said the knife matched the wounds on Kercher's body and had traces of Kercher's DNA on the blade and Knox's DNA on the handle.
"For all intents and purposes I was a murderer, whether I was or not. I had to live with the idea that that would be my life," she said during the interview.
They maintained that the murder weapon was a large knife taken from Sollecitio's house. Prosecutors
However, Knox's defenders said she was innocent and was forced to say things she didn't mean during a lengthy police interrogation. And they said bumbling Italian police contaminated the crime scene, producing flawed DNA evidence.
Since returning to Seattle in 2011, Knox has largely avoided the public spotlight in her Pacific Northwest hometown where she is studying at the University of Washington.
Her memoir, "Waiting to Be Heard," was released yesterday.
CAMPUS
Anti-discrimination office marks first anniversary
HANNAH SWANK
hswank@kansan.com
The University's office of Institutional Opportunity and Access will soon celebrate the first anniversary of its creation.
The purpose of the office of IOA is to provide resources to report discrimination of all kinds, including race, gender, sex and sexual orientation on the Lawrence, Edwards and KU Medical Center campuses.
IOA sent out a 15 question student climate survey on April 26 that included questions discussing the University sexual harassment policy and where on campus to file sexual harassment complaints.
Jane McQueeney, executive director for IOA, said the office's mission is to make the campus safer, inform students about where to file complaints of discrimination and educate students about instances of sexual harassment or assault.
In the office's first year, more than half of the complaints received involved sexual harassment, sexual assault or discrimination based on sexual orientation.
McQueeny said if a complaint is filed with IOA at the same time that criminal charges are filed, the University can take interim measures to protect the safety of students, including changing classes and providing escorts.
"There are a lot of different things that we can do to try to ensure people's safety that the police aren't necessarily going to think of doing." McQueen said.
In its first year, the office has investigated more than 100 complaints and conducted 21 training sessions to inform faculty, staff and students about state and federal anti-discrimination laws and the University policies prohibiting discrimination.
"What I'd like to do is be more proactive in doing more training, talking to students about things they can do to keep themselves safe and making sure that they understand the laws so they are not violating KU policy," McQueeny said. "We want everyone to be safe on our campus and we want to make sure that people understand that they have rights."
Edited by Brian Sisk
KU$\textcircled{1}$nfo
On this date in 1893, at the World's Fair in Chicago, the Kansas Pavilion featured a panorama of North America Mammals. That same panorama is now the feature of Nike National
history Museum in Dyche Hall.
MUNICIPALITY OF MONTANA
POLICE REPORTS
Information based on the Douglas County Sheriff's Office booking recap.
- A 20-year-old female was arrested yesterday on the 100 block of Indiana Avenue on suspicion of criminal threat, aggressive assault and aggressive battery. No bond was posted.
- A 20-year-old female was arrested.
Monday on the 2400 block of Oudsdahl Road on suspicion of domestic battery. No bond was posted.
- A 35-year-old male was arrested Monday on the 1700 block of 24th Street on suspicion of criminal damage to property and violating protective order. No bond was posted.
CRIME
Emily Donovan
Calif. woman charged with felony poisoning at San Jose Starbucks
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — A California woman faces attempted murder charges after police say she tried to sneak orange juice bottles spiked with a lethal amount of rubbing alcohol inside a Starbucks.
San Jose Police arrested Ramineh Behbehanian, 50, late Monday. A customer reported seeing the woman take two bottles of orange juice from her bag and place them
in an open-air refrigerated display case at a Starbucks in San Jose around 3:45 p.m., Sgt. Jason Dwyer said Tuesday.
A store employee followed Behlieman to the parking lot and jotted down her license plate number as she fled the scene after being spotted. Dwyer said that other employees called 911 after noticing the smell of the bottles.
Firefighters on the scene tested the contents and determined that
the bottles contained a "lethal quantity" of isopropyl rubbing alcohol mixed with the juice, Dwyer said.
No one drank from the bottles, said Dwyer, who praised the customer's quick actions.
Officers tracked down Behbehanian Monday night at her San Jose home located about five miles away from the store. She was placed into custody on suspicion of attempted murder and felony poisoning, Dwyer said.
Hey Jayhawks.
Ready for the Samsung Galaxy Challenge?
TheNextBigThing is at KU.
Enter for a chance to win prizes and receive up to $20,000 in Samsung donations on behalf of your student organization.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
PAGE 4
O
opinion
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 2013
FREE FOR ALL
Text your FFA submissions to 785-289-8351
What's wrong with skaters on campus?
I'd rather see a skateboarder on the sidewalk than some idiot on their bike.
I think it's about time KU Maintenance did something about Stauffer-Flint's front yard. There are weeds everywhere.
I like to watch my roommate workout, while I sit on the couch and eat cinnamon rolls.
Got sunburned while having class outside. In the shade. #gingerproblems
I'm going to place a restraining order on winter. It must stay a state's distance away in the months following March and up till November.
I'm trying to read my textbook, but I keep getting distracted by your cleavage too!
So I finally realized the statue in front the religion building is a dude with a beard, and not Cleopatra. Editor's note: Smith hall? That's Moses.
Skies out, thighs out
To chivalry girl: wait, it took two guys to open one of the doors?!
A windy day on the hill means wearing those dangly earrings was a mistake.
Apparently you have to be pretty for chivalry to exist...
Some of the people you see on campus.
I lost my headphones... Campus is so eerily audible now.
Can you not?
First we argue over leggings, and now high waisted shorts? Come on. Just live and let live, bro.
It's not possible to study when "Clue- less" is on TV!
Batman or Superman? Editor's note:
Batman. End of discussion. I will not
print any FFAs that disagree.
Who wants a slip'n'slide down the Campanile on stop day?
it is too early to sell my books back?
Editor's note: Why are you asking me?
If you go to The Hawk without taking pictures with basketball players, did you really go to The Hawk?
If you're a true townie you wear your Birks all year round.
And Ernie, the knight bus driver, is back...
It's only 80 degrees and I'm already overheating. Thursday's icy rain can't come fast enough.
That awkward moment when you text an FFA to the person your talking about.
Shout out to all the girls from Johnson County wearing cowboy boots. You're hilarious!
EQUALITY
Women's rights still overlooked in media
We have come so far in the United States in terms of respect for women. But sometimes, I still worry about the media's perception of women - and I'm not just talking about the scantily clad female anchors I see on Fox News.
When a University of Arizona student held up a sign on campus last week that read "You Deserve Rape," the public was appropriately outraged. The backlash against that man – "open air preacher" Dean Saxton who goes by "Brother Dean" – was swift, and continued to be fueled once people discovered his Twitter feed, which was even more unpleasant.
Brother Dean is clearly an outlier in society. His beliefs are convincing to almost no one because they are so cruel and unkind.
But what happens when a crime against women is committed by one of society's "in crowd?" We saw it happen in Steubenville, Ohio last month, when two young, good looking,
Maikil Richmond and Trent Mays were found guilty of rape on March 17. Richmond was sentenced to a minimum of one year in a juvenile correctional facility, while Mays will face a minimum of two years because he snapped a photo of the victim and sent it to friends.
promising high school athletes were accused - and subsequently convicted - of raping a drunk 16-year-old girl.
Yep, you read that right. A photo of the victim drunk, naked and lying on a basement floor.
You'd think this type of crime would elicit the same type of reaction as Brother Dean's viral protest, right? Especially from women?
By Lindsey Mayfield lmayfield@kansan.com
That's where you'd be wrong.
That's where you'd be wrong. CNN's Candy Crowley and Popp Harlow — both female reporters — broke the judge's decision live on CNN. Far from celebrating the fact that justice was done for a young female victim, or even being nonbiased, the two reporters lamented the fact that Richmond and Mays
will have to register as sex offenders, and mourned for their lost "promising futures."
Harlow also testified to how emotional it was to watch Malik Richmond collapse and exclaim, "my life is over," as the verdict read.
Emotional because of — What exactly? Because the boys were good students? Because they'll miss senior prom? Because they are facing the prospect of being incarcerated for as little as two years?
Let's review some of effects that rape victims may experience after their attacks: nightmares, flashbacks, depression, dropping out of school, distancing from loved ones or increased substance
abuse. Not to mention the physical injuries like shock, nausea, sexual disorders, sleep disturbances and pregnancy.
Authorities never released the name of the Steubenville rape victim, identifying her only as a 16-year-old Jane Doe from West Virginia. It is important, however, that we don't let the fact that we don't know her identity keep us from seeing her as anything other than what she is - a very young girl who was taken advantage of at her most vulnerable moment.
I can see, of course, how it could be emotional to watch a young man - a boy, really - dissolve into his mother's arms for the last time before being hand-cuffed and taken to jail. But we have to be careful not to compare these boys' foregone football these boys' foregone football to the long-lasting physical, psychological and behavioral effects of rape and sexual assault.
These seemingly slight differences in perceptions may not seem important in the grand scheme of things. After all, can't we have sympathy for both parties in this situation?
Yes, but subtle situations like these are crucial to the similarly subtle realities that women face every day — making 77 cents to a man's dollar, being objectified both in the workplace and in the media, and having their personal appearances constantly scrutinized.
Equal treatment for women will not be achieved in the public's disdain for royal idiots like Brother Dean. It will be won in those delicate situations that really make us think, and will likely divide us.
Those of us who understand the importance of this issue, however, have to stand strong for women like Steubenville's Jane Doe. Even if it means ruining a perfectly good football career.
Mayfield is a junior studying journalism, political science and leadership from Overland Park
SALAD BAR
Changing diet should be a personal, not political, choice
was a staunch vegetarian for four bread-ridden years and
I was a student Vegan for four bread-ridden years and I can say with confidence that you should not do the same. There is no better example of slacktivism than the vegan movement. It isn't a political statement or lifestyle; it is a dietary choice.
Being a vegetarian is not hard. People moan and whine about how difficult it would be but all it takes is an excess of ramen and a little misdirected passion. No one is changing the world by eating just cheese sandwiches and bananas.
By Wil Kenney
wkenney@kansan.com
I say these things as a veteran of the "I'm better than meat-eaters" ideology. Vegetarians won't admit it, but we do feel superior for not eating meat. Why else would anyone do it? It's not particularly fun or interesting. I convinced myself that my diet was a moral litmus test and a sign of character. It was something to tell people when you first met with the kid pictures in your wallet.
I was wrong as hell. Avoiding meat is no more than a sign of some self-control. Meat has its risks and negatives like any other modern convenience. People drive cars daily well aware that they could die at a moment's notice and that they are actively
contributing to global warming. Why do they do it? Because it's necessary.
I realized this at the first bite of meat after that years-long fast. No one is carnivorous just to spite vegetarians. No one likes the fact that bastards torture animals in factories. There are thousands of humans being tortured in Syria as I write this, go get riled and put some time in there.
However big the frenzy people can build themselves into, the vegan political movement in America is dead. The fact remains that the nation's political masthead for vegetarianism is PETA, one of the most hypocritical and sensationalist groups to ever gain nation-wide support. I won't delve too deep here but there have been a number of cases uncovered about PETA euthanizing animals in mass while running adoption campaigns, even having it listed
on their own website.It's also unfortunate that their name was so easily reattributed to mean People Eat Tasty Animals.
I mean, come on; too easy.
But really all I've done with this column is blow more smoke onto a dying argument. If every vegetarian has a reality check and every omnivore tries a fake chicken nugget, maybe we could all get along. For an issue so low on the priority toem pole, it's unnerving to see people so angry over so little. There needs to be a heftier conversation started.
Which is why I've decided to adopt a Peep-free diet. The sugar and fat kills untold dozens on Easter each year and I've chosen to take a stand by not eating this evil candy. The production of Peeps contributes to global warming and many thousands of innocent Peeps are abused each day. We'll stop the production of these delicious sinister treats one by one. I will keep you updated on my progress.
Kenney is a freshman majoring in political science and journalism from Shawnee
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PEACOCKING
The art of courtship bizarre, human or not
Whether it is through an elaborate nest or a creative mating dance, animals are masters of courtship. Although their methods may seem strange and irrelevant in day-to-day life, there may just be a jewel of wisdom in the stomp of a Prairie Chicken.
Let's look at our friend the moose. A male moose will roll in a muddy, urine-scented pit to attract his mate. While we may not douse ourselves in urine, I'm going to go ahead and extend this analogy to perfume and cologne. The main lesson that can be derived from this instance is that less is more. Maybe spray some of your favorite scent on the carpet and roll around in it.
If you feel nervous about approaching someone, remember that it couldn't be worse than having your head bitten off. Australian Redback Spiders have a cruel and risky courtship ritual. The female spiders are much larger than the male and they have relatively high standards. They expect the males to dance for approximately 100 minutes, with elaborate moves such as beating on the abdomen of the female spider and incorporating the female's web into his own web. If the female becomes unhappy with the male, it is common for her to bite his head ill, literally. Although if you approach a woman by beating on her abdomen, you may also get your head bitten off.
Prairie Chickens repeatedly stomp their legs and inflate their neck to attract mates. Their dance may not be that elaborate but they will continue their dance until they grab the attention of the hens. So even if you are not the most talented and elaborate dancer, eventually your effort (like a Prairie Chicken's) will be rewarded.
The Anglerfish reminds us that dependent relationships won't work; each party should be contributing, otherwise it is parasitic. Male Anglerfish shu
If none of these dating tips work, some of the animal kingdom is eternally "single" and they seem to be doing pretty well. Think of the all-female species of whiptail lizard, Cnemidophorus neomexicanus. These lizards reproduce by parthenogenesis, an asexual method of reproduction where the growth and development of an embryo occurs without fertilization. These female lizards still bask in the sun and go about their lives without any males around. To keep it even, nature has the all-male (genetically speaking) species of the Corbicula clam. David Hillis, a University of Texas computational biologist, says that they sometimes steal eggs of other species but usually the maternal genome is ejected after fertilization and the genome is replaced with their own. So although their method of staying "single" is a little shadier, they still thrive on their own under the sea.
down their immune system at a certain age and then they bite a female fish and release an enzyme that eternally binds the male and female fish, and the male fish continues to mooch off of his now permanent mate.
The mating mechanisms of animals have evolved over thousands of years. Although human social cues may make us seem worlds apart, we aren't as different from our animal family as we may think.
Stern is a freshman majoring in biology from Lawrence
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GE 4
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
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HOROSCOPES
Because the stars know things we don't.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
Mercury enters Taurus, and for
about two weeks, get practical
and profitable. Avoid snap
judgments and assumptions;
all isn't as it appears. Postpone
meetings for a few days to formulate the message and plan.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9
Don't bother to argue. Stay respectful. Postpone travel for a few days. You're even more practical for the next few weeks, although prioritizing a big opportunity over mundane chores makes sense. Spread enthusiasm.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9.
Hold your horses and study the situation. Stick to your budget. Check the exact wording. Clear up old messes these next few weeks. Assert leadership, and don't get rattled by disagreement. It brings freedom.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8
You work effectively with groups. Accept a challenge. Financial planning scores today and tomorrow. Upgrade equipment without spending a lot; get creative and barter, or join forces to get funding.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9
Take on more responsibility. Don't get intimidated. Praise everyone's results, favor negotiations and compromise. Go slowly to avoid mistakes. Talk about love more than money.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9
Reschedule a meeting so you can be home with the kids. Improve your living conditions. Change doesn't happen all at once. The details are important so get involved. Double-check data, and stay cool.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8
Stay objective about a hot topic and avoid gossip. Lay low, get into your work, and make an amazing discovery, which can remain private. You have great emotional support. Call the bank. Discard junk.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7
Listen carefully. Stay out of someone else's argument, but remember who says what. Enforce household rules. Settle up. There's an unexpected bonus. This makes waste.
Haste makes waste.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Work requires more of your attention. Accept constructive criticism; if you can't be nice, be quiet. There's a good suggestion in there somewhere. Keep harmony alive, and it could even get romantic. Add flowers.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9
Consider an interesting suggestion. Costs are higher than expected, and tempers short. You're entering a two-day business phase. Play that ace you've been holding. For two weeks, it's easier to express your love.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8
Keep faith and ask questions later. Travel is complicated; adjust your schedule. Decide what role to play. Take leadership. Resolve a family issue. It's easy at home.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
ACHOSS
1 Pos-
sesses
4 Cribbage
scorer
7 Ringlet
8 Preclude
10 "M*A*S'H"
setting
11 Scents
13 Kitchen
pair
16 — and
outs
17 "The —
Show
With
Jon
Stewart"
18 Whopper
19 Citi
Field
team
20 Marching
music-
makers
21 Topper
for
Miss
USA
23 Rush-
more or
Rainier
25 Responsibility
26 Cried
27 Lawyers'
org.
Today is a 9
Get obsessed with details,
and minimize risks. Finish work
privately today and tomorrow.
Concentration is easier, so advance in your studies. There's more money flowing. Stay patient. Smell the blossoms.
28 Memorable mission
30 Shooter ammo
33 13- Across, e.g.
36 African desert wind
37 Ointment
38 Military subdivision
39 Unattractive
40 Mauna —
41 More, to Manuel
DOWN
1 Throws hard
CHECK OUT
THE ANSWERS
2 Sign-
borhood
3 — :
spoken ::
libel :
written
4 Danger
5 Black
wood
6 Ready for
action
7 Quarter,
e.g.
8 CSA
president
9 Overcoat
sleeve
10 Japanese
pond
carp
12 Epithet
for Simon
Templar
(with
"The")
http://bit.ly/10qxNim
18324506789
SUDOKU
| | | 1 | 2 | 3 | | | 4 | 5 | 6 | | |
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| | | 4 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 8 | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | 3 | | | | | 4 | |
| 6 | | | 8 | | | | 2 |
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| 8 | 6 | | 7 | 9 | 5 | | 3 |
| 4 | | | | | | | 8 |
| 9 | | | | | | | 6 |
| | 8 | | 9 | | | 3 | |
| | | 6 | 8 | 1 | 7 | 2 | |
14 Information
15 Scarlet
19 Spring month
20 On the other hand
21 Big brass
22 Slanted, as lettering
23 Viral Web phenom
24 One skilled in playing dead
25 “— Kapital”
26 Goes up a few degrees
28 Worship
29 Parkinson’s treatment
30 Doctor’s orders?
31 Jealousy
32 Iron or Bronze
34 Out of control
35 Long story
Difficulty Level ★★★
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excess HOLLYWOOD review
McConaughey makes 'Mud' worth rolling in
By Landon McDonald
lmcdonald@kansan.com
In the six years since the release of his debut "Shotgun Stories," Jeff Nichols has been quietly establishing himself as one of the most exciting new voices in independent film, a writer-director with a refreshingly un-ironic affection for life in rural America and a gift for harnessing atmosphere as an active participant in his work. His "Take Shelter" was an uneasy meditation on mental illness and the possibilities of extrasensory perception wrapped in the guise of a horror film about a construction worker (Michael Shannon) who becomes dangerously obsessed with protecting his family after he starts experiencing apocalyptic visions.
Neckbone, having been raised by a reality-challenged uncle (Michael Shannon again), is immediately suspicious of the pistol-packing stranger who tells
"Mud," Nichols' third and most successful outing to date, centers on Ellis (Tye Sheridan), a 14-year-old fisherman's son stranded in the awkward throes of adolescence and still reeling from the news of his parents' impending divorce. One day, while exploring one of the many islands of the Arkansas delta, he and his best friend Neckbone (Jacob Lofland) encounter a fantastic sight courtesy of the last major flood; a boat, seemingly abandoned, stranded at the top of a tree. The boys claim the vessel as their new clubhouse before discovering it's already occupied by Mud (Matthew McConaughey), a friendly, superstitious drifter who claims to be waiting on his one true love, the wonderfully named Juniper (Reese Witherspoon).
them he wears crosses on his boots to ward off evil spirits. Ellis, on the other hand, completely buys into the rugged romanticism Mud represents and soon finds himself sneaking food to the lovelorn vagrant in exchange for more stories about Juniper, whom he gradually comes to idealize.
Eventually the real, deeply imperfect Juniper appears at a local motel, hounded by state troopers and a posse of bounty hunters led by the vengeful Carver (Paul Sparks). As it turns out, Mud is a fugitive wanted for the murder of one of Juniper's many abusive ex-boyfriends, and the rest of the movie deals with Ellis and Neckbone's efforts to help the couple escape.
McConaughey, continuing the remarkable career resurgence that began with "The Lincoln Lawyer" in 2011, radiates the kind of manic self-assurance you'd expect a man like Mud to possess, rattling off factually dubious anecdotes about lucky T-shirts and deadly snakebites while constantly insisting that Ellis's grizzled, solitary neighbor (the great Sam Shepherd) is actually a trained CIA assassin. It's obvious that McConaughey took the time to establish a genuine rapport with his young co-stars, as their
performances seem more focused and natural when he's around.
Sheridan, who brought an inestimable amount of soulful intensity to a mostly nonspeaking role as one of Brad Pitt's sons in "The Tree of Life," makes the most of his first major role here, showing how Ellis's naiveté can be both a blessing and a curse. The scene where he attempts to defend the honor of a high school girl is simultaneously hilarious and heartbreaking in its sincerity. Newcomer Lofland gives an equally effective performance as the sarcastic yet stalwart Neckbone, while Shannon, Nichols' friend and constant collaborator, is uncharacteristically hilarious as the uncle whod prefer to be thought of as a goofty older brother.
At first blush, "Mud" appears to be little more than a warmly observed coming-of-age drama set among the sweat and silt of the Arkansas bayou. As Nichols' film unfolds, however, it becomes increasingly clear that what we're watching is also meant to function as an elegiac tribute to the Mississippi River and the culture that has sprung from her muddy banks; a flashbulb evocation of a way of life that's slowly vanishing in the face of crushing poverty and land development deals. It is a sight that demands to be seen and cherished now, before its history washes clean.
Edited by Dylan Lysen
★★★
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PAGE 6
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASEBALL
THE OTHER WILDCATS
The struggling Baker Wildcats travel to Hoglund Ballpark to take on the Jayhawks
HOGLUND FIELD, 6 P.M., LAWRENCE
17- Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34- Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
KANSAS (26-18, 9-9)
17 - Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34 - Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
BAKER WILDCATS (6-38, 3-23)
23 - Neal Boyce, Fr.
7 - Josh Zach, Jr.
17 - Brett Lechien, Jr.
3 - Matt Fry, Jr.
14 - Ethan Jacks, Fr.
22 - Bryan Kindle, Sr.
44 - 35 - Justin Lane, Sr.
44 - Miles Sanderson, Sr.
55 - Tanner Ponne, Sr.
55 - Tanner Poppe, Sr.
PITCHING
HITTING
Kansas' sophomore right-handed pitcher Robert Kahana went eight innings with five strikeouts, giving up five hits in his career-high eight innings. Kansas senior right-handed pitcher Tanner Poppe gets the nod against Baker. He faced the Wildcats in his last start, giving up a run in two tough innings with three strikeouts and one walk.
Kansas hitters continued to struggle for a large part of their 1-0, 8-3 inning victory against Wichita State. The Jayhawks scratched across their winning run on a single from sophomore left fielder Michael Suiter, a pitch worn by senior first baseman Alex DeLeon, a bunt from senior third baseman Jordan Dreiling and sophomore right fielder Dakota Smith's walk off RBI single.
FIELDING
The Jayhawks rebounded defensively after a rough weekend in West Virginia. The Jayhawks committed no errors in the 11-inning victory against the Shockers. Kansas recorded two double plays, the second coming in a jam with runners on second and third in a scoreless eighth inning. The Jayhawks have committed 44 errors on the season.
PITCHING
The Wildcat pitching staff got their money's worth at Hogland Ballpark pitching six pitches. Senior right-handed pitcher Josh Vossen got the start and gave up two runs in 51 pitches and two innings. Senior left-handed pitcher Ryan Hahn suffered most of the damage giving up five earned runs and five walks in two two innings and 67 pitches.
HITTING
Senior third baseman Bryan Kindle led the Wildcats in their last appearance at Hogland Ballpark. Kindle went 1-for-3 at the plate with the team's lone RBI. Baker hitters struggled, collecting only six hits at the hands of Kansas pitching. The Wildcats struck out eleven times walking just twice in the 7-1 loss.
FIELDING
The Wildcats committed three errors in their last appearance against the Jayhawks. Baker can't afford fielding errors against power conference Big 12 talent. Junior second baseman Matt Fry is the leading guilty party with 16 committed errors on the season.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
QUOTE OF THE DAY
---
PAGE 7
PAGE 103
ee errors
at the Jay-
ing errors
12 talent.
ry is the
committed
"He's the strongest human being who's ever played the position. Ever. He is rare. Tebow is the kind of guy who could revolutionize the game. He's the 'wildcat' who can throw. This guy here is 250 pounds of concrete cyanide, man. And he can throw. He throws well enough at any level to play quarterback."
— Jon Gruden (2010)
espn.com
FACT OF THE DAY
FACT
espn.com
Tim Tebow was the first sophomore to win the Heisman.
Q: What pick was Tim Tebow in the NFL draft?
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
A: 25th to the Denver Broncos.
— espn.com
THE MORNING BREW Tebow's departure looks permanent
John Legend once remixed his "Ordinary People" into "Extra-Ordinary Tebow." "Tebow's state, they do that," but
"Tebow's stats, they do stink, but somehow you still lead the show. Extra-oooordinary Tebow. Your powers we can't know. Extra-oooordinary Tebow. Maybe we should take it slow."
By Chris Hybl
chybl@kansan.com
The song, about the now team less-quarterback Tim Tebow, was released just after Tebow's one-season stint with the Denver Broncos. Legend sings about the public's infatuation with Tebow, his winning, his bad stats, everything. But that's all over now — probably for good.
The news of Tebow's release from the New York Jets is a book closing slammed shut. Last chapter written — it's done. If Tebow's career were a book, it would probably say "the end." It's a sad occasion; the sports world lost one of the greatest underdogs in history.
So, as I drowned to Legend's soulful piece, I reflected on the leopard that was.
pass I renected on the legend that was. Tebow's wobbly spiral pass overshaded all of his achievements as a quarterback. Tebow rescued Denver from the dumps in 2011-2012 as he went 8-5 as the starting quarterback of a team that had a 1-4 start to its season. He led Denver all the way to a wildcard playoff victory against the Pittsburgh
steelers before losing to the Patriots in the
divisional round of the playoffs. Tebow made
it just as far as Peyton Manning did this season.
Anti-Tebownites get all up-in-arms over Tebow's success. I'm not trying to say he is a great quarterback. You're right, he throws the ball with the best of the third-stringers — but what's important is that he does care. Skill didn't make Tebow great. The winning and the comebacks did. Obviously everyone takes Manning over Tebow, but Rex Ryan's Jets team was the worst possible second home for the Mile High Messiah.
While Manning was rerouting his way
to Papa Bear's house and listening to XM 60 outlaw while cruising to an AFC West championship, Tebow was in the dumps of a dumpy organization. But finally, when Ryan decided that five turnovers in one game was too much to tolerate, he didn't go with Tebow, but rather worthless Greg McEldroy. The team lost both remaining games, good — or bad — enough for a 6-10 record.
It wasn't like Ryan knew nothing. Flashback to a year earlier and Ryan must have failed to see Tebow's talents right in front of his face when Tebow led Denver in a fourth-quarter comeback against the Jets in November 2011.
Ryan and the jets wasted time and money on the Tebow project they never unveiled, and it was at a high cost. To be precise, it cost the jets a fourth-round pick and $1.5 million in salary along with another $2.5 million they had to pay to Denver to satisfy the trade agreement.
KU
All that time and money spent to have Tebow throw eight passes and rush 32 times has now led to Tebow being the butt of every mocking CFL and arena football owner desperate to create attention for their team that has less regular season game attendance than
the nearest grade school. Even one indoor football quarterback by the name of James McNear (he plays for the Omaha Beef if that indicates a talent level) swelled up with confidence over his owner's offer to Tebow, "I think Tim can learn a lot from me." McNear said in the ESPN report.
The treatment of Tebow is vomit-inducing Tebow didn't fall, he was pushed from grace pretty hard.
For now every shedding of an eyelash, penny tossed into a fountain and every 11:11 sighting will wish for his return. As John Legend's voice jokes, the piano twinkles off, the curtains close. No. 15 jerseys are hung and the stone rolls over the grave. I call dibs on the "resurrection."
This week in athletics
Edited by Dylan Lysen
Wednesday
Baseball Baker 6 p.m. Lawrence Softball Wichita State 6 p.m. Lawrence
Thursday No events scheduled
Fridav
OU
Softball
Oklahoma
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
XII
Saturday
QU
Softball
Oklahoma
Noon
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
XH
Sunday
CAREER
XII
Baseball
Baylor
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
CRIME
Monday No events scheduled
Tuesday
Teenage soccer player punches referee, causes brain damage
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The 17-year-old was booked into a juvenile deten-
tension center on suspicion of aggravated assault, said Unified Police Lt. Justin Hoyal. Those charges could be amplified if the 46-year-old referee's condition worsens.
SALT LAKE CITY—A referee for a recreational soccer league is in critical condition in a Salt Lake City hospital after being punched in the face by a teenage player who didn't like a call the man made in a weekend game.
Baseball
Wichita State
6:30 p.m.
Wichita, Kan.
The incident happened during a soccer game Saturday at a field at Eisenhower Junior High School in Taylorsville, a Salt Lake City suburb.
The referee called a foul on the player and issued him a yellow card, triggering the player to turn and punch him, authorities said. At first, it appeared the referee just had minor injuries from the single blow.
When the man was taken to a hospital, however, they discovered serious internal head injuries, Hoyal said.
He's been in critical condition since Saturday.
"It was almost an instinctive reaction," Hoyal said.
There was no buildup to the incident or previous exchange of words between the referee and player, Hoyal said.
By the time police arrived at the field, the teenager had left. Authorities investigated
the incident over the weekend and arrested the teen Monday. He is in the Salt Lake Valley Juvenile Detention Center. His name isn't being released because he's a minor.
The game was part of a "rogue league" unaffiliated with the popular Utah
Youth Soccer Association or any city or town recreation department, association CEO Andrew Hiatt said. The association has 50,000 youth players and 15,000 coaches statewide.
In the state association, any player or coach who puts a finger on a referee faces immediate suspension. Players and coaches also sign
a code of ethics.
"To see something like this is not what we are looking for," Hiatt said. "It's horrible. Hopefully we use this as teaching moment to continue to push sportsmanship."
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Volume 125 Issue 114
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
kansan.com
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S sports
PAGE 6 Baseball preview
COMMENTARY Alcohol should be sold at events
By Mike Vernon
mvernon@kansan.com
Kansas State Athletics quite literally made a splash last week when it announced it would sell beer to anyone of age at its six remaining baseball games.
"We updated our athletics alcohol policy in order to allow us to implement a test program allowing beer sales at all remaining baseball games this season," Scott told Robinett.
It's possible for this to happen right here in Lawrence if the right people want to make the change. Kansas State's senior athletics director for operations, Casey Scott, told Kellis Robinett of the Kansas City Star that the move was in accordance with the Wildcats' university policy and procedures.
It's smart to test an idea that could raise revenues for the athlet ic department, increase fan interest for the program and also, dare I say, make games more fun.
I would like to commend them for this splash.
In case you didn't know, Kansas baseball is having its most competitive season in the three years I've been in Lawrence. I admit, its 25-18 record and spot at number five in the Big 12 rankings isn't exactly mind-boggling. But just four games ago, the jayhawks appeared to have a legitimate shot at obtaining a second-place finish in the conference.
The six-game trial is a smart move for Kansas State. It gives the administration a chance to see if its fans are mature enough to handle beer being sold at a collegiate sporting event. I'm willing to guess they'll behave accordingly.
And why not? Fans should be able to enjoy themselves at the Hog on a weekend, and players deserve to have more fans cheering them on.
Edited by Dylan Lysen
Believe it or not, Kansas Athletics should take a look down I-70, and at the very least consider selling beer at baseball games.
Now, Scott did tell Robinett that Kansas State is not considering selling beer at future football or basketball games. He did say selling beer at all baseball games is under consideration for next season.
I find it hard to believe that Kansas couldn't have similar results for its Friday and Saturday home games if it sold beer at Hoglund Ballpark where everyone's outdoors and there's already an intimate feel.
Now they've lost those last four games and have a season teetering between normally average and abnormally outstanding. It needs its fan support now more than ever. Selling beer at games could help the lahwacks get that support
Kansas State's first series where beer was made available to any fan over the age of 21 was against TCU. The Wildcats' played their second game of the series at 4:05 on Saturday. The temperature was recorded at 58 degrees that day. 2,957 fans showed up to the ballpark.
Kansas' last Big 12 home game was a series-deciding match with Texas. The Jayhawks won 4-3. There were 1,189 fans in attendance.
EXTRA-INNING WALK OFF
GEORGE MULINIX/KANSAN
Sophomore starting pitcher Robert Kahana attempts to pick off the runner on first. Kahana gave up five hits with five strikeouts. Before last night's game, Kahana maintained an ERA of 3.93 and had 22 strikeouts.
ODD BALL
Jayhawks overcome squirrelly game to defeat Wichita State in extras
TREVOR GRAFFE
tgraff@kansan.com
Baseball fans couldn't write a more fitting end to Kansas' 1-0, eleventh-inning victory over the Wichita State Shockers.
A single, hit batsmen, bunt single and sophomore right fielder Dakota Smith's walk off RBI single in the bottom of the eleventh sealed the victory in what will go down as the prime picture of oddity in the 2013 season at Hoglund Ballpark.
"It feels good." Smith said. "We lost one to them last year that I felt pretty bad about because I ended up losing a ball in the outfield to lose it. Tonight I helped the team win and it really just feels good."
With Shockers' sophomore catcher Tyler Baker on second base, a rebellious campus squirrel entered the field of play. Kansas senior shortstop attempted to scoop the squirrel out of play before Tyler Baker, with a deft flip of the helmet, trapped the squirrel and escorted it to safer ground behind the third base dugout.
The madness started in the fourth inning as an unexpected substitution entered the game at shortstop.
"That was pretty crazy," Smith said. "I thought it was pretty funny. It was a good time."
Smith's answer was cut short with the customary shaving cream pie to the face in an atmosphere that took a much looser turn after the end of the day.
West Virginia.
K ans s a pitching fared well in the 11 inning debacle. Soph o more right-handed pitcher Robert Kahana went a career-high eight innings,
Kahana said. "It just took a little adjustment. I was choking the ball at first. I just moved it to my finger tips and I can feel the ball a lot easier."
The oddity continued in the fifth inning with what would have
"I can tell you there's a lot of guys in that clubhouse who got a sense of getting that monkey off their back."
"That was crazy," Kahana said.
"When he picked it up in his helmet and ran off the field with it, I didn't expect him to put on the same helmet. That was crazy. I was staying far away from that squirrel."
giving up five hits while striking out five in the shutout.
Kahana didn't mind running through a solid Wichita State line-up, but he would have nothing to do with a rogue squirrel.
Kahana's successful night came in the wake of grip changes.
"I just had a grip situation."
RITCH PRICE Kansas coach
a bewildered state.
been a grand slam hit high over the left field fence by Kansas senior first baseman Alex DeLeon. The initial home run call from home plate was overturned leaving many in
"I saw two things tonight that I've never seen before," coach Ritch Price said. "First, I compliment their catcher. When he picked up that squirrel in his helmet, I didn't think he could even do it. I thought it was one of the funniest things I've seen in baseball. Then there was the grand slam called fair then taken off the board. I've never seen that in my entire career."
The Jayhawks got a much needed morale boost in the victory against Wichita State. The
Shockers swept Kansas in last season's two-game series. After the West Virginia trip over the weekend, a sense of relief could be felt in the Kansas clubhouse.
tonight were the same guys that struggled in West Virginia. It was huge for those guys' confidence level and hopefully that carries over to the weekend."
"I can tell you there's a lot of guys in that clubhouse who got a sense of getting that monkey off their back," Coach Price said. "The same guys that clutched up to win
The Jayhawks face Baker University tomorrow at 5 p.m. in Hoglund Ballpark.
- Edited by Dylan Lysen
FENNELS
In the top of the fourth a happy squirrel delayed the game for several minutes. The squirrel took a ride in Wichita State player Tyler Baker's helmet and watched the rest of the game from the stands.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
SOFTBALL
1 ANSA
KELSEY WEAVER/KANSAN
The Jayhawks welcome Chaley Brickey, a freshman from Haltom City, Texas, back to home plate after a home run. Brickey scored the only run in the Jayhawks' first game of April 27 against Baylor.
Maggie Hull and company to face off against Wichita State
JOSEPH DAUGHERTY
jdaugherty@kansan.com
Kansas (30-15, 5-7) will face the Shockers (18-29, 9-12) Wednesday night at Arrocha Ballpark Wednesday at 6 p.m. for just one game. The Jayhawks lead the all-time series with the Shockers 69-17. Wednesday's game will mark the 87th time the teams have faced each other. The last time the Shockers beat the Jayhawks was April 28, 2010.
The Jayhawks come into this game leading the Big 12 in batting average for the 12th straight week, hitting .344. No other team has
The Shockers are hitting .248 with 69 doubles and 29 home runs
led the league in batting average this season. Freshman Alex Hugo has hit three home runs in the last five games and also holds the freshman home run record with 14, while senior left fielder Maggie Hull sits for the Kansas career RBI crown. One more RBI will break the current record, 135, held by former Jayhawk and current softball color analyst Liz Kocon. Maggie Hull is also continues to sit atop the Big 12 in batting average, hitting .451 for the season and is on pace to break her own record of .409 for a season.
Y
as a team. Junior center fielder Erin Carney leads the team with a .299 batting average and .430 slugging percentage. The Shockers were selected to finish 9th in the Missouri Valley Conference this season.
"I think they are a good mix. Their record doesn't indicate how strong of a team they are," coach Megan Smith said. "They have good pitching, they have some speed in their lineup and a little bit of power too, so definitely a good mix."
Edited by Madison Schultz
3
KANSAN outs.
as
days that
1. It was
confidence
carries
Baker
p.m. in
an Lysen
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UDK
the student voice since 1904
YKANSAN tes. The d the
fielder
m with
and 430
shockers
h in the
face this
good mix.
state how
" coach
have
some
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Schultz
OUT DRINKING
AT HOME ON THE ROAD
EMILY DONOVAN
edonovan@kansan.com
Sometimes when Brian Devine looks in his rearview mirror, he realizes, "Oh yeah, I'm driving my house."
He and Maria Scarpello, nomadic University alumni, have visited 288 craft breweries since ditching their townhouse, buying a recreational vehicle and heading west in August 2010.
The first week of classes her freshman year, Scarpello, then a Delta Gamma from Omaha, Neb., ventured down the sixth floor of Oliver Residence Hall, introducing herself to any fresh-faced floormate who had left his dorm room door open. Devine, from Overland Park, admits to being less aggressively social. They hung out. They worked on projects for their design class together. It wasn't until second semester sophomore year that Devine asked her to come to a The Roots concert at Abe and Jake's Landing.
Ten years later, Scarpello's pixie
cut is now accented with fuschia. Devine first shaved a mohawk—or, rather, "layhaw," as it was originally blue and red for March Madness — in 2012. He recently reshaved it and dyed it green, as recommended by the 3-year-old son of a friend whose driveway the couple had parked their RV in.
Scarpello graduated in 2005 with a bachelor's in Graphic Design and a master's in Design Management; Devine graduated in 2006 with an Industrial Design degree. The following years of success in corporate jobs were necessary — both attribute their having found good work now to the network of mentors and references their real world experiences built — and unfulfilling. Wanting to break away from the 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. workday, Scarpello felt ready for a change.
"I like to say I took an early retirement at the age of 27," Scarpelle said. "I enjoyed life and what life is without having the pressures of work and how you're supposed to live get in the way."
At a March Madness watch party three years ago, one of their friends mused about buying an RV and a national parks pass and touring the country. Scarpello, who had always daydreamed about flipping a school
A smoker named Gary, who reportedly had only four teeth, sold them Stanely, their mobile house, for $10.000. Their first
order of business was to gut it, ditching the stained shag carpeting and bringing in their collection of Macs loaded with thousands of movies and songs. They moved out of their townhouse, selling off their lawn mower, television and anything they didn't consider memorabilia.
"As you started to get rid of this stuff,you realized how much you don't need it."
philosophy was "Anything that we can replace, let's get rid of."
Devine's parents were intrigued; Scarpello, concerned.
"Hey Dad," Scarpelle said, finally calling her parents during their vacation in Florida a few days before she and Devine hit the road. "I bought an RV, quit my job and am going to travel the nature."
"As you started to get rid of this stuff, you realized how much you don't need it." Devine said. "Our
BRIAN DEVINE
2006 University graduate
There was a pause.
you going to get the news?" her father asked, caught off guard.
They thought for maybe six months theyd tour California, Washington and anything in between. Two weeks in, they high-fived and congratulated each other on the RV being such a good idea.
"There's too much in the world to see to stop." Scarpello said.
Hoping to meet real people at
their first stop in Colorado Springs, they headed to a bar and found not just a warm experience but the heart of the town: locals recommended the perfect bike trails, restaurants and sightseeing spots.
They've always praised the communities that brew craft beer — Devine bussed tables at Free State Brewery as an undergraduate student and they started learning how to brew their junior year. As designers, they admire innovation, appreciating different flavors and processes. Supporting local business, Scarpello said, is supporting the American dream. Their website, theroamingpint.com, features a blog of their experiences and reviews of each brewery.
Thanks to mobile broadband, Devine freelances, illustrating for magazines and creating icons, and Scarpello works full-time, managing web design accounts. As they generally only drive for an hour or two a day, bouncing between the nearest towns after a few days, they budget $600 a month for gas — as
much as they would pay in a month for their commute when they both worked corporate jobs.
Their two dogs, Ernie, a labrador/terrier mix from the Lawrence Humane Society, and Buddha, an English bulldog who slobbers nonstop that they "rescued" from living in the state of Missouri, have swum in both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans and spent their three daily walks exploring dog parks and fire hydrants in the majority of U.S. states. Devine and Scarpelle have on more than one occasion Googled a coin flipping website — it's hard to catch a quarter on a bumpy highway — to decide where to head next.
"The less you plan, the more you experience — I don't want to say 'serendipity'—" Scarpello said, turning to Devine, looking for the right word.
“— Spontaneity” Devine finished.
Edited by Megan Hinman
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
pg.2A
CAMPUS
SAFETY
A PREVIEW
pg.7A
ROTC
THE MORNING BREW
KU
pg.2B
EXCESS HOLLYWOOD pg.5A
SUMMER STYLE
pg.6A
pg.4A OPINION UDK
BASEBALL
REWIND
KANSA
pg.1D
Index CLASSIFIEDS 2B CRYPTOQUIPS 5A SPORTS 1B CROSSWORD 5A OPINION 4A SUDOKU 5A
All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
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CALENDAR
Thursday, May 2
WHAT: Cosby Sweater
WHERE: Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
WHEN: 8 p.m.
ABOUT: Catch electronica act Cosby Sweater at this all-ages show.
Friday, May 3
**WHAT:** "Desert of Forbidden Art"
**WHERE:** Spencer Museum of Art auditorium
**WHEN:** 5 p.m.
**ABOUT:** This documentary tells the story of a treasure trove of banned Soviet art worth millions of dollars stashed in a far-off desert in Uzbekistan. Admission is free.
WHAT: 2013 Dole Lecture: IKE's Legacy
WHERE: Dole Institute of Politics
WHEN: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
ABOUT: Brigadier General Carl Reddel,
executive director of the Eisenhower
Memorial Commission, will discuss
the 34th president's legacy.
WHAT: Lawrence Region Antique Automobile America Swap Meet
WHERE: Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St.
WHEN: 1 to 11 p.m.
ABOUT: Antique auto enthusiasts will be coming to Lawrence from all over the country, looking to buy and sell hard-to-find parts and accessories. The event is free, but parking is $5.
**WHAT:** Point B Dance Carnival Featuring the AIM Dance Company
**WHERE:** Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
**WHEN:** 7 to 9 n.
ABOUI. The AIM Dance Company of Point B Dance will present a new work called "Hide and Seek," dedicated to the survivors of the Holocaust, at its fifth annual Dance Carnival. Tickets are $10 to $13.
Saturday, May 4
**WHAT:** "The Reluctant Dragon"
**WHERE:** Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
**WHEN:** 11 a.m.
**ANSWER:** This family-friendly play is the last production of the 2012-2013 season at Lawrence Arts Center. Suggested donation is $5.
WHAT: Great Books Discussion Group
WHERE: Lawrence Public Library, 700 New Hampshire St.
WHEN: 2 to 4 a.m.
ABOUT: Enjoy classic literature? Join your bookworm peers at this month's meeting to discuss "Invisible Man" by Ralph Elison.
Sunday, May 5
WHAT: Lawrence Region Antique Automobile America Swap Meet
WHERE: Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St.
WHEN: May 3-5, 1 to 11 p.m.
ABOUT: Antique auto enthusiasts will be coming to Lawrence from all over the country, looking to buy and sell hard-to-find parts and accessories. The event is free, but parking is $5.
WHAT: Spring Arts and Culture Festival
IN THE DARK
WHERE: Spencer Museum of Art
WHEN: 1 to 3 p.m.
ABOUT. The sixth annual Spring Arts and Culture Festival will feature live music, art-making activities for participants of all ages, and art for sale from local and student artists. The event is free to the public.
Senate looks to improve lighting near GSP
EMMA LEGAULT
elegault@kansan.com
Spradlin, a freshman from Fort Smith, Ark., isn't the only one to feel slightly uneasy walking near campus late at night.
After a late night at the library, Addison Spradlin starts the trek back to her room at GSP. As she walks down Louisiana Street, she clutches her phone and keeps her car key between her index and middle fingers, just in case an unexpected situation arises.
"I'm paranoid about walking late at night," she said. "I've watched one too many C r i m i n a l Minds episodes."
Poor lighting around the GSP and Corbin residence halls is something that the Student Safety Advisory Board, a subset of Student Senate focused on general safety and improving the student culture, is aware of and hopes to fix in the near future.
The project could potentially use the entirety of the roughly $80,000 the board has to operate with for the upcoming year. Also, because the area is residential, additional lighting could possibly devalue some properties.
"I'm paranoid about walking late at night. I've watched one too many Criminal Minds episodes."
Rippberger said that the process has gone more smoothly for other on-campus lighting projects. In the past, the board has worked on similar lighting projects on Daisy Hill near the Nunemaker Center.
ADDISON SPRADLIN Freshman at the University
"Sometimes it's really easy to get those lighting projects where it is clearly an issue, and sometimes it's harder," he said.
"I think that's a really big [issue] because it's a huge chunk of students that live over there, and that area is pretty poorly lit and has been that way for a long time," said Alex Rippberger, current chair of the Student Safety Advisory board.
Rippberger, a senior from Olathe, said that working with the city to complete the project could be expensive, slow and complicated.
EVERGENCY
PHONE
HOME
board's attention is lighting in and around the Stouffer Place Apartments. Seyool Oh, a graduate student senator from South Korea, said there are issues with hallway and stairwell lighting, and insufficient lighting around the playground, parking lot and pathways used for shortcuts to campus.
For example, Oh said that there is a staircase leading down to the laundry room that has an automatic sensor light, but it doesn't come on immediately, posing a danger for residents.
He believes that in these cases, safety should not be sacrificed for energy efficiency.
"Don't save money, provide safety and protect our students," Oh advised. "It's KU's responsibility."
Oh, who has lived at Stouffer Place for seven years and served as president of Stouffer Neighborhood Association for three years, is passionate about the safety of the residents.
"I'm married. I have my wife who also goes to the school, I have a daughter." Oh said. "I have concern about this issue."
EMILY WITTLER/KANSAN
In addition to bigger projects including the speed bumps in front of JRP hall, security cameras on campus and self-defense classes, the board has also worked with the Office of Institutional and Opportunity Access to develop programs such as "Buddy Up" and free fountain drinks for designated drivers at local bars.
"A lot of what we want to do is educational." Rippberger said. "Student safety can really be any of those things."
Elle Yankovich, a junior from Bonner Springs, looks behind her to make sure no one is there as she walks home late in the evening. The Public Safety Department has placed blue light boxes around campus, like the one in this photo, so that if a student feels unsafe they can press a button on the light box.
Although the board has identified areas around Potter Lake, behind Oliver Hall, around GSP and Stouffer Place with insufficient light. Rippberger said the past year has been slower because of less student input.
Rippberger said this could be due to a lack of awareness about the board, or a general feeling of being safe on campus.
"We rely a lot on people to bring the issues to us, and this year was actually really low and not many people brought things to us," he said.
In his opinion, the University
STUDENT SENATE
Edited by Tyler Conover
with friends, extracurricular activities, you have to feel safe," he said. "That's the bare minimum; you have to have a safe campus for you to enjoy anything else."
go to www.kansan.com to read about the final Student Senate meeting of the year
is a pretty safe place for students to thrive,
http://bit.ly/11Z9J9k
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Victim or witness of discrimination or harassment?
DON'T BE SILENT
Tell us what you think about sexual harassment on campus!
Speak up! We'll listen!
To assist KU, please complete a brief survey on sexual harassment- it only takes 3 minutes! Participation in the survey is completely voluntary, and all individual responses will be kept strictly confidential. Use the link below to access the survey!
http://www2.ku.edu/~irsurvey/cgi-bin/rws5.pl?FORM=Student_Climate_Survey SP2013
Thank you for participation!
We'll listen.
Tell us what you think about sexual harassment on campus! Speak up! We'll listen! SPEAK UP
We'll listen.
785.864.6414 | Institutional Opportunity & Access | www.mc.edu
GE2A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 3A
North 10 to 15 nce of
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
EMERGENCY PHONE
/KANSAN re no partment that if aular ac- safe," he nimum; campus else."
Conover
kku.edu
CAMPUS
OE DOWIE
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
Professor's novel mixes local history and fiction
Professor Chester Sullivan is the author of the Kaw Triology, "Rattlesnakes in the Rock Chalk" is the second book of the series, and it is featured in the Kansas Union Bookstore.
JENNA JAKOWATZ
The limestone of Lawrence has more significance than just "Rock Chalk."
"Rattlesnakes in the Rock Chalk" is Professor Chester Sullivan's latest novel, the second in the Kaw Trilogy. It brings to life an epic story of history, mystery and romance — all happening in Lawrence.
jjakowatz@kansan.com
The Kaw Trilogy dives into the history of Kansas through the use of fictional characters that interact with real historical figures and take part in events that really happened in Kansas.
Sullivan, a creative writing professor at the University, drew
inspiration for Rattlesnakes from the University's own professor and 19th century naturalist and explorer, Lewis Dyche, for whom Dyche Hall is named.
"I wanted to write a series of books tracing history to the present. I wanted to focus on the activities of people, of the town, river and natural history preserve. A lot of action takes place at the natural history preserve." Sullivan said.
For the last several years, Sullivan spent much of his time researching Lawrence, especially the natural history preserve.
The central character, Anna Earlson, a pre-med student who has just graduated with a biology degree, receives a fellowship to manage a reptile survey, on
the natural history preservation — a site where Ansel Drucker, an unemployed printer from St. Louis, mined limestone using dynamite until he eventually died in his hermit's cave in 1886. A few years later, a professor builds her home and a tower out of Drucker's same limestone. She fell to her death from the tower and her ghost is rumored to haunt the site.
The novel dives into the history of the site, nicknamed Snake Farm, and the experiences of the characters that live and work on Snake Farm.
"My favorite aspect was being able to apply my own imagination to factual situations, being able to invent characters who become real people to me and watching them
move and interact," Sullivan said. "The plot is forward moving and builds suspense. There are some expectations fulfilled and some surprises along the way."
Sullivan is currently gathering research for the final volume of the trilogy. It will focus on Truman Capote, famous author of "In Cold Blood." In the upcoming book, Capote dresses in disguise in Lawrence to gather information for an article he is working on about William Burroughs, another famous novelist. Burroughs is unaware Capote is doing a laudatory about him, and the novel will focus on the action in Lawrence of Capote trying to secretly get information about Burroughs.
versity, which means Sullivan was able to conduct his research and write Rattlesnakes through funding by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The college is also currently funding his research for his next novel.
The University is a research uni-
"It's important to write fictions because they give expression to ideas that are not fictional, like history and social history." Sullivan said.
"Rattlesnakes in the Rock Chalk" is currently featured in the Kansas Union Bookstore and available for purchase on Amazon.
— Edited by Hayley Jozwiak
KU$1$nfo
Walking down the hill and leaving before the ceremony is a little like walking down the aisle and leaving before you say "i do." www.commergenceku.edu
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
POLICE REPORTS
- A 33-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 1900 block of 23rd Street on suspicion of possession of drug paraphernalia, attempting to elude and operating a vehicle under the influence. A $700 bond was paid.
- A 28-year-old male was arrested Tuesday on the 3700 block of Franklin Circle on suspicion of criminal trespassing. A $100 bond was paid.
- A 20-year-old female was arrested Tuesday on the 2400 block of Cedarwood Drive on suspicion of domestic battery. No bond was posted.
- A 29-year-old male was arrested Tuesday on the 300 block of East 1950 Road on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. A $250 bond was paid.
—Emily Donovan
Follow
@UDK_News
on Twitter
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PAGE 4A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY & ANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
Text your FFA submissions to 785-289-8351
opinion
Guess we should all get ready for the "Kansas you're drunk, go home" tweets.
The real definition of classy, having a formal at Abe and Jake's. C'mon, pharm school.
FREE FOR ALL
I start to question my choice of school with my extreme fear of squirrels.
Mad props to the Wichita State baseball player who caught the squirrel with his helmet. You, sir, are a hero.
KU squirrels stormed the field at the baseball game last night... They fear nothing
"Livin' On A Prayer" is playing on the radio as I rush to campus in search of my last flash drive, Ironic.
Finally someone who speaks logically about our standard on grades! We value our grades over what we learn. Sad.
Test first thing in the morning and what am I doing? Ordering hedgehogs online
No, I went through the same door twice.
Now that summer is here: Legs. Legs everywhere.
UUHHH BATMAN! No doubt! He doesn't even have super powers because he's just that badass! Being rich AND smart comes in handy! Editor's note: I said end of discussion.
What is it about baseball that squirrels just love?
If you didn't Instagram it,it didn't happen.
So my horoscope said to reschedule meetings to be with my kids...I don't have kids...
Superman can go back to his no longer existent planet Krypton. Batman got our planets safety under control!!! Editor's note: I said end of discussion.
To the person who thought the statue outside of smith was Cleopatra. Congratulations! You just won the dumbest comment in the FFA this year.
It's amazing how one person says something clever and in the following days several others are saying the same thing worded differently.
CULTURE
You know what I realized? Every day is a good day according to the horoscope.
Never seems to dip below a 6!
To the tour group decked out in Mizzou apparel, please leave.
I see someone found the sensitive subject area for the FFA editor. Let's not bring up superheroes anymore. Editor's note: I said end of discussion.
The girls wearing boots aren't from JOCO, they're from up north and they think Kansas is "the south." #iDiots
Thank you FFA Editor for choosing Batman over Superman. Now I can rub it into mg friends face! #winning Editor's note: #Winning
I wouldn't not.
Paranoia leads to over-cautious society
A lot of our new developments and cultural standards are simply outstanding. They reflect an (almost) unified cultural maturity. Yet, as is always the case in the states, the good trends are accompanied by the stupid trends. I feel there is none worse than Health and Safety Paranoia. Coined it myself, do you like it? HSP
Here is an example of HSP. In the United States we advertise for medicine on television. Ask your doctor if it's right for you! Wouldn't a doctor tell you if it was right for you without you asking? Well the advertisements work and people do ask and doctors prescribe drugs to help calm anxiety, anti-depressants, sleeping medicine, and wake-up medicine all with just a few potential side-effects: bloody nose, liver failure, insomnia, trouble eating, trouble breathing, potential to contract SHPD, eyes popping out, light-headedness, heart-murmers, seizure, coma, vomiting, vomiting blood, vomiting mucus, loss of arms, and you might start to like "Glee."
Why? Why do people think
they need so many drugs? Because they help you live longer and healthier. We don't need to live longer. We enjoy almost a century of life but for some that's apparently not enough. We live these mega-long lives and we can't even retire. That sounds depressing. Good thing we have medicine for that.
By Nathan Bartocci
nbartoccci@kansan.com
The genetic continuation of health paranola will probably end up changing our immune systems for the weaker. We're dependent on drugs to cure basic ailments and complicated ones. We're dependent on drugs to fix real medical problems and ones we only think we have. We're so weak. God forbid we find ourselves without access to all of these drugs one day. Our dependency could be our end.
Then there's safety paranoia which might even be worse for us. Safety paranoia is plastic jungle-gym equipment, rubber-padding instead of rocks, every one gets a trophy so nobody's feelings get hurt, football with less tackling, not letting kids play with each other outside of a parent's earshot, and not letting kids
take walks because everyone now is a child-molester or a murderer. Generation X, you’re doing it wrong.
I remember the day my elementary school removed the giant jungle-gym from the playground. It was a lot of fun, but a little bit dangerous. I saw a few friends fall in uncomfortable ways which resulted in injury. They were replaced with a much safer piece of playground equipment that replaced the tall metal with short round plastic. Fewer injuries were occurring, but nobody really thought it was as much fun as the old metal beast
— at least, not in my little group of miscreants.
As a child I was beat-up, scratched-up, scabbed-up, bruised, and blistered; but I had
a lot of fun. My friends and I would take adventures unsupervised all around Olathe, exploring the creeks and tunnels, different parks and the sketchy parts of the park where you could tell some older kids had been... doing what they do. I've had the pox, the flu, a heat-stroke, and all sorts of other bacterial infections, but hey! I had a lot of fun!
Yeah, we stayed inside to play video games, but that's when we weren't trying to sled underneath a slightly broken chain-link fence. I managed to do it because I was small, but my older neighbor didn't fare so well. Sometimes we were supervision; sometimes we were getting into trouble and getting bloodied up rough-housing. It builds character.
It astounds me that we wonder why kids stay inside playing video games all the time when they're not allowed to have adventures anymore. They don't play dodgeball in PE because someone might get a bloody nose which would be dangerous. Being worried about safety is one thing, but denying the joy of life so nobody gets scratched is just raising a
weak generation.
We need a little danger. We're animals - resilient animals that don't go down easily. A child can mature faster socially by interacting with other children away from adults. Getting into a little troubles test your limitations.
This is how it works: Every time a kid breaks his arm, he becomes a stronger person. This is the truth. A higher pain-threshold is a good thing. It starts with rough-housing as a child getting into a little danger. If a person doesn't learn at an early age to be courageous, he'll be a coward when he's grown-up. Cowards aren't winners. A sheltered child has no need to be courageous at an early age. Guess what happens when he grows up.
He's passive aggressive, afraid of confrontation, afraid of out-side, and addicted to prescription drugs like his parents.
AUTO
Bartocci is a junior majoring in journalism from Kansas City
Cars need to be fixed,don't let it ruin your entire summer
Your opportunities over the summer are endless. The warm weather and abundance of free time put plenty of options at your disposal, like bonfires by the lake, canoe trips with the guys, concerts in Kansas City, or even fixing up your car.
Alright, I'll admit it, fixing our used cars probably isn't at the top of anybody's fun list except mine, but for many of us, it's a necessity. It doesn't have to be so hard, though.
By RJ Zeiler
rzeiler@kansan.com
The first thing you can do to keep your car in smooth running condition is changing the oil, which anybody with a wrench and a bucket can do themselves. Use the jack to lift up the front of the car, then slither underneath the engine to find the oil drain plug (oftentimes, it's conveniently labeled "engine oil"). Use your hardy wrench to unbolt the plug, and let all of the old oil drain into your bucket, then replace the bolt and tighten it on. Stay under the front end of the car to find your oil filter, which is usually a brightly-colored cylinder. Unscrew it from the engine and screw the new one right in place. Next, pop the hood and pour your fresh oil into the top of the engine, making sure to add the amount your owner's manual specifies. Check underneath the car to make sure none of your fresh oil is leaking on your driveway, and then replace the oil cap on the engine and you're ready to roll.
While you've got the hood open, you might as well check your air filter. Use your owner's manual to determine how to access the air filter, and if it looks pretty dirty, it's probably time to
replace it.
Remove your radiator cap, which is usually near the very front of the car by the hood latch, and make sure your radiator is full of antifreeze. If the bright green fluid doesn't reach the lip of the radiator spout, it's time to add more.
If you've made it this far through the article, you're pretty adventurous when it comes to your auto maintenance, and for that, I applaud you. Next, you'll want to address your pesky check engine light. Simply take your car to the nearest auto parts store (my personal favorite is AutoZone), and ask them to run a diagnostic test on the car, which is completely free. They'll tell you what's throwing the check engine code, and then you can replace the part yourself. Run a quick Google search before you buy any new parts, though, because sometimes the part just needs a quick (and free) cleaning. At least, that was the case with my car's Exhaust Gas Recirculation valve last summer. Sounds complicated, but it was just a couple bolts to remove it, a bit of carb cleaner, and then retightening those bolts.
Every hundred thousand miles or so, your car will need new spark plugs and wires. This is a tricky process, because you'll need a special socket to remove
and replace them, and you'll have to be very careful when replacing them so as not to cross-thread your engine block. We're talking a couple thousand dollars to fix your mistake if you cross-thread your spark plugs, so seriously, be careful here.
Finally, your brakes will heed a bit of attention sooner or later. Changing your front brake pads is as easy as removing the wheels, loosening a few big bolts on the back of the caliper mount, and then removing the caliper. Hang the caliper from your coil spring so you don't have to disconnect the rubber brake hose, and you'll have easy access to removing and replacing the pads. There's two pads on each wheel, so don't miss any.
If you've ever noticed strange wobbling or vibrations when braking, you'll want to have your rotors resurfaced. Simply remove all of the caliper hardware and the rotor will slide right off so that you can drive it to your local O'Reilly Auto Parts to have it resurfaced for about $10. Prot tip; don't drive your car with the brake rotors removed; find another car for this drive if you want functioning brakes.
With all of this routine maintenance performed on your car over the summer, it'll be ready to tackle the dangerous streets of Lawrence in the fall! Not only that, but you will save yourself hundreds of dollars over going to a mechanic, so you can spend it on other things, like performance modifications for the car! Or your fall textbooks, whichever you deem more important.
Zeiler is a junior majoring in mechanical engineering from Olafhe
TELEVISION
Free time should be spent watching TV
We are finally nearing the end of the spring semester. With all the time-consuming homework, summer job applications and overall insanity, I haven't had time to check out some of the newest TV shows on air. So, for my last column of the year, I want to share the shows I will be checking out this summer, once I have a life again.
"THE BIBLE" — HISTORY CHANNEL
"The Bible" mini-series on History Channel aired this March, and from what I've heard, the producers did justice to the religious text.
Whether you are religious or not, the Bible is one fascinating piece of literature. Once you get over the worse-than-Shakespeare diction, you have an ancient reality TV show with drama, romance, and war. To make it a TV show was all kinds of genius, and from what I've heard, people are loving it. I'm excited to see how actor Diogo Morgado portrayed Jesus, which is one hefty role to play. But to be completely honest, the real reason I want to check out this show is to see the physical resemblance between the character Satan and President Obama that sparked outrage. Call it morbid curiosity.
"DEFIANCE" — SYFY
This sci-fi show aired on April 15, so I'm not too far behind. Aliens, post-acapalytic world, and a corresponding video game? Yes, please. "Defiance" is a town built upon the ruins of St. Louis, trying to recoup after the arrival of several different alien races and the war that followed. But what I truly love about this concept is the video game they created to add to the overall story. This is the future of storytelling, and I can't wait to immerse myself in the TV show and learn more about the world in the video game.
By Emily Brown
ebrown@kansan.com
"HANNIBAL" ABC
I'm a little nervous to check out this TV remake of my four favorite movies in the world: "Silence of the Lambs," "Hannibal," "Red Dragon," and "Hannibal Rising." Nobody can do Hannibal Lector like Anthony Hopkins, though Gaspard Ulliel did a decent job in "Hannibal Rising." But I'm a sucker for serial killer-inspired TV shows, so nothing could keep me away. This show apparently details Lecter's life before he is outed as a serial killer, and his work in aiding criminal investigations.
I can only hope for it to be as good as I want it to be.
"SUPERNATURAL" — CW
I'm only on season 2 of "Supernatural," and I'm already obsessed. I had to take a break from the emotionally and physically heart-wrenching show, so I could survive this second semester. But I willingly surrender my social life this summer for this show. My goal is to catch up to season 8, which just finished airing. If I'm not back next year, it is because Dean Winchester, played by Jensen Ackles, killed me with his hottness. Or his brother Sam Winchester, played by the very tall Jared Padalecki, killed me with his ridiculous bad luck. If you want a taste of demons, ghosts, angels, vamps, shape shifters and the brothers hunting them down, "Supernatural" is the show for you.
Brown is a freshman majoring in journalism from Overland Park
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Second, I would take away all sports
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THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
E 4A
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HOROSCOPES
Because the stars know things we don't.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9.
Consider the money, but don't get stopped by lack of it. If you have trouble adjusting, discover other resources, like groups and networks with valuable connections and opportunities.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7
Assume new duties, and prepare for inspection. Remain firmly patient with a resister. Having love makes it easier to stick to a budget.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8
You don't have to spend a lot to impress your date. Find inventive ways to show you care. Travel, studies and education tickle your fancy. Have an adventure.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9
Follow a hunch, even if it seems ridiculous at first. Don't overspend, and report clearly. A conflict between love and money makes it a tricky time for romance.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9
Put your talent to work, and keep to the budget. It's not a good time to travel yet, but you're lucky now. Handle that main obligation first. Getting it complete satisfies.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9
Stick to practical issues, especially if controversy arises. Gather information for an expanding project, and include important details.
Today is a 9
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Take on more work this week. You gain in popularity. There's a potential clash with authority. That's part of the process, so anticipate some disagreement. Share ideas with your partner, and dare to stand out.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8
Don't overstep your bounds. True things are getting stirred up. Obligations may force a delay. More money is coming soon, but resist an enthusiastic salesperson anyway.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Be careful as you address ancient issues. Consistent effort wins. Accept acknowledgment from a person you admire. There's positive cash flow ahead, but keep to your budget anyway.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9
Make a sales call. Stick with your principles, and work to achieve immediate goals. You can achieve abundance together. Tempers may be short. Discuss; don't argue.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
Work interferes with play. Continue to increase your investigation in the coming week. Consider whatever might go wrong. Develop greater skill. Financial shortages will be overcome.
Pisces (Feb.19-March 20) Today is an 8
Circumstances change quickly, so bid high if you really want it. Don't force things. Continue to decrease obligations and worries this week. Get out into the community.
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1 Cleans the floors
5 Pouch
8 One of the Three Bears
12 Admitting customers
13 Time of your life?
14 Change for a five
15 Draped dress
16 Sailor
17 Western state
18 Deceptive
20 Melody
22 Lengthwise, to 16-Across
26 In spades
29 Actress Farrow
30 Mai — (cocktail)
31 Exceptional
32 Corral
33 Check
34 Film trickery, for short
35 One of the Brady
Bunch
36 Cartoonist Trudeau
37 Everywhere
40 Surround
41 Attachments
45 Blunder
47 Rowing need
49 Help in crime
50 Padlock fastener
51 Oilfield structure
52 Fourth dimension
53 Vocal come-back
54 Hearty brew
55 Sur-
mounting
DOWN
1 Rolling stone's lack
2 Colorful fish
3 Graceful woman
4 Cold symptom
5 Attendant of Bacchus
6 — Khan
7 Foolproof
8 100 pence
9 Enemy of an "army"?
10 Shade of green
11 Shade of blonde
19 Plaything
21 Actress
markel
Make corrections table
25 Wee
26 St. Louis landmark
27 Creche trio
28 Annoyingly proper
32 Internet radio provider
33 Numbers to be crunched
35 Cookie container
36 Deity
38 Ballerina in "Fantasia"
39 Ginorous
42 Last write-up
43 "Finding —"
44 Flight component
45 That girl
46 Fond du —, Wis.
48 Have some thing
QR code
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26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44
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SUDOKU
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Difficulty Level ★★★
5/02
excess HOLLYWOOD review
--hallucinogenic maelstrom of desperation and madness.
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The film begins with a premise worthy of Jonathan Swift and his "A Modest Proposal." Our protagonist,
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Instead, we're treated to "Antiviral," a movie that would be labeled Cronenbergian even if it weren't written and directed by the master's own flesh and blood. Thirty-three-year-old Brandon Cronenberg has crafted a cerebral shocker that's technically comparable to his father's earliest efforts, even if it lacks the grotesque spark of originality that made those films seem so vital and viscerally fascinating. "Antiviral" could be described as a sado-satire, an incisive yet humorless commentary on our culture's fetishization of celebrities, a practice that dates back to sacrificial worship and early Christians fighting over the bones of their saints.
Holiday Apartments
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Canadian cult filmmaker David Cronenberg has long been acknowledged as the father of body horror, a nasty little sub-genre noted for externalizing moral corruption through graphic depictions of perversion ("Crash"), decay ("Rabid") and transfiguration ("The Fly," "Videodrome"). Although Cronenberg himself has since graduated to the comparatively elegant ferocity of character dramas like "A History of Violence" and "Eastern Promises," there has always been a demand for him to return to his blood-soaked, pustule-ridden roots.
Jones, fresh from emitting supersonic shrieks as the Irish superhero Banshee in 2011's "X-Men: First Class," has a zonked-out, almost reptilian presence that reminds me a great deal of David Bowie's rapidly deteriorating vampire character in Tony Scott's under-seen AIDS allegory "The Hunger." Some of the film's most striking imagery finds him lurching around the exterior of the clinic or inside his sterile sanitized apartment, a thermometer clamped tight between his teeth waiting for the next horrific symptom to reveal itself.
Cronenberg may not be destined to share his old man's status as a morbid visionary, but he's still a talented young filmmaker with good visual instincts and no shortage of imagination. If he's able to develop his own voice and break free from fan expectations, "Antiviral" could represent the beginning of a long and interesting career. But if he insists on remaining indebted to his father's obsessions, the Son of Cronenburg runs the risk of becoming the artistic equivalent of black market clone meat: bland, derivative and easily forgotten.
By Landon McDonald
Imcdonald@kansan.com
★★★☆
WANT ENTERTAINMENT UPDATES ALL DAY LONG?
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When he gets the chance to sample an unknown virus from alling superstar Hannah Geist (Sarah Gadon), Syd can't resist the temptation to inject himself with a few drops of her blood, just to feel a bit of her inside of him. A few days later, the news breaks that Hannah has died and Syd must face the terrifying possibility that he may be infected with whatever killed her. The rest of the movie involves him trying to solve the mystery of her death, a mystery that ultimately leads to a
the freckled, cadaverous Syd March (Caleb Landry Jones), works for the Lucas Clinic, a private hospital whose clients pay for the privilege of being injected with diseases harvested directly from their favorite stars, a procedure thought to represent a kind of biological Communion between celebrities and their fans. Unbeknownst to his co-workers, Syd has been stealing viruses to sell to Arvid (Joe Pingue), a black market butcher who specializes in growing "cell steaks", mounds of edible tissue cloned from famous flesh.
UUK
UWK
Edited by Megan Hinman
RECYCLE ME!
MAY 4th
lawrence Electronic Recycling Event & Document Shredding
Rain or Shine
The City of Lawrence invites residents and small businesses to recycle unused or obsolete electronic equipment and securely shred confidential documents.
Items accepted for recycling: Confidential Documents, Computer Monitors, Desktops, Laptops, Keyboards, Other Peripherals, Printers, Copiers, Scanners, Fax Machines, Telephones, Hand Held Devices, Televisions, VHS/DVD Drives, Small Appliances (Microwaves and Toaster Ovens) and Household Batteries.
A recycling fee applies for computer monitors ($10) and televisions ($15). Cash or check only. No charge for other electronics. A maximum of 10 boxes of confidential documents will be shredded and recycled at no charge.
City of Lawrence
PUBLIC WORKS
WASTE REDUCTION & RECYCLING
9 am to 1 pm
Saturday, May 4, 2013
For further information call 832-3030 or visit www.LawrenceRecycles.on
Free State High School
NE Parking Lot 4700 Overland Dr.
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Today's Cryptoquip Clue: F equals H
LIED CENTER PRESENTS
Advance tickets on sale now to KU Students and Friends of the Lied
20 YEARS
SEPT. 16 & 17
7:30 p.m.
THE TRIUMPH OF THE
TAPESTRY
Blue Man Group High-octane theatrical experience
A. D. HENRY
Oct. 25
7:30 p.m.
Hal Holbrook in Mark Twain Tonight!
MEMPHIS
ALEXANDRA JACKSON
Nov.14
7:30 p.m
FRED HAWKINS
Tony Award-winning Broadway musical
Feb. 12
7:30 p.m
The
JOHN FENNELL
Addams Family A magnificently macabre musical comedy
APRIL 3 & 4
7:30 p.m.
Broadway's Next H!T Musical An improvised musical comedy
KU Student Ticket Discounts Available!
QR code
LIED CENTER OF KANSAS
lied.ku.edu
785-864-2787
f t
PAGE 6A
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FASHION
ASSOCIATED PRESS
model wears a creation from the Maria Filo summer collection during Fashion Rio in Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, April 16, 2013.
Stay cool with new summer styles
CALLAN REILLY
oreilly@kennell.com
creilly@kansan.com
As the last weeks of school come to a close and the weather slowly heats up, we'll soon be trading in our books and jeans for swimsuits and shorts. Summer can be a difficult time to dress, as humidity and heat always conquer hairdos and make up.
Dressing for summer requires a handful of must-have accessories. For starters, sandals have taken a turn for the 2013 season. Summer footwear has been updated with strappy sandals, both flat
and heeled. Chunky block heeled shoes are also hot for the upcoming season, rather than platform heels or thong sandals.
Hats are another item that will come in handy this summer. Trade in your baseball cap for a wide-brimmed fedora or floppy hat. The oversized options are a great way to hide lake-washed or humidity-streken hair. These accessories are always the easiest way to spice up a simple outfit. Sunglasses are the same way — not only do they keep you from blinding yourself, but they automatically make your look appear more polished than before.
im pieces are the last things you want to put on, the handiest clothing to have are simple, lightweight dresses. Sporty A-line and maxi cuts are the season's best picks. What's even better is that these styles flatter every body type, can be worn anywhere and can easily be thrown on over a swimsuit.
Classic Ray Bans and aviators are always good go-to's, though new styles are popping up everywhere. Try a cat eye or another different shape to give your summer shades an update.
We're all familiar with the very popular denim cutoff short trend. It exploded last year and will surely stick around for another summer season. The trend may be responsible for summer's new go-to pant, destroyed denim boyfriend jeans. The relaxed fit looks best with simple pairings, such as heeled sandals and a plain t-shirt.
Wherever your summer takes you, be sure to have these summer must-haves ready. The staples will make dressing for hot weather simple and easy but still stylish.
On warmer days when stiff den
Edited by Megan Hinman
DON'T DEW IT
Pepsi crosses the line with rapper's Mountain Dew ad
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — PepsiCo is once again learning the risks of celebrity partnerships after an ad for Mountain Dew was criticized for portraying racial stereotypes and making light of violence toward women.
The soda and snack food company said it immediately pulled the 60-second spot after learning "that
people found it was offensive. The ad was part of a series developed by African-American rapper Tyler, The Creator, and depicted a battered white woman on crutches being urged to identify
"We have removed it from all Mountain Dew channels and Tyler is removing it from his channels as well."
a suspect out of a lineup of black men.
A goat character known as Felicia is included in the lineup and makes threatening comments to the woman, such as "Ya better not snitch on a playa" and "Keep ya mouth shut."
The woman eventually screams "I can't do this, no no nol!" and runs away. The word "do" is in apparent reference to the soft drink's "Dew It" slogan.
rough sex act to the tortuous death of Emmett Till, a black teen who was murdered in 1955 for allegedly whistling at a white woman. Last month, Reebok also ended its relationship with Rick Ross after he raped about giving a woman a drug to have his way with her.
Mountain Dew, known for its neon color and high caffeine content, is generally marketed to younger men and sometimes attempts to have edgier ads. But the controversy over its latest spot illustrates the fine line that companies must walk when trying to be hip.
PEPSI'S STATEMENT
Laura Ries, president of Ries & Ries, a marketing firm based in Atlanta, said companies that
In fact, Mountain Dew also was criticized recently because of its endorsement deal with Lil Wayne, whose rap lyrics compared a
want the "street cred" of a celebrity may end up losing control of the message they want to convey.
If PepsiCo had created an ad for Mountain Dew, for example, she said it might not have been considered edgy or
cool. But by handing over control to a celebrity, she said the company ran the risk of having an ad that wasn't appropriate.
PepsiCo Inc., based in Purchase, N.Y., said it understood how the ad could be offensive.
"We apologize for this video and take full responsibility," the company said in an updated statement late Wednesday afternoon. "We have removed it from all Mountain Dew channels and Tyler is removing it from his channels as well."
Jen Ryan, a spokeswoman for PepsiCo, said the company learned from its consumer relations team on Tuesday that people found the ad offensive. She declined to explain the approval process for the ad but said it was never meant to run on TV.
A publicist for Tyler, the Creator did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
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SATURDAY, JUNE 8TH
HEARTS OF DARKNESS
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REVEREND HORTON HEAT
SATURDAY, JUNE 15TH
THINK FLOYD USA
TUESDAY, JUNE 18TH
TEBESCHI TRUCKS BAND
THURSDAY, JUNE 20TH
TURNPIKE TROUBAOURS
FRIDAY, JUNE 21st
O.A.R.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22ND
MERCULUS CHAINSAW GLASSACRE
TUESDAY, JULY 2ND
DARKSTAR ORCHESTRA
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3RD
BRET MICHAELS
FRIDAY, JULY 5H
MARSHALL TUCKER BAND
THURSDAY, JULY 11TH
BRANDI CARLIE
FRIDAY, JULY 12TH
DAVID BYRNE & ST. VINCENT
FRIDAY, JULY 26th
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KATCHAFIRE
MUSIC FESTIVAL
LYNDSEY HAVENS
lhavens@kansan.com
Kanrocksas returns with new lineup this summer
Lawrence is known for having an eclectic and vibrant music scene. In 2011, Kansas City decided it was time to jump on board by launching its very first music festival — Kanrocksas. The festival lasted two days and brought in more than 20 musical guests and about 100 thousand eager fans.
While the festival started with the intent to be annual, it took a break last summer. Due to construction projects taking place at the Kansas Speedway, the decision was made to hold off on the event to keep the consistency of the location.
This year, Kannocksas is back and has plenty to offer. The festival will be returning to the Speedway, but other changes will take place. The first noticeable difference is that in 2011, the festival took place in early August, but this time, it will happen in late June. This will give fans and locals a proper kick off to summer.
However, not all fans are looking forward to the festival. Nathan
Lipsky, a senior from Prairie Village, attended the inaugural festival in 2011 and feels that this year it doesn't quiet compare.
"For having two years to prepare for this festival, I feel that there is a severe lack of star power this time around," he said. "Hopefully, the third time around, Kanrocks will get it right because having a local music festival is a really great thing."
Brianna Brown, a freshman from Leawood, missed out on the festival in 2011 and is anxious to attend this year.
"I'm going because a bunch of my favorite bands will be there," Brown said. "I'm most excited to see Imagine Dragons and fun."
Other headliners include: Passion Pit, MGMT, Pretty Lights, Kendrick Lamar, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and many more.
For the full lineup, tickets, and other details, visit kanrocksas. com.
The festival will take place June 28-29.
Edited by Megan Hinman
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CONTRIBUTED POSTER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
PAGE 7A
GREEN THUMB
University gains Tree Campus USA status for planting efforts
.
OSTER
LAKEN RAPIER
lrapier@kansan.com
SUNNY BAY CENTER FOR GARDENING
It took weeks for artist Patrick Dougherty and his crew to construct "The Bedazzler" in front of Spooner Hall in 2009. A swirl of maple and dogwood saplings wrapped around a large dying elm tree became an outdoor getaway for students and campus visitors. During its 27 months, "The Bedazzler" hosted picnics, classes and even a few wedding proposals.
Using chainsaws on a summer day in 2011, it took just a few hours for landscaping crews to carve "The Bedazzler" into wood-chip sized pieces. A rare tree virus finally killed the elm, but it brought to light the importance of preserving and enhancing historic landscapes and open spaces across campus.
As time has passed and campus has been forced to expand, the importance of trees hasn't faded. The summer-day landscaping crews gathered around "The Bedazzler," sizing up the iconic tree, while students, faculty and other Lawrence natives simultaneously huddled around in disdain. Emotion flooded campus, as the disease-stricken tree was cut down. It was evident the elm was much more than a tree.
GEORGE MILLINIX/KANSAN
Members of different organizations such as the Tree Campus USA, plant trees around campus. The campus has had a decrease of trees and is working with the Center for Sustainability to maintain the tree population.
Trees are more than protection from the blistering summer sun and wicked Kansas wind. If one thing is for sure, it's the University's love of trees. So much in fact, trees outnumber students. There are enough trees on the Lawrence campus alone to fill the stands of Allen Fieldhouse nearly twice.
The campus tree count grew to 29,536 earlier this week when 11 new crabapples were planted near Fraser Hall. The trees were installed with the help of more than 30 volunteers, the Center for Sustainability's Campus Tree Advisory Board and other campus organizations at the Replant Mount Oread event.
An event originally established in March of 1878 by Chancellor James Marvin to celebrate Arbor Day has since resulted in the planting of
more than 100 different varieties of trees such as walnut, elm, oak, hackberry, evergreen, redbud, honey locust saplings and crabapple. Last March, more than 134 years later, Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little established the annual Replant Mount Oread event, in efforts to expand campus' environmentally friendly landscape and gain "Tree Campus USA" status.
"Our historic green space, from the very start when you look at Potter Lake, Marvin Grove, just the open space that has been preserved on this campus is a sign that we value green space," Livinggood said. "We value our connection to nature through the campus setting."
Long before the Tree Campus USA program and the Center for Sustainability's Campus Tree Advisory Board, dozens of elm trees lined Jayhawk Boulevard throughout the 1950s. The canopy of trees acted as a natural barrier from the elements and the importance of landscape was prominent, regardless of distinctions. This summer, efforts to rebuild the canopy will begin.
It takes more than a few dozen shovels and trees to obtain the coveted Tree Campus USA status from the Arbor Day Foundation. But the efforts are paying off and the University is one of only two Kansas universities with the distinction.
"We saw an opportunity to engage students in planting trees and help rebuild our connection with the green spaces on campus," said Jeff Severin, director of the Center for Sustainability and Campus Tree Advisory Board member.
However, the University's tree population is decreasing faster than than they can be replaced because of diseases, lack of room for roots to grow, frigid temperatures and historic droughts. These conditions are threatening one of the most environmentally friendly landscapes in the nation.
"This year, for the first time, we were designated a Tree Campus USA," Severin said.
The Tree Campus USA Program
recognizes campuses for developing and promoting both healthy trees and student involvement. In efforts for the University to earn "Tree Campus USA" status, five Arbor Day Foundation standards had to be fulfilled. The first was the establishment of a steering committee, KU Campus Tree Advisory Board (CTAB). In addition to other requirements, a strict 1:1 tree replacement plan was to be created as part of the University's larger Tree Care Plan.
"Each individual construction project is responsible for replacing any trees that have to be removed
during the project," said Peg Livingood, Office of Design and Construction Management project manager. "In our construction projects, we really do press for one for one, if not even two for one in some cases."
The main concern of the Center for Sustainability's CTAB is the prominence of trees throughout campus. The 12-member board was created, "to help maintain and enhance the beauty of the campus landscape, as well as to assist with the preservation and revitalization of our historic green spaces," according to the CTAB mission statement.
"It's really aimed at preserving and enhancing the green spaces that we have, because we are losing a lot of trees to disease, storm damage and in some cases, construction," Severin said.
The Center for Sustainability isn't alone in its efforts to keep the tree population healthy and growing. KU Endowment Association and the student group KU Student-Run Tree Farm are also lending a hand to fund a small-scale student tree farm located at the KU Student Farm and medicinal plant garden northwest of 23rd and Iowa streets. The Capstone course in the
Environmental Studies Department gives students the opportunity to operate a small-scale student-run tree farm, for which the ultimate long-term goal is to supply the University with trees transplanted from the farm.
"Trees are just symbolic of tradition here at KU and the ongoing commitment to sustainability," said Emma Donachie, a junior from Dallas majoring in environmental studies. "There is an entire department dedicated to landscape. It's a huge part of campus."
Edited by Allison Kohn
IN UNIFORM
ROTC branches united in annual parade
CALER SISK
csick@kansan.com
The four branches of the KU ROTC program are poised to come together this Saturday for their annual parade and joint-services tournament. The festivities are meant to both celebrate the graduation of the senior cadets and commission them into active service. "I'm very excited for the event because it is one of the few opportunities that all four branches have to come together and have fun," said Matthew Mulheran, a member of the Air Force ROTC.
The festivities kick off bright and early at 9 a.m. when time the cadets will be marching through Memorial Stadium in complete formal attire. Once the formalities have been observed, the cadets will break off into squadrons within their respective branches and compete in a number of physical competitions.
Cadets will compete at Robinson Gymnasium and Field in sporting events such as
Volleyball, Basketball, Ultimate Firsbee and Flag Football. Along with the sporting events, cadets will compete in military contests such as tug of war, ammo can lift, log sit-ups, and the maneuver under fire exercise.
At the end of the day, once the scores have been recorded, the branch with the highest score will be awarded the Captain's Cup. This traveling trophy remains in the possession of the winning service and serves as bragging rights until next year's competition.
SAMSUNG
Although this stands as a competition and a trophy is awarded, at the end of this day, the true winners will be the senior cadets that will be moving on to serve in our armed services. "It will be a little bittersweet to see the seniors leave because we will obviously miss them but we know that they are moving onto bigger and better things" said Mulheran.
Students that find themselves with ample free time this Saturday should consider coming out and supporting these students who will be fighting for our freedom
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
KU ROTC will have its annual parade on Saturday, May 4 at Memorial Stadium. It will begin at 9 a.m. and will have different events throughout the day.
in the near future.
Despite the friendly nature of the competition Mulheran, has no doubts that "Air Force will fly, fight and win."
Edited by Hayley Jozwiak
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Celebrate graduation with the KU Alumni Association!
Grad Grill
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Stop Day, Friday, May 10
Adams Alumni Center
Join us for free Bigg's BBQ and music on Stop Day, as our way of saying "Congratulations on your graduation!"
are invited.
Commencement Open House
Commencement Day, Sunday, May 19 Adams Alumni Center
Stop by the Adams Alumni Center or Commencement Day for a champagne toast and a light snack! The entire family is welcome.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The University of Kansas
Visit www.kualumni.org to learn more about what the KU Alumni Association has to offer you. Questions? Call 785-864-4760.
PAGE 8A
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BUDDY UP.
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C Check in with your buddy regularly.
T Take charge to return home together.
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SPIRITS
$22.99 1,75L Cpt Morgan
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MINI MONDAY:
Free mini cheese pizza for kids 12 and under w/ purchase.
Limit two kids per adult.
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$5.99 Tostada Calzone
$3.50 House Margarita
$3.25 Corona Bottle
WINE & DINE WEDNESDAYS:
$5 Bottle of House Red, White,
or Rose Wine w/ purchase of
Large Gourmet Pizza ($14.89)
14.99 Lp. Cane Minnie's Pizza
$3 Minnie's Barbie Luxe Plum
$9 Burleague Pitcher
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Volume 125 Issue 115
kansan.com
Thursday, May 2, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY & SUNSHINE
S sports
COMMENTARY History made off court for the NBA
By Ben Ashworth
bashworth@kansan.com
It took until Monday, April 29th, 2013, but the world of sports finally started catching up to the world outside of it.
Current NBA player Jason Collins declared to the world that he is gay.
Collins isn't the first gay player in major league sports. Far from it. Statistically speaking, there have been hundreds of gay players that have competed in professional sports.
However, until Monday, all of those players had to remain closed, at least until they retired. The pressure to live up to "masculine" stereotypes both within the locker room and outside of it caused these players to feel the need to lie to other people about who they really were. Sometimes, it caused them to have to lie to themselves.
Collins' courageous act changed all this. No one wanted to be the first openly gay active player in sports. Doing so would place the spotlight on even the most anonymous player. Collins used to be that anonymous player; now he is a household name.
Sports needed this. The world always seems to think that sports is exempt from reality, as if it possesses a cheat code that keeps it from facing the issues that honest Americans face every day. Nothing could be further from the truth, and ignoring those issues never made them subside. It simply bottled them up.
Not everyone concurs with this sentiment. Ex-Pittsburgh Steeler Hines Ward postulated that the NFL was not ready for a gay player. It may be a newsflash to Ward, but the NFL has gay players that take the field every Sunday. Asking them to remain closeted does not change or suppress their sexuality. Rather, it asks them to do something no person should have to do, and that is pretend to be someone you are not.
Ward's views seem to be an anomaly. Equally as important as Collins' declaration has been the public acceptance of it. Athletes such as Kobe Bryant and LeBron James have publicly supported Collins, implicitly supporting all athletes who are questioning whether to come out of the closet.
Actions speak louder than words, and this fight is not over just because prominent figures vocalized their support. It remains to be seen how Collins will be treated when the novelty of his story wears off, and he laces up his sneakers to fight a battle on the court rather than off it. Hopefully, these words of support aren't simply the product of public relations teams seeking to capitalize on an obvious opportunity. It's the reaction when the cameras are off that will be the most telling.
If that reaction is anything but a continual flow of support, sports will fall behind the times once again. More and more people have begun to see sexuality for what it is: one characteristic that contributes to, but does not define, a person.
Monday represented a monumental moment in both sports and the gay rights movement. Nevertheless, there is still much to be done.
But it certainly is a step in the right direction.
— Edited by Megan Hinman
PAGE 3B Baseball Graphic
VS
MITTING
The team was impressive and won twice to history. They were right behind Larry Bird in home runs and scored more than anyone else in the season. The team also impressed with their defense, with nine shutouts.
MITTING
The team was impressive and won twice to history. They were right behind Larry Bird in home runs and scored more than anyone else in the season. The team also impressed with their defense, with nine shutouts.
MITTING
The team was impressive and won twice to history. They were right behind Larry Bird in home runs and scored more than anyone else in the season. The team also impressed with their defense, with nine shutouts.
MITTING
The team was impressive and won twice to history. They were right behind Larry Bird in home runs and scored more than anyone else in the season. The team also impressed with their defense, with nine shutouts.
PAGE 6B
Baseball
Photos
KANSAS
BATS AT BAY
21
Senior third baseman Jordan Dreiling runs to third after a Connor McKay double. Dreiling finished 1 for 3 with a run scored.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
KANSAS WINS BIG
The Jayhawks were able to keep Baker off the scoreboard on Wednesday
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
Kansas baseball blanked the Baker Wildcats in an 8-0 victory, its second win over the Wildcats this season, at Hoglund Ballpark.
A Jayhawk youth movement led the way with six underclassmen taking the field in Wednesday's starting lineup. Freshman first baseman Marcus Wheeler took full advantage of his opportunity in the lineup. Wheeler finished the day hitting two-of-three at the plate with a two-RBI double in the sixth inning.
"I was just trying to be aggressive," Wheeler said. "I knew I had guys on second and third, so I had to get the job done. I got an early
fastball and let that one go by. The next pitch was a changeup. I got it with the end of the bat and luckily it stayed in play."
The Kansas freshman doesn't often get the opportunity to grace the first base side of the Jayhawk lineup.
"It took us a while to get going,
"I just try to make sure I come out strong." Wheeler said. "I'm glad I got the opportunity to play and help the team get the win."
but at the score at the end of the game is really all that matters", Wheeler said.
The Jayhawks struggled to dial in the bats early in the game. Kansas hitters couldn't plate a run in the first five innings of play. Wheeler's two-RBI shot was the catalyst the Kansas lineup needed as they scored three runs in both the seventh and eighth innings.
"That was quite a bomb," senior right-handed pitcher Tanner Poppe said. "It probably went 460 or bounced off Naismith I don't
DeLeon added to his season home run total with a towering ball hit into the trees beyond the right-center field wall. DeLeon's big fly is his seventh of the season and padded his three-for-five day at the plate.
In the seventh, senior third baseman Alex DeLeon hit a deep ball that caromed off the wall in left field for an RBI double, while sophomore right field Connor McKay added to the scoring with an RBI single making the lead 5-0.
even know. It was a good shot."
even know. It was a good shot.
For DeLeon it was a simple as see the ball and hit the ball.
"I got a good piece of it," DeLeon said. "It was a good pitch to hit, and the wind just carried it out."
Kansas senior right-handed pitcher Tanner Poppe was focused from the start of the game for the first time in quite some time. Poppe's ongoing battles with a shoulder injury have resulted in several short outings of late for the Girard, Kan., native.
"This is the first time I've felt completely 100 percent all year," Poppe said. "It was nice to go out there. My arm felt good. It was just nice to go out there and feel good for once."
Poppe's struggles early in the
year often centered on lack of command and high pitch counts.
"That was my biggest issue leading up to today was just throwing strikes and commanding the off-speed pitches," Poppe said. "I was able to do that today so that was a step forward in my progression to get back to everything I did in the past."
Poppe pitched seven innings with seven strikeouts allowing a lone hit in his shutout appearance.
The Jayhawks return to Big 12 play for a home series against the Baylor Bears. The series starts Friday night at 6 p.m. in Hoglund Ballpark.
Edited by Hayley Jozwiak
BELL LAP
Track squad ready for Big 12 championship
COLIN WRIGHT
cwright@kansan.com
Track squads have high expectations for Big 12 Championship
The Kansas track and field team travels south to Waco, Texas, this weekend for the Big 12 Outdoor Championships. The women have a goal of sweeping the conference after winning the Indoor Championships in February, and the men have individuals who have aspirations of becoming conference champions at the meet hosted by Baylor University.
The women, who currently rank No. 2 in the nation, have been ranked in the top-five of the NCAA for the last twenty weeks according to the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association. Their narrow victory over the rest of the league in Ames, Iowa, at the Big 12 Indoor Championships brought the university its first male or female track and field title since 1983.
The women will be led by a handful of athletes who will look to pick up valuable team points in the field. Junior Natalia Bartnovskaya, who holds the school record in the pole vault and an NCAA Indoor Championship under her belt, will have a chance to win her first conference title.
Simpson
P. B. LOVELY
Horizontal jumpers Francine Simpson, Sydney Conley and
Andrea Geubelle will all have an
opportunity to win the long jump competition. The three Jayhawks have the three farthest jumps in the conference this season.
be led on the track by senior Kyle Clemons and sophomore Michael Stigler. Clemons has the fastest 400 meter time among Big 12 athletes this year, while Stigler holds that honor in the 400 meter hurdles.
The men will
hockey team are sophomores Kenneth McCulin and Michael Hester. Their season-best time of 3:05.93 is the seventh fastest time in the nation this outdoor season.
Joining that duo on the 4x400
(1)
McCuin
On the track, the women will try to repeat as champions in the 4x400 meter relay. The team of Denesha Morris, Paris Daniels, Taylor Washington and Diamond Dixon won the event last year in a time of 3:28.10 on their way to qualifying for the NCAA meet.
Daniels, a senior sprinter, will attempt to win the 200 meter dash at the Big 12 Outdoor meet for consecutive years. Her season best time of 22.76 is the fastest 200-meter time in the conference this season.
Heather Bergmann, Jessica Maroszek and Alena Krechyk, who hold the school records in the javelin, discus and hammer throw respectively, will look to gain points in the throwing events in helping the women compete for the conference title.
The Kansas women defeated the University of Texas by just 2.5 points at the Big 12 Indoor Championships in February, and there is a good possibility that the team championship will be decided in the final race once again, the 4x400 meter relay.
With the NCAA Outdoor Championships more than a month away, both the men and women's track and field squads are solely focused on the Big 12 meet this weekend, hoping to bring more hardware back to Lawrence.
— Edited by Tyler Conover
The 2013 Big 12 Outdoor Championships are this Friday through Sunday at the Hart-Patterson Track Complex on the campus of Baylor University.
WASHINGTON BREAKER
5189
TARA BRYANTKANSAN
Junior distance runner Josh Munsch starts Saturday's Glenn Cunningham men's mile run at the Kansas Relays. Munsch competed against two Olympians in the event and finished in fifth place with a personal best time of 4.02.9.
PAGE 2B
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"All the support I have received today is truly inspirational." I knew that I was choosing the road less traveled but I'm not walking it alone."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jason Collins, Twitter
FACT
FACT OF THE DAY
Jason Collins has a twin brother Jaron Collins who also played in the NBA
— NBA.com
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q. What does the Williams Institute at UCLA Law estimate the gay population to be in the U.S. alone?
A: 9 million (about 3.8%)
williamsinstitute.law. ucla.edu
THE MORNING BREW NBA player should be defined by play
For Jason Collins, a 7-foot, 255- pound backup center for the Washington Wizards, this past NBA season may be his last.
The 12-year veteran from Stanford has endured a long, successful stint as a bench player for the Wizards, the New Jersey Nets, the Memphis Grizzlies, the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Atlanta Hawks and the Boston Celtics, but the end of this NBA season may mark the end of his professional career.
By Daniel Harmsen
dharmsen@kansan.com
At 34, he has seen his share of individual and team success in the playoffs, but he is far from a household name, and his best seasons are distant memories (he topped out at 6.4 points per game and 6.1 rebounds in game 2004 for the Nets).
After all, it would behove a team to sign a younger, more vigorous player with similar size and numbers because Collins won't be selling tickets on his name alone—well, that might change in light of the recent news...
Despite his freakish size and undisputed leadership coming off the bench, few NBA teams will be taking a chance on Collins for one reason. A reason unrelated to his skill-set or athleticism.
Employment for a center in his midthirteens, is a risky venture to begin with due to possible bum knees, diminishing foot speed or a noticeable drop in muscle mass and coordination. However, Collins will be a dangerous signing because of his sexual orientation.
On Monday, April 29, Collins disclosed his gay preferences to Sports Illustrated, making him the first active athlete from a major American sport to
come out publicly. In a declaration that will hit the newsstands on May 6th, Collins prefaced with "I'm a 34-year-old NBA Center. I'm black. And I'm gay"
In a captivating interview with Good Morning America, Collins proclaimed that loyalty to his team was what kept him from coming out earlier and loyalty to mankind is the reason why he chose to come out now. The gravity of the Boston Marathon bombings made him realize that time was of the essence. The time to tell the truth was now.
Like they were when Jackie Robinson attempted to break the color barrier, general managers have reason to be leery of signing Collins. The same questions will be asked, but with the word "gay" replacing the word "black." How will an [openly] gay man fit in an NBA locker room? Will he be more of a cost than a benefit? More of a distraction than a piece of the puzzle?
KU
It was inevitable that an active profesional athlete would come out or have his/her orientation revealed in a TMZ
scandal. Somebody had to do it, and Jason Collins was just the man for the job. And he did it on his terms, which made the situation easier to digest. My advice: Sign Jason Collins like Branch Rickey signed Jackie Robinson.
Collins is a professional in every sense of the word. He has no interest in fame. He just grabs rebounds, executes his assignment and plays unrelenting team defense. Like many working class Americans, sometimes the little things he does get overlooked. Some people are gay; some people are straight. It makes no difference. He can be that trailblazer on a sports platform.
— Edited by Tyler Conover
This week in athletics
Thursday
No events scheduled
Friday
QU
1
Softball
Oklahoma
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
Saturday
OU
Softball
Oklahoma
Noon
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
Sunday
GAMBOLA
Baseball
Baylor
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
Monday No events scheduled
XII
Tuesday
Baseball
Wichita State
6:30 p.m.
Wichita
Wednesday
Williams Education Fund
Houston Football
Preview party with
Charlie Weis
7 p.m.
The Armadillo Palace
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SAN
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
O
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PAGE 3B
BASEBALL
BEARS VISIT THE HOG
vail. b/w
e.org or
MPUS on live in specials
AT CES
Baylor heads to Lawrence for weekend series
HOGLUND FIELD, 6 P.M., LAWRENCE
17- Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34- Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
KANSAS (27-18, 9-9)
17 - Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34 - Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
BAYLOR BEARS (25-20, 11-6)
13 - Grayson Porter, Sr.
15 - Adam Toth, So.
4 - Nathan Orf, Sr.
20 - Jake Miller, Sr.
8 - Lawton Langford, Jr.
18 - Cal Towey, Sr.
2 - Steve DalPorto, Sr.
1 - Brett Doe, Sr.
---
12 - LHP Wes Benjamin, So.
11 - RHP Thomas Taylor, Sr.
19 - RHP Frank Duncan, Jr.
13 - Grayson Porter, Sr.
15 - Adam Toth, So.
4 - Nathan Orf, Sr.
20 - Jake Miller, Sr.
8 - Lawton Langford, Jr.
18 - Cal Towey, Sr.
2 - Steve DalPorto, Sr.
1 - Brett Doe, Sr.
BASILI
21 - RHP Max Garner, Sr.
10 - RHP Austin Stone, So.
PITCHING
28 - RHP Dillion Newman, Jr.
The quality appearances just keep coming for Kansas. Senior right-handed pitcher Tanner Poppe went seven shutout innings giving up just one hit with his seven strikeouts. The Jayhawks middle relievers haven't had much to do of late. Coach Price said the bullpen remains ready regardless of pitching fewer innings.
HITTING
In the game against the Baker Wildcats, Alex DeLeon added another home run to his season total. His seven big flies lead the team in that category. Although six underclassmen started the game, Kansas still managed 14 hits and eight runs in the 8-0 victory. The Jayhawks have struggled to plate runs of late, with the strong winter weather expected over the weekend, it could be a tough watch for fans of hitting.
FIELDING
The Jayhawks rebounded after the weekend in West Virginia against Wichita State. They continued to play solid defense against Baker. Outside of one, poorly judged ball dropped by sophomore left fielder Michael Suiter in left field, Kansas was nearly perfect on the game.
Kansas continues to hang its hat on solid defense and pitching, a style quite similar to the Baylor Bears.
PITCHING
The storyline of the Baylor season has come on the mound with a starting rotation carrying a 3.38 ERA into the weekend series at Hoglund. Saturday starter Austin Stone leads the rotation with a 3-2 record and 2.81 ERA. Friday Starter Max Garner is the veteran of the staff. As a senior he's 3-4 with a 3.21 era.
HITTING
FIELDING
The Bears have committed 56 errors on the season. Senior third baseman Cal Towey is the most prolific fielder with 8 errors on the season. Of the regular starters only junior left fielder Grayson Porter remains perfect on the year. As always, the Jayhawks will put pressure on the Big 12 infield by running early and often to put the Bears on their heels.
Baylor hitters are batting a team average of just .268 on the season. Much like the Jayhawks, Baylor is focused on small ball tactics this season. The team has hit a total of 14 home runs on the season. Senior right fielder Nathan Orf leads the squad with a .389 average. Orf is one of two Baylar bears hitting above the .300 mark. Senior third baseman Cal Towey is hitting .307 on the season.
---
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PAGE 4B
BASEBALL WEATHER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
GART AND SUE PADGETT
TRAINING CENTER
The Jayhawks congratulate each other after a 8-0 win over the Baker Wildcats. The Jayhawks are now 27-18 overall and remain 9-9 in the Big XII.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Baylor visits Lawrence for Big 12 matchup
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
The Jayhawks enter their series with the Baylor Bears this weekend at Hoglund Ballpark with just six games remaining in the 2013 Big 12 schedule.
The Bears enter the weekend with a 25-20 record in sole possession of second place with their 11-6 record. The Bears' three-game winning streak can be credited in large part to their
play defense, very similar to us, that wins them games."
starting pitching rotation that carries a 3.38 ERA into the series.
"Every game was a one run loss. We pitched great and played great defense, but we just have to put it behind us."
Coach Price said solid pitching on the Jayhawks part is key to a Kansas series victory against Baylor. The Kansas pitching staff has been rock solid of late giving up only five runs in the last five
games.
THOMAS TAYLOR Kansas pitcher
"Their pitching has been fabulous," coach Ritch Price said. "They've been winning low scoring games; so really for them it's starting pitching and the way they
"Their playing great of late as well," senior right-handed pitcher Thomas Taylor said. "We have to go out and get after them and put ourselves back in position to get back to playing
get back to their normal level in the Baylor series.
well and to a regional."
The Kansas weekend pitching rotation suffered through a tough series of one-run losses in their meetings against the West Virginia Mountaineers last weekend. The rotation is trying to refocus and
"That was a really tough series loss," Taylor said. "Every game was a one run loss. We pitched great and played great defense, but we just have to put it behind us."
The Baylor lineup focuses on small ball tactics much like the Jayhawks this season. As a team the Bears are batting .268 on the season. With just two hitters operating at averages above .300.
The Kansas weather won't give up on the Jayhawks. With 10 games either rescheduled or cancelled already this season, the Jayhawks face another tough weekend with winter weather forecasted in May. The dreary weather doesn't change much for the Jayhawks.
"One thing this team has done is they've grinded every week," Coach Ritch Price said. "They like each other. There's really good team chemistry there. They like playing in Hogland Ballpark, and I'm actually glad to see the weather forecast that it's going to be cold, weary and damp. The Texas kids don't like that too much."
The layhawks aren't afraid of the bad weather. They've played in it all season. In fact, Kansas players are relishing the thought of playing in the elements.
"It's going to be a tough series," DeLeon said. "It's supposed to be really cold here which is actually an advantage to us. We're used to playing in the cold, and they're from Texas so it's actually probably an advantage for us."
With the weather on their side and the weekend rotation intact, the Jayhawks start their climb back up the Big 12 ladder Friday at 6 p.m., in Hoglund Ballpark. The Jayhawks' Thomas Taylor will face the Baylor Bears' Friday starter Max Garner.
Edited by Tyler Conover
KANSAS
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Senior third baseman Jordan Dreiling runs to third after a Connor McKay double.
Dreiling finished 1 for 3 with a run scored.
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Freshman infofelder Chaley Brickey dives for home plate during the softball game against the UMKC Roos. Kansas defeated the Roos 4-0.
10
SAFE
Jayhawks play No.1 Sooners in weekend series at Arrocha
JOSEPH DAUGHERTY
jdaugherty@kansan.com
The Jayhawk softball team to take on the No.1 in the nation Oklahoma Sooners in a three game series that has been pushed to a Saturday double-header and game on Sunday due to expected inclement weather.
In what has become a recurring theme this season for the Jayhawks, Mother Nature once again has changed the team's schedule. Wednesday's game against in-state rival Wichita State was canceled due to weather and this weekend's series games had to be changed to just two days instead of a full weekend series.
Kansas (30-15, 5-7) will go into the series against the Sooners (43-3, 11-1), with the Jayhawks leading the Big 12 for the 12th straight week
in batting average, hitting at .344. Freshman Alex Hugo has hit three home runs in the last five games and also holds the freshman home run record of 14 runs, while senior left fielder Maggie Hull sits tied for the Kansas career RBI crown. One more RBI will break the record of 135, currently held by former Jayhawk and current softball color analyst Liz Kocon. Hull continues to sit atop the Big 12 in batting average, hitting .451 on the season, and is on pace to break her own University record of hitting .409 for a season.
The Sooners (43-3, 11-1) lead the NCAA in ERA at 1.14 as a team, while only letting opponents hit .161. They are also second in the Big 12, with a batting average of .338. The Sooners also have four hitters in the top 10 of batting average in the Big 12, and have the top
two pitchers in ERA. The Sooners are coming off losing in to the Alabama Crimson Tide in the NCAA championship last season. The Sooners' potent offense and great pitching will pose a tough challenge for the Jayhawks. The Sooners have won five straight games and have only one conference loss to Texas.
The Jayhawks will try to score another upset against a top-25 team this weekend, but will have their work cut out for them against the top-ranked Sooners. This weekend's series will be a classic matchup between the Jayhawks' top-hitting team and the Sooners' dominant pitching. The first game of the series is Saturday at 2 p.m. at Arrocha Ballpark.
Edited by Elise Reuter
SAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
PAGE 5B
KANSAN
KANSANuble.
图
STAYING AFLOAT
KANSAN ated the
Jayhawks to host Big 12 championship in Kansas City
STELLA LIANG
sliang@kansan.com
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NCAA n. The dud great
challenge
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Texas.
to score top-25 will have against this
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The Big 12 rowing teams are heading to Kansas City, Kan., as the Jayhawks will host the Big 12 Championship on Saturday. This will be the first time five teams will compete as West Virginia joins Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma and Texas at the regatta.
"We are hoping all the teams do well. Rowing is a team sport," Coach Rob Catloth said. "Our goals are to place as high in the Big 12 as we can."
Catloth
The teams will compete in six events: fourth varsity eight, third varsity eight, second varsity four, first varsity four, second varsity eight and first varsity eight. All schools will race together in each race, unless a school doesn't have a boat for a particular race.
Team points are given out for
each race depending on which place the boat earned. Fourth varsity eight is worth the least amount of points while the first varsity eight race is worth the most. Final standings are based on how many points each school accumulates over the course of all six races.
"I think Oklahoma is coming in a heavy favorite," Catloth said. "They haven't lost to another Big 12 school this season."
In the seeded races (first and second varsity eight and first varsity four), Oklahoma is seeded first in each. Kansas is seeded fifth in the first varsity eight, third in the second varsity eight and fourth in the first varsity four.
In the past, Texas has dominated the Big 12 Championships. In the four-year history of the event, Texas has placed first in all of them. Last year, Texas narrowly edged Oklahoma for the title 105 points to 104.
For Kansas, look for the second varsity eight boat to continue to have success. The team is coming off a two-week period without competition. Two weeks ago at the Lake Natoma Invitational, Kansas competed against many teams ranked in the top 20. The team ended up winning two races and losing seven. The weekend before that, Kansas had a strong showing at the Knecht Cup with two boats, varsity four and second varsity four, winning gold in the Grand Finals.
The Big 12 Championship will be held on Wyandotte County Lake in Kansas City, Kan., Saturday, May 4. The first race will start at 9:40 a.m., and the awards ceremony will follow the competition at 11:50 a.m. The winner of the Big 12 Championship does not earn a bid to the NCAA Championship. Kansas also competes in Conference USA, which does have an automatic qualifying bid, and that conference tournament will be May 18.
Edited by Elise Reuter
KANSAS
CHRIS BRONSON/KANSAN
The Kansas' Varsity Four stretches their lead over Kansas State in their race Saturday morning at the 14th Annual Governor Cup. The Varsity Four would defeat Kansas State by more than nine seconds with a time of 7.38.4. Kansas State would defeat Kansas 16-14.
GET BACK ON
President falls off horse, wins race and $11 M
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSCOW — Seeing the president slam face-first into the ground after falling from a speeding horse would be a shock to any nation. In authoritarian Turkmenistan, many residents didn't even get the chance.
President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov apparently wasn't seriously injured Sunday when his horse stumbled and he pitched into the dirt track at the hippodrome on the outskirts of the capital, Ashgabat. But the fall was certainly a wound to the pride of the 55-year-old Central Asian leader, whose all-powerful personality cult portrays him as effortlessly competent.
Thousands of people were in the stands for the race that celebrated Turkmenistan's renowned desert
racehorse breed, the Akhal-Teke. But state television's video of the race cut off just before the fall and the extensive written reports on the event didn't mention the plunge.
All domestic broadcasting in Turkmenistan is state-run; newspapers are either state-run or under heavy government supervision. Media criticism of the president is non-existent and elaborate praise of him is ubiquitous in this nation of 5 million, wedged between the Caspian Sea and Iran, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan.
Turkmenistan's security agencies reportedly went into high gear to try to block video or images of the president's fall from slipping out to the rest of the world. The opposition-in-exile group Gundogar cited witnesses as saying police were carefully checking the computers, tablets, mobile phones and
cameras of departing passengers at Ashgabat's airport. The horse celebration had attracted an array of foreign horse enthusiasts.
Video obtained by The Associated Press shows a rider falling when his horse stumbles just after crossing the finish line in first place. State media reported that Berdymukhamedov won the race.
The horse also fell, but quickly got up, showing a slight limp. Berdymukhamedov, however, lay motionless. Within seconds, several dozen men in dark suits and one in traditional garb including a high white sheepskin hat rushed onto the track, and an ambulance soon arrived.
The man who shot the video spoke on condition of anonymity for fear that divulging his name could have negative repercussions on his livelihood. He said the president reappeared about half an hour later to accept the winner's prize — about $11 million.
State TV showed the president accepting the award, which he said would be used to improve Turkmenistan's horse breeding.
The choreographed winning of the race — the nearest challenger was obviously throttling back his mount in the home stretch — the media censorship and the reported tough security response at the airport all reflect Turkmenistan's two decades of stifling authoritarianism.
Since becoming independent in the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Turkmenistan has been an extreme example of a one-party state.
Berdymukhamedov, who became president after Saparmurat Niyazov's death in 2006, has put
aside some of Niyazov's more extreme measures, but he has not opened up Turkmenistan's politics or media. His own personality cult includes such feats as winning last year's maiden automobile race in Turkmenistan, even though he supposedly wasn't scheduled to take part and asked to join only at the last minute.
State media reports about the president's actions overflow with admiration and delight.
"The audience greeted President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov, who finished first — demonstrating great skills of horse riding, the will to win, firmness and courage — with a storm of applause," the state news agency TDH reported after Sunday's race.
MATRIACHINE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Turkmenistan's President Gurbangul Berdymukhamedov smiles as he rides a horse in capital Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. Berdymukhamedov fell off his horse during a race over the weekend, an opposition group said Tuesday. Adding that security agents are now closely searching passengers at the capitalial airport to intercept any embarrassing photos or videos.
NH
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PAGE 6B
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KAGA
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
The Jayhawks had a lot to smile about
on Wednesday as they defeated Baker.
KANSAS
GEORGE MULLINIX/'ANSAN
Junior pitcher Junior Mustain throws a ball towards home plate in Wednesday's game against Baker. The Jawhawks have the game 8-0, advancing to 27-18 on average.
KANSAS KU KANSAS 23
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
The Jayhawks were all smiles on Wednesday, defeating the Baker Wildcats 8-0.
CLASS OF 2019
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Your graduation gift is a one-year membership in the KU Alumni Association your connection to all things KU! Compliments of the KU Alumni Association and KU Endowment
Compliments of the KU Alumni Association and KU Endowment.
KUJ
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The University of Kansas
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
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- Your alumni membership is effective June 1,2013-May 31,2014
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- Email kualumni@kualumni.org or call 785-864-4760 to update your mailing and email addresses
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Watch your email for a welcome message from the KU Alumni Association it will include your official electronic membership card
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Visit www.kualumni.org to learn more about the KU Alumni Association. Questions? Call 785-864-4760.
HIGH HEAT
Jayhawks cage Wildcats
AT BAT BALL STRIKE OUT H/E
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GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
The Jayhawk pitching staff meet in the right field after the 8-0 win over Baker
KANSAS
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
GEORGE MOLLINIX/KANSAN Freshman infielder Colby Wright gets fooled by a off-speed pitch in Wednesday night's 8-0 win over Baker.
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THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2013
ISAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 78
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANSAN
Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) and center Kevin Garnett (5) deflect a rebound from New York Knicks center Tyson Chandler (6) in the second half of Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series at Madison Square Garden in New York.
GARDEN TO GARDEN
Don't call it a comeback
CENCS 34 CENCS 5
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK (AP) — Back in the series, now back to Boston.
The Celtics are two victories from NBA history, and from extending the Knicks' postseason futility in a most improbable manner.
The Celtics will host Game 6 on Friday night, needing two victories to become the first NBA team to overcome a 3-0 deficit to win a series.
Kevin Garnett had 16 points and 18 rebounds and the Celtics stayed alive in the playoffs, cutting New York's lead to 3-2 with a 92-86 victory Wednesday night.
"We're still down. Our mentality has to be all-out," Garnett said. "It can't be anything (else)."
Brandon Bass added 17 points, steadying Boston as it shook off an 11-0 deficit and pulled away in the second half to stop the Knicks again from achieving their first playoff series victory since 2000.
Jeff Green scored 18 points and Paul Pierce had 16 as he and Garnett, the two franchise stalwarts, extended this season — and perhaps their Celtics careers — at least one more game.
Terry also scored 17 off the bench.
"We didn't panic and that's something we've done, but we didn't," coach Doc Rivers said. "I thought once the game got back to that five, six area, our guys were good again."
J. R. Smith, back from his one-game suspension for elbowing Jason Terry with the Knicks way ahead late in Game 3, missed his first 10 shots and finished 3 of 14 for 14 points.
"Obviously being down 2-0 or 3-0 or whatever it was, we could have folded shop. Nobody in here is going to quit," Terry said.
Carmelo Anthony scored 22 points but was just 8 of 24 in another dismal shooting night for the Knicks, who blew a big lead in this game and now the series. They face an unwanted trip back to Boston instead of the rest this aging roster could surely use before the second round.
If they get there.
The Knicks would host Game 7 on Sunday.
"I think we're fine," Knicks coach Mike Woodson said. "Sure we would've loved to close it out and move on, but nobody said it would be easy."
"I told you from Game 1 that this wasn't going to be a breeze, it wasn't going to be a walk in the park, them guys were going to fight and they're showing some fight right now," Anthony said. "They threw a couple punches at us now and it's time for us to do the same."
The Celtics were the first or the eight NBA teams that have come from 3-1 down, beating Philadelphia in 1968, and put themselves on the short list of teams that have erased a 2-0 deficit the next year in the NBA Finals.
So perhaps it would be fitting if they were the first to overcome 3-0.
"I think so. I mean, I think that would be wonderful, and someone's going to do it and I want it to be us, obviously, since that's the situation we're in," Rivers said before the game. "Someone will do it, and I really want to be a part of that."
He's still got a chance.
The Knicks limited the Celtics to 75 points per game while winning the first three, and nearly came back to win Game 4 on Sunday even without Smith. So they felt good even after missing their first chance to wrap it up, when Anthony was 10 of 35 in an overtime loss.
Point guard Raymond Felton said the Knicks still feel in control of the series "for sure."
"I mean, this is what playoff basketball is about. Yes, we wish we could have swept them, yes we wish we could have won that
game tonight. Sometimes things don't happen that way," he added.
"Things aren't always pretty, things aren't always the way you want them to be. We've just got to grind it out and go get a win."
Though few of these players were here for the streak, the Knicks were perhaps a bit overconfident leading into the game for a franchise that lost an NBA-record 13 straight postseason games from 2001-12.
Smith said Tuesday hed have been playing golf instead of practicing had he played in Game 4, and players wore black to the game Wednesday as if they were heading to the Celtics "funeral."
The Celtics didn't like it, with reserve Jordan Crawford exchanging words with Anthony and Raymond Felton after the final buzzer.
Forget the funeral.
"Well, we was going to a funeral, but it looks like we got buried." Smith said. "Basketball is a very humbling game."
The second halves had belonged to the Knicks in the series, but the Celtics remained steady in the third quarter, opening a 69-60 lead on Terry's 3-pointer with 41 seconds left, and pushed it to 75-60 early in the fourth.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Royals overcome 5-run deficit
Learn how to launch your career with a KU MBA on Tuesday, May 7 on Summerfield Hall South Lawn from 11:30 - 1 p.m.
Kansas City Royals pitcher Luis Mendoza winds up in the first inning of Wednesday's game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Kauffman Stadium.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Elliot Johnson homered against his former team and the Kansas City Royals rallied from an early fiver-run hole, beating the Tampa Rays 9-8 on a cold, blustery Wednesday night.
Royals 39
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Tampa Bay jumped out to a 2-0 lead when Joyce homered for the second straight game, and
Lorenzo Cain and Jeff Franceeor each drove in a pair of runs for the Royals, who trailed 5-0 in the third inning before slowly chipping away at the Tampa Bay lead.
Bruce Chen (2-0) pitched two scoreless innings in relief of Royals starter Luis Mendoza, and Greg Holland worked a perfect ninth inning in a light drizzle for his seventh save.
They eventually pulled ahead with a five-run sixth off Rays reliever Jake McGee (0-2), and then held on through the final three innings for their second straight comeback win.
Kansas City clawed back in the bottom half when Johnson homered over the wall in right field, his first home run since last September when he was still with the Rays.
Kansas City kept peppering Hellickson in the fifth, this time with a leadoff double by Billy Butler and an RBI triple by Cain. Mike Moustakas followed with a sacrifice fly to center field that allowed Kansas City to get within
Scott answered for Tampa Bay with a solo shot in the fourth, but the Royals scored again in the bottom half when Gordon's two-out base hit the Rays' lead to 6-2.
Zobrist gave the Rays back-to-back homers for the first time this season. The solo shots also gave Tampa Bay at least one homer in 16 straight games, setting a new franchise record.
Kelly Johnson's RBI double and Desmond Jennings' sacrifice fly made it 4-0 in the second, and Evan Longoria's triple in the third turned into another run on James Loney's base hit.
Tim Collins entered for the Royals and coughed up most of the lead on Loney's RBI single and a two-out single by Scott, but Aaron Crow retired Jose Lobaton to escape the seventh inning.
two runs.
Crow pitched a perfect eighth before Holland wrapped up the win.
They loaded the bases with two outs for Butler, who hit a liner right back at McGee that the pitcher managed to knock down but still scored a run. Eric Hosmer then hit a grounder deep in the hole at shortstop, and Yunel Escobar's error allowed the tying run to score.
The Royals finally pulled ahead off McGee in the sixth.
Cain followed with a blooper to center that gave Kansas City the lead, and Francoeur greeted new reliever Kyle Farnsworth with a two-run single that made it 9-6.
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1
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Volume 125 Issue 115
kansan.com
Monday, May 6, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UDK
the student voice since 1904
THE MERITS OF MEDITATION
TANVI NIMKAR
tnimkar@kansan.com
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY TRAVIS YOUNG
Breathe in. Breathe out. Breathe in.
Breathe out. I sit in my chair and close my eyes behind my sunglasses. All around me I could hear the shuffle of hundreds of feet, the shutter of hundreds of cameras, yet all I feel is an inner calm. I slowly let go of every thought in my mind. I'm in La Sagrada Familia, the most famous church in Barcelona, just experiencing it all. Twenty minutes later I stand up and stretch. As I look around I see dozens of other people sitting down with their eyes closed experiencing the inner calm.
Meditation is becoming part our social norm with more and more people practicing it daily. Approximately 10 percent of Americans said to have practiced meditation daily in a 2007 national survey by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Instead of being a mystical Eastern concept, people around the world are starting see the merits of meditation.
"It's a state of peace that people go to," said junior Olivia McCarthy.
WHAT IS MEDITATION?
"It's the art of doing nothing but being awake," says Andrew Numberg, a meditation teacher with the Art of Living Foundation.
Art of Living is a non-profit educational and humanitarian organization. Its programs focus on incorporating breathing techniques, yoga and meditation in daily life. The different chapters across the world organize events
such as meditation retreats.
Nunberg started practicing meditation 15 years ago after a friend suggested he attend an Art of Living course.
"It [meditation] is when our mind is completely in the present and the subtle aspects of who we are experienced effortlessly. I do remember
"I feel a sense of peace I am not aware of any problems in my life."
my mind really going really deep inward. It almost felt like I was sinking. I had gone very deep into mediation; at one moment I lost all awareness. All of a sudden I was aware again. I felt so much calmer," Numberg recalled of his first experience.
Since that day, Nunberg has spent approximately 3,642 hours meditating. Every day he notices a difference after meditation. "I feel a sense of peace. I am not aware
ANDREW NUNBERG Meditation teacher
of any problems in my life. It's not these problems don't exist; it's just not a problem anymore."
Although meditation itself isn't a religious practice, it was developed as a spiritual practice in ancient India. Meditation served as a means to increase self-awareness and knowledge in the Hindu tradition. Civilization across Asia adopted meditation — especially with the spread of Buddhism — so it is considered an Eastern practice.
Medicine defines it as a technique in which a person learns to focus attention on breathing or repeating a calming word, phrase or sound to slow the stream of thoughts that occupy the conscious mind, according to Kavita Prasad, a physician from the Mayo Clinic.
Researchers at University of California Santa Barbara examined the effect of meditation and a student's level of focus. Students who are often faced with stressful situations can develop a tendency to let the mind wander when faced with difficult tasks. The study found an improvement in mental capacity and the ability to focus in students. Although it was only a two-week experiment, the researchers concluded that if the students continued to practice meditation, they would see the
same benefits.
Graduate student Kelly Berkson used to experience extreme stress until she discovered meditation in an Art of Living Course.
"All my life I have been a procrastinator and I wait to the last minute to do things, and then I get incredibly stressed out to the point where I physically feel nauseated, can't keep food down," Berkson said. "Someone came into this class I was in one morning, and it was like every other day: I hadn't done the homework the night before, I was cranky with myself not having it done. I was cranky with my teacher for wanting my work. And this person came in to talk about a breathing and mediation course that they
SEE MEDITATION PAGE 2
LAWRENCE
Renovations planned for national historical landmark
JENNA JAKOWATZ
jjakowatz@kansan.com
Another building in town is eligible as a place of historical significance. The house at 1145 Indiana Street is getting a makeover so it, too, can join the list of other properties are recognized on the National Register of Historic Places.
Tim Keller and fellow investor Ernie Eck will soon be renovating the house to restore it to its former glory.
"It was originally built as a boarding house, and we're going to restore it back to its original look," Keller said.
"The Hancock Historic District includes the properties on the north and south sides of the 700 block of W.12th Street, as well as adjacent properties on Mississippi Street, Indiana Street and Oread Avenue," Keller said.
The large house located just across from the Oread Hotel lies in the Hancock (12th Street) Historic District, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.
The Hancock Historic District includes properties built between 1900 and 1945, many of which originally served as housing for University professors.
"Every building in the district
has at least one person associated with the University," Keller said.
The National Register of Historic Places does not recognize 1145 Indiana Street as a contributing structure because a two-story porch was added to the house in 1960, altering its historic purity.
"We're going to replace the two-story porch with a replica of the original porch the house had," Keller said.
Once the porch is restored to look like the original, the National Register of Historic Places will recognize 1145 Indiana Street.
According to the National Register of Historic Places: "The property significantly increased in value between 1911 and 1912 under the ownership of Harriet E. Tanner, who never lived in the house. L.W. Coleman purchased the property in 1913. Leonidas and Alice Coleman are listed as proprietors of furnished rooms here in the 1915 city directory. The Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity House is listed here from 1917 to 1919. Lela Hope is listed as the owner in 1923. The Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity is listed here from 1925 to 1930 and the
The house, built in 1910, originally served as a boarding house and later served as homes for a few different fraternities.
Triangle Fraternity is listed nere in 1932."
According to the City of Lawrence, the property has had several different owners over the years, including Olin Templin for a short time in 1919.
In June 2012, The City of Lawrence Planning and Development Services approved the renovations, and Keller and Eck began plans to bring the house back to its original state.
"I'm excited to be a part of maintaining something historical," Keller said.
Currently, the house has seven bedrooms and six bathrooms and is approximately 4,270 square feet, but is divided into three separate units that are rented out mainly to students.
SCHAUMBERG
"The Hancock Historic District retains its historical mix of owner-occupied and multiple-family housing," Keller said. "The massing and relatively unchanged appearance of several housing types contributes to the district's sense of time and place."
Keller hopes the renovations will restore the house to once again serve as a boarding-room style of property.
— Edited by Allison Hammond
EMILY WITTLER/KANSAN
Index
EMILY WITTLER/NANSAN
This house, at 1145 Indiana, received an award for historic preservation. There are few rentals this close to campus that have this distinction.
CLASSIFIEDS 9
CROSSWORD 5
CRYPTOQUIPS 5
OPINION 4
SPORTS 10
SUDOKU 5
All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Don't forget
There are no classes on Friday because it is Stop Day, which is not necessarily an excuse to go out the night before. But you do have the day off...
Penguin
Today's Weather
A
Partly cloudy. Fog early Winds from the North at 5 to 10 mph.
HI: 77
LO: 50
A nice day to spend outside
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MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
What's the weather, Jay?
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan.
66045
KJHN
WARNING
Mostly sunny. 20 percent chance of rain. SSEwinds at 8mph.
Scattered thunderstorms. 50 percent chance of rain. SE winds at 12mph.
Tuesday
Penguin
HI: 77
LO: 55
Scattered thunderstorms. 40 percent chance of rain. SE winds at 12mph.
Thursday
Wear your shades today.
Wednesday
HI: 74
L0: 60
Don't rain on my Stop Day eve.
Cloudy weather
Watch out for storms.
Monday, May 6th
CALENDAR
C
**WHAT:** Film Screening of Drying For Freedom. Our Future Is Hanging on the Clothesline
**WHERE:** Liberty Hall Cinema, 644 Massachusetts St.
**WHEN:** 7 to 9 p.m.
**ABOUT:** This award-winning documentary tells the story of banned clotheslines in favor of tumble dryers all over the world. Tickets are $2 to $4.
WHAT: KU School of Music Presents
KU Choirs: Bales Chorale & Vocal Collegium Musicum
WHERE: Bales Organ Recital Hall,
Murphy Hall
WEN: 7.30 to 9 p.m.
ABOUT: Enjoy the sweet sounds of
Bales Chorale and Vocal Collegium
Musicum at this free concert.
Tuesday, May 7th
(
WHAT: Jewish Studies
End-of-Year Party
WHERE: Blake Hall, 329
WHEN: 4 to 5:30 p.m.
ABOUT: Take a break from studying to celebrate the end of the semester. Light refreshments will be served and all are welcome.
WHERE: Lawrence Arts Center, 940
New Hampshire St.
WHEN: 7:30 to 9 p.m.
ABOUT: Hear various artists perform
the music of classic 60s band The
Kinks at this free event.
WHAT: The Tuesday Concert: Kinks Collective
Wednesday, May 8th
WHAT: Unclassified Senate - Full Senate Meeting
WHERE: Kansas Union, Malot Room
WHEN: Noon to 1:30 p.m.
ABOUT: Want to see how student government works? Attend the monthly Unclassified Senate meeting--it's open to the public.
WHAT: Screening of "Nawang Gumbu:
Heart of a Tiger"
WHERE: Dole Institute of Politics
WHEN: 3 p.m.
ABOUT: This documentary celebrates the life of the Sherpa who became the first man to climb Mt. Everest twice. A discussion with producer Bev Chapman will take place after the screening.
Thursday, May 9th
WHAT: KU School of Music Youth Chorus Concert
WHERE: Murphy Hall, 328
WHEN: 5 to 6 p.m.
ABOUT: This choral group, composed of community children, will have its final performance of the school year. Admittance is free.
WHAT: KU Tango Spring Classes
WHERE: Kansas Union
WHEN: 7:45 p.m.
ABOUT: Bring your dancing shoes and an adventurous spirit to this free tango lesson.
MEDITATION FROM PAGE 1
were having that weekend. I was just so sick of myself. I just needed a new start. I thought, 'OK let's try it.' Who knows, I'll learn something."
Berkson noticed an immediate change in her life after she started meditating for twenty minutes daily. Her mind calmed down and she felt stable and in control.
"I learned that I can discipline my mind. You aren't just automatically good at sitting still with your eyes closed for four minutes or twenty minutes," Berkson said. "At first your mind is going to wander like crazy and you are going to feel antsy. I was super antsy at first and ten minutes felt like an eternity. What I noticed
is that after I opened my eyes after mediating for twenty minutes, everything looks sharper and clearer."
Meditation can be frustrating at first because you may not know you are doing it correctly. Sophomore Noah McCoy spent a whole summer studying meditation rigorously. He checked out several books from his local library to learn how to meditate properly.
"I think the big moment where I knew it was something for me. I was in my room in the afternoon; it was kind of cloudy that day and I have a window in my bedroom. I was sitting on my bed; my eyes were closed. Suddenly I just achieved that point where I wasn't thinking," McCoy said. "It was a very strange out-of-body experience. As soon as that happened, the sun broke out behind the clouds and just shone in on my room. I felt this glow. It was really uplifting and amazing."
HEALTH BENEFITS
Meditation is one of the top three alternative health methods in the United Sates. With approximately 20 million Americans practicing, researchers are beginning to discover meditation's impact on health. The most commonly associated benefit is that meditation reduces the level of stress because it allows the mind to focus on what's important in the moment.
Berkson notes that the mind is an instrument with which you study everything. Putting in few minutes each day to take care of that instrument allows your mind be more productive.
Researchers at Northeastern University published a recent study in which they found a correlation between mediation and increased levels of compassion. Participants were placed in rooms with several actors who feigned extreme injuries, such as a broken leg. Fifty percent of the people who went through a meditation course during the trial helped the injured person. In comparison, only 15 percent of the participants that didn't go through a meditation course offered to help. The study concluded that meditation affected the level of compassion by changing the moral standards. Through learning to let go, the participants were able to better focus in a challenging situation.
It may seem like a big commitment to incorporate meditation
as part of a daily routine, but those who have can see the positive impact in their lives.
"I usually meditate as soon as I finish with my classes and before I do anything else.
Sophomore Garrett Holm said he reflects on his day before meditation.
"I use mediation to organize my thoughts," Holm said.
"I live by the rule that if you are too busy to meditate for 30 minutes a day then you probably need a hour," Holm said.
He started to meditate while in high school when he realized he needed to take time out of his day to reflect. Meditation helps motivate him to achieve his goals.
NATIONAL
- Edited by Elise Reuter
Five die, five escape in limousine fire on California bridge
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — A liqueuse taking nine women to a bachelor party erupted in flames, killing five of the passengers, including the bride-to-be, authorities and the mother of one of the survivors said Sunday.
The limo caught fire at around 10 p.m. Saturday on one of the busiest bridges on San Francisco Bay, California Highway Patrol officer Art Montiel told The Associated Press.
Five of the women were trapped, but the four other women managed to get out after the vehicle came to a stop on the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge, the patrol said.
Rosita Guardiano told the San Francisco Chronicle that the woman for whom the bachelorette party was being thrown was to be married next month. Guardiano said her daughter was one of the survivors.
Investigators haven't determined what sparked the fire, but the patrol said the white stretch limo became engulfed in flames after smoke started coming out of the rear of the vehicle.
Aerial video shot after the incident showed about one-third of the back half of the limousine had been scorched by the fire. Its tailights and bumper were gone and it appeared to be resting on its rims, but the remainder of the vehicle didn't appear to be damaged.
A photo taken by a witness and broadcast on KTVU-TV showed flames shooting from the back of the 1999 Lincoln Town Car.
The driver of the limo —
46-year-old Orville Brown of San Jose — was the only person to escape unhurt.
"Four people got out, as far as what was going on inside, I don't know," CHP officer Jeremy Lofstrom said Sunday. CHP investigators Sunday afternoon were still seeking witnesses to the incident.
It wasn't clear how he managed to escape without injury. Investigators Sunday afternoon were still seeking witnesses, the CHP said.
All five women were pronounced dead at the scene. Autopsies were being conducted, San Mateo County Supervising Deputy Coroner Michel Rippa said.
The company that operated the limo was identified as Limo Stop, which offers service through limousines, vans and SUVs.
A telephone message left at the company seeking comment by The Associated Press wasn't immediately returned. Attempts to reach the driver were also unsuccessful.
Guardiano said her daughter — 42-year old Mary Grace Guardiano of Alameda — was being treated for smoke inhalation.
The three other women who escaped the fire, Jasmine Desguia, 34, of San Jose; Nelia Arrellano, 36, of Oakland; and Amalia Loyla, 48, of San Leandro, were taken to hospitals to be treated for smoke inhalation and burns, the patrol said.
Desguia and Loyola were listed in critical condition, said Joy Alexiou, a spokeswoman for Valley Medical Center. The condition of Arrellano, who was taken to another hospital, was not known.
1
LE RAVAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
San Matee County firefighters and California Highway Patrol personnel investigate the scene of a limousine fire on the San Matee-Hayward Bridge in Foster City, Calif., on Saturday. Five people died when they were trapped in the limo that caught fire as they were traveling, and four others and the driver were able to escape.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
PAGE 3
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Holm before
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EDUCATION
while in hezed he his day motials. if you for 30 lobbably
Reuter
Bill provides options for Kan. school districts
PRESS San light fire
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In 2008, McPherson Superintendent Randy Watson and his staff at Unified School District 418 began the process of becoming exempt from the federal No Child Left Behind Act.
NIKKI WENTLING
nwentling@kansan.com
The initiative excludes state assessments.
"We shouldn't have a student take a test that doesn't mean anything to them," Watson said. "It doesn't get you into college. It doesn't get you a job. It doesn't get you a scholarship. It doesn't even get you a grade. We said we ought to give assessments that mean something to kids."
After two years of research, visiting other schools and going on a series of retreats to define new goals and a new system, the district, which has a total enrollment of 2,400, submitted its plans to the Kansas State Board of Education in June 2010. In February 2011, the United States Department of Education granted the district a waiver to enact its new initiative: Citizenship, College and Career readiness.
McPerson now places more emphasis on ACT performance, maximizing scholarship opportunities and providing job shadowing or internship experience.
A new Kansas law taking effect July 1 allows up to 10 percent of the state's 286 school districts to opt out of state assessments and other state education laws.
Gov. Sam Brownback signed House Bill 2319, dubbed the "Innovative Districts Act", early last week. Under the pilot program, interested districts can apply to be designated as "public innovative districts" for a period of five years. Though the districts are exempt from certain state laws, they must adhere to federal education laws, conduct annual testing of students and comply with laws regarding health, safety and welfare. These
districts will also receive the same funding as other schools.
"Innovative School Districts brings to the state of Kansas what the waiver from NCLB did for McPherson," Watson testified at a House Committee on Education hearing on Feb. 9. "This bill takes our accomplishments a step further by allowing for even more flexibility."
HB 2319 OPPOSITION
Some Kansas legislators think this "flexibility" could be damaging to the state education system.
Rep. Ed Trimmer, D-Winfield, was a teacher at Winfield Public
schools from 1974 to 2006. Though he is not against innovation, Trimmer said there is no justification for this law, and that it gives schools too much leeway.
"They don't have to follow state assessments
and they don't have to have certified staff," Trimmer said. "At no time did we identify any specific rule or state requirement that we think hamstrings districts. I don't understand it."
Trimmer also said that because it will not be illegal to hire uncertified teachers, some districts might be tempted to do so when faced with shortages.
"If you don't have to worry about math and science teachers being certified and you can get people for less money, the motivation is there to do that," he said.
Opting out of the professional negotiating act and the teachers due process act are also possibilities, Trimmer said. The Kansas National Education Association testified against the bill because districts would be exempt from these laws and others regarding relations with teachers.
Ward spoke in favor of an amendment introduced by Rep. Valdenia Winn, D-Kansas City, on the House floor in March. The amendment would have included these laws, as well as the teachers' contract law and several others, as regulations that the districts would still have to follow. The amendment failed 50-71.
"There are innovations I think we could try if we weren't held to the 1,080 hours or 180 days or a block schedule. There are possibilities."
Rep. Jim Ward, D-Wichita, not only thinks this is a possibility but is the real reason why some districts would apply to be "innovative."
This amendment failed, Ward said, because right-wing conservatives want administrators to have
an easier route to fire tenured staff.
REP, SUE BOLDRA
R-Havs
"They think it's wrong that employers shouldn't be able to terminate at will," he said.
Ward also said that the rhetoric of
establishing the innovative districts is a ploy to distract from the elimination of due process.
FORMER TEACHER BACKS INNOVATION
Though Ward thinks the motivations of the legislators, and of the districts, may be skewed, Sue Boldra, R-Hays, said the intent is innocent and districts would not go against their staffs.
"That would destroy morale; districts would lose their good teachers," Boldra said.
Personal experience prompted Boldra to support the bill from its early stages. While teaching at Hays High School, Boldra and a fellow teacher merged a U.S. history and an English class as an experiment. The class became popular, and enough students enrolled the following year that it would have to be split into two
sections. However, the school's block scheduling wouldn't allow for it, and it was canceled.
"There are innovations I think we could try if we weren't held to the 1,080 hours or 180 days or a block schedule," she said. "There are possibilities. Good schools that want to change up some things should have the opportunity to do this."
Another aspect of HB 2319 that worries some legislators is the lack of accountability because student progress will not be measured by state assessments.
Under the measure, the applications from the first two districts to apply would be sent to the governor and the chairpersons of the House and Senate education committees.
Boldra argued that there are enough checks in the system that this would not be an issue.
If a majority approves the application, the district would send another application to the state BOE. The district is required to include a description of the new program and its specific goals, a description of parental and community support and an explanation of how student performance will be measured, evaluated and reported.
For remaining districts, the initial request for approval will go to a board made up of representatives of the approved innovative districts.
While lawmakers continue to ask questions about the new law, administrators in McPherson can relax. Now in its third year, the Citizenship, College and Career Readiness initiative, and the waiver, was recently approved by the U.S. Department of Education for two more years.
MOVING FORWARD
And as for all of the questions regarding the lack of accountability and malicious intent, Watson has a simple answer: "That's
wrong."
"There will be much higher accountability," he said. "We've set a higher bar. I think school districts have the intent of being exempt from some laws, which will maybe allow them some freedom to get kids where they want to go in life."
Though the law goes into effect this summer, Ward, who remains skeptical, thinks the legislature will see this come up again.
"Elections matter," he said. "In 18 months, we'll have an election. If they change some of the people sitting in these chairs, I think we'll see a change. I do."
—Edited by Julie Etzler
QUICK FACTS ABOUT THE INNOVATIVE DISTRICTS ACT
- The new law allows 10 percent of Kansas' 286 school districts to be designated as "innovative."
- Gov. Sam Brownback approved House Bill 2319 on April 22, and it will take effect July 1.
- Districts may keep their designation for five years at a time.
- Innovative districts may opt out of several state education laws, including state assessments.
KU$\textcircled{1}$nfo
Yesterday, students received an additional $8.00 in free printing funds.
Free printing funds will be cleared from accounts Saturday, May 18.
ALMA
POLICE REPORTS
information based on the Douglas County Sheriff's Office booking recap.
- A 22-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 3100 block of Ousdahl Road on suspicion of domestic battery and battery. No bond was posted.
- A 22-year-old male was arrested yesterday on K-10 on suspicion of driving while intoxicated, first offense.
A $250 bond was paid.
- A 24-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 800 block of Massachusetts Street on suspicion of uninning or defecating in public and battery. A $300 bond was paid.
- A 22-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 900 block of New Hampshire on suspicion of battery. A $100 bond was paid.
- A 32-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 2400 block of Fairfield Street on suspicion of theft of property, criminal damage to property, possession of controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and burglary of a dwelling. A $7,500 bond was paid.
- A 24-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 800 block of Massachusetts Street on suspicion of uninating or defecating in public and battery. A $300 bond was paid.
Emily Donovan
Follow
@UDK_News
on Twitter
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THE UNIVERSITY DARLY KANSAN
PAGE 4
opinion
You're watching glee in class. Go home, you're not ready for college.
FREE FOR ALL
I want to be the person napping in the hammock next to Marvin hall. Editor's note: When you graduated, you can be anyone you want to be.
Batman's not even a superhero. Unless you consider super-wealth a power.
Don't worry everyone, I found the headphones. In the washing machine.
Spring in Kansas- "It's a trap!"
Someday I'm going to accidentally say "lot" out loud, and I'll never be allowed to talk again.
This weather makes me a sad panda.
Does anyone actually know how to get a book out of the stacks?
It's funny how one person will say something awesome and a couple days later other people are saying the exact same thing just worded in a different way.
Go home Kansas weather, I'm drunk. And cold. And wet.
I can officially tell my grandchildren someday that I walked to class uphill, both ways, in the wind, rain, and snow.
To the Editor: If you want it to be end of discussion on Batman/Superman, don't post them in the FAA then! Dhil! Editor's note: Do you understand what a joke is?
I love watching the out-of-staters (reak about the weather... I can't wait until they experience their first tornado warning!
Not your call editor! Batman is a hack. You can't buy your way into the JLA!
April showers bring May SNOW.
May, stop trying to make snow happen. It's not going to happen.
The girls from "up north" put their boots away in march. Even Minnesota doesn't have winter in May.
I feel like I'm in an abusive relationship with Kansas and I can't leave because my CDs are in his truck.
$11
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
You don't have kids, that you know of. Dum dum dummmm.
I have a craving to eat something incredibly unhealthy and delicious.
I got hit on on the bus. Must have been the yoga pants.
Welcome to the midwest where the weather is made up and the seasons don't matter.
POLITICS
Everything awesome starts with a B! Burgers, Basketball, BBQ sauce, Boobs, Butts, Babes, Beer, Marjanau.
Brownback discusses education funding
Gov. Sam Brownback is fond of describing his economic agenda as a "Roadmap for Kansas." On April 23, his map brought him to the University to discuss higher education funding. The visit was designed to give the impression that the governor is advocating to preserve higher education against the right-wing agenda of House and Senate Republicans. The only problem is that an examination of Brownback's past record and the circumstances surrounding his new "proposals" make it apparent that higher education isn't very high on his priority list, and may be excluded from it altogether.
The governor's proposal would keep state funding for higher education flat for the next two years, as opposed to cutting it. That should be
good, right? At least he doesn't want our public universities to fall even farther behind. Well, they're pretty far behind as it is. State funding has been falling for the past two decades, shifting the burden to students in the form of higher costs, according to the Kansas Board of Regents. The economic crash in 2008 brought even more cuts to higher ed. While Brownback's current proposals may not take a hatchet to higher ed funding to the degree House and Senate Republicans are gunning for, funding for state universities is nowhere near its pre-crisis levels. Much more needs to be done, but the governor seems to think he is doing a great service to students and families simply by stopping the bleeding. He's wrong.
By Eric Schumacher
It's also hard to see the friction between Brownback and
By Eric Schumacher
eschumacher@kansan.com
legislative Republicans as anything more than a manufactured standoff designed to benefit the governor politically. As professor Bob Beatty of Washburn University noted in a recent Kansas City Star article, either outcome stands to grant Brownback a political benefit. If his proposal for higher-ed funding goes through, it's likely that he'll get an extension of the higher sales tax that was originally implemented in 2010 to help pay for it. If the cuts go through, he will be able to
say he took a centrist stance in fighting for public education funding.
The need for a political rebound of sorts for the governor becomes apparent when looking at recent numbers. The March data on unemployment for Kansas showed little progress in job creation, and a late February poll found his disapproval rating to be 52 percent with just 37 percent approving, meaning his re-election campaign may not be the cakewalk many Republicans have been anticipating.
Despite the governor's words, the picture for Kansas universities isn't looking good. When the House and Senate return on May 8, the 2014 budget will have to adjust to millions in lost revenue that has been given away as tax breaks to wealthy individuals and businesses.
Public funding is expected to be on the chopping block, and Statehouse Republicans don't seem eager to spare KU or other public universities. Even if higher education is spared, it's likely all Kansans will be paying a price in the form of higher sales tax. Maybe all this new "moderate" talk signals that the governor is slowly figuring out the harm his agenda is doing, especially to students burdened by the rising costs of college. Whatever his reasons, the "roadmap" is pretty clear — and Kansans don't like where it goes.
Schumacher is a senior from Topeka majoring in creative writing and political science
Reflecting on relationships at the end of the semester
As this year and some of our college careers draw to a close, many students at Kansas may be reflecting on the past year of dating and debauchery. And as we finish another year, we may also be closing whole relationships or deciding whether or not to apologize and make amends for the ones of our pasts.
By Rachel Keith
rkeith@kansan.com
When I had an intense falling out with an acquaintance in March, I figured I'd never hear from him again. Then I felt the same way after a failed attempt to make up and start over a month later. But then not even three weeks after that, I was sitting alone in my bedroom getting antsy after a late-night phone call with him, which ended in a flirtation with the idea of going to see "The Great Gatsby" together after its May 10 release.
He and I were never close; but there was something inside of me that wanted to make amends despite the recent cyclical drama of having him in my life. I knew the lesson to be learned but couldn't stand to absorb it. I longed to make things right between us after five years of being on good terms.
Through all of the trials and tribulations of college dating, we are bound to have at least one ex, with many of whom we aren't on good terms. And if we desire to change that, we have a few options. We must
keep in mind that apologizing and making amends are different: an apology is just that, but making amends is taking action to compensate for the past.
Deciding when to apologize or make amends should be at the discretion of individuals based off of a number of factors such as the cause of the falling out and the state of the relationship before it. It can be worth the effort to perhaps not necessarily restore the relationship to its previous ways but to at least be at peace with the situation with a simple apology (but only if you mean it).
Sometimes we should do one. Sometimes we should do both. But sometimes we should do neither.
In mind of that, however, sometimes it's best to not apologize or make amends at all, such as in cases when a relationship had gone so awry that no number of apologies or amount of time trying to restore peace is worth it. Our exes may take those gestures as attempts to get back together and react negatively, creating more hostility in the long run.
In those situations, we have to remember who we are and what we believe in and to simply let it be. Regardless of the downfall there, the best chance to move on is to be at peace with the self. In some cases, it just doesn't work out, and that's fine too.
There are some situations that get too heavy, and when that happens, we need to just let go. But when they are repairable, we need to know how to identify it and how to act accordingly. And the person who knows best is just you.
The end of an academic year is always a humbling experience, especially for those of us who have come to the end of the line at the University, at our internships, or for me, at the end of both. Most of us may be in Lawrence until at least the end of July, but the conclusion of the school year still marks the end of an era in our personal lives and prompts reflection about the experience.
And when we can take that reflection and decide the best path for finding peace within ourselves and others, regardless of what the outcome is, knowing when to let go and when to make amends will serve us well in the long run.
Keith is a graduate student in education from Wichita. Follow her on Twitter @Rachel UD Keith.
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ENTERTAINMENT
How are you dealing with end-of-the-semester stress?
Summer brings hit movie sequels
@A_Nob
@UDN_Opinion self medicating
The summertime is right around the corner, and that means re-runs of our favorite television series will soon be filling our television sets. But, that is all right because this summer is anticipated to have some of the biggest hits we have seen in a while.
To me, movie sequels are the best movies. They are better than remakes or movies without sequels. And this summer, we can expect to see a lot of great sequels.
@brianjang
@UDK_ Opinion watch the NBA
playoffs. Lots of it.
The Hangover is back for a third and final movie: "The Hangover Part III." The two previous movies were huge hits in the box offices, and it doesn't seem as if that will change for the third movie.
Our favorite wolf pack is back. And no, I'm not talking about canines. I am talking about the four guys that can't seem to get it together after a night of drinking, led by the infamous Zach Galli nakis.
But this time there is no wedding or bachelor party. So what could exactly go wrong? Well, this summer the trilogy comes to an end in the most treacherous ways possible.
Ken leong returns to play Mr. Chow, who is one of every one's favorite characters in the trilogy. It will also be a nice addition to see what old-timer comedian John Goodman can bring to the table.
Also being released on the same day as the Hangover will be Fast and the Furious 6. Vin Diesel and Paul Walker return and make a trip to London to
By Ben Carroll
bcarroll@kansan.com
face an international crime ring. We can expect much of the same and plenty of entertaining car-chases. And who could forget everybody's favorite hard-core chick in Michelle Rodriguez returning to her old role of a gritty, highly skilled street racer.
"Iron Man 3" is another sequel coming out this summer. We can expect a huge come back movie for Robert Downey Jr. as the second movie had some critics shaking their heads. Ben Kingsley, known for his prominent role in Schindler's List and Hugo, will play the mega villain bringing a new, scary mood to the series. It is made by Marvel, which also made "The Avengers", so we can expect to see a well-plotted film. I would predict this to be the best Iron Man film yet.
It will be interesting to see what movie comes out on top, but expect all three movies to be some of the biggest hits of the summer. There is one thing we can be sure of and that is it will be a great summer for production companies and moviegoers.
Carroll is a junior from Salem, Conn., majoring in journalism.
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THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THE EDITORIAL BOARD Members of the Kansan Editorial Board are Hannah Wise, Sarah McCabe, Nikki Wentling, Dylan Lysen, Elise Farrington and Jacob Snider.
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
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THE UNIVERSITY DARY KANSAN
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PAGE 5
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HOROSCOPES
Because the stars know things we don't.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
You're more confident. Somebody else's crazy idea inspires you.
Confront old fears. Come up with a plan and dive into action.
Postpone travel or launching. Be open for miracles.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8
Clarify your direction with friends. Encourage creative thinking. Contemplate potential outcomes. Your views change concerning group membership. You don't need to spend your savings on trinkets.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8
Rest and gain clarity. There could be a disagreement about priorities or a difficult situation. Follow a prosperous hunch. These days are good for travel; set sail on a new course.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9
Practice makes perfect in the coming phase. You have what it takes. Do the harder job first. Keep the faith, even with an unexpected development. Avoid arguing with your partner. Let off steam after.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7
Conditions look good for travel and romance. Financial modesty is appealing. Review your holdings, and do some long-range planning. You may need to turn down a request or cut spending to hit the target.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8
Do your own research, and prepare to negotiate carefully. Review financial arrangements. There's a breakthrough regarding service. In a moment of confusion, ask for help. Encourage creativity.
A partner comes to the rescue, and together you stir things up. Negotiations resume, with brilliant insight. Imagine perfection. Review details: some targets have become superfluous.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9
A colleague demands your time now. Let your subconscious mind help. Quiet your natural curiosity, and listen for a startling discovery. You have the power. Get a lot done today and tomorrow.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9
This phase is reserved for fun.
Don't let recent successes
distract. You have things to take
care of at home.
Focus on home and family. You can see multiple ways to solve problems. Apply that ability to improving the quality of your environment. Keep a secret. Enjoy it together.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8
Today is a 9 Study and practice. You thrive doing what you love. You don't have as much as you think you do because you're so generous.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9
CROSSWORD
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9
This week is good for making money. Focus on finances for insight. In a stroke of genius, discover savings or a new income opportunity and follow through. Don't share about it, yet.
ACROSS
ACHOSS
1 Move like molasses
5 High card
8 Judicial garment
12 Place for sports reporters
14 Vivacity
15 Aware
16 Flex
17 Do sums
18 Kindle downloads
20 Sew loosely
23 Liveliness, in music
24 Wheel-base terminus
25 Obama's old title
28 — de Janeiro
29 Hawaiian dances
30 Deity
32 Dakar's country
34 Salver
35 Bacchanalian blast
36 Yonder
37 Hallux,
more
common!
40 That girl
41 "Super-
food"
berry
42 Mexican
miss
47 Show-
room
sample
48 One of
three
rulers
49 Paradise
50 Tree fluid
51 Harmoni-
ization
DOWN
1 Wife of
Saturn
2 Raw rock
3 Buddhist sect
ings
5 Sleeping
6 Opposed
7 Outer
8 Start the PC up again
9 Bread spread
10 Savings institution
11 Make — meet
13 Faction
19 Prejudice
20 Tavern
21 Line of symmetry
4 Mansion and its surroundings
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22 — gin fizz
23 Stop, at sea
25 Hints at
26 Shrek is one
27 Bellow
29 Medal earner
31 Coloring agent
33 Idea
34 Gas bill units
36 Commandment starter
37 Commanded
38 On the rocks
39 Chess or checkers
40 Use scissors
43 Historic time
44 Wall climber
45 Can metal
46 Joan of —
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HOLLYWOOD review
--introduction in 1964. Although the original Mandarin was conceived as a Fu Manchu-style antagonist who drew his power from 10 mystical rings, Kingsley, an actor capable of embodying almost any ethnicity, insists on playing the supervillain as a multicultural mangle, drawing inspiration from the televised theatrics of Osama bin Laden, the scraggy facial hair of a Tolkien dwarf and the grandiose inflection of Sam the Eagle. I understand the Mandarin in the comics has been decried as a racial stereotype (albeit a largely rehabilitated one), but this version could almost pass for another character entirely.
'Iron Man 3' resuscitates, brings closure to franchise
The first "Iron Man" may have resuscitated Robert Downey Jr's career, but it was Shane Black who applied the defibrillator paddles back in 2005 when the "Lethal Weapon" screenwriter-turned-director cast the newly sober Downey as a motor-mouthed amateur sleuth in his rollingick L.A. neo-noir "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang." Despite its tepid box office returns, the film wowed critics and helped to persuade studio bigwigs that its star was no longer an insurance liability. Six years later, Downey returned the favor by lobbying for Black to direct and co-write the third installment of Marvel's highest-grossing franchise.
The result is "Iron Man 3," a sharply written, relentlessly entertaining beast of a summer block-buster which augments the expected digital eye candy with an even grander spectacle: a gifted, clearly restless performer straining against the limits of what's become his signature role. The line between Downey Jr. and Tony Stark began to blur a long time ago, and Black's film, which has more in common with his rapier-witted action thrillers than a standard superhero movie, is far more interested in testing the mettle of our hero's psyche than the metal of his gold-titanium exoskeleton.
By Landon McDonald
lmcdonald@kansan.com
Apparently the experience of flying a nuclear missile through a wormhole to destroy an alien mothership is enough to traumatize even the most well-adjusted genius billionaire playboy philanthropist. Since the events of "The Avengers", Stark has been plagued by insomnia and crippling panic attacks that have caused him to spurn the affections of Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) and hole up in his basement, compulsively tinkering with new Iron Man suits to prepare for the next invasion.
This self-imposed exile is lifited after he learns of the threat posed by the Mandarin (Ben Kingsley), a shadowy terrorist mastermind with a deep-seated grudge against Western decadence and the misappropriation of Asian iconography. His latest scheme involves turning maimed U.S. Army veterans into brainwashed, molten-skinned human bombs with help from Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce), a weapons-tech upstart Stark inadvertently inspired during his days as an arms dealer, and a failed super-soldier serum known as Extremis.
Those issues aside, the cast of "Iron Man 3" is its greatest asset. Kansas City native Don Cheadle has much more to do this time around as Stark's staunch ally Colonel James Rhodes, whose state-sponsored War Machine persona has been rebranded as the Iron Patriot after the latter tested better with focus groups. The lovely Rebecca Hall, so memorable in Ben Afflock's "The Town," also lending a surprising amount of pathos to her role as Stark's pre-Pepper love interest Maya, the scientist who may have created Extremis.
Thanks to Marvel's auteur-friendly hiring practices, Black has made an "Iron Man" flick that's truly and utterly his own, from the rampant film noir references (Downey opens and closes the story with voice-over narration) to the devious, whip-smart dialogue. He also manages to end the trilogy on a point of genuine thematic closure (something that might be looked back on as prescient depending on how Downey renegotiates his contract). As it turns out, the man makes the suit after all.
Edited by Brian Sisk
GLASS OF 2019
CLASS OF 2013!
Your graduation gift is a one-year membership in the KU Alumni Association your connection to all things KU! Compliments of the KU Alumni Association and KU Endowment
KU
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The University of Kansas
- Your alumni membership is effective June 1,2013 - May 31,2014
- To take full advantage of your benefits you must have a current mailing and email address (not a ku.edu address) on file with the KU Alumni Association
- Email kualumni@kualumni.org or call 785-864-4760 to update your mailing and email addresses
KU
KU
ENDOWMENT
The University of Kansas
Member benefits
- Online career center
- Access to 300,000 Jayhawk alumi through our online directory to build your network.
- 10% discount at KU Bookstores (in store and online)
- Invitations to alumni events
- Six issues of Kansas Alumni magazine
- Alumni news, event invitations and announcements
- Access to alumni chapters throughout the state, across the country and around the world
Watch your email for a welcome message from the KU Alumni Association it will include your official electronic membership card
Visit www.kualumni.org to learn more about the KU Alumni Association. Questions? Call 785-864-4760.
PAGE 6
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
OUTDOORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
(1)
Ogden beekeeper Vic Bachman, left, and partner Nate Hall prepare to remove a 12-foot-long beehive from an A-frame cabin in Eden, Utah. It was the biggest beehive the Utah beekeepers have ever removed, containing about 60,000 honeybees.
SALT LAKE CITY — It was the biggest beehive that Ogden beekeeper Vic Bachman has ever removed — a dozen feet long, packed inside the eve of a cabin in Ogden Valley.
Hive containing 60,000 bees found outside Utah cabin
"We figure we got 15 pounds of bees out of there," said Bachman, who said that converts to about 60,000 honeybees.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bachman was called to the A-frame cabin last month in Eden, Utah. Taking apart a panel that hid roof rafters, he had no idea he would find honeycombs packed 12 feet long, 4 feet wide and 16 inches deep.
They didn't want to kill the honeybees, a species in decline that does yeoman's work pollinating flowers and crops.
So they called Bachman, owner of Deseret Hive Supply, a hobbyist store that can't keep up with demand for honeybees. Bachman used a vacuum cleaner to suck the bees into a cage.
The honeybees had been making the enclosed cavity their home since 1996, hardly bothering the homeowners. The cabin was rarely used, but when the owners needed to occupy it while building another home nearby, they
decided the beehive wasn't safe for their two children. A few bees had found their way inside the house, and the hive was just outside a window of a children's bedroom.
"It doesn't hurt them," he said.
The job took six hours. At $100 an hour, the bill came to $600.
"The bees were expensive," said Paul Bertagnoli, the cabin owner. He was satisfied with the job.
"It's the biggest one I've ever seen," Bachman said. "I've never seen one that big."
Utah calls itself the Beehive State, a symbol of industriousness. Whether this was Utah's largest beehive is unknown, but Bachman said it would rank high.
He used smoke to pacify the bees, but Bertagnoli said honeybees are gentle creatures unlike predatory yellow jackets or hornets, which attack, rip apart and eat honeybees, he said.
"They just want to collect nectar and come back to the hive," Bertagnolli said. "Most people never get stung by honeybees — it's a yellow jacket."
Bertagnoli reassembled the hive in a yard of his North Ogden home, while saving some of the honeycomb for candles and lotions at his store. He left other honeycombs for the cabin owners to chew on.
"We caught the queen and were able to keep her," Bertagnolli said. "The hive is in my backyard right now and is doing well."
O
Congratulations
Class of 2013!
Celebrate graduation with the KU Alumni Association!
Grad Grill
11 a.m.–4 p.m.
Stop Day, Friday, May 10
Adams Alumni Center
Join us for free Bigg's BBQ and music on Stop Day, as our way of saying "Congratulations on your graduation!" All graduating students are invited.
Commencement Open House
11 a.m.–3 p.m.
Commencement Day, Sunday, May 19
Adams Alumni Center
Stop by the Adams Alumni Center on Commencement Day for a champagne toast and a light snack!
The entire family is welcome.
Visit www.kualumni.org
to learn more about what the
Grad Grill
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Stop Day, Friday, May 10
Adams Alumni Center
Join us for free Bigg's BBQ and music on
Stop Day, as our way of saying
"Congratulations on your graduation!"
All graduating students
are invited.
KU
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The University of Kansas
Visit www.kualumni.org to learn more about what the KU Alumni Association has to offer you. Questions? Call 785-864-4760.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ENVIRONMENT
Moist air reduces fire
I
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CAMARILLO, Calif. — Cool, moist air moving into Southern California on Sunday helped firefighters build containment lines around a huge wildfire burning through coastal mountains.
Firefighters from Stockton, Calif., put out flames off Hidden Valley Rd. while fighting a wildfire May 3 in Hidden Valley, Calif.A huge Southern California wildfire burned through coastal wilderness to the beach on Friday then stormed back through canyons toward inland neighborhoods when winds reversed direction.
Fire crews took advantage of improved conditions as the high winds and hot, dry air of recent days were replaced by the normal Pacific air, significantly reducing fire activity.
The National Weather Service said an approaching low pressure system would bring a 20 percent chance of showers Sunday afternoon, with the likelihood increasing into the night and on Monday.
East of Los Angeles in Riverside County, a new fire that broke out Saturday afternoon burned 650 acres of wilderness south of Banning. It was 30 percent contained Sunday. Banning has been flanked by a nearly 5-square-mile fire to the north, which destroyed one home shortly after it broke out Wednesday. That fire was fully contained late Saturday.
The 44-square-mile blaze at the western end of the Santa Monica Mountains was 60 percent surrounded Sunday morning.
Full containment was expected Monday, according to Ventura County fire officials.
In Northern California, a fire that has blackened more than 10 square miles of wilderness in Tehama County was a threat to 10 unoccupied summer homes near the community of Butte Meadows, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
"The fire isn't really running and gunning," said Tom Kruschke, a Ventura County Fire Department spokesman.
The progress made led authorities to lift evacuation orders Saturday for residences in several areas.
Nearly 2,000 firefighters using engines, bulldozers and aircraft worked to corral the blaze.
Nearly 1,300 firefighters were on the lines, and the blaze, which started Wednesday, was 20 percent contained.
Thunderstorms were expected to bring erratic winds but little rain to the area about 200 miles north of San Francisco.
Firefighting efforts were focused on the fire's east side, rugged canyons that are a mix of public and private lands, Kruschke said.
The change in the weather was also expected to bring gusty winds to some parts of Southern California, but well away from the fire area.
Despite its size and speed of growth, the fire that broke out Thursday and quickly moved through neighborhoods of Camarillo Springs and Thousand Oaks has caused damage to just 15 homes, though it has threatened thousands.
The fire also swept through Point Mugu State Park, a hiking and camping area that sprawls between those communities and the ocean. Park District Superintendent Craig Sap told the Ventura County Star that two old, unused ranch-style homes in the backcountry burned. Restrooms and campgrounds also were damaged. Sap estimated repairs would cost $225,000.
On Friday, the wildfire reached the ocean, jumped Pacific Coast Highway and burned a navy base rifle range on the beach at Point Mugu. When winds reversed direction from offshore to onshore, the fire stormed back up canyons toward inland neighborhoods.
The only injuries as of Saturday were a civilian and a firefighter involved in a traffic accident away from the fire.
"It came pretty close. All of these houses — these firemen did a tremendous job. Very, very thankful for them," Shayne Poindexter said. Flames came within 30 feet of the house he was building.
wildfires in the state so far this year — about 200 more than average.
Residents were grateful so many homes were spared.
The blaze is one of more than 680
HEALTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Valley fever cases increase
FRESNO, Calif. — California and federal public health officials say valley fever, a potentially lethal but often misdiagnosed disease infecting more and more people around the nation, has been on the rise as warming climates and drought have kicked up the dust that spreads it.
The fever has hit California's agricultural heartland particularly hard in recent years, with incidence dramatically increasing in 2010 and 2011. The disease which is prevalent in arid regions of the United States, Mexico, Central and South America
— can be contracted by simply breathing in fungus-laced spores from dust disturbed by wind as well as human or animal activity.
The fungus is sensitive to environmental changes, experts say, and a hotter, drier climate has increased dust carrying the spores.
"Research has shown that
Longstanding concerns about valley fever were heightened last week when a federal health official ordered the transfer of more than 3,000 exceptionally vulnerable inmates from two San Joaquin Valley prisons where several dozen have died of the disease in recent years. A day later, state officials began investigating an outbreak in February that sickened 28 workers at two solar power plants under construction in San Luis Obispo County.
when soil is dry and it is windy, more spores are likely to become airborne in endemic areas," said Dr. Gil Chavez, Deputy Director of the Center for Infectious Diseases at the California Department of Public Health.
Although millions of residents in Central California face the threat of valley fever, experts say people who work in dusty fields or construction sites are most at risk, as are certain ethnic groups and those with weak immune
systems. Newcomers and visitors passing through the region may also be more susceptible.
In California, according to the CDC, valley fever cases rose from about 700 in 1998 to more than 5,500 cases reported in 2011. The disease has seen the sharpest rise in Kern County, followed by Kings and Fresno counties.
Nationwide, the number of valley fever cases rose by more than 850 percent from 1998 through 2011, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2011, there were more than 20,400, with most cases reported in California and Arizona.
Out of the 18,776 California cases between 2001 and 2008, 265 people died. according to the state health department.
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KU SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
0
SAN
e
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
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PAGE 7
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NBA
Thunder beat Grizzlies 93-91 in Game 1 of semifinals
ASSOCIATED PRESS
OKLAHOMA CITY— Kevin Durant scored 35 points and hit a pair of jumpers in the final minute to lift the Oklahoma City Thunder to a 93-91 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies on Sunday in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals. Derek Fisher poked the ball away from Mike Conley to spring Durant the other way, and he pulled up to make a shot with 11.1 seconds left that put Oklahoma City up 91-90.
Quincy Pondexter had a chance to send the game to overtime when he was fouled attempting a 3-pointer with Memphis trailing 93-90 and 1.6 seconds remaining. But he missed the first free throw.
On the Grizzlies' previous possession, Thabo Sefolosha deflected an inbounds pass, and Conley landed out of bounds while diving for the ball. Reggie Jackson then hit two free throws to make the lead three.
But Jackson hacked Pondexter on his right arm before he released a' 3-pointer from the left wing in an attempt to tie it. Pondexter, a 72 percent career free-throw shooter, made his second attempt before purposefully missing the third, but
Durant swatted the rebound away and Marc Gasol's attempt at a buzzer-beater was late.
The Grizzlies got 20 points and 10 rebounds from Gasol and 18 points and 10 rebounds from Zach Randolph. Pondexter and Conley scored 13 apiece.
Kevin Martin scored 25 for Oklahoma City, which trailed for much of the game but was able to avoid repeating its Game 1 loss from when these two teams met in the West semifinals two years ago. The Thunder were able to rally and win that series in seven.
Game 2 is Tuesday night in Oklahoma City.
Conley made a pair of driving layups and a jumper as Memphis surged ahead with a 15-4 run early in the third quarter. The lead stretched to 70-58 when Conley hit a free throw following 3-pointers on back-to-back possessions by Pondexter and Tayshawn Prince.
The Thunder started to rally before Pondexter's buzzer-beeper from the half-court logo to finish the third quarter bumped the lead up to 73-64. That didn't stop Oklahoma City's comeback though.
Martin converted a three-point
play and a 3-pointer as the Thunder scored nine of the first 11 points of the fourth quarter, prompting Memphis coach Lionel Hollins to call a timeout with the lead down to 75-73 with 10:08 left.
Randolph banked in a jumper to stabilize the Grizzlies, and Prince followed with a 3-pointer from the right corner to push the lead back to seven.
Durant then sandwiched a pair of driving buckets around Derek Fisher's 3-pointer as Oklahoma City pieced together seven consecutive points to tie it at 84 with 3:47 to play.
The Grizzlies went back up 90-87 when Serge Ibaka missed one of two free throws and Gasol followed with a hook shot with 1:08 to go.
It was a competitive new chapter in an increasingly fierce rivalry, but there weren't any scuffles between the two teams this time. They had combined for nine technical fouls in three meetings during the regular season, including one confrontation that got Randolph and Kendrick Perkins ejected.
THUNDER
35
Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant (35) high fives teammate Kevin Martin (23) over the top of Memphis Grizzlies guard Jerry Dayless (7) during the second quarter of Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinals NBA playoff series in Oklahoma City yesterday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CRIME
Referee dies from injuries after being punched during game
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MURRAY, Utah — A 46-year-old soccer referee who was punched by a teenage player during a game and later slipped into a coma has died, police said.
Ricardo Portillo of Salt Lake City passed away at the hospital, where he was being treated following the assault last weekend, Unified police spokesman Justin Hoyal said Saturday night.
Police have accused a 17-year-old player in a recreational soccer league of punching Portillo after the man called a foul on him and issued him a yellow card.
"The suspect was close to Portillo and punched him once in the face as a result of the call," Hoyal said in a press release.
The teen, whose name hasn't been released because of his age, has been booked into juvenile detention on suspicion of aggravated assault. Hoyal said authorities will consider additional charges because Portillo has died.
An autopsy is planned. No cause of death was released.
Portillo suffered swelling in his brain and had been listed in critical condition, Dr. Shawn Smith said Thursday at the Intermountain Medical Center in the Salt Lake
City suburb of Murray.
The victim's family, which publicly spoke of Portillo's plight this past week, has asked for privacy, Hoyal said.
Johana Portillo, 26, said last week that she wasn't at the April 27 game in the Salt Lake City suburb of Taylorsville, but she's been told by witnesses and detectives that the player hit her father in the side of the head.
"When he was writing down his notes, he just came out of nowhere and punched him," she said.
In accounts from a police report, Portillo's daughter and others offer more details about
what occurred.
The teenager was playing goalie during a game at Eisenhower Junior High School in Taylorsville when Portillo issued him a yellow card for pushing an opposing forward trying to score a goal. In soccer, a yellow card is given as a warning to a player for an egregious violation of the rules.
The teenager, quite a bit heavier than Portillo, began arguing with the referee, then unleashed a punch to his face. Portillo seemed fine at first, then asked to be held because he felt dizzy. He sat down and started vomiting blood, triggering his friend to call an ambulance.
When police arrived around noon, the teenager was gone, and Portillo was laying on the ground in the fetal position. Through translators, Portillo told EMTs that his face and back hurt and he felt nauseous. He had no visible injuries and remained conscious. He was considered to be in fair condition when they took him to the Intermountain Medical Center.
But when Portillo arrived to the hospital, he slipped into a coma with swelling in his brain. Johana Portillo called detectives to let them know his condition had
worsened.
That's when detectives intensified their search for the goalie. By Saturday evening, the teenager's father agreed to bring him down to speak with police.
Portillo's family said he hao been attacked before, and Johanna Portillo said she and her sisters begged their father to stop refereeing because of the risk from angry players, but he continued because he loved soccer.
"It was his passion," she said.
"We could not tell him no."
MLB
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Royals win over White Sox in 10-inning battle
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Alex Gordon hit an RBI single with two outs in the 10th and the Kansas City Royals, saved when Billy Butler sent the game into extra innings, rallied past the Chicago White Sox 6-5.
Butler's two-out, two-run double in the ninth tied it for Kansas City.
Lorenzo Cain led off the 10th with his third hit and stole second with one out. With two outs, Chris Getz was intentionally walked and George Kottaras then walked on five pitches, loading the bases for Gordon.
Gordon singled on the first pitch from rookie Brian Omogrosso (0-1), who made his first appearance
since being called up Wednesday.
Greg Holland (1-1) worked a perfect 10th.
Butler's tying double scored pinch runner Chris Getz and George Kottaras. Addison Reed blew his first save in 18 opportunities dating to Aug. 25. He was 10 for 10 in save chances this season.
Alex Rios homered and drove in two runs and Alejandro De Aza contributed a two-run double for the White Sox.
Royals reliever Tim Collins started the seventh with a 3-1 lead, but allowed three runs on three hits without retiring a batter. In his past two outings, Collins has yielded five runs on seven hits and gotten only two outs.
wild pitch that let one run score and Rios hit his team-leading seventh home run.
Royals right-hander Wade Davis, who had allowed 15 runs on 20 hits and seven walks in eight 1-3 innings in losing his previous two starts, held the White Sox to one run on five hits in six innings.
Davis gave up a run in the third on Rios' ground out with the bases loaded.
White Sox left-hander Jose Quintana held the Royals hitless for four innings before they scored three runs in the fifth. Miguel Tejada and Alcides Escobar had RBI singles and the other run scored on second baseman Jeff Keppinger's error.
IOWA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas City Royals' Alex Gordon connects for the game-winning hit in the 10th inning of a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., yesterday. The Royals defeated the White Sox 6-5.
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PAGE 8
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TRACK & FIELD
KANSAS
3127
KANSAS
3143
ERIN BREMFER/KANSAN
Sophomore distance runner, James Wilson, hands the baton off to Evan Landes during the men's 4x1-mile relay on friday at Memorial Stadium. The Kansas Relays took place from Wednesday through Saturday in Lawrence.
Women win Big 12 title again with outdoor championship win
COLIN WRIGHT
cwright@kansan.com
The stage was different, but the results were the same. The Kansas women's track and field squad made it a complete season sweep by winning the team title at the Big 12 Outdoor Championship on Sunday evening. The team scored 158 team points to defeat the University of Texas, the defending outdoor champion, which scored 145 points.
It had been 30 years since any Jayhawk squad — men or women, indoor or outdoor — had won a conference championship. Exactly 10 weeks after capturing the Indoor Championship in Ames, Iowa, the women's team added another title in Waco, Texas.
In the finale in Ames, it came down to the women's 4x400-meter relay, which Kansas ran fast enough to claim the title. On Sunday, the Jayhawks clinched the title before the 4x400 squad stepped on to the track. With the championship already in hand, the team ran its fastest time of the year and won the relay.
The Jayhawks hoisted a number of individual championships that helped them claim the Big 12 title and solidify their place on top of the league and their top-five national ranking.
Senior Francine Simpson won the long jump on her final attempt, knocking her teammate and fellow senior Andrea Guebelle down to second place. Simpson's jump of 6.67 meters (21 feet, 10.75 inches) set a new school record and the duo added a combined 18 points in the long jump. Guebelle later claimed the
title in the triple jump with a jump of 13.59 meters (44'77") more than two and a half feet better than the next best jump.
Sophomore Lindsay Vollmer won the heptathalon, earning the most total points in the seven-event competition, adding to her Big 12 indoor title in the pentathlon. According to a KU Athletics news release, Vollmer is the first Jayhawk to grab the heptathalon title since 1999. Vollmer also finished fourth in the high jump with a jump of 1.75 meters (5'8.75").
The women also captured the conference title in the women's 4x10 meter relay. The quartet of senior Paris Daniels, freshman Tianna Valentine, senior Denesha Morris and junior Diamond Dixon ran finished in 43.89 seconds to pick up 10 points.
Junior Jessica Maroszek won the discus event with a throw of 56.81 meters (186'5"), nearly 10 feet farther than the second place throw. Junior Natalia Bartnovskaya finished second in the pole vault, clearing a height of 4.26 meters (13'11.75").
Daniels won the 200 meters, tying a stadium record with a time of 22.73. Her 100-meter time of 11.34 seconds earned her second place in the dash.
Olympic gold medalist Dixon claimed another title, winning the 400 meters in a time of 51.73, less than a half second off the stadium record.
On the men's side, sophomore Michael Stigler and senior Kyle Clemons led the Jayhawks. The duo won the 400-meter hurdles and 400 meters respectively.
Stigler came in 49.79 in the hurdles, while Clemons won the
400-meter race in 45.10, adding a combined 20 points to the men's total. The men finished the weekend in fifth place after scoring a total of 82.5 points.
Senior Jesse Vaughn won the javelin throw for the Kansas men, topping the rest of the field with a throw of 67.86 meters (222'08") more than 13 feet farther than the second place throw.
Themensteam also claimed the 4x400-meter title. Sophomores DeMario Johnson and Kenneth McCuin joined Clemons and Stigler in the relay, winning the event in a time of 3:07.72.
The women achieved the goal of winning the Big 12 in both the indoor and outdoor seasons, but they still have unfinished business. The NCAA Outdoor Championships is a month away, and the title is attainable after a performance like the women had this weekend.
The women's 4x400-meter team of Morris, Dixon, Daniels and senior Taylor Washington didn't have to run a 3:32.00, their fastest time of the year, but they did. They didn't have to beat the Texas 4x400-meter team to win the team conference crown, but very fittingly, they did.
Before this weekend, the women's track and field team had already gathered hardware and received national rankings that no track and field women's team had ever done at Kansas. After this weekend, they will go down in history as the best women's track and field team in school history, and deservedly so. They left no doubt in anyone's mind. They are the Big 12 Champions.
- Edited by Tara Bryant
ROWING
BIG12
AWARD
CHAMPIONSHIP
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
The Kansas rowing team receives its medals after finishing third at the Big 12 Championship on Saturday in Kansas City, Kan. The Oklahoma Sooners, the conference favorite, placed first in the championship's fifth year.
Kansas finishes third in Big 12 Championship
STELLA LIANG
sliang@kansan.com
Kansas started the Big 12 Championship strong by winning the fourth varsity eight race in a close fashion. Down the stretch, the three competing boats, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, each had a chance to win. When it was announced that Kansas had won with a time of 6:41.72, the rest of the team erupted in cheers.
Kansas finished third overall in the Big 12 Championship Saturday in Kansas City, Kan., out of five teams. With the addition of West Virginia to the conference, this was the first time five teams competed. This is the fifth year of the tournament and the third time Kansas has hosted it.
This year, Oklahoma came in ranked 20th in the country and was the favorite to win the conference championship; the team didn't disappoint. Oklahoma won with 136 points. Texas came in second with 117, Kansas had 81, West Virginia had 75 and Kansas State had 66.
This was the first time that Texas did not win in the five-year history of the event.
The regatta consisted of six events: fourth varsity eight, third varsity eight, second varsity four, first varsity four, second varsity eight and first varsity eight. Fourth and third varsity eight were races by the novice teams. Teams earned points based on their standings in each race.
On a dark, overcast day on the river, under a steady drizzle, the Kansas team was happy with its performance.
"Today we went and we just wanted to race our own race," junior Caty Clements, who was the coxswain on the second varsity eight boat, said. "I think with the conditions, we did really well, and there was good clean water. We went out there and proved what we wanted to prove."
Texas won the third varsity eight race. The second varsity four race gave Texas its second race victory in a row. Kansas finished third in that race with a time of 7:34.67.
finishing just .5 seconds behind Oklahoma. From there, it was all Oklahoma. The Sooners won the last three races.
The next best showing for the Jayhawks was the second varsity eight boat, which has had success all season. Saturday, Kansas finished second behind Oklahoma with a time of 6:41.14. The field also included West Virginia's second varsity boat, which had been named the Conference USA boat of the week. Rowers on the Jayhawk boat were seniors Cheyenne Verdoorn and Danielle Adam, junior Amanda Lewis, and sophomores Julia Alvey, Claudijah Lever, Erin Brogan, Jenni Hartzler and Jade Lambkins. Clements was the coxswain.
KANSAS
"The 2V8 boat has only been beat by one team that is not ranked in the top 20." Kansas coach Rob Catloth said in a Kansas Athletics news release. "They are doing a really good job of attaining their goals."
The Kansas competes at the Big 12 Championship Saturday in Kansas City, Kan.
The Jahawks placed third in the championship's fifth year.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Throughout the event, rowers on the all-academic team were recognized. After the regatta, members of the Big 12 all-conference first and second teams were recognized. Senior Olivia Kinet earned a spot on the first team, and two Jayhawks, juniors Alex Torquemada and Liz Scherer, were named to the second team.
The Big 12 Championship was held on Wyandotte County Lake in Kansas City, Kan. All of these teams will meet again at the Conference USA Championship May 18 in Oak Ridge, Tenn., where they will compete for the automatic qualifying bid to the NCAA Championship. Until then, the team will be working hard to prepare.
"I think we are just going to work on peaking and finding that extra little tid bit of speed on our sprint, and we will be ready for Conference USA," Clements said.
Edited by Allison Hammond
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MEN'S BASKETBALL
McLemore's former coach accepted bribes
A USA Today piece by Eric Prisbell reports that Ben McLemore's Amateur Athletic Union coach received gifts and financial aid from a middleman on behalf of a sports agency looking to sign the Kansas freshman.
to Los Angeles from Rodney Blackstock, the CEO and founder of Hooplace Academy, in exchange for his influencing McLemore to sign with an agent who has not been named.
The report also notes that Richard Boyd, a cousin of McLemore, accompanied Cobb on two of his trips to California. Boyd denied the accusation to USA Today.
Darius Cobb, who coached McLemore in St. Louis, says he accepted $10,000 cash and three all-expenses-paid trips
Blackstock had also received tickets to three Kansas basketball games this
season, complimentary of McLemore, yet the piece notes the Jayhawks' leading scorer is unaware of Blackstock's intentions, nor the arrangement with Cobb.
In a statement to USA Today, Kansas athletic director Sheahon Zenger said the school was also unaware of any wrongdoing and has launched an investigation into the matter.
NCAa BAY 12.3,1.2 states that she is athletic if he or she, or friends
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or relatives, receives benefits from an agent. Under Bylaw 12.02.1, an agent is any individual who seeks to obtain any type of financial gain or benefit from securing a prospective student-athlete's enrollment at an educational institution or from a student-athlete's potential earnings as a professional athlete.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ED PHOTO
Kan. The
MONDAY, MAY 6. 2013
in
PAGE 9
QUOTE OF THE DAY
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Curry is the only player in NBA history with at least seven assists and four 8-pointers in four straight playoff games.
1.
— ESPN.com
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: Who were the only point guards in the regular season with a higher victory share than Stephen Curry?
A:Chris Paul and Russell Westbrook — basketball-refence.com
THE MORNING BREW NBA fans be warned: this Curry is hot
To the human race, curry is known as a flavorful spice mix we put on our food. It is extremely hot and
spicy. As the second round of the NBA playoffs are now underway, there is only one player who is just as hot and spicy as the curry we eat.
Yes, the Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry is so hot right now you can see the steam sizzle off him. In fact, he's so hot right now that he actually might be able to single-handedly carry his team to uncharted territory, exceed all expectations and reach the NBA Finals.
Think about it for a second. The Warriors are a very young athletic team that has to first play an old, banged up San Antonio Spurs. Assuming they get past the Spurs, they would either play a Thunder team without Russell Westbrook or a Grizzlies队 that cannot match the Warriors' guard play.
By Ryan Levine
Ryan Levine@kansan.com
If Curry continues to play at his current level, it may go down as one of the best playoff performances ever. In the first round game with the Denver Nuggets, Curry averaged 24.3 PPG, 9.3 APG, and shot an astonishing 47 percent from the field, while also going a perfect 21-21 from the free throw line.
However, Curry is more impressive than his statistics; there's also the influence he shows on the floor and how different the Warriors team looks when
he takes the bench. When Curry was on the floor playing against the Nuggets, the Warriors had a point differential of +52 and shot 51 percent as a team, compared to the -27 point differential and 42 percent from the field when he was not on the floor.
Because Curry can shoot the ball at such a high level and handle the ball exceptionally well, he is almost to the point of being named an elite player like Lebron James, Kevin Durant, and the other "ungaurdables." If defenders play up close and tight on him, he will use his quickness to get by them and either drive to the basket and score, or dish out to open shooters along the perimeter.
The best part of Stephen Curry is the fact that he does it on both ends of the floor. People know him for all of his offensive weapons, but don't pay attention to his defensive skills. As a team the Warriors forced 15 turnovers per game
KU
against the Nuggets, and allowed them to shoot 29 percent from beyond the arc when Curry was on the floor. When Curry was off the floor, the Warriors forced only 11 turnovers, and the Nuggets shot 45 percent from the 3-point line.
To say Stephen Curry is on fire right now would be an understatement. He is playing like he has a "climb on my back and I will lead you to victory" mentality, which is what you need to have in order to succeed in the playoffs.
Edited by Brian Sisk
This week in athletics
Monday
No events scheduled
Tuesday
Baseball
Wichita State
6:30 p.m.
Wichita
Wednesday
Williams Education Fund
Houston Football
Preview Party with
Charlie Weis
7 p.m.
The Armadillo Palace
Williams Education Fund
Dallas Football
Preview Party with
Chris Weis
6:30 p.m.
Dallas Market Center
Thursday
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Friday
Softball
lowa State
4 p.m.
Ames, lowa
SYRATES
A
Baseball
Kansas State
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Track Georgia Tech Invitational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
Saturday
II
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
H
Baseball
Kansas State
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Track Georgia Tech Inventational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
I
Sunday
A
Softball
iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
Baseball
Kansas State
1:00 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Tennis
NCAA 1st/2nd round
TBA
TBA
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785.841.8400
Volume 125 Issue 115
kansan.com
Monday, May 6, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAHY KANSAM
S sports
COMMENTARY Kansas athletics improve in 2013
KU
PAGE 9
YOUR MORNING BREW
The football team started strong, but lost seven straight to end the season. Former coach Mark Mangino was fired for his mistreatment of players.
The basketball team only lost two games all season, but then had an early exit in the NCAA Tournament after an ugly loss to eight-seeded Northern Iowa. A year later, Lew Perkins, former athletic director, would retire following a ticket scandal.
There is nothing wrong with that, but you already know that the University, students and professors are incredible. What many might not know is how awesome Kansas athletics have been over the years.
Many students, including myself will follow tradition and walk down the hill in 13 days.
In August 2009, I arrived on campus as a clueless freshman that didn't know what college was truly about.
After hiring Dr. Sheahon Zenger, the clouds seem to dissipate.
And the success doesn't stop there.
There seemed to be a black cloud over Kansas athletics.
The volleyball team advanced past the first round of the NCAA tournament and finished its season with the program's best winning percentage. The women's track and field squad has been the number-one team in the nation for many weeks and has a gold medalist in spinner Diamond Dixon.
Before I came to Kansas, my sister would brag about the 2008 National Championship and Orange Bowl victory. I desperately wanted both of those to happen again for the programs.
Of course, that didn't happen. The first year was far from that.
Sure, the men's basketball team didn't make it to the National Championship game, but it recovered from great adversity. Kansas lost three straight games and was on the brink of having the Big 12 regular season title streak broken. Luckily, the streak continues and stands at nine straight titles.
You know, the typical farewell column that every senior columnist writes here at the University Daily Kansan.
The tennis team advanced past the first round of the Big 12 tournament for the first time in five years. Coach Charlie Weis made the football program competitive again, and the baseball team still occupies the top half of the conference.
I came in as a freshman and the athletics programs crumbled, but now, the programs rebounded and put together one of the most memorable years in Kansas history.
Hail to old KU. Now and forever, rock chalk Jayhawk.
Edited by Brian Sisk
Plenty of great things happened last year. The men's basketball team participated in the NCAA National Championship game in a "down" year. The women team made it to the Sweet Sixteen, even though Carolyn Davis tore her ACL. Even the women's soccer team made it to the NCAA Tournament.
The women's basketball program lost a key player in Natalie Knight, but that didn't stop coach Bonnie Henrickson and the layhawks. Kansas barely made the NCAA Tournament and went to the Sweet Sixteen for the second straight year.
By Pat Strathman
pstrathman@kansan.com
Last year was great, but this year was even better.
I could sit here and describe what it truly means to be a Jayhawk. Maybe I could mention that everyone here at the University of Kansas is family to me.
PAGE 8
Big 12 Track and
Field Tournament
KANSAS 5, BAYLOR 4
KANSAS
KELSEY WEAVER/KANSAN
First baseman Alex DeLeon, a senior from Woodland Hills, Calif., runs hard for third base. DeLeon has the highest batting average on the team at .329.
HOW SWEEP IT IS
Jayhawks' three one-run victories clinch series sweep over Bears
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
The Jayhawks' weekend series sweep over the Baylor Bears is a testament to just how quickly fortunes can change in NCAA baseball.
At this time last weekend, Kansas players and coaches were preparing for the long charter flight back from Beckley, WVa., after experiencing the wrong side of three one-run losses at the hands of the West Virginia Mountaineers.
"We played so well coming into that weekend against West Virginia," senior third baseman Jordan Dreiling said. "We just wanted to put ourselves back in position to get into the NCAA tournament. Nothing better than
having a sweep after getting swept."
Kansas players broke out the brooms in a truly styling style for this 2013 lineup. The Jayhawks won all three games by a single run, winning game one 3-2, game two 6-5 on a walk off from senior shortstop Kevin Kuntz and clinching the sweep with a walk-off single from Dreiling to win 5-4.
"He left a fastball up and luckily I got a good barrel on it," Dreiling said. "I didn't know for sure. I knew I hit it well, but their right fielder made some good plays over the weekend. I didn't know if he had a good enough jump on it to catch it."
The layhawks have made an art of the one-run victory. Over the course of this season, Kansas has recorded 11 victories in one-run
fashion.
"I'll tell you what," coach Ritch Price said, "I'm glad there's a really young coach in that third base box and a really young coach in that first base box because I'm having a heart attack in the dugout."
After the weekend in West Virginia, it looked as though the Jayhawks might be out of the race for the Big 12 conference. The Jayhawks are now a half-game out of first after Oklahoma's 9-6 Sunday loss to West Virginia. The Kansas mentality never changed over the course of the turnaround.
"Energy level in the dugout is always high," Dreiling said. "We had our backs against the wall. Every game from here on out is pretty much a playoff game because we have to get our record up to get an NCAA regional bid. I
In a weekend full of Jayhawk heroes, sophomore designated hitter Connor McKay came up big in Sunday's sweep-clinching win. McKay belted two doubles to score two of Kansas' runs. One of these doubles came in the bottom of the ninth inning to tie the game at four and send the Jayhawks to extra innings.
think everybody knows that in the back of their minds and everybody believes they can contribute"
"We've lost a lot of one-run games this year," McKay said. "There was kind of that bitter taste in our mouth, especially after West Virginia. We really needed this series and the team itself, knowing how it feels to lose, wasn't going to let the loss happen."
Kansas junior closer Jordan Piche' appeared in all three of
the Jayhawks' one-run wins. Piche' struggled through one and one-third innings giving up three hits, an earned run and striking out three. The appearance raised Piche's ERA to 0.72.
"When you're asking a young man pitch three days in a row, they don't even do that in the big leagues." Price said. "He's grinded all year. The reason we're 12-9 in this league is him being the best guy in the country at the back end of games."
Kansas heads to Wichita on Tuesday for an important game against the Shockers. The game won't affect Kansas in the Big 12 race, but has a large effect on an NCAA regional bid. First pitch is set for 6:30 p.m. at Eck Stadium.
- Edited by Tara Bryant
SOFTBALL
Team makes history on Senior Day
CHRIS SCHAEDER
cschaeder@kansan.com
The Kansas softball team made history on Sunday in the team's doubleheader against No. 1 Oklahoma at Arrocha Ballpark.
Sunday's 2-0 victory over Oklahoma was the first by the Kansas softball program over a number-one ranked team. Kansas was previously 0-5 all-time against top-ranked teams.
Kansas coach Megan Smith said she was proud of her team accomplishing a historic milestone.
"We have such a special team, and we've had some games not go our way this year," Smith said in a Kansas Athletics news release. "For it to finally happen is kind of like a breath of fresh air for us. Maybe the monkey is off our back and we can take that next step now. I can't imagine a better day for the seniors than beating the No. 1 team in the country. I can't say enough about them. They've been a big reason why we've been successful year after year."
This weekend's series was scheduled for Friday and Saturday, but several rain delays prompted the switch to a Sunday doubleheader.
Kansas started off strong in its
2-0 victory with an RBI double by freshman shortstop Chaley Brickey that drove in freshman catcher Alex Hugo and gave the Jayhawks an early 1-0 lead.
Freshman pitcher Kelsey Kessler pitched a complete game and threw her fifth shutout of the season.
"Oklahoma is an incredible team, and I don't know if you ever say we deserved it or had it coming, but we've played a lot of good teams tough this year," Kessler said in a Kansas Athletics news release. "So hopefully those games taught us all the got us to where we are now. We had a lot of heart going into this game; we wanted it for our seniors."
Kessler said tough competition prepared Kansas for facing a tough team like Oklahoma.
Sunday's doubleheader was also Senior Day for Kansas. Four seniors — outfielders Rosie and Maggie Hull, pitcher Morgan Druhn and infielder Mariah Montgomery — played their last game at Arrocha Ballpark.
The doubleheader began with a 4-2 victory by Oklahoma over Kansas. Despite a complete game from sophomore pitcher Alicia Pille, two unearned runs in the
seventh inning by the Sooners gave them the victory.
Kansas took an early 1-0 lead in the second inning on an RBI double by sophomore third baseman Chanin Naudin. The Jayhawks held this lead until the top of the fifth inning when Sooners sophomore second baseman Georgia Casey hit a two-run RBI single to go on top 2-1. A throwing error by Oklahoma allowed Kansas' Hugo to score on a dropped third strike that tied the game going into the seventh inning.
A squeeze bunt and a throwing error by Kansas in the top of the seventh drove in the eventual game-winning run and an RBI single by Oklahoma's senior left-handed pitcher Keilani Ricketts gave the Sooners a 4-2 lead that they wouldn't relinquish.
The Jayhawks look to continue their momentum next weekend as they travel to Ames, Iowa, to conclude the regular season against the Iowa State Cyclones. A three-game series is scheduled for Friday, Saturday and Sunday with game times at 4 p.m., noon and noon, respectively.
Edited by Tara Bryant
KANSAS
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
Sophomore pitcher Alicia Pille pitches during the softball game against the UMKC Roos. Kansas defeated the Roos 4-0.
81
Volume 125 Issue 116
kansan.com
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
KANSAN
1. Piche'
d one
three
striking
raised
young a row, the big grinded in 12 in the bestack end
uita on
game
game
Big 12
on an
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KANSAN
UMKC
Bryant
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK the student voice since 1904
PAGE 2
Summer fitness opportunities
RECIPE FOR SUCCESS
Quiet Corral
PAGE 5
ERIN BREMER/KANSAN
ORGANIC PROD CERTIFIED $169 Fresh Salads $169 FRONTLINE ORGANIC $199 MORE PRICES
Students are opting for nutritional meals, including fresh fruits and vegetables, in their daily dining routines. On campus, maintaining a healthy diet is tough, but many dining areas provide healthy meal options.
HEALTHY HABITS
Food enthusiasts bring passion for nutrition to campus
EMMA LEGAULT
elegault@kansan.com
"You see those people who have had Type 2 diabetes for so long that their legs have been amputated," she said.
Having worked in an assisted living facility for 10 years, Karla Wessling has seen the realities of an unhealthy lifestyle.
It was here that Wessling, a student in the dieticic program at KU Medical Center from Baldwin City, felt that she could do more. As she worked her way up from cook to dietary manager, she realized her dream of becoming a dietitian.
It's a natural career path for Wessling, who has always worked in food service. From 1994 to 1998, she worked a block away from her home at Baker University in the cafeteria. She said that although no one really cared about nutrition in the '90s, she found a passion for providing food to people.
A self-described "cliché person," Wessling loves cooking Thanksgiving dinner on her own from start to finish for she and her husband's extended family every year. She calls herself a "vegetable eater," but would rather serve a sweet, decadent dessert because it makes people happy.
After working at one end of the spectrum, Wessling did a 180 and spent last fall's clinical portion of the internship at Children's Mercy Hospital developing dietary strategies for patients and educating their adult counterparts.
"Many of the children, they're born with different anomalies, where in the adult population, sometimes but not always . . . your lifestyle habits turn into your health problem," she said.
Wessling hopes the message reached them in more ways than one.
Between the internship at Children's Mercy and watching her 14-year-old son and his friends grow up, being around young people has played an important factor in Wessling's desire to spread nutritional knowledge.
Now at the management portion of her internship at KU Dining, she has the opportunity to work with a slightly older yet equally critical demographic: college students.
"My gear has changed," she said. "I worked with the elderly and I learned about nutrition, but then watching children grow up actually made me passionate about pediatric nutrition."
Brandon Volz couldn't stay away from KU Dining after graduating in 2010. He loved his job he held at the Studio at Hashinger as a freshman into his senior year, and then returned about a year ago to a supervisor position at Oliver Hall and now, North College Café.
"... Watching children grow up actually made me passionate about pediatric nutrition."
Volz has a passion for his job, where he gets to experiment with new ingredients and recipes that are newer, better, fresher and healthier. His blue eyes seem to light up as he speaks with genuine excitement about the different flavor profiles of fish, learning to saute and moving out of his comfort zone to work with vegetables, grains and fruit.
KARLA WESSLING Dietitian
He isn't much of a baker, he said, but he is an avid fan of cheesecake. In fact, his recipe for mini cheesecake shooters made its way to the dessert tray at North College Café.
"It doesn't ever feel like work," he said. "I love everything about this job."
The atmosphere of wellness KU Dining promotes prompted the energetic Volz to make a change in his own life. While he was working
at Applebee's after graduation, he woke up one day feeling lethargic, weighed down and subdued. He needed a change of atmosphere and took advantage of the opportunity to return.
Now, Volz and the staff of North College Café try to personally connect with their diners. He gives an example of an upset student when the Café runs out of Fruity Pebbles.
"When that happens, we explain to our staff that it's not necessarily that that person's crazy or anything, it means maybe something happened to them during the day — maybe the only thing they wanted to make their day better was a bowl of Fruity Pebbles, and that's what we want to be able to provide," he said.
"I get excited when I come to work," Volz. "There's a vibrance and an energy that's really present. It's not just coming in and handing them a sandwich, it's making a difference in their day."
When Volz comes to work, he finds interacting with students makes the job meaningful.
For Volz, cooking has taught him to be fearless in trying new things. His own mother's words continue to echo through his mind.
"My mom always told me that I'm not allowed when it comes to eating $_{f}$, I can't say I don't like something until I try it once," he said.
Although Wessling admitted to not eating vegetables regularly until college, her son loves vegetables and asked for a Magic Bullet for his birthday to make smoothies.
At her home in Baldwin City, Wessling tries to keep fresh options for she and her son, Ryan.
CAREER
"That's what makes me think, 'Yeah, I've probably instilled some good habits into his life,'" Wessling said. "And hopefully, he'll keep them."
Edited by Jordan Wisdom
Prepare for post-graduation job interviews with these tips
MARSHALL SCHMIDT
mschmidt@kansan.com
With graduation around the corner, here are 10 tips for landing that professional job and avoiding having to move back in with your parents.
1. DON'T PANIC
Searching for a professional job is a creative, yet vexing, process.
However, as Bill Watterson, author of the "Calvin and Hobbes" comic strip, said, "You can't just turn on creativity like a faucet. You have to be in the right mood. What mood is that? Last-minute panic."
Even if soon-to-be graduates have not even started a job search, it's never too late to start, said Chance Clutter, career counselor for the University.
"While panic can help motivate students, it is going to take time and effort." Clutter said.
2. BUT DON'T WAIT AROUND TOO LONG
The National Center for Education Statistics estimates 1,791,000 students will graduate with a bachelor's degree in 2013, which means there is plenty of competition for job openings, Clutter said.
"By delaying a job search, you might be missing those professional opportunities that exist right now, but may not exist after the summer," Clutter said. "If you are looking for that career, waiting around isn't going to help."
3. SUIT UP!
"The suit will get you cash later," Clutter said.
When it comes time to ask for your graduation gift, Clutter recommended asking for a suit to wear to job interviews instead of the usual request for cash.
The University Career Center, located in 110 Burge Union, allows students to borrow up to five pieces of professional attire to use for interviews.
4. BE AWARE OF YOUR ONLINE PRESENCE
Most employers will do some sort of Internet search on job candidates, Clutter said, which includes Facebook and Twitter.
Students can improve their online image by using social media, including creating a LinkedIn account and interacting with potential employers online. Clutter said.
"Nothing is private online," Clutter said.
5. NETWORK, NETWORK,
NETWORK
Beyond LinkedIn, students should actively make company contacts with potential employers at career fairs, with friends' employers or through internships, said Cynthia Valdivia, corporate recruiting manager for Abengoa Bioenergy Corporation in Chesterfield, Mo.
"In this world, it's all about who you know," Valdivia said. "All the jobs I've gotten are because of who I've known."
Valdivia recommended never speaking ill of previous employers, especially in an interview.
6. TREAT PAST EMPLOYERS WELL
"If you're talking bad about them, you'll talk bad about us," Valdivia said.
When considering hiring a potential employee, companies do look at work history and call references, said Misti Mustain, director of specialty services for Labette Center for Mental Health Services, Inc., in Labette County, Kan.
"We look for students who show they are looking for a career and loyal to a company," Mustain said.
7. VOLUNTEER OUTSIDE WORK
Employers are looking for balanced employees who volunteer and have other interests outside of work, Mustain said. Working unpaid internships does not count.
"We favor people who do volunteer work because it shows they have a level of care and compassion about their community," Mustain said.
Compassion is important in every job that the Labette Center hires for, including nurses, therapists and case managers.
"We can teach you the skills of working the job, but we value people who have integrity," Mustain said. "That's not easily
taught."
8. BE AGGRESSIVE. B-E AGGRESSIVE!
Many students who come to Clutter for career guidance say they are looking for any job.
"Really, they're not," Clutter said. "We need to figure out where their interests lie so we can focus the search to be more intentional about the job search."
No matter the job hired for, Jeana McCune, manager of learning innovation for H&R Block in Kansas City, Mo., said she is looking for people who are passionate about what they do.
Even if students are only offered an internship rather than a full-time position, if it's in a field they want to be in, it's still worth pursuing. Clutter said.
"It's really important to talk about your passions and what your career goals entail." McCune said. "Even if you're not graduating this year, it's still important to have your career goals two to five years ahead of time in mind."
Even if potential employers only look at a resume an average of 15 seconds before deciding to give a candidate an interview, Clutter said3 bringing a resume to a job interview is a must.
To show interest in the company, Valdivia advised asking a question at the end of the interview. And of course, always follow up with a thank-you note.
"If you don't hear anything after a week, follow up with a phone call or email," Valvidia said. "It shows you're persistent."
9. BRING A RESUME TO THE JOB INTERVIEW
"One person didn't get hired because they didn't bring their resume," Valdivia said. "We want to make sure you're prepared and pay attention to the details."
10. REMEMBER, INTERNSHIPS
CAN LEAD TO FULL-TIME
POSITIONS
"It's a good way to get inside the company and meet people," Clutter said. "Around 50 percent or so will turn into a full-time job."
Edited by Paige Lytle
THE AVE. CLUB OF MISSISSIPPI
WHERE FASHION IS CENTERED
Students can borrow clothes for professional job interviews at the University Career Center located in room 110 in the Burge Union.
Index
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS 7
CROSSWORD 5
CRYPTOQUIPS 5
OPINION 4
SPORTS 8
SUDOKU 5
All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Don't forget
Return or sell back your textbooks before the end of the school year.
Today's Weather
Boy
Partly cloudy. 20 percent chance of rain. Wind SSE at 9 mph.
件
HI: 75
LO: 54
Break out the sunscreen
3
N
news
THE UNIVERSITY
DAIRY KANSAN
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief Hannah Wise
PAGE 2
Managing editors
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Nikki Wentling
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
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NEWS SECTION EDITORS
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Sports editor Pat Strathman
Associate entertainment and special sections editor Kayla Banzet
Copy chiefs
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Taylor Lewis
Brian Sisk
Designers Trey Conrad Sarah Jacobs
Opinion editor Dylan Lysen
Photo editor Ashleigh Lee
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General manager and news adviser Malcolm Gibson
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The University Daily Kansan (USSN 0746-967) 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, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue.
The University Dial 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 Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045.
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KHK is the student voice in radio. Whether it is rock'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHK 9.5 is for you
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TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013
HI: 70
LO: 54
Mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and a chance of rain. South southeast winds at 5 to 15 mph.
Friday
Wednesday
Penguin
HI: 73
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Thursday
Hold on to your umbrella.
baby penguin
Overcast with a chance of thunderstorms and rain. North winds at 5 to 10 mph.
HI: 70
L0: 52
At least it's warm.
Kansas weather gave up.
Tuesday, May 7th
CALENDAR
C
WHAT: Jewish Studies
End-of-Year Party
WHERE: Blake Hall, 329
WHEN: 4 to 5.30 p.m.
ABOUT: Take a break from studying
to celebrate the end of the semester.
Light refreshments will be served, and
all are welcome.
Collective
WHERE: Lawrence Arts Center, 940
New Hampshire St.
WHEN: 7:30 to 9 p.m.
ABOUT: Hear various artists perform
the music of classic 60s band The
Kinks at this free event.
WHAT: The Tuesday Concert: Kinks Collective
Wednesday, May 8th
WHAT: Unclassified Senate - Full Senate Meeting
WHERE: Kansas Union, Malott Room
WHEN: Noon to 1:30 p.m.
ABOUT: Want to see how student government works? Attend the monthly Unclassified Senate meeting. It's open to the public.
WHAT: Screening of "Nawang Gombu:
Heart of a Tiger"
ABOUT. This documentary celebrates the life of the Sherpa who became the first man to climb Mt. Everest twice. The Dole Institute will hold a discussion with producer Bev Chapman after the screening.
WHERE: Dole Institute of Politics
WHEN: 3 p.m.
Thursday, May 9th
HEALTH
WHAT: KU School of Music Youth
Chorus Concert
WHERE: Murphy Hall, 328
WHEN: 5 to 6 p.m.
ABOUT: This choral group, composed
of community children, will have its
final performance of the school year.
Admittance is free.
4
WHAT: KU Tango Spring Classes
WHERE: Kansas Union
WHEN: 7:45 p.m.
ABOUT: Bring your dancing shoes
and an adventurous spirit to this free
tango lesson.
Friday, May 10th
WHAT: KJHK and SUA present Bad Rabbits
WHEN: 8 p.m.
ABOUT. Enjoy the musical styling of Bad Rabbits, a fusion of futuristic R&B and post-rock, free with your KU ID.
WHERE: Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
**WHAT:** Talib Kweli
**WHERE:** The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
**WHEN:** 8:30 p.m.
**ABOUT:** In the mood for some political hip hop? Tickets are $22 to see Brooklyn-based rapper Talib Kweli perform at The Granada.
Lawrence offers diverse summer fitness choices
HANNAH BARLING
hbarling@kansan.com
Summertime can mean sunshine, hanging out at the pool, and wandering around downtown and enjoying the freedom of no classes. But summer can also be a time to get in shape and explore ways to stay active in Lawrence.
JULIE MEYER
Various gyms and fitness centers offer workout classes during the summer.
Students can find a variety of fitness classes offered in Lawrence during the summer. Classes include dancing, yogisates, water aerobics, biking and hiking.
Aqua Zumba, offered at the Lawrence Indoor Aquatic Center located at 4706 Overland Drive, is a workout that integrates Zumba with traditional water fitness.
For a more intense workout, the Douglas County Senior Services, located at 745 Vermont St., hosts a circuit training boot camp. Varied exercises, such as jumping rope, agility and speed training, make for a full-body workout.
Douglas County Senior Services also offers ballroom dancing lessons. Participants learn dances such as the cha-cha, East Coast swing and the waltz.
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
If someone is looking for a high-intensity full-body workout, they
The Community Building dance studio, located at 115 W. 11th St., also offers dancing lessons. The lessons include belly dancing, adult tap, country dancing and hip-hop.
Yogilates is a combination of pilates and yoga. The workout, also offered at the Community Building, integrates the flexibility and relaxation of yoga with the core workout of pilates.
can join the CrossFit Lawrence Family, located at 815 E. 12th St. This strength and conditioning program increases participants' stamina and endurance while improving their body composition.
Title Boxing Club offers boxing and kickbox classes and will implement a full-body weight training class this summer. Everyone's first class is free, and the club offers two weeks of classes for $21 or a year-long membership fee with unlimited access to the gym.
Steve Nichols, a trainer at Title Boxing Club, said boxing takes cardio and makes it fun by letting out aggression.
"Any time you get to punch something during the week is a good stress relief," Nichols said.
June is National Great Outdoors Month, and Lawrence offers several ways to be active outdoors. People can go golfing at Eagle Bend Golf Course at 1250 E. 902 Road, right below the Clinton Lake dam. Clinton Lake is also home to nearly 30 miles of trails on which people can bike, hike or run.
Collin Earhart, an employee at Sunflower Outdoor and Bike at 804 Massachusetts St., said biking is a great way to get out and explore the community. He said people who bike in Lawrence are lucky because they have multiple options for trails. Besides Clinton Lake, there is a nine-mile River Trail in North Lawrence. Earhart said biking can be beneficial to
Earhard also said biking is a good way to kill a hangover.
The Ambler Student Recreation Fitness Center launched its bike rental program in April. Twelve bikes are available: eight mountain bikes and four comfort bikes. Rates are $8 per day, $16 per week-
college students because it's an easy way to get around town.
"With campus on a hill, you get a workout just going to class," Earhart said.
end and $24 for an entire week.
Canoe KU will host a canoe trip on the Buffalo River in Arkansas on May 28 through June 3. The five-day excursion includes floating on the river and camping. One payment of $350 covers all meals, transportation and equipment.
The Rec also has a long list of other outdoor activity rentals. Students, faculty and staff can rent camping chairs, coolers, tents, sleeping bags, stoves and cooking sets, climbing shoes, backpacks, kayaks, canoes and frisbee golf sets.
Whichever activity seems most interesting, take time this summer to try something new and enjoy Lawrence while getting fit.
Edited by Paige Lytle
CAMPUS
Professor leads walking tour
EMILY DONOVAN
edonovan@kansan.com
When Ted Johnson walks by Fraser Hall, he notices something intriguing about the blooming yellow and red tulips in the flower bed. Unlike their cousins only a few hundred feet away by the marquee outside Watson Library that stretch straight up to the sun, these blooms all bend slightly to the northeast.
Johnson, a professor emeritus of French who has walked past Fraser since coming to the University in 1968, can't help but wonder why. On this year's Stop Day walking tour, "The Perspectives on the Monument of Mount Oread," he hopes to find out.
"There's a certain humor in these things." Johnson said.
For more than 20 years, Johnson has led a public walking tour of campus, focusing on historically significant locations. As the tour covers different topics of
When the Spencer Art Museum opened its doors in the new building in 1978, Johnson felt liberated from boring projector slides as he realized he could incorporate real works of art into his classroom. Explaining that "campus" comes from the Latin word for "field," he would lead his humanities classes across campus, discovering pine trees and grasses that aren't native to the state of Kansas. These strolls inspired an annual walking tour open to the public.
discussion over the course of nine hours, attendees are encouraged to come and go.
As the sun peeked from 14th Street on his first tour in 1991, Johnson explained how Lawrence, Tiananmen Square and ancient
"The word 'idea' comes from the word 'to see things differently'" Johnson said. "On this tour, the idea is to stroll around. Ideas pop up, and then we cultivate them."
Roman cities are all arranged alike on an east-west grid. To understand the Natural History Museum building, he considers that the limestone is 320 million years old — older than the stegosaurus of the Jurassic period. As the group passed the Campanile on a recent tour, another professor recognized a line from an unfinished Cicero poem, "Cedant arma togae," engraved on the WWII memorial.
"I learn so much each time I do this," Johnson said. "If there are, say, 10 or 20 people in the group, we have hundreds of years of experience right there, of competence and knowledge that they can contribute."
The tour begins Friday morning at 9 a.m. in front of the Natural History Museum. Events end at 5 p.m. outside Spooner Hall with a summary of the day's dialogues.
Edited by Madison Schultz
STOP DAY WALKING TOUR SCHEDULE
9 a.m. "Whoso findeth wisdom findeth life."
Location: Natural History Museum, 14th and Jayhawk Boulevard
11 a.m. "Make our garden grow" (final chorus of Leonard Bernstein's Candide).
Location: Twente Hall and then to the Prairie Acre
10 a.m. The Seven Liberal Arts and the Classical Tradition.
Location: Lippincott Hall
1 p.m. Lunch and conversation.
Location: The Crimson Café,
Burge Union.
Noon. Memory, the Muses, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Location: Watson Library and then across the campus to Burge Union
2 p.m. "Civilization is measured by the extent to which people obey unenforceable laws." Location: The Law School.
}
3. p.m. "Of cycles and civilizations: the Chi Omega Fountain and the University of Kansas Korea and Vietnam War Memorials."
Location: The Chi Omaga Fountain and Memorial Drive.
4 p.m. The World War II Memorial Carillon and Campanile and the northern slopes of Mount Oread.
Location: The Memorial Campanile.
5 p.m. Tentative Syntheses and Perspectives.
Location: Arthur D. Weaver Court, adjacent to Spooner Hall
*
AGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013
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PAGE 3
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Friend of Tsarnaev faces 8 years in prison
Bury this terrorist on U.S. soil and we will unbury him
AMERICAN JUSTICE
BESTOW
STRONG
From left, Lisa Taurasi, Lucy Rodriguez and Luis Barbosa hold protest signs as they stand across the street from Graham Putnam & Mahoney Funeral Parliars in Worcester, Mass. on Sunday evening. They are upset about the possibility that Boston marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev may be buried in the United States.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WORCESTER, Mass. — A magistrate judge on Monday agreed to release a friend of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev from federal custody while he awaits trial for allegedly lying to federal investigators probing the bombings.
Robel Phillipos, 19, was charged last week with lying to investigators about visiting Tsarnaev's college dorm room after the bombings. The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth student faces a maximum of eight years in prison if convicted.
Prosecutors initially asked that Phillipos be held while he awaits trial, arguing he poses a serious flight risk. But both sides said in a court motion filed Monday they agreed that Phillipos should be released on $100,000 bond, face home confinement and wear an electronic monitoring bracelet.
"We are confident that in the end we will be able to clear his name," defense attorney Derege Demissie said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney John Capin said documents filed over the weekend by Phillipos' defense attorneys, including many affidavits showing support from family and friends, might be viewed as indirectly questioning the government's case against Phillipos.
"The government stands by its allegations." Capin said.
Defense attorney Susan Church described Phillips as a well-liked, honor roll student with many friends. At least 50 relatives, friends and other supporters attended the court hearing.
Church emphasized that Phillipos is not accused of helping Tsarnaev and his brother plan or carry out the bombings.
"At no time did Robel have any prior knowledge of this marathon bombing," she said.
Magistrate Judge Marianne Bowler agreed to the strict house arrest during a hearing Monday afternoon. She told Phillipos he was allowed to leave the house only for meetings with his lawyers or true emergencies.
It was not immediately clear when Phillips would be released.
Meanwhile, a funeral director
trying to find a cemetery to take the body of Tsarnaev's older brother and alleged accomplice, Tamerlan, pledged to ask the city of Cambridge to allow him to be buried in a city-owned cemetery because the brothers lived in Cambridge for the last decade.
Cambridge City Manager Robert Healy said he is urging Tsarnaev's family not to make the request.
"The difficult and stressful efforts of the citizens of the City of Cambridge to return to a peaceful life would be adversely impacted by the turmoil, protests, and wide spread media presence at such an interment," Healy said in a statement Sunday.
Worcester funeral director Peter Stefan said he hasn't been able to find a cemetery in Massachusetts willing to accept the remains of Tamerlan, who was killed following a gunbattle with police after the bombings. He said if Cambridge turns him down, he will seek help
from state officials. Stefan said Monday he is looking outside of Massachusetts and does not think Russia will take the body.
body is a family issue" that should not be decided by the state or federal government. He said family members had "options" and he hoped they would make a decision soon.
Gov. Deval Patrick said Monday the question of what to do with the
He declined to say whether he thought it would be appropriate for the body to be buried in Massachusetts.
stepping back and let the family make their decisions", the governor told reporters.
Phillipos is accused of lying to investigators about visiting Dzokhar Tsarnaev's college
"We showed the world in the immediate aftermath of the attacks what a civilization looks like, and I'm proud of what we showed, and I think we continue to do that by
"We are confident that in the end we will be able to clear his name."
DEREGE DEMISSIE Defense attorney
Tsarnae's dorm room All four had studied at UMass Dartmouth.
dorm room on April 18, three days after the bombings. Two other friends were charged with conspiring to obstruct justice by taking a backpack with fireworks and a laptop from
Phillipos' attorneys said in court documents their client had nothing to do with the deadly bombings and isn't a flight risk.
In letters filed with the motion, friends and family members urged the court to release Phillips on
bail, describing him as peaceful and non-violent.
"I was shocked and stunned when I heard the news of my arrest. I could not control my tears," wrote Zewditu Alemu, his aunt. "I do not believe that my beloved Robel crosses the line intentionally to support or assist such a horrendous act against us the people of the USA. By nature he does not like violence. He loves peaceful environment."
Phillipos' resume, filed in court, shows he was majoring in marketing with a minor in sociology at UMass Dartmouth and expected to graduate in 2015.
The Tsarnaev brothers are accused of carrying out the bombings using pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails, ball bearings and metal shards. The attack killed three people and injured more than 260 others near the marathon's finish line.
KU$\textcircled{1}$nfo
At last week's KU employee recognition, 7 people were honored for 45 years of service and 16 were honored for 40 years. That's a total of just under 1,000 nonpharmed services.
to KU!
ALEXANDRIA BARBERS
POLICE REPORTS
- A 23-year-old female was arrested yesterday on the 3900 block of Harvard Road on suspicion of operating a vehicle under the influence. A $500 bond was paid.
- A 21-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the intersection of 19th and Haskell Streets on suspicion of no valid driver's license and no insurance. A $200 bond was paid.
- A 21-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 1200 block of Ohio Street on suspicion of no valid driver's license, transporting an open container and no insurance. A $800 bond was paid.
- A 24-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 2300 block of Kasold Drive on suspicion of operating a vehicle under the influence, transporting an open container and suspended tag. A $700 bond was paid.
Emily Donovan
STATE
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas Medicaid cuts provide funding for in-home services
TOPEKA, Kan. — Advocates for the disabled Monday praised Gov. Sam Brownback's plan to use projected savings from the state's Medicaid program to pay for in-home services and said they also will push for a long-term plan to end waiting lists for such assistance.
The Kansas Developmental Disabilities Policy Group's endorsement of the Republican governor's plan came even as advocates for the developmentally disabled remained at odds with Brownback's administration over including their services next year in an overhaul of Medicaid, which covers health care
for the needy and disabled.
State officials said last month that the overhaul of Medicaid would save the state $62 million more than previously anticipated during the current fiscal year and the fiscal year beginning July 1. The overhaul turned administration of most of the Medicaid program over to three private health insurance companies this year and renamed it KanCare.
Brownback predicted that the overhaul not only would lower the state's cost but provide better-coordinated health care for participants. The governor has proposed using $8 million from the state"s "KanCare dividend" savings on in-home
services for the physically and developmentally disabled, plus $10.5 million in federal funds, to move about 600 people off of waiting lists during the next fiscal year.
Coalition members said the governor's proposal, if adopted, would represent the most significant progress in years toward reducing the waiting lists. But they said they'd like to see Kansas go further and commit to eliminating its waiting lists, which contained about 5,400 people as of last month, according to the state.
"The previous administrations never addressed it at all," said Ronda Klein, a Topeka resident and the mother of a 19-year-old son, Curtis, who is autistic, developmentally disbled and prone to seizures. "It's a great first step."
Kansas legislators plan to reconvene Wednesday after a spring break to wrap up business for the year. Lawmakers must finish a state budget of roughly $14.5 billion for the next fiscal year, and Brownback's proposal on Medicaid savings is among the major issues facing House and Senate negotiators.
Some families wait years for inhome services that can include an attendant to help a disabled child with daily tasks. The state has separate waiting lists for people with developmental disabilities and people with physical disabilities,
and some people with development disabilities are receiving some but not all of the services they sought. According to the state, as of April, in-home services cost an average of $1,765 a month for the physically disabled and $3,534 a month for the developmentally disabled.
Tim Wood, manager of the Disability Rights Center of Kansas' "End the Wait" campaign, said the coalition isn't specifying how quickly it wants the state to eliminate the waiting lists but added, "We need to have an effectively working plan."
Advocates of the developmentally disabled were among the most vocal critics of the Brownback administration's overhaul of Medicaid and won a year's reprieve in having their in-home services administered by the private health insurance companies. They're seeking a permanent "carve out", arguing that private companies aren't well-equipped to deal with ongoing services.
But Angela de Rocha, spokeswoman for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, noted that the administration projects that carving out services for the developmentally disabled would cost an additional $9 million during the next fiscal year and "jeopardizes the state's ability to address the waiting lists."
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opinion
When you think schol hall, think hot nerd
Brunettes just do it better. And by "it," I mean sex.
Dear KU, Please repair the roads on campus. Sincerely, Every KU student.
Laziness is having the Jimmy Johns delivery guy pass your sandwiches through the window so you don't have to walk the 10 feet to open the door.
After reading about meditation, I skipped math lab and went to Potter Lake.
Correctly guessing what to wear in Kansas in spring is like winning the lottery.
Well, Batman is in the Justice League soooo yeah I guess you can buy your way in. Also be a badass.
To the dude that thinks everything awesome starts with a B. You forgot Bill Self
Batman turned the Justice League down. Look it up. He was tired of pulling their sorry asses out of the fire all the time
Ha, I see what you did there.
If "Minnesota doesn't have winter in May," then why did they get 18 inches of snow over the weekend?
Dear Brain, please stop hurting and work. Love, Rest of body.
To the people that think it's funny to post the overshared memes in the FFA, it’s not.
I wonder how many calories I just inhaled from stress eating.
To the girl jammin' at the Bailey bus stop, I'm glad someone is enjoying their Monday.
I'm so glad I don't have to worry about makeup dripping down my face. You should try it girls. Editor's note: Maybe you should try not telling what to do.
If you know you have to stand in front of your entire class and present... Don't let a girl leave you three huge hickies on your neck.
Its not that I'm bored in class or anything, but there are 142 ceiling tiles in Budig 120.
If she doesn't consider super wealth a super power, she's too young for you, bro.
I wanna get a pit bull and name him
Esteban Julio Ricardo Montoya de la
Rama Ramírez.
I think I'm going to change majors and become an engineer so I can get overpaid for stupid ideas.
Why don't girls who wear mom shorts look as good as the mom's who wear them.
Very strong Monday FFA people. Let's use this synergy moving forward into next quarter.
TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013
Bmarijuana makes me laugh.
POLITICS
Empathy matters more than sympathy
Politicians are often accused of being out of touch with the American people. For instance, Congress failed to pass a measure expanding background checks on firearms despite the fact, according to several news sources, that 91 percent of responding registered voters supported it. In other words, they failed to empathize with the recent victims of such neglect.
But people are drawn to politicians that think like them — the lower class loved President Clinton because he grew up without a dad and played a mean sax. His experiences with poverty were reflected in his policy. And one of President Bush's few redeeming qualities was that he seemed like a man you could share a beer with (Romney was a teetotaler, and look how that turned out for him). Sure, we have a constitution, but there really is no set of rules on how
to be a good leader. Politics is all about empathy.
To be honest, I never thought about getting into politics until Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach tried to bring SB-1070 to Kansas, and I suddenly had to worry about getting pulled over and subsequently asked to show my papers just because I have black hair, brown skin and the ability to roll my Rs. And then I became certain of my decision after I lost my health insurance and got denied by every damn company for having too many pre-existing conditions. My life has been turned upside down by bad policy, and so I got into this business in hopes that I could someday have a say in my own health. I don't want your sympathy, I want your empathy.
There's a difference. Let me tell you a story about my sister and I. She got the psychological illness and I got the physical illness. We
By Will Webber
wwebber@kansan.com
both got the stubbornness. So I'd get sick and she's been sick before, but it's like, maybe a mild cold at worst — and shed sympathize with me because she knew that being sick sucks.
But she had no idea what it's like to constantly struggle for air, or to have fluid in her lungs more often than not or to be in so much physical pain for so long that she forgets what comfort feels like. She was diagnosed with depression, anxiety and some other things a few years back. She was unhappy. I've been unhappy before, but it's like, my mom
grounded me from N64 for a day — and I'd sympathize because a day without Donkey Kong was a bad day, but I had no idea what it was like to really hate myself sometimes or to lose joy in the things I love, or to have so many negative thoughts in my head that I forget how to smile. So I dismissed it. It wasn't a real disease like mine; it was an excuse.
I've had a taste of it this year. It's worse than anything that's ever put me in the hospital. I never once tried to understand what she was going through for the years that she struggled, and I became part of the problem. I'm so sorry for that. It's sad, but there are a lot of people in this world who have trouble believing in something if they haven't personally experienced it. So we're not on the same page. We aren't helping one another. Rural and urban Americans look at a gun and see either a source of recreation and venison or a source of fear and death. Rich Americans sympathize with the poor, but don't understand that working harder isn't always the answer when your school, family, friends and environment all set you up for failure.
Most politicians are strongly motivated by their own interests. Try to name a Republican senator in favor of marriage equality that didn't suddenly have an epiphany after his son came out of the closet. I'm as guilty of that as anyone. But I've been writing columns for a full school year now, and I like to think that I've learned a little empathy in the process. I'm done writing about myself — at least for awhile — because I think it's time help someone else tell their story.
SOCIAL MEDIA
Webber is a freshman majoring in journalism and political science from Prairie Village
Controversial girls-only app allows anonymous reviews
Ever heard of Lulu? Ladies,
I expect you have at least downloaded the newest craze app, searched your crush's profile and left a review or two.
Guys, I have to break it to you,
you most likely are out of the loop on this one, with the exception of those of you who have borrowed your lady-friend's phones in order to scope out your own profile.
Lulu, the dating database built by girls for girls, no boys allowed Luluvise created the platform for private networking between women after raising $1 million in November 2011. Originally, the website fared OK as it represented 69 countries, but not many women were jumping at the chance to look up men they knew. However, Lulu believes they have figured out the best way to spread the word about their exclusive database: U.S. colleges.
By Jordan Warren
jwarren@kansan.com
This "girls-only app for dating intelligence" launched via invitation-only at Florida State University and the University of Florida in January. By the end of the month, 60,000 women had downloaded the Lulu app and reviewed 140,000 men. On Feb. 7, Lulu launched nationwide as, "A private, fun - and - safe - space for girls to talk," according to a
When I first heard of this app, I laughed at the prospect of rating the guys I know. Then, like many women, I became curious to know what was out there on this secret database of men. I downloaded it, scrolled through some hilarious reviews and talked about it at work. You know, like what you do on Facebook. Only this time it was different. We ladies had the power to look at all the profiles and have immediate access on our phones. The guys had to peek over our shoulders or borrow our phones to see what was out there in cyberwars
Lulu blog post. To counter Lulu for girls, the company launched a web-based LuluDude, where guys can edit their profiles and request reviews from girls. Unfortunately, men, you still cannot rate women.
Is it fair? Goodness no. But, is life fair? Men may be upset they cannot simply download the app and read everything posted
on their profile. They may even feel anger at the fact they do not have an equal site to rate women. However, if you think about it, many rating sites began as males rating females. This app is simply the opposite.
Some, who have downloaded the app to learn what the craze is all about, feel it is stereotypical to rate people on their attributes. Actually, rating females is stereotypically considered a male trait. Wait, hold the phone! Women do the same thing? Of course we do. This app happens to allow us to do it anonymously and with the exclusivity of girl-world. You may think its weird, dumb, crazy, sexist, etc.
To me, it is a bit of fun that breaks up the monotony of other social media sites. The truth is, ladies, when you hit it off with a guy on your next night out, you are going to Facebook stalk him when you get home. Instead of drowning in all the photos and status updates, you can turn to Lulu and find exactly what you wanted. Who are you going to review?
Warren is a junior majoring in journalism from Overland Park
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Follow us on Twitter @UDK_Opinion. Tweet us your opinions, and we just might publish them.
EDUCATION
Evaluations offer great opportunity
图9
@jhonjhonman
@UDK_Opinion garfield
It's that time of year again when professors start sweet-talking their students, and GTAs beg for a little compassion. It's the time when extra credit is handed out as freely as T-shirts on Wescoe Beach, and when TAs give their most enthusiastic performance of the semester. That's right, it's time for instructor evaluations.
For those new to the process, every instructor is given a few weeks to choose a class period where they give their students a few minutes to fill out an anonymous survey to evaluate how the instructor did as a teacher. All evaluations have the basic questions such as how organized the class was, how helpful and available the instructor was, etc. From there the evaluations are kept in an envelope until the end of the semester, and after grades are turned in, the professors can see how they did. Basically, it's the student's opportunity to grade their professor.
Which is all fine and dandy, except that before most professors give out the evaluation forms they give the "instructions." Now I don't know about all of you, but I've been filling out bubble sheets since the first grade. I think by now, as a college student, if you fail to completely fill in the bubble you probably have a problem. Even so, instructors are required to give instructions on how the evaluations work. Notice, however, that while instructions are required, the guilt comes free of charge. Every semester about this time of year all around campus instructors pause, holding their envelope hostage, while they give one final plea for leniency. It is here that, following the official instructions, the instructor stresses the importance of the evaluations towards their career. They talk about what a pleasure it has been to have us in class (and suspiciously, that's the only day I hear that for most classes) and that they have loved getting to know "each and every one" of us. Then they go for the real point: the guilt.
Suddenly you're hearing about how seriously they take the evaluations, and about how they hope that you had as much fun taking the class as they had teaching it. They suddenly
@ChazSchneider
@UOK. Opinion Will Ferrell
Chaz #MomMeatao!!
By Anna Wenner
awenner@kansan.com
remind you of that extra credit they gave out last class period, or for good measure, change a due date at that moment so that the students realize how truly awesome they are.
By the time they finish, I usually have a good helping of guilt on my soul, though I like to think that I fill out the evaluation the same way regardless. But it's not just for my own conscious that I feel this needs to be addressed—it's because seeing a grown professional grovel is just uncomfortable and sad. Still, if they're going to go for the guilt technique, they really ought to go all out. Less "you're all great" speeches and more creativity is in order, in my not-so-humble opinion. Thus, to help out these nervous instructors, I shall get them started on their more creative techniques.
WIFE AND KIDS
The "I have a wife and kids to feed" excuse is getting a little old. I mean, most people do have a family the support, which is a very valid thing, but they should really spice it up a little. I mean, two kids? Easy. But what if they had a spouse, 16 kids, a few dogs and a guinea pig? I admit, knowing might give them a boost in their numbers, even if it was just for the first sign of creativity from them.
THIS ISN'T BRIBERY. RIGHT?
If they're going to go for bribery, I think a little more extreme measures are in order. I mean, a few points of extra credit might cause a tinge of guilt as I'm writing a bad review, but it won't make or break my ratings. However, throwing a party, bringing lots of free food, and cancelling the final could definitely improve the ratings I give. (Especially canceling the final... Any of my professors, feel free to take note!)
Wenner is a sophomore majoring in English and history from Topeka
---
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9
Today is a 9
Kick back, play and think big,
Ask probing questions, and don't worry about results. Love gives you the advantage. Convince through logic. Broaden your perspective. Use all your charms.
Send a positive message.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8
You have extra resources for a household project, if you need them. Follow a bunch. Heed advice from family. Convince your partner by addressing their concerns. Listen for the best plan.
You and an expert can solve a tough problem. Follow a friend's recommendation. Love and truth get you past any tough spots with grace. People are saying nice things about you.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9
An important person comes through for you again. Accept more responsibility with a challenge, gracefully. Stick with what you know works, for a while. Continue to shop wisely. It pays off.
Leo (July 23-Aug.22)
Today is a 9
Welcome a visitor from far away. Consider a new possibility, and make a wise move on to the next adventure. Follow a great suggestion. Public funds may be available. Green light: go.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9
A dream figure shows you how to make a change. Meanwhile, accept a gift for your home. Bring out valuables you've kept hidden. Money for a household investment becomes available. Test a new
product.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9
brilliance.
Try out a new idea and get creative. Friends offer good advice. Tell the truth, and ask probing questions. Learn new skills from a master. Dazzle them with your
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8
Ask for what you want, and accept a generous offer. Keep track of your promises. Work can be fun, too you know. Don't forget to invoice. Work faster and more.
more money.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Accept an honor and a great suggestion from a child. Your imagination is greatly admired. Control your personal spending. You have the innate power to do this. Friends believe you can do
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8
Keep track of your winnings. Get it in writing. Arrange financing or play with investments. You may have more than you realize. Continue a renovation project. Good news comes from far away.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8
Collaboration is a good idea. This could even be enjoyable. Turn down a risk. Persuade with the evidence, and let friends know what you've discovered. This new information causes a modifica-
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20 Today is a 9
Consider another profitable idea.
Accept a new assignment on your
conditions. Confirm plans in writing.
Believe you can succeed. The
checks get written. You're winning
admiration, and it fits your heart.
CROSSWORD
TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013
ACROSS
1 Docket entry
5 Heidi's range
9 One's years
12 Greatly
13 Inquisitive
14 Present
15 Madison's place
17 Exist
18 Ardor
19 Cuts into cubes
21 Extra
24 Rover's friend
25 Difficult
26 Hawk trainer
30 Carte lead-in
31 Eliot's Marner
32 Rotation duration
33 Outwardly curved on both sides
35 Bouquet holder
36 Reed instrument
37 Essential points
38 Prenatal test, for short
40 — morgana
42 Island neckwear
43 Grayish metallic element
48 A Gershwin
49 Author Hunter
50 Medicinal amount
51 X rating?
52 Force measure
53 Unseen hitch
DOWN
1 Crow's call
CHECK OUT THE ANSWERS
http://bit.ly/11cFy30
2 Clay, now
3 "Help!"
4 Left an impression
5 Actress Paquin
6 Missing
7 Omega preceder
8 Municipa magistrates
9 Huge snakes
10 Bush opponent
11 Rams fans?
16 U.K. ref. bk.
18 Altar affir mative
21 Moby-Dick's pursuer
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19 20 19
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 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59
CRYPTOQUIP
PAGE 5
U'K ZQYVJXLBJA JVMUGR LNB YHZSUVXY, SVKPVILZQJB YVPZ U QVXRNL ABYLBIOZA. UL'Y YUKHJA OUMZG! Today's Cryptoquip Clue: U equals I
22 "The Persistence of Memory" painter
23 Severe
24 Linen source
26 Basketball team
27 Brewery product
28 Right on the map?
29 Deli loaves
31 Took a nap
34 Japanese sash
35 Food
37 Classic muscle car
38 Settled down
39 Unembellished
40 Drescher or Lebowitz
41 Zits
44 Poison —
45 Charged bit
46 Portion of N.A.
47 "Family Guy" daughter
1 4 2
2 2 8 7
5 9
1 6 2 9
3 9
3 7 4
9 4
8 6 1
2 7 1
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PLAY
BENNY BROADWAY FOUNDATION
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO BY HARRISON SCHEIR
Quiet Corral has played in a variety of music festivals, including Austin City Limits, South by Southwest, Middle of the Map Fest and is scheduled to play in Kanrockas.
CORRAL CHEMISTRY
Formed in 2010, local band Quiet Corral has worked its way through the music festival rankings
CARA WINKLEY editor@kansan.com
Ten minutes before the show, only a handful of people were standing in front of the stage.
waiting for the next act to go on. The venue was a smaller stage across the hall from the Uptown main stage, a two-level room with the bar up top overlooking the dance floor and stage. The blue walls framed the sunken stage and looked like a picture box framing the band as they set up. After a few minutes of sound check, Quiet Corral, a six-man band, began to play. The dance floor was packed. Two girls slyly made their way around the people in front of them to stand front and center of the stage. As the band
this summer. This local band is quickly gaining recognition in the music industry, and is doing so by its strong relationship with its fans and smart strategy to get ahead.
began to play their first song — an upbeat original — everyone watched intently. They started to rock back and forth, bobbing their heads and mimicking every move the band made.
Quiet Corral formed in 2010. It started touring the summer of 2011 and has played many big-name music festivals including Austin City Limits, South by Southwest, Middle of the Map Fest and will play at Kannocksas
The band has six members: Isaac Flynn, 21, from Lawrence plays drums, guitar and vocals; Jesse Roberts, 26, from Hutchinson, does vocals and plays guitar and the mandolin; Zach Mehl, 22, from Lawrence, plays guitar keyboard and vocals; Matt Green, 22, from Lawrence, plays bass guitar and vocals; J Barnes,
"We like getting to know people and establishing real friendships."
ISAAC FLYNN Band member
32, from Picayune, Miss., plays the drums; Garrett Childers, 24, from Phoenix, Ariz., does vocals and guitar.
Their chemistry with each other and their fans is a large part of what makes them successful and what keeps listeners coming back for more. As I was interviewing them on the sidewalk in downtown Kansas City, Mo., outside the Uptown Theater, many fans of the band came walking
by. Each time they did, Flynn immediately acknowledged them and struck up a short "How are you?" conversation. He made each one of them feel recognized and important.
Some of their fans are good friends whom they have known since before the band, and they still hang out with them all the time. As for the newer fans, Flynn says he tries to say hi and have a real conversation with them. "We like getting to know people and establishing real friendships," Flynn said.
Also, a band needs to actually get along with one another to be successful. "We have good chemistry and enjoy being around each other," Green said.
Quiet Corral originally was called Quiet Chorale, which basically means "quiet singing group." They decided this probably wasn't a great name for a rock band, so they changed the "chorale" to "corral." Even now, people sometimes get confused when they see the name
and think they are a country band. Though they may wear flannel sometimes, they describe their music style as rock with influences of folk, gospel and Tom Petty.
Quiet Corral's music style complemented the Middle of the Map Fest, a three-day music festival of local, national and emerging artists in downtown Kansas
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PAGE 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY MAY 7, 2013
CORE
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO BY HARRISON SCHEIB
Quiet Corral agrees that Lawrence is one of the best places to play. The band loves the level of support and energy that local fans exude
...
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO BY HARRISON SCHEIR
The band posts its new music videos on its Facebook page. Quiet Corral is scheduled to release a new album on iTunes.
CORRAL FROM PAGE 5
City, Mo. Halfway through their set at the Middle of the Map Fest, a group of four girls dressed in sheer flowery and solid tops, skinny jeans and scarves started getting really into the music creating their own crazy dance moves, moving around, laughing. The band played off their energy and engaged the crowd in every song they sang.
Throughout their set, Isaac would scan the crowd, making eye contact with friends and giving them a little laugh when not singing. Zach blew a kiss to his girlfriend standing a little behind first row.
At the end of their set, they began moving around each one playing a different drum. The energy on stage was immense. They bobbed their heads to the beat of the drums. Every minute, they would switch places on stage and start playing their new drum with even more enthusiasm than the last. Halfway through the drum medley, Isaac came out into the audience banging the drum hanging from his body. The girls in the front row squealed with excitement as he came and stood right next to them facing the audience.
Bethany Brown from Kansas City, Mo., came to Middle of the Map Fest and saw Quiet Corral play for the first time. After the set, she exuded excitement and amazement from Quiet Corral's drum medley toward the end of the set. "That was awesome. They totally engaged the whole crowd," she said.
Quiet Corral writes all its own lyrics. Jesse is the one who will write, then during practice, the whole band will come together and modify or perfect what he created. Some of the members are Christian, including Jesse, and their beliefs are expressed through some of the lyrics they sing.
Leah Frees, the fiancee of Jesse, says that her favorite Quiet Corral song is called "Where the River Ends." jesse wrote the lyrics, and it tells a story about how through all waters of life, he wants to be where she is. "It's about being committed to me," Freed said.
"We focus on writing the best songs that we possibly can and good songwriting will hopefully go a long way," Flynn said.
When asked what it's like walking on stage to a crowd of people coming to listen to their music, Green says, "It's like nothing else." He enjoys playing in Lawrence because "Lawrence is the epitome of that for us because there are so many great supporters. I value every time I play there."
Patrick Ashby, a "mini groupie," according to his friend Dusty West, tries to come to every Quiet Corral show when they are in town. He first saw Quiet Corral when they played at Crossroads. "I liked what I heard and have been going to [their shows] ever since," Ashby said.
Although their strong relationship with their fans helps their popularity, their strategy is ultimately what helps get them out in front of their fans. Quiet Corral began
playing in Lawrence at various bars around town. In 2011, they started working with a booking agent who books them for shows, festivals and tours. They then took the next step in their strategy and decided to fully commit to the band.
Fully committing to the band comes with some drawbacks and tough decisions. At the time, three of the band members were enrolled and taking classes at the University. When deciding whether or not to quit school and focus on the band, Flynn talked to his teachers, and
two of them in particular encouraged him to quit, saying that he could always come back, but that trying to make it big as a band was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
This decision has allowed the band to further its success by playing one of the top music festivals in the U.S.: Austin City Limits.
have had some incredibly memorable life experiences."
"I think getting to play something like Austin City Limits causes a boost in morale, and more importantly, it's a really cool life experience," Flynn said. "If nothing else happens with the band, we will
Through these experiences, Flynn has learned a lot about the business side of things. "The biggest thing I've learned is that you can only control what you put out. I want everything we release to the public, whether it's a song, a video, a website, or anything else to be high quality," Flynn said.
The band just finished recording a new album, coming to iTunes soon. There is no release date set, but the band plans to have a release
party with all their friends and fans. Currently they are working on new videos and posting them to their Facebook page for fans to watch.
"We are really looking forward to releasing [the album] and getting a reaction to it; whether it's good or bad, only time will tell, but we're hoping that it's good," Flynn said.
— Edited by Jordan Wisdom
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RUDY'S PIZZERIA
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FILM
'Great Gatsby' captures luster of new millenium
There's a lot to like about "The Great Gatsby," Baz Luhrmann's flashy, messy, manic adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel. That slim but thematically tricky little volume remains a captivating riddle, which may be why no filmmaker has created the "definitive" version. Luhrmann, the fourth to try, hasn't, either — there's a lot to dislike here as well — but his is easily the most entertaining "Gatsby" yet.
It's a product of its time, as were the others: a 1926 silent, a 1949 noir and a gauzy 1974 romance starring hunk-of-the-moment Robert Redford as the mysterious Long Island millionaire Jay Gatsby. This version is a postmodern pastiche: Flappers gyrate to Jay-Z, Gatsby's Gold Coast mansion looks like a Disneyland castle and Jazz Age New York has more candy-colored costumes and confetti than a Katy Perry concert. (Make that Madonna; Luhrmann's vision of pop spectacle sometimes recalls the 1980s more than the 1920s or 2010s.)
The anachronisms hammer home are
obvious point — 'twas ever thus! — which would get tiresome if not for some outstanding performances. Carey Mulligan is picture perfect as Gatsby's aristocratic beloved, Daisy Fay Buchanan, but the character's vibrancy has been written away; now she's just sad, sad, sad. Tobey Maguire, as Nick Carraway, strikes a nice blend of passivity and outrage, while Joel Edgerton, as Daisy's husband, Tom, is a revelation, bringing out the nobility in this story's go-to villain. Crucial roles, such as the jet-setting Jordan Baker (Elizabeth Debicki) and the ill-used Myrtle Wilson (Isla Fisher), are reduced to near-cameos.
As for Leonardo DiCaprio, he is now the Gatsby to beat. Despite a borderline comedic entrance — haloed by fireworks and accompanied by Gershwin's "Rhapsoy in blue" — DiCaprio nails this maddening enigmatic character. He's as tough as Alan Ladd in '49, as suave as Redford in '74, but also vulnerable, touching, funny, a faker, a human. You hear it all in Gatsby's favorite phrase, "old sport," a verbal tic that stumped other actors. It's a tremendous, hard-won performance.
McClatchy Tribune
H
A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013
PAGE 7
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I will forever be a coach at heart, an educator."
--- Sheahon Zenger
kuathetics.com
---
FACT OF THE DAY
HEIB
The football program's all-time winning percentage fell below.500 (573-580-58) last year for the first time since its first season.
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TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q. When did KU play its first football season?
n is now
workbooks
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suave
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kuathletics.com
Tribune
THE MORNING BREW Jayhawks could have best athletic program
Summer break is fast approaching, along with all its warm, pleasant connotations: beaches, cookouts, baseball and good times with friends.
But if you are a Kansas fan, student or alum, summertime might just be the preface to an altogether awesome sports year, and not the climax.
After Sunday's heroes in softball, baseball and track, it struck me that athletic director Sheahon Zenger has a solid plan for each and every KU sport and that he is executing that plan to near perfection. Zenger will be counting down the days for summer to end so he can watch his hard work pay off in the fall.
By Daniel Harmsen
dharmsen@kansan.com
Just a few short years after KU Athletics (sans men's basketball) looked grim and former Athletic Director Lew Perkins' ticket-scandal sent him packing, Zenger has instilled a winning culture throughout all programs, and the entire scope of KU Athletics looks bright heading into 2013-2014 year.
When Zenger took over on Jan. 3, 2011, Kansas had basketball going strong like it usually does, but was middling in the majority of its other sports and terrible in the rest.
Now, it's smooth sailing throughout the entire department.
Let's start with the obvious. The men's basketball team just wrapped up its ninthstraight Big 12 Championship and made its 24th consecutive NCAA tournament appearance. I don't foresee too much to fret about, especially with Bill Self locked in for 10 years.
The women's basketball team seems to have found its niche, having made back to back Sweet Sixteens. Maybe Zenger is able to get more out of coach Bonnie Henrickson than Lew Perkins ever could? Maybe it's a by-product of something else? Who knows? But it's working.
Women's track & field is making mincemeat of its competition. The Jayhawks are
poised to win a national championship. That'll go nicely with Diamond Dixon's Olympic gold.
The men's track and cross country teams have shown incremental progress in the past few years. The cross country team was ranked several times this year.
After sweeping Baylor over the weekend, the baseball team is 12-9 in the Big 12, and 30-18 overall, thoroughly exceeding expectations. It will look to make the College World Series in the coming weeks.
The softball team took down top-ranked Oklahoma, handing them their fourth loss on the season. It was the first time in school history that the softball team beat the No.1-ranked team in the country.
The hiring of Charlie Weis was risky, but it has paid early dividends. Although the football team didn't see progress in the victories and losses column, they were clearly more competitive throughout the twelve-game season last year.
If Weis had a better quarterback and defense, Kansas could have made a push for six wins. This fall, they should have both. A bowl game isn't entirely out of the question.
KU
Women's soccer recorded a 3.46 GPA, and seven other sports eclipsed the 3.0 mark.
women are student-athletes (with emphasis on the student), so grades and graduation rate are also measuring sticks for Zenger.
Let's remember that these men and
Kansas is climbing out of its recent athletic lull very quickly. If the football team can consistently make bowl games in the next five years, Jayhawks will be able to honestly say they support one of the best athletic departments in the United States.
The football team posted its highest GPA in a fall semester (2.83) since the school started keeping track of it in 1986.
Rock Chalk.
Edited by Jordan Wisdom
This week in athletics
Tuesday
Baseball
Wichita State
6:30 p.m.
Wichita
感
Wednesday
Thursday
Williams Education Fund
Houston Football
Preview Party with
Charlie Weis
7 p.m.
The Armadillo Palace
Villiams Education
Williams Education Fund
Dallas Football
Preview party with
Charlie Weis
6.30 p.m.
Dallas Market Center
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Friday
Softball
lowa State
4 p.m.
Ames, Iowa
STATE
PACIFIC
Baseball Kansas State 6 p.m. Lawrence
Saturday
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
I
Track
Georgia Tech Invitational
All Day
Atlanta, Ga.
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
C
Baseball
Kansas State
2 p.m.
Lawrence
I
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Sunday
Track Georgia Tech Invitational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
T
Baseball
Kansas State
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Tennis
NCAA 1st/2nd round
TBA
TBA
Williams Education
Monday
Fund
Football Season Ticket
Select-A-Seat
All Day
Memorial Stadium
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
HOME
SALE
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Megaphone
announcements
JOBS
Acro Teacher Needed Starting in August
Amanda's Dance Academy
Eudora, KS - 6 miles east of Lawrence
Email or call if interested
785-690-7200
amandacademacy@gmail.com
AAAC Tutoring Services is hiring Tutors for Fall 2013! To apply, visit www.tutoring.ku.edu 785-864-7733 OE/AA
...
JOBS
Positions Open- KU Endowment is seeking KU students to work 5 nights each week during the summer, talking with University of Kansas alumni while earning $9/hr. Excellent communication skills, dedication and a desire to make KU a better university are all a must. Email Emily at evieux@kuendowment.org today to learn more about this exciting opportunity to build your resume and have fun in this professional environment.
Part-time personal care attendant for a woman w/ autism. 1-2 shifts per week.
Experience/knowledge helpful.
Call 785-266-5307
Bambino's immediate Openings Servers and Delivery Drives. Apply in person. EOE: 1540 Wakara Drive.
Century School is Hiring
Part-Time Summer-Fall Teachers
Flexible Schedules. For more information
Call Sara 785-832-0101
Jimmy John's is looking to hire some Delivery Drivers & Inshoppers. We make delicious sub sandwiches & we make them freaky fast. We're loud & fast paced. We love to train new people & we're hiking right now! Delivery Drivers make a full hourly wage & also great tips. If you like to move fast & want to have fun at work, this is the job for You! Please apply in person at 1730 W 23rd St. Must be available during closing hrs 5p-3am, cover all tattoos. No gauged earrings & one periing ear or
Pharmacy Needs counter clerk to work afternoons & some Saturdays. Position starts this month to continue through school year. Call Karyn 843-4160
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Coleman American Moving Services in Shawnee, KS is seeking loaders, packers, drivers and warehouse personnel for the summer season. Pay range is $12-$14hr. Please call 800-239-1427 or email jason.christiansen@covan.com to apply.
TRAFFIC-DUF'S-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY
Student legal matters; criminal issues
divorce; criminal & civil matters
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DONALD G. STROLE
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WANTED: Gymnastics Instructor $12+/hr, pays gas & drive time Call 618-975-1601 for details!
Give back to the community & help those in need: PT Support Workers wanted, $8-50-$9hr, assist people w/ developmental & intellectual disabilities w/ daily living activities. Apply online at trinityhomecome.com. E-mail questions to Scott Crqui at scott.tlhc.org.
Part Time Administrative Assistant
Seeking part-time Admin Assistant to work 20-30 hrs/wk in KC Metro. Requires: Excellent phone skills, typing skills, knowledge of Microsoft Office Suite and able to multi-task. Hrs may vary. Email resume to:
Help wanted for custom harvesting.
Truck driver. Good wages. Guaranteed pay. Call 970-483-7490 evenings.
Part Time Administrative Assistant
vary. Email resumes to: reports@alternativeclaims.com.
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PAID INTERNET
Gage Management
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hawkchalk
HOUSING
1428 West 19th Terrace
3 BR 1.5 BA House, W/D $1050, Avail
Aug 1. Great Location South of KU,
785-393-4960
2 BR, DW, WD, wood floors, very close to campus, 1242 Louisiana, $620 paid, 785 393 6330 call or text
Great Deposit Specialist! W/D, fitness center, pool, Free DVD rental, sim pets welcomel Canyon Court Apartments.
700 Comet Lane (785) - 832-8805
3 BR and 4BR Available August.
Close to KU. All appliances. Must see.
Call 785-766-7518.
4 and 7 BR houses.
Available August 2013.
thomas@sunflower.com
Coolest Apt. In Town
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CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM
- Ironwood Court Apts
- Park West Gardens Apts
- Park West Town Homes
1-5 Bedrooms
Hall Equities Group
Alliance Center, New York, NY 10026
Garages
Pool
Fitness Center
785. 840.9467
www.remington-square.net
Also, Check out our Luxury
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HOUSING
Bob Billings & Crestline 785-842-4200
meadowbrook Apartments & Townhomes
WATER TREE
Apartments & Townhomes
available IMEDIATELY
Summer & August
• Close to campus
• Several Bus stops
$250 deposit per person
($750 max)
No application fee
See availability on our website www.meadowbrookapartments.net
Sunrise Place & Sunrise Villiage
Apartments & Townhomes
---
Spacious 2,3 & 4 BR Townhomes
- $200-400 off 1st month of rent
- Swimming pools, Pet-friendly, & Some with garages
ON KU BUS ROUTE
www.sunriseapartments.com
785-841-8400
Volume 125 Issue 116
kansan.com
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S sports
COMMENTARY
Kansas baseball is on edge
By Trevor Graff
tgraff@kansan.com
The Jayhawks were on the ropes.
Like a prizefighter from yesterearth, Kansas baseball took a solid shot to the chin and stood wavering on the brink of a knockout in the Big 12 conference race after suffering the sweep in West Virginia.
The uppercut, served at the hands of the Mountaineers, still lingers in the minds of many around Kansas baseball. It still comes up in interviews and conversations among fans, but there's a shift in the tone of these conversations.
A shift that winning made evident. A shift that winning made essential.
The Jayhawks weekend series sweep of the Baylor Bears got the Jayhawks off of their heels and back into the fight. Not just back in the fight, but back and throwing haymakers. Every one-run victory the Jayhawks reeled off over the weekend moved the conversation closer to resurgence.
After the weekend in West Virginia, it seemed apparent that the Jayhawks were playing for second place in the Big 12 conference. After sweeping Baylor, the Jayhawks are back within a game of the conference-leading Oklahoma Sooners.
That fact is embedded in the minds of Kansas players and coaches.
"Every game from here on out is pretty much a playoff game because we have to get our record up to get an NCAA regional bid," senior third baseman Jordan Dreling said. "I think everybody knows that in the back of their minds, and everybody believes they can contribute."
Per usual in a Ritch Price dug,
out, no one is getting ahead of
themselfs. The Jayhawks can't
afford to look forward.
Living in the moment has been a strength of this Kansas squad. That being said, the moment calls for a midweek victory against a red-hot Wichita State at Eck Stadium and a must have series victory against another solid Kansas State Wildcat squad.
There's no doubt Kansas baseball is on edge. Their knees shook, and hitting the mat seemed like a solid option at one point, but they stuck with the Big 12's rigorous schedule and found themselves back in the fight. The attitude has shifted, and what seemed like an impossibility is now quite real.
Is a Big 12 baseball championship heading to Lawrence?
The Jayhawks don't face 34-1 odds in winning the Big 12 Conference. But doing so won't be easy.
The Jayhawks need a perfect storm in the midst of this unseasonable Kansas weather. The odds are longer than the 34-1 posted for Golden Soul in the Kentucky Derby. Three horses faced stiffer odds, but Golden Soul finished runner-up.
The odds say no, but the prize-fighter in the Jayhawks is saying there's a chance.
Edited by Paige Lytle
THE MORNING BREW PAGE 7
KU
FIGHTING FOR FIRST
RENEWED OPTMISM
Jayhawks have a big week ahead battling in the NCAA Tournament
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
A weekend sweep of the Baylor Bears brought a renewed sense of optimism to Kansas baseball.
The Jayhawks' 12-9 conference record lands them in second, within a game of conference-leading Oklahoma.
a must-win midweek matchup against the Missouri Valley-leading Wichita State Shockers.
"It's just baseball," senior third
"We thrive in the situation. We get energy from it. It's fun for everyone."
baseman Jordan Dreiling said. "You've got to flush the last week and a half. We have to take care of business again on Tuesday and over the weekend, but I guess now it's just taking care of business."
"It would be nice to put up some runs and not deal with this every night," Drilling said. "We thrive in the situation. We get energy from it. It's fun for everyone."
The Jayhawks flushed last week in grand fashion with a series sweep against the Bears that included three one-run wins and walk-off RBIs hit by Dreiling and senior shortstop Kevin Kuntz.
JORDAN DREILING
Senior third baseman
Kansas has won 10 games in one-run fashion. The regularity of close victories doesn't make them any less stressful.
"We have to treat it like another Big 12 game," Dreiling said. "These midweek games are just as important when we're trying to get into NCAA regionals. Everybody is coming with the same mentality, and we just have to compete on every pitch."
tough times. Dreiling said the mindset of the dugout is focused heading to Wichita.
The energy hasn't left the Kansas dugout through the
The playoff feel of Tuesday's game is enhanced by the talent level across the diamond from the Jayhawks. Wichita State's 14-4 Missouri Valley record leads the
conference by one and a half games.
The Jayhawks are embroiled in a conference race of their own, but Kansas is putting the Big 12 aside against Wichita State.
"It's a huge week," coach Ritch Price said. "We were in the NCAA Tournament going into West Virginia, and we played ourselves out, and we've turned around and played oursels back in this week. Next week will be huge."
Edited by Madison Schultz
KELSEY WEAVER/KANSAN
Kansas takes its fight for the NCAA Tournament to Wichita State's Eck Stadium for a 6:30 p.m. first pitch. The Jayhawks' senior right-handed pitcher Tanner Poppe is set to take the mound.
ECK STADIUM, 6:30 P.M., WICHITA
WICHITA STATE SHOCKERS (30-21, 14-4)
8 - Mikel Mucha, So.
21 - Taylor Doggett, So.
28 - Garrett Bayliff, Jr.
38 - Erik Harbutz, Jr.
1 - Tanner Dearman, Fr.
17 - Tyler Baker, So.
16 - Casey Gillaspie, So.
35 - Parker Zimmerman, Fr.
TBA
Kansas baseball players take a moment to converse with a coach during their match against Baylor. The Jayhawks defended the Bears, 6-5.
?
12 KANSAS
PITCHING
12 K
KANSAS
Wichita State pitches are solid Junior right-handed pitcher Cale Elam leads the squad with a 5-2 record and a 2.26 ERA. Elam's 59 strikeouts lead Shocker pitches. In their appearance in Lawrence, freshman right-handed pitcher Garrett Brummett started the game throwing four innings and giving up four hits in a scoreless appearance. Junior right-handed pitcher Brandon Peterson was credited with the loss.
HITTING
FIELDING
Wichita State struggled fielding the ball at Hoglund Ballpark. The Jayhawks failed to take advantage of the three errors committed by the Shockers. Guilty parties included freshman second baseman Tanner Dearman, junior shortstop Erik Harbutz and freshman right-handed pitcher Garrett Brummett.
The Shockers continue their hot play at the plate. They've risen to sole possession of the lead in Missouri Valley Conference, one and a half games ahead of Illinois State. Shockers junior outfielder Garrett Bayliff continues to lead the squad with a 348 average, 62 hits and 27 RBIs. In his appearance in Lawrence, Bayliff ended a hitting streak by going hitless in four at-bats with a strikeout.
POLICE
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
17- Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34- Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
55 - Tanner Poppe, Sr.
3 - Dakota Smith, Sc
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr
20 - Justin Protocio, So.
FANATIC
34- Alex DeLeon, Sr
22 - Kaliana Fldredge, Jr.
28
PITCHING
The Jayhawks committed five errors on the series against Baylor. Unfortunately, several of these errors occurred in key moments. Senior Shortstop Kevin Kuntz uncharacteristically booted a ball in the late stages of a game in which junior closer Jordan Piche' earned the save. Regardless of the spotty errors, the Jayhawks continue to play solid defense.
HITTING
There was no shortage of heroes in the Kansas lineup this weekend against the Baylor Bears. One could point to any of the position players in the lineup and find a contribution to the three one-run victories notched over Baylor. The lineup showed a bit of pop on Sunday. Sophomore right fielder Connor McKay hit two RBI doubles in the 5-4 10th-inning victory, one of which came in the bottom of the ninth to extend the game.
X
A
FIELDING
Kansas pitching didn't overpower the Bears by any means, but overpowering pitching isn't the Kansas way. The Jayhawks did, however, pitch to contact and allow a defense, functioning at their highest level of the season, to take over and win close games. The Jayhawks gave up 11 runs on the weekend. Tanner Poppe makes the start after his best appearance of the season in the midweek last week.
1
Volume 125 Issue 117
kansan.com
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK
the student voice since 1904
GRADUATION
Your guide to planning Commencement
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
IMPORTANT DATES
May 10 Grad Grill at The Adams Alumni Center 11 a.m. – 4 p.m.
May 11 Black Alumni Congratulatory Graduation Banquet and Hispanic Alumni Congratulatory Graduation Banquet
May 13 Student Alumni Association Finals Dinner at the AAC 11 a.m. – 4 p.m.
A list of recognition ceremonies by department and school are available at commencement.dept.ku.edu/schedules/
May 19 Commencement Open House at the AAC 11 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Gates at Memorial Stadium will open at 9 a.m. for guests, and no tickets are required. Check-in for graduates is at 10 a.m. on Memorial Drive.
2013 GRADUATION BY THE NUMBERS
4,000 students have completed the application for a degree for Spring 2013
According to KU News
New York City is the top city for recent graduates. Other top cities include Washington, D.C., Seattle, Chicago and Denver
According to the Apartment Guide blog
The top company to work for is Facebook
According to Glassdoor's Employee's Choice Awards
The current unemployment rate is 7.5 percent. The unemployment rate for graduates with a bachelor’s degree or higher is 3.9 percent
According to the lastest BLS report
The top starting salary for a graduate is $63,000 (engineering) followed by $60,000 (computer science). The lowest starting salary is $37,000 (humanities and social sciences).
According to the National Association of Colleges and Employers
CHECK OUT GRADUATION COVERAGE ALL WEEKEND
kansan.com
CAMPUS
University experiments with hybrid classes to engage students
MARSHALL SCHMIDT
mschmidt@kansan.com
Sleeping through a boring lecture is not an option for Colleen Cesaretti, a freshman from Naperville, Ill., during her Infomania class in the journalism school, where she learns about the subject of information management.
I am very proud to be a member of this team. Our work focuses on improving the way we communicate and collaborate with others. We use various tools such as email, social media, and video conferencing to connect with our colleagues and clients. We also invest in developing new technologies that can help us stay ahead of the curve. Our team is dedicated to providing excellent service and making everyone feel valued. If you have any questions or would like to contribute, please feel free to reach out to us.
Taught by Doug Ward, associate professor of journalism, Infomania is one of the new breed of courses known as hybrid classes. This up-and-coming classroom format combines students learning material through online resources and working on group projects during class time.
John Griffin, a freshman from Dallas, sits in class Tuesday afternoon in the commons in Spooner Hall. Griffin has been working in a group in associate professor Doug Vard's Infomania class. The group is creating a KU survival guide for incoming freshman.
Each week, Cesaretti and a group of six summarize assigned readings into websites to connect each week's readings together and demonstrate their progress for Ward.
"This class is very technologically oriented and really promotes collaboration and teamwork within our group," Cesaretti said. "It is refreshing to be able to come to class and not have to sit and just look at Powerpoints all day. The class style is very conversational, and I feel that this makes students more likely and willing to talk and contribute their ideas."
Along with online and lecture styles, hybrid (HB) classes will be available to University students as an official designation beginning this summer, said Julie Loats, director of the Center for Online and Distance Learning. Loats said 10 classes are marked as HB for summer, which will expand to 36 in the fall.
"In those large format lecture courses, we see potentially high drop, fail or withdrawal rates."
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
Loats said. "The University has a keen interest in helping to lower those rates by making sure students are successful in moving through those courses because a lot of time that's their first experiences at KU"
Through collaborating on her group's project focused on curating information Christina Ostmeyer, a freshman from Colby also taking Ward's Infomania class, said she has learned a lot through working with her fellow classmates.
"I definitely feel that my retention of the material has improved through the format that the class is presented in," Ostmeyer said.
By putting readings online, Ward said his class encourages students to take an active role in their education, compared to the passive learning style of traditional lectures.
"It's the least effective means of teaching there is," Ward said of classroom lectures, despite being used for the past 150 years. "Are students learning? Sometimes. They may be looking out the window. They may be doing the crossword puzzle. They may be doing a whole lot of things. It doesn't mean they're learning."
After teaching both online and lecture classes before, Ward decided to put class material online and reserve class time for small group collaboration. Ward said students learn best by interacting in small groups.
"When students were away from fifth grade desks and were at tables in their groups, they started talking to one another," Ward said.
While John Griffin, a freshman from Dallas, appreciates the personalized learning experience of Infomania, it took some effort for
him to adjust to the hybrid format.
"At first it was definitely tricky," Griffin said. "When you're given a lot of freedom like we've had, you actually end up wanting some direction to make sure you're doing things right."
Milton Wendland, assistant professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University, has also found the format challenging as he prepares to teach Studies in Intersections of Identity as a four-week hybrid course this summer.
"The reduced face-to-face contact time is problematic because so much learning takes places because of personal interactions in the classroom," Wendland said. "Using discussion boards and even video-conferencing will never replace in-
class time."
Wendland still recognizes the convenience of the format for students, and plans to maximize the productivity of the in-class portion of the class.
Now in the final week of classes, Colleen Cesaretti has been collaborating more than ever with her group as well as the rest of the class on their final project, which is
focused on digital collaboration.
"The hybrid format of this class really does help me retain material that we have learned because we do so much discussing and connecting of the overall ideas," Cesaretti said.
Edited by Dylan Lysen
Index
CLASSIFIEDS 7
CROSSWORD 5
CRYPTOQUIPS 5
OPINION 4
SPORTS 8
SUDOKU 5
All contents, unless stated otherwise. © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Don't forget
Today is the 563rd anniversary of Jack Cade's revolt against King Henry VI.
Today's Weather
T-showers. 60 percent chance of rain. Wind SSE at 14 mph.
MASGREY
HI: 77
LO: 59
4
ust give up already.
3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N
news
PAGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief Hannah Wise
Managing editors
Sarah McCabe
Nikki Wentling
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
Business manager Elise Farrington
News editor Allison Kohn
NEWS SECTION EDITORS
Associate news editor Joanna Hlavacek
Entertainment and special sections editor Laken Rapier
Associate sports editor Trevor Graff
Associate entertainment and special sections editor Kayla Banzet
copy chiefs
Megan Himman
Taylor Lewis
Brian Sisk
Design chiefs
Ryan Benedick
Katie Kutsko
Designers Trey Conrad Sarah Jacobs
Opinion editor
Dylan Lysen
Photo editor Ashleigh Lee
Web editor
Natalie Parker
ADVISERS
General manager and news adviser Malcolm Gibson
Sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt
Contact Us
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www.kansan.com
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Twitter: UDK_News
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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 Kansas are 50 cents. Subscribes can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunists Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045.
KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS
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, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue.
Check out KUJH 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 tku.edu
KHK is the student voice in radio. Whether it's rock 'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events. KHK 301 is for you
97JHJ
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan.
66045
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2013
What's the weather, Jay?
Penguin
— weather.com
Thursday
Thunderstorms. 60 percent chance of rain. N winds at 7 mph.
HI: 71
LO: 54
4
April showers bring... May showers.
Mostly sunny. 10 percent chance of rain. N winds at 14 mph.
PENGUIN
Friday
HI: 68
LO: 51
HI: 66
L0: 43
Saturday
Few showers. 30 percent chance of rain. NNE winds at 11mph.
At least it's not snow.
What's this? Seasonal weather?
Wednesday, May 8th
CALENDAR
WHAT: Unclassified Senate - Full Senate Meeting
WHERE: Kansas Union, Malott Room
WHEN: Noon to 1:30 p.m.
ABOUT. Want to see how student government works? Attend the monthly Unclassified Senate meeting. It's open to the public.
**WHAT:** Screening of "Nawang Gombu:
Heart of a Tiger"
Thursday, May 9th
WHERE: Dole Institute of Politics
WHEN: 3 p.m.
ABOUT. This documentary celebrates the life of the Sherpa who became the first man to climb Mt. Everest twice. The Dole Institute will hold a discussion with producer Bev Chapman after the screening.
**WHAT:** KU School of Music Youth
Chorus Concert
**WHERE:** Murphy Hall, 328
**WHEN:** 5 to 6 p.m.
**ABOUT:** This choral group, composed of community children, will have its final performance of the school year.
Admittance is free.
Friday, May 10th
**WHAT:** KU Tango Spring Classes
**WHERE:** Kansas Union
**WHEN:** 7:45 p.m.
**ABOUT:** Bring your dancing shoes
and an adventurous spirit to this free
tango lesson.
WHAT: KJHK and SUA present Bad Rabbits
WHERE: Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
CAMPUS
WHEN: 8 p.m.
ABOUT: Enjoy the musical styling of Bad Rabbits, a fusion of futuristic R&B and post-rock, free with your KU ID.
WHAT: Talib Kweli
WHERE: The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
WHEN: 9:20 a.m.
WHEN: 8:30 p.m.
ABOUT. In the mood for some political hip hop? Tickets are $22 to see Brooklyn-based rapper Talib Kweli perform at The Granada.
Saturday, May 11th
WHAT: Lawrence Potters Guild sale
WHERE: Carnegie Building, 200 W.
9th St.
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ABOUT: Support the Lawrence Potters
Guild at their spring sale, just in time
for Mother's Day and graduation.
WHAT: 3rd Annual Red Rockin' Music Festival
WHERE: Buford M. Watson Park
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Student takes nonprofit job with Teach for America
ABOUT: This event benefitting the Lawrence Community Nursery School features music, games, food and Free State beer.
EMILY DONOVAN
EMILY DONOVAN
edonovan@kansan.com
When Bailey Reimer discusses her post-graduation plans, she
often gets one of two reactions: people are either worried for her safety, or people are excited for the experience in a big city. The reality is somewhere in the middle.
Riemer
Reimer, a senior from Shawnee, has been accepted into Teach For America, a national nonprofit organization that sends recent high-achieving college graduates to teach in low-income communities. According to the organization's website, more than 58,000 new 2012 graduates entered the
Riemel
program last year.
The more she thought about leaving the Lawrence area to go into nonprofit education work, it seemed to make more sense to use Teach For America as a support staff to get acclimated to the demands of teaching in a classroom.
Volunteer work is no new field
"I'm still really young and I'm still figuring out where exactly my niche will be." Reimer said. "I like the idea that I can do this for two years and if I love it, I can do it for longer."
Teach For America works to eliminate educational inequity. When she finished her application to the program in early November, Reimer knew she would spend the next two years earning her teaching certification and the salary of fellow public school teachers (ranging from $25,500 to $51,000 annually).
for Reimer. After a couple of mission trips and a high school program where she helped teach a second-grade class for one hour every day her senior year, she stumbled across an Alternative Breaks information table at the Kansas Union as a freshman. After her first trip, a week in the winter of 2010 spent working with Teach For America in Chicago, the very city she'll now be moving to, she was hooked.
"The people who get involved in Alternative Breaks are some of the smartest, most conscientious people I've ever met," Reimer said. "And Alternative Breaks has helped me develop a lot as a student, as a citizen and just as a person."
With a few week-long and weekend trips under her belt, she coordinated this past summer and winter's Alternative Break weeklong trips. She said the Teach For America program is appealing
because it focuses on social justice. Kids from poor families aren't given the same opportunities as kids in wealthier public school districts that can afford to bring in the best teachers and programs.
"It's addressing a very real need and because it's been around for more than 30 years now, they have an infrastructure of support that really allows people to flourish," Reimer said.
She may not find out which public school in the Chicago area is able to hire her until as late as August, but, as she knows she's been placed to teach a bilingual elementary classroom, Reimer is likely to find herself leading a predominantly hispanic classroom. She considers herself highly proficient in Spanish, especially after her semester-long study abroad program in Costa Rica.
"Even if I was a Spanish major
After six weeks of intensive classes through Teach For America to provisionally certify her to teach, Reimer will spend this fall both teaching and taking 14 hours of classes to earn her full teaching certification.
STATE
Her mother, who also got a bachelor's degree in a nonprofit field, now teaches in an elementary school.
"We're both driven for a career that is fulfilling and utilizes all of our skills," Reimer said. "I've been raised in a way where I can be happy as long as I'm making enough to pay rent and I like the job I do."
Edited by Dylan Lysen
and had taken 40 hours of Spanish lit, I feel like I'd still have a lot of learning to do to know how to teach a second grader in Spanish," Reimer said.
Kansas' own Bardo the Clown's estate up for auction
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HUTCHINSON — His home, a trailer that sat parked on the Kansas State Fairgrounds for years, has been sold and moved away. Now what is left of Bardo the Clown's estate will be put on the auction block.
After 67 years as a clown, a sign painter and an artist, J.B. Holdren died in his trailer at age 93 on Jan. 1 — one of the nation's last true show painters still working in the profession.
Don't confuse that with a sign painter, said friend Joan Brown, a co-executor of Holden's estate.
"Hed correct you," the former assistant state fair manager said of the man who painted almost all the fair's signage and show art.
"He really enjoyed it," she said.
"The fair was like his family. It
really was."
On May 18, R.E.I.B. of Hutchinson will auction off most of what remains of Holdren's estate. Items include collectibles such as hand-carved carousel horses and circus posters, as well
as woodworking tools, The Hutchinson News reported.
Holden had an auction several years ago to sell some of his artwork, Brown said.
work for a circus after World War II, went by the sad-minstrel clown persona of Bardo and collected a variety of things circus- and carnival-related.
"He sold most things half price last year" at his fair booth during the 10-day event, she said, noting that Holdren probably knew he wouldn't see the 2013 Kansas State Fair.
r
Still, she noted, there is plenty of unique Bardo memorabilia for collectors.
One poster for sale, circa 1916,
Holdren, who also claimed to
"The fair was like his family. It really was."
JOAN BROWN
Friend of Bardo the Clown
features "Big Bingo" — the Ringling Brothers Circus "giant two-story elephant" Other posters, from the 1920s
Ringling Brothers posters from the 1970s show Gunther Gebel-Williams, a famous animal trainer who died in 2001.
advertise the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus as a "combined show"
Holdren also was a wood carver and craftsman. In later years, he purchased raw or unfinished carousel horses and then carved
the fine details and painted them.
"There are a lot of unique collectibles," he said.
Three full-sized carousel horses will be auctioned, said auctioneer LaVerle Pounds, with R.E.I.B. The estate also will sell a large carousel giraffe, as well as miniature carousel horses.
Brown said other items to be auctioned are Holdren's woodworking tools, a few of which were owned by his father. A table saw, drill press and scroll saw are among the tools.
Some auction items are part of the inventory he would sell in his state fair store, such as stuffed animals, Hopi Indian figurines, clown collectibles and his "Bardo creations."
For instance, there are a couple of back scratchers made out of corncobs and "show-painted" toilet seats.
NATIONAL
A few of his multicolored paint-splattered pants will be auctioned, too, said Brown.
The fair plans to construct a memorial for Holdren next to the one honoring former Physical Plant Manager Larry Ankerholz near the fair's Administration Building.
"You never know," she said about what will be popular.
Ankerholz, who died in 2004 in an accident that occurred just one day after the fair's closing as crews attempted to lower the cover over the grandstand stage, was like a son to Holdren, Brown said.
Delaware approves gay marriage
DOVER, Del. — Delaware became the 11th state in the nation to allow same-sex marriage when Democratic Gov. Jack Markell signed a gay ma.riage bill into law just minutes after its passage by the state Senate on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
4
"I do not intend to make any of you wait one moment longer," a smiling Markell told about 200 jubilant supporters who erupted
in cheers and applause following the 12-9 Senate vote barely half an hour earlier.
"Delaware should be, is and will be a welcoming place to live and love and to raise a family for all who call our great state home." Markell said.
Delaware's same-sex marriage bill was introduced in the Democrat-controlled legislature barely a year after the state began recognizing same-sex civil unions. The bill won two
weeks ago in the state House on a 23-18 vote.
Under the bill, no new civil unions will be performed in Delaware after July 1, and existing civil unions will be converted to marriages over the next year. The legislation also states that same-sex unions established in other states will be treated the same as marriages under Delaware law.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Event guide: finding summer fun in Lawrence
JENNA JAKOWATZ
GRANADA
5 BIG BOI WITH KILLER MIKE
6 ZION I
9 CASEY DONAHWCW
10 TALIB KWELI
jjakowatz@kansan.com
BRITTANY THIESING/KANSAN
Despite the mass exodus of students at the end of the semester, Lawrence continues to offer a host of concerts and activities for the summer. If you don't know how to spend all your excess free time, there's bound to be an event for you.
FOR THE MUSIC LOVERS:
The Granada will host many concerts this summer. Acts include Falling in Reverse, Limp Bizkit, Streetlight Manifesto and many others.
Hey Juggalos, The Insane Clown Posse will play at the Granada on Monday May 20, at 7 p.m. Tickets start at $29 and the show is all ages.
On Wednesday May 22, rock group Trapt will take the stage at The Granada at 7 p.m. Tickets start at $12, and the show is all ages.
Nineties nu-metal favorite Limp Bizkit will be "Rolling" into The Granada on Sunday June 2, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $30 and the show is all ages.
On Saturday July 6, Anberlin will perform at The Granada at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $17 and the show is all ages.
If you are looking for a more intimate music experience, The Jazzhaz at 926.5 Massachusetts Street features local and national jazz, blues, reggae and rock artists on its stage Monday through Saturday. Shows are 21 and over, so keep that in mind before you make plans.
FOR THE THEATER LOVERS:
Buran Theatre, a Brooklyn-based theatre company, will perform at
the Inge Theater on Friday, May 24,
and Saturday, May 25, at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets start at $5. The troupe's performance will feature their original theatre work "Nightmares: a demonstration of the Sublime." According to the Burian Theatre's website, "The piece situates itself between terror and comedy (the sublime), beneath the gaze of Henry Fusell's iconic painting, and in the midst of an enveloping soundscape to plumb the extremities of our contemporary condition and posit the question: are we still capable of being overwhelmed?"
On Saturday, June 22, at the Lied Center, Joseph Hall will perform as Elvis Presley in a concert raising funds to help end Polio. The concert wraps up a weekend of events aimed to raise money to eradicate Polio worldwide. Elvis takes the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $31 for adults, and $16 for students and youth.
THE COLOR RUN:
The event that is coloring the nation is returning to Lawrence on Saturday, September 14, but you don't have to wait that long to participate in what The Color Run calls the "best, biggest and happiest sk." The Color Run is coming to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City on June 1 and June 2. The Color Run website says the amount of people who signed up for the June 1 date was so overwhelming that they had to add a second date. June 1 is currently sold out, but spots
are still available online for June 2. Individual entries cost $50 and team entries cost $45. There are currently more than 1,600 people "attending" on the Color Run's Kansas City event page, so sign up as soon as possible if you want a spot.
DOUGLAS COUNTY FAIR:
From Saturday, July 20 to Saturday, Aug. 3, the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Lawrence will once again host the Douglas County Fair. Admission is free and
open to all ages. There will be petting zoos and pony rides, as well as pie competitions and a tractor pull. Gdcountyfair.com has a list of specific events for the fair.
If you're looking for free events to attend over the summer, check these out:
FOR THE FREELOADERS:
Lawrence's weekly farmers market happens every Tuesday from 4 to 6 p.m., and every Saturday from 7 to 11 a.m. at 824 New Hampshire.
Fresh coffee and orange juice is provided, and every Saturday features live local musical.
On the final Friday of each month, The Lawrence Arts Center features local artists' work downtown and draws hundreds of people with local art and live music. Bars, restaurants and shops downtown also feature the work of Lawrence artists.
Edited by Brian Sisk
KU1nfo
Congratulations to all the 2013 graduates! KU Info estimates that it takes about 300 steps to make it from the Campoale to the bottom of the.
CRIME
hill. Enjoy every step!
POLICE REPORTS
Information based on the Douglas County Sheriff's Office booking recap.
An 18-year-old female was arrested yesterday on the 1800 block of Sweetwater on suspicion of possession, purchase or consumption of alcohol by a minor, transporting an open container and no insurance. A $300 bond was paid.
A 33-year-old male was arrested yesterday at the intersection of 7th and Connecticut on suspicion of driving with a suspended, revoked or cancelled license and no insurance. A $200 bond was paid.
A 21-year-old female was arrested Monday on the 2400 block of Ridge Connect on suspicion of driving with a suspended, revoked or cancelled license. A $100 bond was paid.
- A 37-year-old female was arrested yesterday on the 1700 block of 24th Street on suspicion of possession of drug paraphernalia and failure to appear in municipal court. A $593 bond was paid.
Investigation of Ottawa deaths continues
FRANKLIN COUNTY
EMERgency
SEEKERFF
SHERIFF
SUPERIOR
70833
SHERIFF PATROL
Emily Donovan
ASSOCIATED PRESS
OTTAWA — Authorities on Tuesday were investigating the deaths of three people whose bodies were found on a rural property in eastern Kansas, a day after friends of the residents called police to report a foul smell at the site.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Meanwhile, investigators in a nearby county were waiting to see if one of the bodies is a suburban Kansas City mother who has been missing with her 18-month-old baby since last week.
A Franklin County Sheriff's deputy talks on a cell phone Monday outside a farm where three bodies were found near Ottawa. Authorities found the bodies after friends of the residents reported smelling something fouled from the site.
The bodies of two adult men and one woman were found Monday on the farm west of Ottawa, which is located about 60 miles southwest of Kansas City, Sheriff Jeff Richards said at a news conference.
"We have three homicides on a very large scene." Richards said.
Richards declined to release other details, including the victims' identities or how they were killed.
Kortni McGill, of Ottawa, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that she, Corey Schl扎厚z, 26 and Shona Osladil, 21, went to the home Monday afternoon and saw in the garage a dead body covered in a tarp and weighted down with a cinder block.
"I reached down and saw teeth through the square in the cinder block. I said, 'Corey, there's a body here,' McGill said.
McGill said she and Schlotzhauer first went to the property Sunday to check on a friend who had not been heard from since April 25. When they got there they smelled a foul odor coming from the south side of the home and called police.
McGill said sheriff's deputies went into the home and came out 10 to 15 minutes later, saying they didn't find anything and the smell was probably trash. She said the deputies then peered inside a large garage on the opposite side of the house, where there also was a strong, foul smell, but dismissed it as garbage and left.
McGill and Schlotzhauer returned to the home Monday with Osladil to feed the resident's dog and investigate the strong smells again.
Osladil said the three looked around the garage for no more than 10 minutes when they found the tarp under what appeared to be a pile of junk that had apparently been put there on purpose.
McGill said the body appeared to have decayed and that they saw a bag of baby clothes on top of the tarp. They called 911 again.
Just outside the garage entrance, McGill said, she saw a burn barrel that had baby clothes, a baby bottle and a girl's sleeping bag. She said she also saw a pair of baby's socks on the ground that appeared clean despite rainy conditions in recent days.
Olathe Police Sgt. Brad Caldwell said Tuesday that Kaylie Bailey, 21, and her 1½-year-old daughter, Lana Bailey, were last seen Wednesday and were reported missing Friday.
McGill and Osladil — who had known Bailey her whole life — said Bailey had a relationship with a man who lived in the home and had planned to drop her baby off there Wednesday.
More than 40 detectives from various agencies were helping with the investigation. Olathe police are part of that group because of the open missing person case, Caldwell said.
Olathe police had provided the Franklin County Sheriff's Department with an address to check Friday, but Caldwell declined to say whether it was the same address where the bodies of an adult woman and two adult men were found Monday.
"I'm very frustrated," she said. "Without us going out there how long would it have been before they found that body?"
The missing baby doesn't meet the criteria for an Amber Alert, Caldwell said, but didn't go into details.
Richards also acknowledged Tuesday that deputies had been to the scene Sunday and found nothing. He said when officers responded Monday, they got a search warrant and found the other bodies.
Oladil said she was upset with the way authorities handled the matter.
NATIONAL
THE MUSICIAN
SPEAKING ON THE TREASURES OF HIS FAMILY AND HIS WORK.
James Holmes, left, and defense attorney Tamara Brady appear in district court in Centennial, Colo., for his arraignment.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Holmes to pursue insanity defense
ASSOCIATED PRESS
DENVER — The man accused in the deadly Colorado theater shootings wants to change his plea not to guilty by reason of insanity, his lawyers said Tuesday.
Holmes was insane, a jury could still find him guilty.
Attorneys for James Holmes said in a court filing they plan to formally ask for the change of plea at a May 13 hearing.
The insanity plea was widely expected given the compelling evidence against Holmes. He is charged with multiple counts of murder and attempted murder. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.
A judge in the case previously entered a standard not guilty plea for the 25-year-old Holmes. If the judge accepts the new plea, Holmes would be sent to the state mental hospital, where doctors would determine whether he was insane at the time of the July 20 shootings.
If the doctors do determine that
Holmes' attorneys have said in court hearings and written in court documents that Holmes is mentally ill. He was being seen by a psychiatrist before the July 20 attack at a midnight screening of the latest Batman movie that killed 12 people and injured 70.
Holmes could be executed if he's convicted of more than 160 counts of murder and attempted murder.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY GANSAN
PAGE 4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FREE FOR ALL
Text your FFA submissions to 785-289-8351
opinion
It's a Monday night and I'm already thinking I've had a bad week.
You know how I know you're serious about getting in shape? You're not running on campus.
Yes cars, computers, and phones are all stupid ideas. We never have gotten any benefit from engineers ever.
The FFA Editor is a total sassmaster,
I love it.
Better than being a liberal arts major getting underpaid for stupid ideas.
Holy allergies, Batman! I feel like I just got bitch-slapped by spring.
Suite life of Zack and Cody! Childhood -3
Shoutout to the frat boy who stopped to smell the flowers. Thanks for reminding me not to hate on you all!
Wow, downloading and accessing Lulu was remarkably easy. But also dumb because I'm not in it.
The editor's witty editor's notes are my favorite part of the FFA.
Steel.
There's nothing sexier than seeing a guy do sudoku on the bus... Well, that, and a guy who shows regularly.
They are fixing the roads on campus this summer!
HUGE baseball series against K-State for first place this weekend go support the 'Hawks!
Let the engineer raging begin.
There was no need to hook shot your banana peel into the trash can and cause banana guts to fly all over my computer cord. You barely even made the shot!
Forgot to bring my book to read for fun. What will I do in Biology now? *Editor's note:* Learn.
Brunettes do it better? The redder the head, the better in bed.
The FFA has become reddit repost central. Get it together, v'all.
I always feel bad walking past the "end animal cruelty" guy eating a Chick Fil-A sandwich.
I want a pet chicken...
Girl Power! You tell 'em editor! Editor's note: I'm a guy, but — YEAH!
I schedule my meltdowns. #junior-probs.
To the person who thinks your major in engineering and get overpaid for stupid ideas: you do realize that it was engineers that designed the cell phone you texted that from, right?
BUSINESS
I played frisbee in budig 120. What have you done lately?
Wow, you don't recognize Batman as a superhero? He's clearly the hero you need, and the hero you don't deserve.
US can benefit from foreign-born businessmen
Entrepreneurs create jobs and economic prosperity. The U.S.is prime historical evidence of this, as well as arguably the most innovative country in the world. But it does not have as many entrepreneurs as it could use.
Initiatives to create more entrepreneurs in the U.S. are growing, and they are very important. However, there is a tremendous resource already in the U.S. that is not being tapped into. Entrepreneurs educated in the best institutions in the nation, who want to found companies and create jobs here, but are turned away. These are American-educated students, foreigners who have left their countries and families, temporarily or permanently, with the sole goal of learning more than they felt they could in their homelands.
Many of them would like to work and create companies here, but they are usually sent back home after graduation due to out dated immigration laws. Because of that, the U.S. gives up a highly-
skilled pool of labor that will start ventures and create jobs in other countries rather than here. Fortunately, a proposal to facilitate the immigration of entrepreneurs to the U.S. is in the works. It is called the Startup Visa Act.
According to the Kauffman Foundation, the economic impact of an entrepreneur goes way beyond his or her personal wealth. From 1980-2005, nearly all the jobs created in the USA occurred in young firms. While entrepreneurs of all backgrounds are very effective, foreign innovators seem to have a disproportionate impact in the U.S. economy. As reported by the Partnership for a New American Economy, more than 40 percent of the 2010 Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children, and immigrants are almost twice as likely to start a new business than a American-born worker.
By Arnobio Morelix
amorelix@kansan.com
To capture this talent, the Startup Visa proposes to offer 75,000 new visas to entrepreneurs. Among other groups, such
as foreign workers on H-1B visas, the Startup Visa is geared towards international students.
Foreign students are a sort of hidden talent pool in the U.S. Although trained here, they remain hidden from the marketplace. Universities, as well as the state, invest a lot of money to recruit and train top foreign talent to schools, but fail to retain them because of obsolete immigration laws. In fact, the U.S. already invests so much on international students that it just makes sense to take advantage of them, rather than educate them and ship them home.
I am biased, of course. As a foreign student myself, I feel inclined to support propositions
that would make any country in the world more open to immigration. But the effects of the Startup Visa are clear. According to the Kauffman Foundation, on the current version of the proposal, the companies started through the Startup Visa are estimated to create somewhere between 500,000 and 1.6 million new jobs in 10 years.
Although the effects of the Startup Visa on higher education cannot be predicted, it could potentially attract even more foreign entrepreneurs to American higher educational institutions. As stated by Jared Konczal of the Kauffman Foundation in an interview, entrepreneurially-minded foreign students might be more likely to come to the U.S. if they see a viable long-term solution to start ventures here. This could allow for a snowball effect: foreigners already in the U.S. start companies, foreign entrepreneurs see their success and also come to found companies here. Of course, universities could become wary of entrepreneurial students who
might drop out of school,but the alumni endowment potential would likely offset this.
US-educated foreigners are a valuable asset to the country, and the Startup Visa is a great first step to keep this talent pool here to open companies and create jobs. But as noted by Dane Stangler in a Forbes column, entrepreneurs can come from all sorts of varied backgrounds, and higher education is no requirement to a successful entrepreneurial career. In fact, this is at the very core of the entrepreneurship dynamics, and is part of the beauty of it. Let's make the Startup Visa the first step of a long race towards a comprehensive immigration reform, and clear the path toward not only a more open economy, but also a truly open nation.
TELEVISION
Morelix is a junior majoring in business and economics from Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Reality television can be bad but awfully entertaining too
I have a secret to share. My guilty pleasure? Bad reality TV shows.
Wait, what? Emily, I thought you liked to watch meaningful shows with complicated plots, intriguing alternate worlds, brilliant scripts and ridiculously good-looking actors?
Well, yes, I do. But when I have to work on an essay, or when I have to pretend like I understand Spanish, I need some mind-numbing reality TV. Something that makes my life a little bit better, but doesn't send me into an emotional coma like some of my favorite fandom shows.
By Emily Brown
ebrown@kansan.com
So, what do I watch?
So, what do I watch?
Everything and anything on Bravo.
I could go on and go about Bravo TV. I truly think it is the future of storytelling, and it, without a doubt, is one of the most innovative channels I've seen so far. They've made a brand out of their channel, use an amount of audience interaction I've never seen before and have created some of the best reality TV shows out there like "Project Runway," "Top Chef," and the housewives franchise.
They use the 360 type of storytelling that I love.
I honestly have not encountered a show on Bravo that I haven't liked. They even started showing documentaries like "The Queen of Versailles," which was 100 minutes of trashy exuberance that made me sick to my stomach. Did I watch every second of it? Of course.
You get the normal reality TV show perspective, then you have regular cast blogs online, live after-shows with celebrities and cast members, and, of course, the drama-filled reunion shows.
But what makes Bravo the best TV channel out there isn't the creative programming or my patron saint, Andy Cohen, an executive vice president of Bravo who happens to also host the network's reunions and the live after-show, "Watch What Happens Live."
No, it is the plethora of reality TV stars.
from the "Real Housewives of Atlanta" franchise. She will say whatever she wants to whom- ever she wants and has a sense of swag I long for. She is now becoming an actress in her own right, acting in shows like "Glee" and "The New Normal."
First, there is NeNe Leakes.
Then there is Teresa Giudice, the famous table-flipper, who still has no idea how to say her own last name.
But my favorite? Jeff Lewis.
Bur my favorite, jeff Lewis.
Jeff is from the reality TV show, "Flipping Out," which documents his job as a house "flipper" and designer. The smallest thing can set him off on an OCD-induced rage. Yet, he is still one of the funniest people on the entitley of Bravo. You love him,
and you hate him. But I mostly love him.
So, if you need some mind-numbing reality TV while you study for finals, I recommend you check out Bravo. "Dukes of Melrose," and "Don't Be Tardy" are my favorites that are currently running.
Brown is a freshman majoring in journalism from Overland Park
CAMPUS CHIRPS BACK
UDK
What are your summer plans?
Follow us on twitter @UDK_Opinion. Tweet us our opinions, and we just might publish them.
PAGE 201
@AdriRochelle
@UOK Opinion pool, drink, sleep, repeat. I refuse to do anything remotely productive this summer.
@jhonjhonman
@UDK_Opinion watch garfield
@AdriRochelle
@pinkjavhawk15
@UDK_Observation I'll be in Florence with @Catie1193 of course! I can't wait to eat so much gelato that I puke! #talky #boys #soccer
HEALTH
Music affects the brain in positive way
As we start to transition into the spring season, despite Kansas' reluctance to accept its spring, two things come to mind: loud music and windows open. My walks on campus are not filled with silence anymore, but with the passing of cars, each with their own sound.
It's a simple formula: as the temperature rises, so does the volume of the music, but is it just the weather that have people in a good mood?
Each car is telling a story about the person driving it.
It doesn't matter if you rock out to Metallica or prefer Bach, because music is a universal language. It speaks to every culture. For instance, according to Live Science and Standford University neuroscientist Daniel Abrams, studies have found that happiness, anger and other basic emotions are expressed similarly in music across cultures.
Songs are doing more than creating entertainment. They are stimulating certain emotions and are telling stories that can be sentimental and circumstantial in value. We choose songs based off of our mood, attitude, culture, circumstance, events and ceremonies — such as birthdays, weddings, graduations, etc.
Another car passes by and in it are two men. The driver is bobbing his head and the passenger is trying to sing, more like yelling, "Tonight is the night. We'll fight until it's over. So, we put our hands up like the ceiling can't hold us."
Music is more than melodies and lyrics. According to the Washington Times, music affects our brain waves, emotions, heart rates and breathing rates. Music
One car is filled with women,
all synchronized in their singing,
saying, "I don't care; I love it, but
I'm a 90's b!tch."
According to the Washington Times, Another example of music therapy's benefits is its ability to help those with Alzheimer's disease and dementia "communicate" with their loved ones in a shared, emotional experience through music, when other forms of communication are partially or entirely impossible.
Music therapy, with its universal appeal and many uses in healthcare, can act as our own "therapist", and is one of the most indispensable and affordable "prescriptions" available to help us all live healthier lives.
As Ronald Reagan once said,
"Life is one grand, sweet song, so start the music."
Bierwirth is a senior majoring in journalism from Overland Park
WANT TO WORK FOR THE KANSAN?
The University Daily Kansan is hiring writers designers and photographers for the summer and
According to the American Music Therapy Association, music therapy began "as a healing influence which could affect health and behavior and is at least as old as the writings of Aristotle and Plato." Additionally, according to Elizabeth Scott, a psychologist at San Diego State University, music therapy has a great potential for healing or helping cancer patients, children with ADD, and many others.
Music can be a highly effective method for dealing with stress, among other things.
may even excite us to a state of joy, or move us to tears — a single song has this power.
HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR
fall. Must be enrolled in at least six hours of KU classes. Apply online at www.kansan.com/apply
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Write LETTER TO THE EDITOR in the e-mail subject line.
By Bryenn Bierwirth
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Length: 300 words
The submission should include the author's name, grade and hometown. Find our **full letter** to the editor policy online at kansas.com/letters.
Hannah Wise, editor-in-chief
editor at kansasan
Sarah M.Cabe, managing editor
smccabe at kansasan
Nikki Wentling, managing editor
wentling at kansasan
13752804692
Dylan Lysen, opinion editor.
dlysen@kansan.com
7
Elise Farrington, business manager
ferman@kamanan.com
Jacob Snider, sales manager
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7
CONTACT US
古
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THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Members of the Anansi Board are Hannah Wise, Sarah McCabe, Niki Wontling, Dylan Lysen, Elise Farron and Jacobson
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12. A circle with a circumference of 48 cm has a diameter of 12 cm. Find the area of the circle.
majoring in land Park
E entertainment
HOROSCOPES
Because the stars know things we don't.
Aries (March 21- April 19)
Today is a 7
Start getting practical, and compute expenses. Shopping for household items moves into top priority. Talk over the schedule. Friends are on your side. Think quickly, and move slowly. Get in the flow
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9
Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is an 8
Let the words pour out as you become more confident. Travel to or over water. New information propels action at home. Prepare to launch. Invest in your success. Take quick action for maximum
benefit.
Temperms could be short. You're under pressure to complete old tasks. You get farther with an intermediary. Your dreams are brilliantly prophetic.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8
Set up a meeting to entertain new possibilities. Move quickly to get the best deal. Adjust the schedule. Circumstances control your actions. Work without chatter. Stay focused and keep cool.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8
gives you a boost.
Work requires more attention. Don't speak so freely about money now. Move quickly to find necessary information. Entrie your partner. Listen to all the considerations. A philosopher. A honest.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9
Fix something before it breaks.
Travel conditions improve,
and working at home is nice, too. Tap into your passion, and believe you can. This leads to discovery.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9
Today and tomorrow are good for financial planning. Don't throw money around. Investigate an improbable theory, and take action on an idea with inspiring brilliance. Figure costs. Subtle art elements are best.
art elements are best.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8
today is all a
Look alive and think fast. Then go slow. Let a strong leader take charge. Invest in home, family, land and real estate. Partnership negotiations occur. Help your
team win.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9
Get busy and open a new chapter. Use your imagination. Stand for a new way of doing business ... this is the design phase. Work on the details. Accept unexplainable inspiration. Ask probing questions. Investigate
You score big with creative output. Business takes a new direction. Don't be impetuous. Use resources wisely. You can ask for more and get it. Indulge your cuddl side.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
Today is an 8
Slow down and listen, close to home. Family wants attention. Keep talking. Find ways to increase efficiency. Your team is hot. The previously impossible seems doable. Follow your heart.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a R
Be bold without gambling. Push yourself forward. Offer corrections to erroneous assumptions. Enter a two-day learning phase. Write up the proposal. Listen and include critical information. Bury a treasure. Restore energy with
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
exercise.
ACROSS
1 Docket entry
2 Heidi's range
3 One's years
12 Greatly
13 Inquisitive
14 Present
15 Madison's place
17 Exist
18 Ardor
19 Cuts into cubes
21 Extra
24 Rover's friend
25 Difficult
26 Hawk trainer
30 Carte lead-in
31 Eliot's Marner
32 Rotation duration
33 Outwardly curved on both sides
35 Bouquet holder
36 Reed instrument
37 Essential points
38 Prenatal test, for short
40 — morgana
42 Island neckwear
43 Grayish metallic element
48 A Gershwin
49 Author Hunter
50 Medicinal amount
51 X rating?
52 Force measure
53 Unseen hitch
DOWN
1 Crow's call
CHECK OUT THE ANSWERS
2 Clay, now
3 "Help!"
4 Left an impression
5 Actress Paquin
6 Missing
7 Omega preceder
8 Municipa magis-strates
9 Huge snakes
10 Bush opponent
11 Rams fans?
16 U.K. ref. bk.
20 Altar affir-mative
21 Moby-Dick's pursuer
http://bit.ly/13u6E2E
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 | | | |
CRYPTOQUIP
22 "The Persistence of Me painter
23 Severe
24 Linen source
26 Basketball team
27 Brewery product
28 Right on the map?
29 Deli loaves
31 Took a nap
34 Japanese sash
35 Food
37 Classic muscle car
38 Settled down
39 Unembellished
40 Drescher or Lebowitz
41 Zits
44 Poison —
45 Charged bit
46 Portion of N.A.
47 "Family Guy" daughter
PAGE 5
B F L H T M X U Z M O Z H
UDSILBSYJU SWL KZHL YSIVHT
MD OFLVW UFZLU, KZ XZM
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Today's Cryptoquip Clue: M equals U
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6 5 4 2
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2 1 8 3 7
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8 5 9 6 1 4
6 6 5
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FASHION
Celebs shine in punk-chic style
I CALLAN REILLY
creilly@kansan.com
VIVIENNE D'AGOSTINO
The Met Ball was held at the Museum of Costume of Art in New York on Monday night. The event, also known as the Met Gala or the Costume Institute Gala, celebrates the annual opening of the Metropolitan Museum's fashion exhibit at the Costume Institute. Vogue magazine hosts the extravaganza, which is known as one of the top social events of the year. The celebrity-filled event always has a different theme, this year's being "PUNK: Chaos to Couture".
Riccardo Tici and actress Rooney Mara attend the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute benefit celebrating "PUNK, Chaos to Couture" on Monday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
And dress punk they did. Stars from material girl Madonna to former Victoria's Secret model Gisele Bundchen took the phrase "dress to impress" to a whole new level, all the while embracing the edgy theme. The best-dressed list is endless, filled with stars like notorious good girls Anne Hathaway and Taylor Swift. The usually appropriately dressed celebs showed some edge; Hathaway in a vintage Valentine dress from 1992 and platinum blonde locks, and Swift in a rock n' roll-themed J Mendel number.
This year's theme was all about having fun with fashion and going all out, rather than playing it safe for fear of ending up on worst-dressed lists or EI's Fashion Police. I couldn't possibly think of anything more fun to dress for.
Over-the-top gowns and shoes were a hit on celebrities such as Beyoncé Knowles and Sarah Jessica Parker. Knowles showed up in a black and gold Givenchy floor-length dress and matching thigh-high boots, and the Sex
and the City star donned tartan plaid over-the-knee heels, a Giles Deacon ball gown and Phillip Treacy hat.
Blacks and metallic dresses were a hit on the red carpet, as was making a statement. Stars such as Nicole Richie and Miley Cyrus went so far as to show up with crazy punk-chic hair, if there ever was a thing. While most celebs took the theme to heart, there were a few who looked anything but punk. Infamous Anna Wintour and soon-to-be-mother Kim Kardashian wore floral, and Blake Lively wore an elegant mint and black Gucci gown. While everyone looked great at the number-one fashion event of the year, those who embraced the theme blew everyone else out of the water.
MUSIC
Edited by Tyler Conover
ASSOCIATED PRESS
STOCKHOLM - You can thank ABBA for the music. And so much more.
New ABBA museum features memorabilia, interactive sets
A museum devoted to the pop superstars opening in Stockholm on Tuesday will celebrate the band's long list of hits. But it will also show off paraphernia, including the helicopter featured on the cover of its "Arrival" album, a star-shaped guitar and dozens of glitzy costumes the Swedish band wore at the height of its 1970s fame.
Some gear is definitely not on show. With a smirk on his face, band member Bjorn Ulveaeus says certain items are "mysteriously ... forever lost," conceding only that among them are "embarrassing" "tight costumes he wore when he was "slightly overweight." He declined to say more.
Some 40 sets of the trademark shiny flares, platform boots and knitted hats are on display in the museum. But visitors can also see digital images of what they would
But the museum also shows a less glamorous, more everyday side of the history of a band that has sold 400 million records and consistently topped the charts in the decade after winning the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest with "Waterloo." The band — made up of Ulvaeus, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Benny Andersson and Agnetha Faltskog — started out as two married couples, and continued performing after their divorces, before eventually drifting apart in the early 1980s.
look like in costumes, record music videos and sing such hits as "Dancing Queen" and "Mamma Mia" on a stage next to hologram images of the band members. A telephone also has been placed in a corner and ABBA members have promised to "Ring, Ring" and speak to visitors occasionally.
The collection includes models of the band's kitchen, a cottage where they used to compose their songs and the small, rustic park venues Bjorn and Benny played when they first met in the 1960s.
Visitors can listen to the band members' recollections and one section is dedicated to the break-up and the story of the divorces.
"It (touches) on those things as well because we think they are important in telling the story," Ulvea said.
The museum also includes a Swedish Music Hall of Fame, detailing other Swedish artists.
It was a long time coming, eagerly anticipated by fans and visitors to the Swedish capital, Ulvaeus said they needed the time to reflect on their careers. "You need some distance, you need perspective to be able to tell a story like that and I guess you can say that we have perspective now, 30 years on," he told reporters.
Outside the newly built wooden museum, scores of international ABBA fans gathered Monday, singing the band's songs and hoping to get a glimpse of their idols arriving for a gala dinner. All were expected except Faltskog, who is currently promoting her comeback album "A" in Britain.
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PAGE 6
WEDNESDAY,MAY 8,2013
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NSAN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2013
PAGE 7
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I think I'm the best fighter ever. I respect Sugar and Sugar Ray Robinson. But as of now, I feel I'm the best."
- Floyd Mayweather Jr.
FACT OF THE DAY
FACT
-
Fact: The original Roman Coliseum seated around 50,000 spectators. —Rutgers Law Review
THE MORNING BREW
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: How much did Allen High School's football stadium cost?
—espn.com
Modern athletics still 'bloodsports'
I stood in the basement of a buddy's house on Saturday night watching the fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Robert Guerrero. It was standing room only; all of the guys crowded around the TV, the girls in the back wondered why no one was talking to them.
It was then that I realized how primitive the situation was. It was men enticed by a sport where one male exerts dominance upon the other. It was a return to the days of Circus Maximus and the Roman Coliseum, gladiators entertaining the masses through ruthless combat.
By Jackson Long
jlong@kansan.com
"Money" Mayweather won again, a unanimous 12-round decision sustaining his status as an unbeaten fighter. It wasn't the gruesome scene that one would expect from gladiatorial combat, nor a huge haymaker that would eerily drop a grown man to the floor. But, it was a reminder that what we call professional sports is really just modern-day bloodsport.
Take football as our study case. The
biggest, fastest and strongest athletes thrive in one of today's most physical sports. The collisions from these players have drawn enormous attention from the league as well as the public in recent months, highlighted by the brain-trauma induced suicide by former NFL star Junior Seau. In January, the Seau family sued the NFL over his death.
Modern arenas and stadiums resemble the early designs of the Roman Coliseum. The University of Southern California football stadium is even dubbed "The Coliseum". In the
same way that the Romans met and surpassed the challenges of engineering, owners of professional teams and universities around the country have pushed the limits of the venues.
No state represents this trend better than Texas. I'll leave the opinions to you, but I recommend feasting your eyes upon these Lone-Star football palaces: Allen High School, Texas A&M's Kyle Field renovation plans, and Cowboys Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys.
Sports have become a game of survival of the fittest. The biggest and fastest players make money playing a game, and the smartest owners make the money off those players. Boxers such as Mayweather are the simplest representation. He made $32 million for beating up on Guerrero. He has proven himself a quick fighter, and his dancing around a multitude of Guerrero's punches supports this.
KU
Many boxing critics say Mayweather is the pound-for-pound king of boxing. We may be watching one of the best boxes of a generation, maybe of all time.
But as we continue to watch man beat up man, using various types of equipment to distinguish how we title the sport, we subconsciously revert back to our primitive selves. Throngs of people find pleasure in watching others collide with one another, beating and bruising opponents. Hey, it's sports. We're just following our lineage.
- Edited by Brian Sisk
This week in athletics
Wednesday
Williams Education
Fund
Houston Football
Preview party with
Charlie Weis
7 p.m.
The Armadillo Palace
Thursday
Friday
Williams Education
Fund
Dallas Football
Preview Party with
Charlie Weis
6:30 p.m.
Dallas Market Center
Women's Golf
Central Regional
All Day
Norman, Okla.
I
Softball
lowa State
4 p.m.
Ames, Iowa
T
Baseball
Kansas State
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Saturday
Women's Golf
Central Regional
All Day
Norman, Okla.
Track
SDAY
track Georgia Tech Invitational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
PACIFIC
Baseball Kansas State 2 p.m. Lawrence
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
Sunday
Track
frack Georgia Tech Invitational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
I
Softball
lowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
C
Baseball
Kansas State
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Tennis
NCAA 1st/2nd round
TBA
TBA
Monday
Williams Education Fund
Football Season Ticket Select-A Seat All Day Memorial Stadium
Williams Education Fund
Football Season Ticket
Select A-Seat
All Day
Memorial Stadium
Tuesday
ملاحظة
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
Home
housing
SALE
...
for sale
785-864-4358
JOBS
announcements
Century School is Hiring
Part-Time Summer-Fall Teachers
Flexible Schedules. For more information
Call Sara 785-832-0101
Christian Day Care needs reliable full time or part time help for summer Call 785-842-2088
Positions Open - KU Endowment is seeking KU students to work 5 nights each week during the summer, talking with University of Kansas alumni while earning $90/hr. Excellent communication skills, dedication and a desire to make KU a better university are all a must. Email Emily at evieuxu@kuendowment.org today to learn more about this exciting opportunity to build your resume and have fun in this professional environment.
Jimmy John's is looking to hire some Jimmy John's & inshippers. We make delicious sub sandwiches & we make them freaky fast. We're loud & fast paced. We love to train new people & we're hiring right now! Delivery Drivers make a full hourly wage & also make great tips. If you like to move fast & want to be comfortable, you're welcome. You please appear in person at 1730 W 23rd St. Must be available during closing hrs 5pm-3am, cover all tattoos. No gauged earings & one piercing per ear.
JOBS
WANTED: Gymnastics Instructor
$12+/hr. gas pay and drive time
Call 618-975-160 for details!
AAC Tutoring Services is hiring Tutors for Fall 2013! To apply, visit www.tutoring.kua.edu.uk85-864-7733/OE/AA
MEDIA SPEAKER
Bambino's immediate Openings Servers and Delivery Drivers. Apply in person. EOE. 1540 Wakarau Drive.
jobs
PLAY SPORTS! HAVE FUN! SAVE MONEY! Maine camp love fun loving counselors to teach All land, adventure, & water sports. Great Summer! Call 888-848-0809, campedcar.com
Coleman American Moving Services in Shawnee, KS is seeking loaders, packers, drivers and warehouse personnel for the summer season. Pay range is $12-$14hr. Please call 800-239-1427 or email jason.christansen@covan.com to apply.
Part Time Administrative Assistant
Seeking part-time administration Assistant to work 20-30 hrs/wk in KC Metro. Requires: Excellent computer skills, typing skills, knowledge of Microsoft Office Suite and able to multi-task. Hrs may
Give back to the community & help those in need: PT Support Workers wanted, $8.50-$9/hr, assist people w/ developmental & intellectual disabilities w/ daily living activities. Apply online at trinityhomecare.com. E-mail questions to Scott Criqui at scott@tho.org.
HARD TO FIND WORK? HARD TO MAKE MONEY? Get paid for RIPPLING! Rippin is a brand new FREE mobile app introduction. You, relatives & friends have the opportunity to be rewarded for their own social network. Capitalize & make $$ on 3 emerging markets Mobile, Apps & Gamification. Invitation only. www.startmirtipple.com FREEIlet me know your E-mail address will send INVITE ACCESS. Nothing to lose, a lot to gain! rjenkins-group@aol.com
Help wanted for custom harvesting.
Truck driver. Good wages. Guaranteed pay. Call 970-483-7490 evenings.
Part-time personal care attendant for a woman w/ autism. 1 shift per week.
Experience/knowledge helpful.
Call 785-266-5307
HAWKCHALK.COM
...
vary. Email resumes to: reports@alternativeclaims.com.
JOBS
Pharmacy Needs counter clerk to work afternoons & some Saturdays. Position starts this month to continue through school year. Call Karyn 843-4160
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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HOUSING
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Town Homes and Houses
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HANMAN HOM
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HOUSING
1, 2, 3 or 4 BR, WD included, owner managed and maintained, pets possible.
Downtown and campus locations, 785-842-8473, juju@wavon.com.
2 BR, DW, DW, wood floors, very close to campus, 1242 Louisiana, $620 water paid, 785 393 6330 call or text
2003 University Dr. 3 BR with studio or 4 BR available Aug. 1,2013. W/D Included. 2 bath, 1 car garage. On bus route. New carpet. $800/mo. Contact us at 785-218-6590 or 785-841-
28/r1BA. Dplx Garage, Lndry room
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Cootest Apt. in Town
4br,loft, 4 2/bath/wd
Wood floors, 20 foot ceilings
Call Trom 785-505-0428
4 and 7 BR houses.
Available August 2013.
thomas@sunflower.com
textbooks
LUXURY LIVING AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
3 BR and 4BR Available August.
Close to KU. All appliances. Must see.
Call 785-766-7518.
Ranch Way Townhomes on Clinton Parkway
ID Card
2 & 3 Bedroom $780-$870
TRE-BAQ
½ off deposit
PAID INTERNET
Gage Management
785-842-7644 | www.gagemgmt.com
hawkchalk
WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS
3 Bedroom 3 Bathroom.
As lowes as $355 per person
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Contact for more information on specials
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Great Deposit Specialist W/D, fitness center, pool, Free DVD rental, sm pets welcome Canyon Court Apartments,
700 Comet Lane (785) - 832-8805
HIGHPOINTE APARTMENTS
HOUSING
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1, 2 & 3BR - Now leasing! Free May rent for immediate move in. W/D in each unit,
pool, fitness center, pet friendly. Reduced deposits 785-841-8488/high-
pointe@sunflower.com
Large 1 BR, 1530 Tennessee, nice & quiet, $500 water paid, 785 393 6339 call or text
NOW LEASING FALL 2013! CAMPUS LOCATIONS!
Studios, 1 & 2 bedrooms
OFFICE: Chase Court Apartments
1942 Stewart Ave, 785-843-8220
www.firstmanagementinc.com
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Also, Check out our Luxury
Apartments & Town Homes!
HOLIDAY APARTMENTS
1-4 BR avail. 6/1 & 8/1, Pool, Patio/
balcony, KU & Lawrence Bus. Walk-in.
Closets. Pets OK! Quiet Location. Call:
785 843.0011 www.holidaymgmt.com
HOUSING
Saddlebrook & Overland Points
LUXURY TOWNHOMES
Fork In Specials
625 Falks Mov In Specials
832-820-8200
1 bdrm apart. sublet @ The Connection
June and July
Email h316819@ku.edu
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3 BR 1.5 BA House, W/D $1050, Avail Aug 1. Great Location South of KU,
785-393-4900
Sunrise Place
Sunrise Villiage
Apartments & Townhomes
Spacious 2,3 & 4 BR Townhomes
- $200-400 off 1st month of rent
- Swimming pools, Pet-friendly, & Some with garages
ON KU BUS ROUTE
www.sunrise apartments.com
785-841-8400
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Volume 125 Issue 117
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S sports
kansan.com
COMMENTARY Wiggins could determine Jayhawks' success
By Mike Vernon
mvernon@kansan.com
One week could determine the difference between good and great for the
2013-2014 Kansas basketball season.
Andrew Wiggins, the top recruit in the 2013 class, seems ready to end his prolonged decision making process.
According to the Louisville Courier-Journal, Wiggin's mother will head from Canada to West Virginia to support him for the announcement, which will come "sometime in the next week or so."
The general consensus among recruiting experts is that Wiggins will choose one of four schools: Florida State, Kansas, Kentucky and North Carolina.
I'm not here to speculate on which school Wiggins will choose. I would spew forth nothing of worth if I were to do that. With recruiting, it's a complete guess game until the very end, regardless.
However, I will say that Wiggins could elevate Jayhawk basketball back to top-five status to start the season. That's not to say Kansas won't finish the year without him. But the instant gratification and results of what Wiggins will bring could prove immeasurable.
The 6-foot-7-inch small forward, who has been called the best prospect in years, would fit in perfectly for a Kansas team that could use a star in its lineup next season.
Sure, Naadir Tharpe will be back as point guard and facilitator. Perry Ellis flourished in post-season play at power forward. Big man Jamari Taylor looked promising at times, and Bill Self has spoken highly of Landen Lucas as well.
There's Wayne Selden, an incoming freshman who played in the McDonald's All-American game who will fit in nicely at shooting guard. There's Wichita's stellar shooter Conner Frankamp, whose highlight tape is non-stop barrage of deep 3-pointers and impressive drives to the basket. Not to mention center Joel Embid who has soared in recruiting rankings this season.
But none of those guys will be able to change a game — change a team — like Andrew Wiggins. Sure, the hype is high, but those who have seen the man play almost unanimously declare his talent will count as a gargantuan addition to any team that lands him.
Wiggins would slide perfectly into that small forward spot for Kansas, and the eyes of every opponent would focus on him. That's when Conner Frankamp's 3-point shooting could become deadly. When Perry Ellis will be able to win one-on-ones in the post. When Naadir Tharpe will best be able to blow by his defender.
Of course, all of this means nothing if Wiggins chooses another school. That's just the way recruiting goes. For now, this is Kansas' first must-win game of the 2013-2014 season.
Edited by Brian Sisk
LIGHTS OUT
POWER
SURGE
Jordan
Dreiling
Senior
• 14 stolen bases on the
2013 season
• Third Baseman
Hometown: Lawrence, Kan.
Jordan
Piché
Junior
• Leads Big 12 with saves
on the 2013 season
• Closer
Hometown: Greeley, Colo.
Alex
DeLeon
Senior
• DeLeon leads the team
with seven homeruns.
• First Baseman
Hometown: Woodland Hills,
Calif.
Kevin
Kuntz
Senior
• Kuntz's 21 sacrifice bunts
are three behind Ritchie
Price's program record of 24
set in '08
• Shortstop
Hometown: Tulsa, Okla.
1
Kansas continues solid play amid power outage at Eck Stadium
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
The Jayhawks turned out the lights on any doubts this season, beating Wichita State 7-5 in a hotly contested match at the Shockers' Eck Stadium.
Kansas hung five runs in the fifth, three of which coming off a bases clearing triple from sophomore right fielder Connor McKay. The Jayhawks survived a 20-minute delay when the lights of Eck Stadium went dark.
"Ive really only seen that in the Super Bowl," McKay said. "We took it with a grain of salt. As soon as the lights, came back on we checked it back in. It obviously wasn't hard for Dakota, he put a good swing on that ball and got us another RBI."
Sophomore rightfieldder Dakota Smith scored
Sophomore leftfielder Michael Suiter on a sacrifice fly in the at-bat after light was restored.
The Jayhawks started their surge early with an RBI single from senior third baseman Jordan Dreiling. Kansas fell behind after two one-run Wichita State innings in the second and third innings before it regained the lead with five in the fifth.
In the fifth, McKay hit a bases clearing three-RBI triple, his first triple of the season. The sophomore continued his hot play at the plate after hitting a double off the right-centerfield wall against Baylor.
"That was huge," coach Ritch Price said. "He's a guy that beats himself up. He has great tools, but he's still learning how to play this game at a really high level and compete with Big 12 pitching. He's starting to make those adjustments
and give himself a chance to be successful."
Wichita State didn't fall easily. With two runs in the seventh and one run in the eighth, the lead narrowed to 7-5, prompting Kansas coach Ritch Price to bring in Junior closer Jordan Piche'.
"He's the best guy in the country," Price said. "And the key to our success this season has been his performance at the back end of games. He's having one of the greatest years that a relief pitcher has had at the University of Kansas."
Piche' got his 10th save of the season after he faced four batters and struck out two, including the final out. Piche's 10 saves lead the Big 12 conference. The junior entered the game with runners on first and third base and two outs. Piche' wouldn't have it any other way.
"It's a tough one to come
into, but I like those situations and feel like I thrive on them," Piche' said. "My mindset was throw first pitch strikes and really get ahead on the guy. I really got them off balance and sure enough got them and got out of a tough situation."
Piche' didn't just get out of a tough situation. He got the exclamation point of a strike-out that sent Shockers' leftfielder Mikel Mucha to the bench to seal the save.
"That's just a great feeling," Piche' said. "It really tops the night off."
Piche' has faced a heavier workload of late, but said he felt fine after the victory over Wichita State. The Kansas coaching staff is keeping a close eye on the handling of their key closer.
of those guys that's in great shape. He's so efficient that he throws less pitches than most guys on the mound. That's why he can go multiple days and not be sore."
"We're trying to be really careful with him," Price said. "He's really fortunate to be one
Wichita State is the next game in a long line of resurgence for the Jayhawks.
"For us, that was a must win game as we continue to build our resume to make the NCAA tournament," Price said. "After the huge three-game sweep over Baylor, we couldn't afford to come in here and take a step back tonight. That sets up a huge weekend against the Wildcats for us this weekend."
The Jayhawks face the Kansas State Wildcats in their Big 12 finale at Hoglund Ballpark this weekend.
Edited by Dylan Lysen
ECK STADIUM, 6:30 P.M., WICHITA
KANSAS (31-18, 12-9)
17 - Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34 - Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
55 - Tanner Poppe, Sr.
PITCHING
Jordan Piche' continues his dominance on the mound. Appearing in four straight games, he now has 10 saves on the year to lead the Big 12 conference. Piche' is making a strong case for closer of the year honors having already captured three-straight Big 12 Newcomer of the Week awards. The Jayhawks starting rotation has continued solid play and are a large reason the team is hot at the moment.
FIELDING
Kansas recorded another solid night in the field. The middle infield combo of senior shortstop Kevin Kuntz and sophomore second baseman Justin Protacio have been as solid as any in the country. The Jayhawks will need this to continue if they want a chance at the Big 12 title.
The Jayhawks' Sophomore designated hitter Connor McKay hit a base-clearing RBI triple in the fifth inning against Wichita State to jump start the Jayhawks. McKay has been hot at the plate of late hitting an RBI double off the wall in the Baylor series to help Kansas to victory. The Jayhawks face one of the hottest hitting teams in baseball in the Kansas State Wildcats over the weekend.
HITTING
KU
FOLLOW @UDK_SPORTS ON TWITTER FOR SPORTS NEWS DAILY
2013
Volume 125 Issue 118
kansan.com
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Good luck on finals!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UDK the student voice since 1904
the student voice since 1904
[Image]
GRADUATION GUIDE INSIDE
TOP TOWN
---
LOVING LAWRENCE
HANNAH BARLING
hbarling@kansan.com
Lawrence has been recognized for its friendly, inviting, college student-filled town as the eighth best college town in the nation.
Among the top-10 best college towns in the nation, Lawrence ranks eighth, according to the American Institute for Economic Research's (AIER) 75 Best College Towns and Cities for 2012-2013.
---
AIER took into account 12 different aspects of the towns and cities to create the list. The 12 categories were student concentration, student diversity, research capacity, degree attainment, cost of living, arts and leisure, city accessibility, creative class, earning potential, entrepreneurial activity, unemployment rate and brain gain and drain.
The AIER survey made four groups based on total resident population. Lawrence falls under the college towns category with fewer than 250,000 residents.
more des-
hay hit a
k in the fifth
note to jump
has been
being an RBI
the Baylor
victory. The
tostett hit-
the Kansas
weekend.
Lawrence is home to many traditions and unique places that make it stand out. The University
is full of traditions; from the campanile to Allen Fieldhouse, several landmarks on campus set it apart from other college towns.
Steven Henry, a senior from
Steven Henry, Augusta, likes going to Kansas baseball games because it's a fun thing to do with friends that's free and on campus. He said one of his favorite places in town is Henry's Coffee Shop, located at 11 E. Eighth St.
Henry said it's a nice place that has a local feel and is a way to see people from all areas of Lawrence. Another place Henry frequents is Louise's Bar, located at 1009 Massachusetts St.
"Downtown is awesome because we have a defined street that you're guaranteed to run into someone you know."
"It has a wide range of people who frequently come there," Henry said. "There's not a specific type of person that goes there, and it's really inviting."
town and overall casual and inviting atmosphere.
Annie Drape, a sophomore from Leawood, said one of her favorite restaurants that has a
TANSEY SCHOONOVER Sophomore from Roswell, Ga.
Henry said the proximity of our town being so close to Kansas City correlates to the pace of the
Lawrence feel to it is 23rd Street Brewery, located at 3512 Clinton Parkway. Drape said the restaurant gives good vibes that reflect the town's atmosphere.
"It's a well-known place that I feel like
most everyone in town has been to" Drape said.
Tansey Schoonover, a sophomore from Roswell, Ga., said it almost feels as if Lawrence is hugging you when you're walking around town. Her favorite place to eat is WheatFields Bakery and Cafe, located at 904 Vermont St. She always orders the biscuits and gravy and said it's the best bakery around.
"Downtown is awesome because we have a defined street that you're
guaranteed to run into someone you know," Schoonover said. "It's not only college students but also the townies playing music, food markets and festivals."
BRITTANY THIESING/KANSAN
Besides cool bars and good restaurants, Lawrence is home to several parks and outdoor recreation areas. Topeka sophomore Lauren Fitzgerald likes to explore Clinton Lake and find new trails to run on. She also said Massachusetts street is a fun place to walk around and people-watch, seeing the college students and other members of the community mix.
Another place unique to Lawrence that Fitzgerald visits is Liberty Hall, located at 644 Massachusetts St. She said the town itself has an old-fashioned feel to it sometimes, and Liberty Hall is an old theater that plays less mainstream films and more indie films.
Numerous people of Lawrence enjoy the weather and great food at Free State Brewery. Free State Brewery is just one of the landmarks that makes Lawrence an enjoyable college town.
"The movie store has some movies that I can't find anywhere else," Fitzgerald said. "I love finding the strange and obscure movies there."
Free Sage
Shrinking Bee
— Edited by Hayley Jozwiak
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
A PREVIEW
pg.7A EXCESS HOLLYWOOD
JOHNNY'S
happy 60th birthday
pg.2A
THE MORNING BREW
KU
pg.2B
SPY INDEXED
BROADBAND pg.3A
pg.4A OPINION UDK
TAKING ON THE WILDCATS
KANSAS
23
pg.1D
Index CLASSIFIEDS 2B CRYPTOQUIPS 5A SPORTS 1B CROSSWORD 5A OPINION 4A SUDOKU 5A All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Don't forget Check out the Graduation Guide inside!
Today's Weather
THE UNIVERSITY DARY KANSAN
N
news
PAGE 2A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief Hannah Wise
Managing editors
Sarah McCabe
Nikki Wentling
News editor Allison Kohn
NEWS SECTION EDITORS
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
Associate news editor Joanna Hlavacek
Sports editor Pat Strathman
Sales manager
Jacob Snider
Associate sports editor Trevor Graff
Business manager Elise Farrington
Entertainment and special sections editor Laken Rapier
copy chiefs
Megan Himman
Taylor Lewis
Brian Sisk
Design chiefs
Ryan Benedick
Katie Kutsko
Designers Trey Conrad Sarah Jacobs
Opinion editor
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Photo editor Ashleigh Lee
Web editor
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ADVISERS
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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 Summside Avenue, Lawrence, 66045.
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The University Dalkan Kaisan (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 excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Dalkan Kaisan, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sumside Avenue.
Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUIK's website at tvku.edu.
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KJHN
What's the weather, Jay?
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan.
66045
Weather.com
Penguin
Morning clouds, afternoon sun with a 20 percent chance of rain.
Friday HI:69 LO:49
Sunday
Sunny with winds from the east at 7 mph
Penguin
day
HI: 66
LO: 47
Here comes the sun...
Saturday
Sunday
HI: 68
LO: 42
Sunny with winds from the north-northwest at 14 mph
Just a bit breezy.
Get your tan on.
Thursday, May 9th
CALENDAR
C
**WHAT:** KU School of Music Youth
Chorus Concert
**WHERE:** Murphy Hall, 328
**WHEN:** 5 to 6 p.m.
**ABOUT:** This choral group, composed of community children, will have its final performance of the school year.
Admittance is free.
Friday, May 10th
WHAT: KU Tango Spring Classes
WHERE: Kansas Union
WHEN: 7:45 p.m.
ABOUT: Bring your dancing shoes and an adventurous spirit to this free tango lesson.
WHAT: KJHK and SUA present Bad Rabbits
WHERE: Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St
WHEN: 8 p.m.
ABOUT: Enjoy the musical styling of Bad Rabbits, a fusion of futuristic R&B and post-rock, free with your KU ID.
ABOUT. In the mood for some political hip hop? Tickets are $22 to see Brooklyn-based rapper Talib Kweli perform at The Granada.
WHAT: Talib Kweli
WHERE: The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
WHEN: 8:20 p.m.
WHEN: 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 11th
WHAT: Lawrence Potters Guild sale
WHERE: Carnegie Building, 200 W.
9th St.
WHEN:10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ABOUT: Support the Lawrence Potters
Guild at their spring sale, just in time
for Mother's Day and graduation.
WHAT: 3rd Annual Red Rockin' Music Festival
WHERE: Buford M. Watson Park
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
ABOUT: This event benefitting the Lawrence Community Nursery School features music, games, food and Free State beer.
Sunday, May 12th
**WHAT:** Freedom on the Hill: 5/10K Run for Boston
**WHERE:** West campus
**WHEN:** 9:30 to 11 a.m.
**ABOUT:** Want to help victims of the Boston Marathon bombings? Put on your running shoes and attend Freedom on the Hill. a run to raise money for relief fund One Fund Boston.
**WHAT:** Mother's Day at the Museum
**WHERE:** Spencer Museum of Art
**WHEN:** 12 to 4 p.m.
Freedom on the Hill run to fundraise for Boston
ABOUT. Take your momma out for a day at the Spencer. Enjoy live music and check out artwork inspired by motherhood.
CALEB SISK
csisk@kansan.com
At 2:49 p.m. EDT on April 15, runners across the nation bore witness to an unexpected act of violence, as two improvised explosive devices exploded near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
in the hours following the bombings, Howard Ting decided to take action in support of the victims of the attack. Ting sent a text message to the members of his group for a project in Communications 342 and told them of his thoughts of changing the focus of their service project to helping those affected in Boston.
In the following weeks, Ting's idea evolved from a proactive thought into a large-scale charity event and relief effort. The group members (Ting, Laura Konecny, Manny Delgelo and Amber Banks) went above and beyond the requirements for the project and created the event, Freedom on the Hill, a 5- and 10K charity run.
The event will take place this Sunday, May 12, at 9 a.m. The race will start at the marching band practice field on West Campus, run through West Campus and Park and Ride and loop back around to the starting point. One lap of the course will constitute 5k and two laps a 10k.
The group has since evolved from the original four members to a staff comprised of 35 students working around the clock to make this idea a reality. As well as bolstering its staff, the group has received sponsorship from various campus organizations, including KU Army and Air Force ROTC, Inter-Fraternity Council and Student Senate. Along with these student organizations, Freedom on the Hill received corporate sponsorship from Coca-Cola and Wells Fargo Bank.
"This event is not about vilifying the perpetrators but rather remembering the victims." Ting said.
Ting said the group hopes that this event will help to turn attention away from the perpetrators and their trial and turn focus to helping the victims and their families.
"Attacks such as these are meant to instill fear in the masses and cast attention towards those responsible, but we hope that through our efforts we can prove that we have not lost our faith in the American Spirit," said Andrew Locke, Greek life coordinator.
Participants must pay a $15 entry fee, which garners them a T-shirt and knowledge that they are actively assisting those affected by this tragedy.
Those interested in participating or donating to the cause should visit Freedomonthehill com for registration and more information.
All proceeds from the event will be donated to One Fund Boston, a non-profit created by Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and Boston Mayor Tom Menino.
Edited by Elise Reuter
LOCAL
FREEDOM
ON THE HILL
5K or 10K Run for Boston
SK or TUK RUN FOR BOSTON
To register and find out more visit us at:
FreedomOnTheHill.com
May 12, 2019 9:30am | 1:00pm
University of Kansas West Campus
Run by yourself $15
Run with a Friend $25 for buil
May 12, 2013
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
A class project sparked the creation of a race to benefit the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings. Proceeds will be donated to One Fund Boston.
happy 60th birthday
TYLER ROSTE/KANSAN
A local patron enjoys some beer and baseball at Johnny's Tavern. Johnny's is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year, making it one of the oldest bars in Lawrence.
Johnny's Tavern celebrates 60 years of good food and company
EMILY DONOVAN
Rick Renfro didn't originally think television in a bar sounded like a good idea. When he heard a television network was launching 24-hour sports coverage in 1979, he reluctantly installed a few televisions by the bar, afraid technology would kill conversation. Now, Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., houses 15 fat-screen televisions.
edonovan@kansan.com
The neighborhood tavern has changed significantly in the 60 years since John Wilson bought a few beer taps in 1953. Where most new restaurants fall within three years of being launched, Renfro has worked to keep Johnny's
"John Wilson would turn over in his grave if he knew what I've been doing to the place," Renfro said.
The tavern's success, he believes, can be attributed to two key factors: friendly staff and friendly customers.
fresh, remodeling major facets of his business model every 10 or so years. Pizza and burgers now make up 80 percent of his food sales.
The eight other Johnny's Neighborhood Taverns around the Lawrence and the Kansas City metro have spread the warm atmosphere. When Renfro was looking to expand in 1992, the landlords, wearing suits and ties, visited the Lawrence location on a Wednesday around 5 p.m. to see what kind of operation they would be leasing to. The place was packed with college students, rough construction guys and lawyers taking advantage of the day's special.
"It's more the people than it is the building." Renfro said.
Renfro describes Johnny's as a comfortable pair of old jeans. Back in the day, locals would either go to a barbershop or hairdresser or their local tavern to catch up on the town gossip. Now, Johnny's draws an eclectic crowd of locals — a group of retired men meet as the bar opens at 11 a.m. to share a daily beer, and more and more parents are bringing children under the age of 10. Pop, oldies, country and rap shuffle through the bartender's iPod.
"See those two cigarette butts on the floor over there?" they said. "We need to scoop up some of that and take it to Johnson County."
The 60th anniversary specials, including $6 burgers and $6 domestic pitchers, last through Saturday.
Edited by Megan Hinman
TRANSPORTATION
Bus routes to change next week for finals
If you're planning on traveling to campus before the semester ends, take note: KI on Wheels will run altered route schedules Stop Day and Finals week.
There will be limited service on Stop Day. The following routes will not operate: 27, 29, 30, 33, 36, 38, 42 and 43. Routes 11 and 41 will operate their 'B' schedules on Stop Day and will return to their 'A' schedules for one week on Monday, May 13.
Route 11: The 6.18 a.m. bus will operate as usual. A special 6.48 a.m. departure from The Reserve and The Connection will be added, which should arrive on campus at about 7.20 a.m.
For students with 7.30 a.m. finals, KU on Wheels will service early bus routes during Finals Week.
Route 11: Special 7 a.m. departure from 24th and Naismith.
Route 29: Service will start at 6:40 a.m. from 27th and Scottsdale.
Route 27: Service will start at 6:25 a.m. from Haskell University.
Route 30: Service will start at 6:50 a.m. from Chelsea Place (westbound)
Route 33: Service will start at 6:53 a.m. from North Michigan.
Route 36: Service will start at 6:33 a.m. from Gateway Court.
Route 38: Service will start at 6:45 am from 25th and Melrose.
Route 42: Service will start at 7:01 a.m. from lot 94 at the stadium and at the regular time from 18th Street, 7:10 a.m.
Route 43: Service will start at 7 a.m.
For more information, check out www.
lawrencetransit.org.
Joanna Hlavacek
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
winds at
---
PAGE 3A
on
13
100 oz.
Clambus
$1.5
1:00pm
Campus.
IF. $15
TED PHOTO the Boston
art at 6:25
art at 6:40
sale.
art at 6:50
westbound).
art at 6:53
INTERNET
start at 6:33
start at 6:45
start at 7 a.m.
check out www.
start at 7:01
dium and at
Street, 7:10
Lawrence neighborhoods to compete for gigabit service
anna Hlavacek
ETTS!
1
LAS
E. COM
REID EGGLESTON
reggleston@kansan.com
Students of the University and Lawrence residents will have the chance to opt in this fall to Lawrence's newest gigabit internet service, Wicked Broadband, touted as an equivalent to Kansas City, Kan's Google Fiber service.
Wicked Broadband, founded and based in Lawrence, will provide their service to one neighborhood in Lawrence when students return to school. Wicked boasts processing speeds up to 1,000 times faster than standard internet.
Following a model similar to the one that landed Google Fiber in Kansas City, Wicked has launched a pre-registration drive for their service to determine which neighborhood will first receive their gigabit broadband this August.
For $10, Lawrence residents can vote to bring Wicked to their neighborhood for the upcoming school year and take advantage of internet service that will allow users to upload videos in seconds rather than hours and watch multiple programs online in HD without buffering or pixilation.
The pre-registration drive, which began April 16 and continues through June 15, is located on Wicked Broadband's website, www.wickedfiber.com. Participants in neighborhoods that do not win the drive will have their $10 refunded.
"This drive gives the community the opportunity to tell us that they want the next generation of broadband," said Wicked Broadband owner, Joshua Montgomery.
Montgomery is excited to expand the promises of gigabit services that became so famous through Google Fiber to the Lawrence community. But he sees a few things that help his company stand out.
One is a technology called a community wireless network which integrates entire neighborhoods of broadband users into one secure grid, streamlining the ease with which Wicked can control services and provide better access to customers during potential disasters or severe weather — a service that Google Fiber customers don't have.
Wicked Broadband is also seeking out a unique connection to Lawrence businesses that will likely need fiber service in the near future. While Google Fiber currently does not fill the niche of business internet integration in Kansas City, Wicked hopes their model will become a platform for other providers to offer gigabit service to local businesses.
In that same spirit of competition, Wicked invites future Lawrence internet providers to join the rapidly growing domain of fiber service through their strategy of providing excess capacity throughout the city. When Wicked first delved into gigabit service laying down fiber cables that spanned Lawrence, they added not just two cables for their own company, but two more cables open for other companies to explore fiber broadband and eventually compete with Wicked for gigabit customers.
Aware of the implications his company and gigabit internet have on the world of communication and entertainment, Montgomery asserts that "this is a game-changer that's turning companies that sell you three services — internet, phone, and cable — at a premium price into one service — data transport."
For those looking to pursue the latest in internet service and get the most out of their devices, Montgomery encourages students to try and "cut the cord" when it comes to cable and phone lines, recommending cheaper alternatives like Vonage and Hulu Plus, each of which are compatible with Wicked's internet service.
Some students have already become loyal Wicked customers. The gigabit service was installed two years ago in half of the Greek houses on campus at a rate of $24 per month per person for each house. While students who live on their own will pay anywhere from $50 per month for 20 Mbps internet to $100 per month for the gigabit package, Montgomery points to successes in the Greek community as reason to test out the service.
For students concerned with being tied down to a pesky contract even after they move to different neighborhoods or away from Lawrence altogether, Montgomery reassures that contracts run in 10-month intervals, from August to May, specifically for the benefit of students.
Montgomery hopes that anyone interested in the gigabit internet revolution will get involved and pre-register for Wicked. While only one neighborhood wins, the company plans to use the results of the drive as a guide for where the service will expand in subsequent years.
ROCKYJORDANBAND.CUU
WICKERBROADRAND.CON
CPT
MAX 10P
— Edited by Elise Reuter
DANIEL PALEN/KANSAN
CPF
MEDICAL
MAILBOX
BASIC JACK
PUSH BUTTON
Wicked Broadband is coming to Lawrence. The company is said to be equivalent to that of Google Fiber, which is already in Kansas City, Kan.
CRAFTS
Local potters' club to host spring pottery sale
The Lawrence Potter's' Guild will host its spring pottery sale this Saturday. May 11, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the Carnegie Building lawn at 9th and Vermont.
the Guild, who also teaches ceramics at the Lawrence Art Center.
It will present the work of 15 local artists and include both functional pottery and artistic pieces.
She's been involved with the Lawrence Potters' Guild for two years and participates in arranging the sales, meetings, and events surrounding it.
"It's a perfect opportunity to purchase a gift that is both hand-made and locally-made; something to last a life time," says Kim Brook, president of
Although Brook herself has been
creating pottery for 8 years now, all members of the Guild have different ranges of pottery experience.
"We have artists with 30 to 40 years of experience and those with only several years; it's open to anyone interested in pottery."
Prices for the pieces range anywhere from $5 to $300, and profits help support the art community in Lawrence.
— Krista Montgomery
KU1nfo
HAVE KU graduates always walked down the hill for Commencement? Well, the Campanile has only been in place since the early 1950s, but walking down the hill has been a tradition
— Emily Dcnovan
since 1924, Rock Chalk!
STATEN OF LIBERTY
POLICE REPORTS
- A 34-year-old male was arrested yesterday on the 600 block of Whitfield on suspicion of domestic battery. No bond was posted.
- Information based on the Douglas County Sheriff's Office booking recap.
- A 27-year-old male was arrested Tuesday on the 1700 block of 24th Street on suspicion of theft of property, third offense. A $3,500 bond was paid.
- A 31-year-old male was arrested Tuesday on the 2300 block of Iowa Street on suspicion of theft of property. A $1,500 bond was paid.
WANT NEWS UPDATES ALL DAY LONG?
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@UDK_News
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CLOSET
f t
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PAGE 4A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY & ANSAN
O
FREE FOR ALL
opinion
Text your FFA submissions to 785-289-8351
Editor's note: I've been the FFA editor for a year now. This is my last one.
Thanks for the fun times, KU.
The FFA editor is a woman. #mywhole-lifesalie Editor's note: Uh. No I'm not.
Brave! to the cast of the Police Acad-
emy movies for making it through seven
amazing films!
To the random girl that honked me and told me she loved me... You're moving too fast for me. Seriously that was a 25 mph zone.
All right kids, it's time to play "Homeless Person or College Student?"
When people say "It is never too early to start drinking," I always thought it was dumb. Until today.
My big toe is such a slut,it's always banging everything it can!
Yes I would love to help get animals out of those awful cages... AND IN MY BELLAY.
After my first year of college, all I can say is that I'm now scared sh*tless of having a daughter.
Mega FFA on Thursday? Talk about that Christmas Eve feeling...but better. It's Mega FFA Eve.
I know you can see my panties through my shorts, OK! Back off!
Who is this?
To the fool who thinks he/she can be an engineer; at least you'll contribute to the curve
Pretty sure I just saw Buster Bluth skateboarding down Tennessee.
It would be so clutch to marry a wife with a well paying job. I feel like I would be a great house-husband.
Um... The same crossword two days in a row? Not cool Robert Frost!
Instead of worrying about what the other will make in a career, perhaps we should be thankful for the education and money we have. There are people in the world living on less than a dollar a day.
Fun fact: to help lower allergy severity in spring eat a spoon full of local honey a day. Thank you bees.
So out of curiosity, where does The Doctor stand in the whole "superhero/not superhero" debate? I mean he saves an average of a planet a day, and the whole universe on a bad day.
Blue Steel.
Yeah, but reddit is all reposts anyway,
so...
SHOUT out to the editor and everyone who summited posts for making this years FFA section.
Steal.
I bet engineer majors tell back on the,
"My dad can beat up your dad" a lot
during childhood.
Ah springtime, when the birds sing and girls resort to skrillex haircuts. #notaodidea
ACTIVITIES
Spend your summer productively
W whether you had a good year or a bad year, once final exa
notagoodidea
wrap up next week, it's time for everyone to pack it in and split off on their separate ways for the summer.
Leaving school for the summer can be quite bittersweet. Nothing beats returning to the quiet comforts of home where you can sleep in your own bed and laze around without having anything to do or study for. Plus, you have unlimited access to a fully stocked refrigerator — usually full of food that you didn't have to buy, for once.
I always love the first few days of being home, but then, like anything, it starts to suck as time goes by. Eventually, you'll fully catch up on all the sleep you lost from finals week; you'll have already devoured all the good food from the refrigerator and you'll have hung out with your old friends to the point where
you're tired of them again. At some point — probably during that sixth straight hour of watching "Mad Men" on Netflix — you're going to wish you were back at school
A lot of people stay in Lawrence to take classes during the summer, and others may land internships in a big city. I'm lucky enough to be inning New York, so I'll only spend a few weeks at home before heading off for the summer. But, in my first summer home from college, I figured out ways to make a summer at my parents' house feel a lot more bearable. If you're stuck at home, here's what you can do:
By AJ Barbosa
abarbosa@kansan.com
This should go without saying — if you're not taking summer classes or don't have an internship, there's no reason you shouldn't be working full-time to save up some cash. I have plenty of friends who work at restaurants or bars during the summer,
GET A JOB, MAN.
and since you don't have to pay rent or tuition in the summer, the money you make piles up fast and can sustain you for the better part of next year (if you're smart). If you don't have a job lined up already, you're probably going to be stuck at some podunk fast food joint. That will likely suck, but at least you'll be making money.
GET OUT OF TOWN.
Minneapolis, Dallas and Denver (plus everywhere in between). Take a few days off of work, gather up some friends and head somewhere better than where you already are. If you're a music fan and you've never been to a big-time festival — which means you haven't lived — scope out some tickets to Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza or any other big summer festival and hit the road. Festival passes usually run upwards of $200 or so for the whole shebang, but ask one one of the billions of Chicago kids at the University about going to Lolla. It's a blast.
Road trips are already sweet, but when the weather's this nice, they're a thousand times better. If you're from Kansas City, you're in luck because we're virtually equidistant from cities like Chicago.
GET BETTER AT SOMETHING (YEAH, I KNOW THAT'S CHEESY,
BUT WHAT ELSE ARE YOU GOING TO DO?)
There will be several weeks/ weekends when your friends are all out of town on vacation with their families and it feels like there's nothing to do. You'll have nothing but time. Remember how you only made it two weeks on
Remember how you've always said that you wanted to learn to play piano? Or paint? Or some other quarter-life crisis skill? Do it; it's going to be a lot easier in the summer when you're bored out of your skull than it would be during the school year, especially if you're trying to get back in shape. The gyms back home are usually a lot less packed than the Rec, and you're probably not going to be distracted by all the fun things that pop up in college, because when you're at home, fun things just don't pop up that often. Might as well do something productive.
Or, you could always just watch Netflix. Who cares? It's summer — it's not like your friends from school are going to know.
your New Year's resolution to get back in shape? Well, you might as well give it another shot.
Barbosa is a junior from Leawood majoring in journalism
F. O.E
Strength in the family starts with strong parents
This is the last column I will ever write for the University Daily Kansan
University Daily Kansan.
And it starts like this: My mother is the strongest person on the face of the earth.
On April 29 at 7 p.m. my mother's name lit up my cell phone. I knew what she was going to tell me before I answered. There was no pain in her voice when she spoke to me. She gave me the news the same way she did the last two times she had to deliver bad news.
***
My freshman year at the University was the worst year of my life. After almost being expelled for poor academic standing and fighting depression from a broken heart and home-sickness, I came home to Wichita that December to find my grandmother fighting borderline dementia caused by medicine.
I went to see her at the hospital and witnessed how bad it was. It broke my heart seeing her not understand what was happening around her and using anger to lash out at the confusion. The next day when I visited her again, she was different — happy to see me because she hadn't seen me in so long.
She didn't remember that I saw her the day before.
I prayed to God she would make it through Christmas. She made it through. I came back to the University and stayed. I was going to graduate no matter what
...
By Dylan Lysen
dlysen@kansan.com
My grandmother was a student at the University in the 1940s. That's where she met my grandfather. I've been a Jayahawk my entire life because of them. In the fall of 2009, I began my career at the University, the first in the family since my grandparents.
When I was facing expulsion, I thought of my grandparents. I thought about how family tradition says I should graduate a Ja(hawk). If it weren't for my grandparents, I might have given up a lot easier. If I gave up, I wouldn't be graduating from the University later this month with a degree in journalism.
I knew my grandmother was going to die before she did. I prayed to God she would make it through my graduation. On April 29 at 7 p.m., my mother called to tell me Vonda Hilliard, my mother's mother, had passed away. She won't be making it to my graduation.
***
My mother used to trick me. Whenever I would come home
to Wichita from Lawrence, she would take me to get groceries or new clothes. But before we would make it to the store, my mother would take a detour to my grandmother's apartment.
If my mother had asked, I probably wouldn't have gone. If it weren't for her, I wouldn't have the memories I have today. She understood family meant more than food or clothes. And I'll never forget those days when I sat on my grandmother's couch and she reminisced about her time at the University and reminded me that I'm only a Jayhawk because of her.
My mother's voice had the same comforting sound, just turned down a bit. She wanted to make sure her own children were OK first. That's how she handled it when I was 6-years-old and my cat was hit by a car. That's how she handled it on July 18, 2001, when her father - my grandfather, the World War II veteran who will forever be known to me as the biggest badass to ever live died in his sleep.
***
My mother had to be strong for the rest of us and always has been. She's been the most constant support in my life, and created the strong family bond we share that has always been there for me. My father often brags about my mother's ability to be cheerful no matter what. She's strong for all of us.
Sunday, my family sat down with the minister giving the service for my grandmother's funeral. She asked us questions I didn't want to think about. I couldn't answer. I just sat there staring at her trying not to cry. My mother spoke up for me. Out of all the people who were affected by my grandmother's death, my mother had the most right to breakdown. But she didn't. She was strong for me when I couldn't be.
***
I sat there looking like a spoiled brat who had nothing nice to say about his lovely grandmother, all because I didn't want to cry. My mother stood up for me and dealt with the hardest situation I can imagine. And I thank her for that.
This column isn't supposed to make you feel bad for me because my grandmother recently passed away. It's not supposed to make you realize that I have an amazing mother and family. It's supposed to remind you that sometimes, we take things for granted. You're told this all the time, but you don't really notice it until it's forced upon you and you fail to understand why the great things in life are taken away.
I couldn't be happier to call Vonda Hilliard my grandmother, or Jena Lysen my mother. The strength it took my mother to inform the whole family that one of us has left this earth on April 29 - a day before her own birthday, and sitting at her mother's bedside for 12 hours - is something I'm afraid I won't be able to do in the future. I'm having a hard time just writing this down right now.
My mother is a walking, talking representation of FOE: Family over everything.
***
This is the last column I will ever write for the University Daily Kansan. And it ends like this: I love you, mom.
***
Lysen is a senior from Andover majoring in journalism.
Go work on those great ideas that engineers have and then try to tell they're not overpaid.
If "The Suite Life of Zach and Cody" was part of their childhood... They're too young for you.
KU can spend 3 million on one person's salary but can not afford to re-surface the campus pavements that everyone needs to travel on...
Teachers bring their classes to campus for a scavenger hunt? That can't possibly go wrong!
I bet Batman was in a frat.
One Day I Will Become A Beautiful Butterfly, And Then Everything Will Be Better.
^ This guys knows what he's talking about... v This guy has NO clue
If there was an MVP award for the FFA Lebron James would win that too.
The redder the head the better in bed ... hmw well I'm a redhead turned blonde. Beat that!
I wanted to tell that little kid wearing a K-State Jersey to make sure he wore a different one the next time he visited. Ashamed that I didn't.
Well editor, thanks for a great 3 years. You had certainly made my semesters more humorous and I appreciate it!
We should go show our support for our Baseball Jayhawks!!!
If your childhood was "Suite Life of Zack and Cody' then. WHAT THE?! HOWOLD ARE YOU?!
If "Zach and Cody" was your child-hood, you must be a freshman. Real childhood memories are "Rugrats," "Ahhh Real Monsters," and "All That."
The engineers work harder all semester than most of you do for finals...
lay off. Respect, need homies.
Tabling at Wescoe? Just get a puppy. That'll do the trick.
Just thanked a girl because she's the "only girl I can talk to and not be annoyed." Guess finals are coming up.
A super gigantic enormous FFA?! My chance to get in is here!!!
You will be pleased to know that I finally felt barbaric and drank the milk from the bowl in public.
If she watched "Suite Life of Zach and Cody," she's too young for you, bro!
I've lost a black notebook stuffed with all my notes for semester. If anyone finds it please turn it in to Hash!
"I love our campus roads," said no one ever.
"Suite Life of Zack and Cody"
...When was your childhood? Last year?
The FFA editor is a guy? Here's my official proposal. Let's get married.
Editor's note: Supposedly I've already married someone in the FFA.
I'm obsessed with sleep. My last thought of the day is about how happy I am to finally sleep. My first is unhapiness at being awoken. My second is
planning my next nap.
But didn't the tulips just bloom?
Why must maintenance take them down? ! They're just so pretty!
"The Sweet Life" is your childhood? You were obviously deprived of the sweet glory that is Cartoon Network.
Walked by a physically handicapped man and casually asked how he was doing. He responded with "being blessed." There's a lot to learn from that man.
Well I'm stoned as shit for my last day of class.
That awkward moment when you're wearing rain boots when it's 70 and sunny because it was raining when you left your house this morning.
Bass is love, bass is life.
Is it raining outside or are those just tears because this is my last time reading the FFA?
Always amusing how the Film 100 class population is cut in half when all of the frat boys and sorority girls leave during the films
RCJH.
Here's to the class of 2013!
Engineers are great, but they don't know much about nutrition and exercise. Thanks to engineers, I'll be able to pay off my med school loans faster and make bank.
Hey FFA editor, do people send in pictures? Just curious. Editor's note:
The U.S. doesn't have as many innovators as it used to because people major in stupid things like business.
Holy allergy medication, Robin!
HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR
LETTER GUIDELINES
Length: 300 words
Hannah Wise, editor-in-chief
editor@kansas.com
Length: 300 words
The submission should include the author's
name and hometown Find our full letter to the editor policy online at kansas
comm letters.
Being an engineer major is like being a vegetarian, you can choose to do it, but you don't need to let the whole world know you do.
Sarah McCabe, managing editor smccabe@kansan.com
Nikki Wentling, managing editor nwentling@kansan.com
Last FFA of my KU career. It's been an honor and a blessing to get to call myself a Jayhawk. I may be graduating but I will forever bleed crimson and blue.
And with my graduating this year,
this school will officially lose its hottest
ginger.. My sincerest apologies.
Dylan Lysen, opinion editor
dlysen@kansan.com
Elise Farrington, business manager
The Batman Superman argument is moot because Marvel
Jacob Snider, sales manager
jsnider@kansan.com
CONTACT US
Malcolm Gibson, general manager and news adviser
mgibson@kansan.com
Jon Schitt, sales and marketing adviser
jschitt@kansan.com
THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Members of the Kansas Editorial Board are Hewlett West,
Sarah McCabe, Neki Wenkling, Dylan Lyon, Eise Farrington.
GE 4A
y
PAGE 5A
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
RD
Care Hannah Wise,
en, Elise Farrington
E
HOROSCOPES
Because the stars know things we don't.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
Venus enters Gemini for over a month of learning. Study with passion. In a conflict of interests, walk a thin line. Follow rules, and complain only to someone who can do something. Trust your heart.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9
It's easier to make money for the next month, and you're in the zone.
The New Moon solar eclipse in your sign today provides confident energy for six months. Follow your own drummer.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8
The urge to run and play tempts.
You're irresistibly lucky in love,
with Venus in your sign. Use the
New Moon solar eclipse to organize
and clear space.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9.
You won't wear your heart on your sleeve as much this next month. Sweet dreams and fantasies abound. Allow yourself more quiet time to consider. Sort, file, and discard. Don't reveal all your secrets.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
You're especially popular, and group activities go well. It's a good time to get your message across. Evaluate accounts. Settle an old debt. Reconsider a decision a bit longer.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Divide the necessary tasks more equitably. Then sell, sell, sell! For four weeks, it's easier to advance your agenda, and social networking is key. Take your time with complex computations. Give and receive love.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9
Don't push too hard or you'll break something. It's good for travel and setting goals this coming month. Make a list. Sidestep a conflict of interests. Confer with your team. Think (and reserve) ahead.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9
Today is a 9 Provide leadership. Partnership and compromise arrive more easily. Watch out for misunderstandings. Question tradition. You don't need to tell everyone everything.
It's easier to save this month and to push forward. Increase assets by being aware of expenditures. Stay out of the argument yet soak up their enthusiasm. You're gaining confidence. Re-assess your aspirations.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9
Your work is more fun and creative. A feminine touch colors your workplace. You can afford to save Shop carefully, and don't lose receipts. Provide support.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan.19) Today is a 9
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Today is a 9
Artistic efforts blossom. You're
lucky in love for the next month,
and beauty abounds. Finalize crea-
tive plans with discipline. Calm
your mind, Cutting corners costs
you. Avoid reckless spending.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9
Today is a 9 Start from practical basics, and toss out the superfluous. Your home can become your love nest. Domesticity thrives for the next month. Use your own good judgment, and don't be afraid to change routine.
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1 Tummy muscles for short
4 Slapstick arsenal
8 Scallopir meat
12 Press for payment
13 Ireland
14 Not working
15 Classic Anne Murray song
17 Location
18 Charlotte's creation
19 Capitol VIP
21 Pamper
24 Gun the engine
25 Melody
26 Sprite
28 Thin smoky streaks
32 Messy sort
34 Cut the grass
36 Fit of peevishness
DOWN
1 Billboards
2 Chignon
3 White-flowered amaryllis
4 Little rock
5 Square root of IX
6 Blunders
7 Passover feast
8 Compared to
9 Tend texts
10 Choir member
58 Shooter ammo
59 Adolescent
60 Has bills
61 Dr. Ruth's subject
37 High-
strung
39 Michael
Jackson
album
41 — budget
42 Affirma-
tive
action?
44 About
to fall
asleep
46 Old-style
hairpiece
50 Curved
line
51 Neighbor
of Cambodia
52 Increase
rapidly
56 Scandi-
navian
city
57 Sagan or
Sandburg
CHECK OUT
THE ANSWERS
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SUDOKU
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8 2 6 9
1 8
2 3
6 7 1
9 1 3 2 5
2 4 9
4 6
4 1
7 9 8
11 Ogle
16 Marry
20 Fresh
21 Money
22 Unctuous
23 Shade provider
27 Watch chain
29 Mountain peak covers, often
30 Bowlers' targets
31 Remain
33 Blessing
35 Bankroll
38 Ply oars
40 Talks Dixie-style
43 Mirrorball venue
45 Sphere
46 Basis for a whodunit
47 Relaxation
48 Portrayal
49 Chew like'a chip-munk
53 Tramcar contents
54 Shelter
55 Remiss
Difficulty Level ★★★
5/09
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BEER AND SPIRITS
WINE
His latest effort, "To the Wonder," contains similarly rapturous imagery, some of it cobbled together from unused "Tree of Life" footage. But the evanescent magic that sustained his previous work is gone, replaced by a moody, ponderous sense of self-indulgence that verges on flagrant self-parody towards the final act. This drastic lapse in quality is alternately frustrating and depressing, the cinematic equivalent of Hendrix suddenly forgetting how to play the guitar.
消防员在处理火灾现场。
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The plot, which we gradually piece together through a miasma of whispers and sighs, revolves around environmentalist Neil (Ben Affleck, fresh from his Best Picture win) and his budding relationship with Marina (Olga Kurylenko, last seen dodging alien drones in "Oblivion"), the beautiful French girl he falls for during a trip to the island fortress of Mont Saint-Michel, whose soaring spires and shifting sands are undoubtedly meant to represent some unachievable romantic ideal.
ethereal style has earned him nearly four decades' worth of critical acclaim and unwavering respect within his industry. The notoriously reclusive auteur, who hasn't given an interview since the 1970s, possesses an almost alchemical ability to transmute dreams and memory into the realm of pure cinema, taking the weightiest of existential musings and distilling them into their lightest, purest essence. His polarizing masterpiece "The Tree of Life" was my favorite film of 2011; a rhapsodic, oracular ode to the interplay of human nature and divine grace that likened the daily struggles of a family in 1950s Texas to the birthing pains of the universe itself.
'To the Wonder' a shallow spectacle
Terrence Malick is a film maker whose deliberate, otheral style has earned him
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In the midst of all this literal and figurative spinning in place, it's easy to miss the one performance that makes "To the Wonder" a salvageable experience. Just when we feel as if we can't stand another minute trapped with the aggressively suited Affleck and Kurylenko, the spiritually conflicted Father Quintana (Javier Bardem) appears like an emissary from one of Malick's past masterworks. Bardem's scenes in the film are absolutely exquisite, a powerful,
---
LE MONT AIR DE MÉTAL
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Neil (Ben Affleck) and his constantly twirling French girlfriend Marina (Oiga Kurylenko) fail in and out of love in Ternance Malick's "To the Wonder."
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QMTP'E SFBS BPNYRA, EAB
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Little by little, the lovers turn cold, mainly because the dull, earnest Neil refuses to join the alarmingly free-spirited Marina (we can tell she's free-spirited because she's constantly twirling around the house, spouting faux-profound poetry about "the love that loves us") for the umpteenth frolic through the flowing, sun-dappled gossamer of the living room curtains. This drives the pitiful lug into the arms of his childhood sweetheart Jane (Rachel McAdams, barely registering), a female rancher who frankly doesn't seem that much different from Marina.
He eventually convinces Marina and her saucer-eyed young daughter (Tatiana Chiline) to start a new life with him back in Oklahoma, a land of open spaces, contaminated groundwater and endless Sonic Drive-Ins (it's mildly disconcerting to see Malick's brilliant cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki reduced to pursuing transcendental splendor in a burger stand parking lot).
By Landon McDonald
lmeddonald@kansan.com
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unadorned portrait of a holy man who can feel his connection to God slipping away after years of soaking up the doubts and fears of others. The Class of 2013 would do well to memorize his sermon concerning "the man who hesitates."
Malick was once considered cinema's least productive genius, releasing only four films ("Badlands," "Days of Heaven," "The Thin Red Line" and "The New World") in the span of nearly 40 years. Now, following an unexplained burst of volition, he is said to have no less than three new projects in development. Could this be why "To the Wonder" feels like such a frail, formless wisp of a movie? Is the medium's greatest living impressionist guilty of overextending himself to the point of creative exhaustion? Or is this merely a case of familiarity breeding contempt? There's only one man capable of answering these questions, and he isn't talking.
★★★☆
- Edited by Brian Sisk
CROSSROADSKC
AT GRINDERS
FRIDAY, MAY 10TH
ZoSo
SATURDAY, MAY 18TH
SPRING DANCE PARTY
WEDNESDAY, MAY 22ND
YO LA TENGO
SATURDAY, MAY 25TH
DRIVE BY TRUCKERS & OLD 97s
TUESDAY MAY 28TH
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THURSDAY, JUNE 6TH
THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
SATURDAY, JUNE 8TH
HEARTS OF DARKNESS
MONOPHONICS
FRIDAY, JUNE 14TH
REVEREND HORTON HEAT
SATURDAY, JUNE 15TH
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TUESDAY, JUNE 18TH
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20TH
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FRIDAY, JUNE 21ST
O.A.R.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22ND
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TUESDAY, JULY 2ND
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FRIDAY, JULY 5H
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THURSDAY, MAY 8, 2013
+
HEALTH
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
London
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
Students often find themselves swamped with too many commitments, whether to school and work or favors for friends. When it all starts to be too much, find a way to make yourself happy before helping others.
JUST SAY 'NO!'
Quit committing to all the things that stress you out. Do what you want to do.
Who knew a simple word such as "yes" could be adding to our mountain of stress?
Her phone simultaneously buzzed and lit up with a new text. Emily Ferrell immediately stopped typing her paper and read it.
"Can you drive me to class?"
Buried in homework, she reluctantly pressed the letters "y","c","s"
Ferrell finds it hard to say "no" and a recent Health.com study attributed higher levels of stress to feeling pressured to accommodate other people. It said stress is especially prominent today because requests are consistently coming at us through a constant connection with technology.
The overused affirmative can often make us feel better about ourselves, but it can sometimes be a burden without us realizing it. There's a line between being generous and being a doormat because we all know giving to others periodically makes us feel good. So, when do we put our foot down?
The most obvious sign you're being too nice is when saying "yes" makes you feel bad, said Robert Brown, a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Liz Kocan, a health educator at the University, said it's when you begin to feel stressed about it.
"You have to do what's right for you," she said.
For Ferrell, a junior from Shawnee, the answer is always "yes." She feels obligated to help her friends, whether they're asking for a ride to class or for help with their homework.
"I will sav 'ves' probably 99 percent of the time."
Ferrell admits that more often than not, she puts other's feelings above her own. Four years ago, her doctor prescribed her Xanex to help lower anxiety and stress, but her failure to say "no" in most situations often hinders her life.
There are an infinite number of situations that cause us to feel stressed, and whatever it is, you are certainly not alone. A survey sited in the New York Times found that the average college freshman's stress levels are at an all-time high since more than 25 years ago. It found that only 52 percent of college students reported having above-average emotional health.
I asked 89 college students in my Applied Behavioral Science 100 class to rate their current stress level on a scale of one to 10, 10 being "extremely stressed." More than 60 percent of them ranked their stress level as a seven or higher. The top four stressors were school, finances, the future and relationships.
One student anonymously wrote, "Where am I going to be in two years when I graduate? There's so much stress with money afterward, and I also want to find meaningful relationships while in college to help prepare myself for marriage."
Someone put their stress level as "100," and said, "There is never a slow week... Teachers keep it coming."
Another wrote about the stress that comes with being depressed and overweight. "I've never been at the weight I want to be. It makes me self-conscious about what other people think of me."
Stress can have seriously negative implications on our body, Kocan said. "It affects the immune system drastically and breaks it down," causing you to feel sick or tired, she said. "It also can cause heart problems." Kocan called stress "the silent killer... It's unknown. You don't know you're causing it to your body." She said that one of the biggest ways to reduce
Whether it's telling a friend you can't go out with her tonight because you have too much homework or telling a neighbor you can't babysit her daughter because you'd rather see the newest Brad Pitt movie, sometimes you just need to say 'no' and do what is best for you.
Susan Newman, a social psychologist, wrote four simple steps on Health.com on how to say "no" when you really need to: Be enthusiastic, skip the excuses, show empathy and start with the "no" part. Brown agreed that you need to have a process laid out to help you steer clear of getting pulled into unwanted situations.
stress is to learn to recognize it by your body language and to put yourself first when those awkward situations arise.
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Ferrell said a lot of times, people will call her first if they need a favor.
"I just feel bad when they ask," she said. "So even if I have something I need to do, I'll put that aside to make sure they get done what they need to." Most of the time, she said, she doesn't even feel appreciated afterward.
Brown said to give your decision thought before you respond. "If it's out of habit to say 'yes,' think of the relative importance of what they're asking and how that's going to play into your time and priorities," he said. "Because once you say 'yes' then you have additional stress if you change your mind."
Despite her willingness to bend over backwards for her friends, Ferrell knows it sometimes affects her health.
"I feel stressed a lot," she said. "I wish I could say 'no more.'"
Ferrell struggles with rejecting friends on a daily basis, but is learning to put herself first.
Brown posed an important reflection question: What is going to make you feel better, even tomorrow? Not just what will make you feel better right now?
"My thought process is: I should say no, but if I say no, then no one else will say yes. So I go do it for them. But I need to stop that."
We all get stressed about different issues, and Kocan and Brown agree that we have unique ways of dealing with it.
When saying 'yes' isn't your stress
Kristian Farner, a junior from Towanda, said feeling compelled to help out a friend comes natural to him, but his biggest monster is stress from procrastinating. He relies on his Adderall prescription to help out with his late-night study habits, but sometimes that can be worse.
"Adderal just boosts whatever type of mood I'm in, so if I'm already stressed, I'm going to be really stressed," he said. "It's stress building on stress."
Farner found he goes through the same scenario almost every night that puts him back in the same situation.
"I realize this is what happened last time," he said. "Why am I an idiot? Why did I let that happen again?"
Kocan suggested to identify the source of stress and to get away from it for a while.
Farner likes to take short naps to give his mind a break.
Meredith Allison, a junior from Larned, works 20 hours a week at the Alumni Center and the Clinton Lake marina and is enrolled in 19 credit hours. Her busy schedule leaves her overwhelmed.
"I feel like too many things are going on in my head," he said. "I don't make an improvement if I keep trying to power through."
"I really have a plan every day," she said. "If I get off schedule, everything turns into stress, stress, stress."
Brown said it is crucial to keep your priorities straight and to focus on what you really need to get done. Don't stress yourself out by trying to do too much.
Allison said that balancing work, school, extracurricular activities and a social life can get hectic, but she has learned to make the best of it.
"Know what needs to get done and do that first," Brown said. "If you have time left, then decide want you want to do with that."
"I don't take any moment for granted," she said. "I weave my social life in with school and extracurriculars, and I'm always trying to do the best I can for my friends and for myself."
Kocan said the key to relaxing is to put yourself first. If you can't make yourself happy, you're not likely to make anyone else happy, she said. Listen to your body and treat it well. Allison has learned to do
this and has found it easier to do throughout her college career.
Most people are their own biggest critic, and it's important to discover how to turn that into something positive, said Kocan. A former college softball player, she channeled her frustration through hitting practice. Softball was simultaneously her stressor and her stress relief. Kocan said it was a long period of "trial and error" before she could pinpoint what was wrong and take care of herself.
"I didn't realize I was stressed at the time," she said. "And that affected me for a long period of time."
As the semester progresses, the stress piles on with tests, projects and finals. Some students, like Ferrell, worry too much about pleasing others that they forget to please themselves, while others, like Farner and Allison, struggle to keep stress out of their lives. You can benefit from just saying "no" sometimes, or even just taking a deep breath and a short break from your stressors.
Caroline Atkinson
HOW TO DEAL
Liz Koean, health educator at the University, suggested an easy solution to help reduce stress. "Do something you love."
I posted on twitter to see what individual people do to zap stress. Maybe one of these peer-approved twitter tensions will help you:
---
@Sam Albers
going to the gym, listening to m and having a beer with a friend
PETER RYAN
@beckzzz11 over eating!
@Ja_DoreAsh
(is唱 to music)
@ andikristine
driving around, windows down, singing along to The Breakup CD at the top of my lungs!
B.
@AJBARBROSA
1000MB
I am a student of the English language. I have been studying English for three years and have mastered the language well. I can write and speak English fluently. I am also proficient in various languages including Chinese, Spanish, French, and German. I am looking forward to starting my studies here and learning from you.
@GarretBuie
driving back roads at uh ... the suggested "speed limit"
DONALD J. KENNEDY
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16
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1. 下列各式计算中,正确的是( )
AN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
er col-
PAGE 7A
and it's nothing ployer, practice stress ul and g and
LOVE
with
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forget
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even
your
kinson
LOOKING FOR LOVE
Women use college as a way to gain practical relationship experience
Lauren Dowben always wanted to meet her significant other in college, so when she exchanged numbers with a guy she met in one of her classes, she considered him a possible mate for a long-term commitment. Over the next few months, they communicated via text message and Facebook, and they spent time together watching movies and hanging out, but eventually he told her that although he liked her, he did not want a relationship with her.
"He didn't know what he wanted, and he thought it might be me, but it wasn't," Dowben, a senior from Mountain Brook, Ala., said. "When he finally told me he didn't want a relationship, I still held out hope because I liked him."
Dowben constitutes 63 percent of college women who yearn to find their future husband in college, according to a 2001 study by the Institute for American Values, a socially conservative organization. The study interviewed 62 undergraduate women on 11 campuses, including private and public colleges, and surveyed 1,000 college women students. Although college can be
a great place for us to encounter new people, it can be harder than it may seem to obtain an enduring relationship.
"In college, it may seem a little easier because you are in contact with so many people all the time, so there are a lot of options," Allyn Lueders, a graduate teaching assistant in communication studies at the University, said. "Unfortunately, college is also stressful, and that makes it hard. To find the right one, you have to be the right one for someone else, and that means prioritizing the relationship over other things."
"It's common to think that finding the right person will be easy or fast, but it isn't always," Lueders said. "Also, it might not be love at first sight. Often times, love grows out of friendship so, you shouldn't dismiss someone completely just because you weren't in love with him or her from the very beginning."
College is also a place for us to experiment, which includes making mistakes and learning from them. Lueders said one misunderstanding we have involves our perception of how to find the right one.
Another mistake we may make includes searching for the right person in the wrong place. Jeremy Nicholson, a social and personality psychologist and dating and relationship consultant on Psychology Today, said those of us who want to meet potential partners for a serious, long-term relationship should avoid parties and any settings where people only want short-term
---
A recent study shows that 63 percent of college women aim to find their future husband during their college careers.
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
satisfaction.
"The best environment is any environment where students are more serious about themselves and relationships," Nicholson said. "Any environment that has a shared goal where you have common interests and can build upon an established relationship is good."
But just how exactly do we know when someone is supposedly "meant for us"? Ronnie Ryan, a dating coach on YourTango, said we should evaluate whether
someone is right for us by how he or she treats us and how compatible we are with that person.
"You should be able to comfortable around and understand each other," Ryan said. "Communication and trust are crucial. Also, you have to want the same things and have similar life goals."
YOUR SIDE 313
— Amber Kasselman
KIDNAPPING
Ramsey gains fame from 911 call
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Charles Ramsey speaking to media near the home where missing women Amanda Berry, Gina Delesus and Michele Knight were rescued in Cleveland. Ramsey lived next door to where Ariel Castro is alleged to have kept the women in his makeshift prison until Monday afternoon, when Ramsey happened to be home and heard Amanda Berry's scream.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Helping to free three women from nearly a decade in captivity would seem to be enough. Neighbor Charles Ramsey has also become a star, offering moments of levity in an unspeakably horrible story, free publicity for a restaurant chain and unexpected lessons in race relations.
Ramsey lived next door to where Ariel Castro is alleged to have kept the women in a makeshift prison until Monday afternoon, when Ramsey happened to be home and heard Amanda Berry's scream.
Or let him tell it: "I got the day off from work, so naturally you're doing nothing."
Actually, he was "eating my McDonald's," a fact he trumpeted so frequently that the grateful food giant is trying to get in touch with him. A website that compiled some of Ramsey's television interviews kept count of how many times he mentioned McDonald's in each.
Ramsey, 43, gave a series of interviews to Cleveland television stations as the story broke Monday night that were replayed on national news. CNN's Anderson Cooper tracked him down for a lengthy conversation the next night. The interviews are performance art masterpieces, so filled with colorful language and astute reporting that he trended on Twitter and was the subject of Internet memes and an Auto-tuned song.
Similarly, a tape of a much more profane Ramsey talking to a 911 operator (whom he later called an imbecile) is circulating on the Web.
During his initial interviews, Ramsey said he was shocked to learn of allegations that Ariel Castro led a double life. Ramsey said he "used to barbecue with this dude. We eat ribs and what-not, listen to salsa music."
There was nothing exciting about Castro, he said. "Until today," he added.
"You've got some big testicles to
pull this off, bro," he said.
During his Tuesday interview with Cooper, Ramsey, who works at Hodge's Restaurant in Cleveland, noted that he had trouble sleeping
with the knowledge of what had been happening in the house next door. "Up until yesterday, the only thing that had me losing sleep was the lack of money," he said.
If he had
"When a little pretty white girl ran into a black man's arms, something was wrong."
Seeing a white girl in that situation was "a dead giveaway" that she was either homeless or had other problems, he said.
known what was going on, he said he'd be facing a homicide charge for taking matters into his own hands.
"I glad it turned out this way" Cooper replied.
"When a little pretty white girl
Ramsey's realization of what was happening on Monday was itself a revealing observation on race.
CHARLES RAMSEY
ran into a black man's arms, something was wrong," he said.
That sentence itself made Ramsey's interviewer uncomfortable; their conversation quickly ended. But the sound
bite was also highlighted in a parody song that was quickly doctored with Auto-tune and posted online. The phrases picked out for the song — like "we eat ribs with this dude" — also seemed to emphasize Ramsey's blackness.
ated ethnic stereotypes have been the subject of online mockery that struck some observers as racist. An Alabama man, Antoine Dodson, had his comments about a relative's attempted rape go viral.
Ramsey is the latest "hilarious black neighbor" to become an Internet celebrity, wrote Aisha Harris on the website Slate. "It's difficult to watch these videos and not sense their popularity has something to do with a persistent, if unconscious, desire to see black people perform," she wrote.
Past examples of television interviews that seem to play to exagger-
"There's always this sense of 'otherness' when something like this happens, when you see people who don't look like you or talk like you," said Tracy Clayton, a writer and editor for the Root website. "I like to laugh and make jokes as much as the other person, but I hope that we remember the women in this story, too."
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First lady Michelle Obama signs copies of her book "American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America" at the Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington.
"It's a great gift," she said of "American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Michelle Obama signs book for fans
WASHINGTON (AP) — Michelle Obama on Tuesday returned to the business of selling her first book, and she started by telling scores of people waiting in line at a popular bookstore to "buy away" because Mother's Day is coming.
The book was published about a year ago in late May, and the first lady did just one book-signing event in Washington about two weeks afterward. She was, at the time, taking part in an even bigger sales job: campaigning around the country to help President Barack Obama win a second term.
"If you recall, when the book came out we were in the middle of this campaign, or something or
With the election over and a second term in the history books, Mrs. Obama ventured a few miles north of the White House to the Politics and Prose bookstore on a rainy morning to plug the fruit of her first turn as a best-selling author.
The first lady said she wrote the 271-page book for a bumper crop of reasons: to tell the story of her White House garden on the South Lawn, to spread the word about the history of community gardening in the United States and to start a conversation about childhood obesity in the U.S.
Before the signing, the first lady said all book proceeds are going to the National Park Foundation to help support the White House garden and community gardens across the country.
other" she joked Tuesday. "So we were a little busy."
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To assist KU, please complete a brief survey on sexual harassment--it only takes 3 minutes! Participation in the survey is completely voluntary, and all individual responses will be kept strictly confidential. Use the link below to access the survey!
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PAGE 8A
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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00006
kansan.com
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Volume 125 Issue 118
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S sports
COMMENTARY
Tough games ahead for Kansas
By Ben Ashworth
bashworth@kansan.com
Billy Vanilly opened its doors in Lawrence two years ago, providing cupcakes for dessert aficionados across the city.
If the Kansas basketball team wants cupcakes next season, it should frequent Billy Vanilly, because it won't be getting many cupcakes, also known as easy wins, onits non-conference schedule.
The Jayhawks, while trotting out a brand-new lineup that may include as many as three freshmen starters, will play a neutral-court game against Duke, on the road against Colorado and Florida, and at home against Georgetown. They will also compete in the Battle for Atlantis, which features such teams as Tennessee, Villanova and Iowa. Their mid-major foes are nothing to sneeze at either, as New Mexico and San Diego State will come into town seeking an upset.
Duke and Florida will both likely be preseason top-10 teams. Colorado, Georgetown and New Mexico have a good shot to be ranked. Tennessee and Iowa made the NIT last year, but return most of their respective cores and are safe bets to be NCAA-tournament bound.
The schedule is comparable to Duke's schedule last year, which saw it play against such talent as Kentucky, Louisville, Ohio State, Minnesota and VCU. While Kentucky ended the season floating upside-down at the top of the aquarium, the rest of the teams were contenders throughout the year.
Duke won every one of its non-conference games. Kansas, by all accounts, will not make it through the non-conference schedule unscathed. Duke had senior leaders in Ryan Kelly, Mason Plumlee, and Seth Curry. Kansas does not have the luxury of senior leadership. Duke had freshman talent, but they were able to defer to the upperclassmen. Kansas' freshmen will have to be alpha dogs almost immediately.
This young team will lose games. Some will be heartbreakers, others may not be as close. They might beat Florida but lose to New Mexico. They could win the Battle for Atlantis, or they could be watching its title game from the stands. However, the outcomes of these early season games are not nearly as important as the lessons learned from them.
If you asked a Blue Devil player whether he would trade the early season prosperity for more wins later in the year, he would either enthusiastically reply in the affirmative or flop to the ground. (With Duke, the latter is always an option.)
Duke knows this best. After its immaculate non-conference performance, Duke proceeded to lose four games in the languid ACC, including games against Virginia and Maryland. The Blue Devils entered the NCAA tournament with about as much momentum as Mark Mangino in a footrace.
Bill Self will have the unenvirable task of telling a group of young guys not to worry about early losses. Freshmen have the tendency to hold onto losses, while the upperclassman have shorter memories. The worst thing that the schedule could do is strip Wayne Selden, Joel Embilid, and the rest of the freshman crew of their confidence.
Self will do all in his power to ensure that doesn't happen.
And if Kansas happens to win most of those games along the way, all the better.
Edited by Megan Hinman
14
ROCHESTER FIELD, 6 P.M., LAWRENCE
KANSAS STATE 17-28 11-9
19 - Taylor Stute, S.
10 - Tucker Stute, A.
0 - Stutes Stute, S.
1 - John Ross, S.
10 - Joseph Ruffels, S.
20 - Justin Freeman, S.
10 - John Roffins, S.
20 - Karsten Gerviga, A.
Kansas State WIN/CASE CAT 15-11-11
19 - Tamerio Wigg, A.
20 - Ivan Ingl, A.
4 - Joe Mizzou, S.
3 - Austin Moore, S.
5 - Kenneth Stewart, A.
6 - Luke Lentz, A.
15 - Michael Cameron, D.
6 - Mike Sorenson, A.
10 - Nico Bengtsoe, S.
11 - Thomas Taylor, S.
10 - Scott Brown, A.
FIELING
Nickey答应被裁判罚下比赛,因为他违反了赛前规定。
HITTING
James scored a touchdown for Kansas State.
FIELDING
The ball hit the goal line and it was called an injury.
HITTING
James scored a touchdown for Kansas State.
FIELDING
The ball hit the goal line and it was called an injury.
PAGE 6B
Women's track
back at No.1
SUNFLOWER SHOWDOWN
KANSAS KU KANSAS 23
The Jayhawks were all smiles after defeating the Baker Wildcats 8-0 on May 1.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
TITLE IMPLICATIONS
With first place in the Big 12 on the line K-State visits the Hog
TREVOR GRAFF
tgraff@kansan.com
The Jayhawks are within striking distance heading into the final weekend of Bie 12 conference play.
Kansas State is the final Big 12 opponent on the Jayhawks' radar. The Wildcats, part of the three way tie for first in the conference, are currently second in the nation in batting average. The Jayhawks are riding new found momentum after another solid win over Wichita State.
"I think this team is riding a huge wave right now," coach Ritch Price said. "They're very confident. They're going about their business in a professional way. They
grind everyday and understand the importance of getting reps to improve. It's a very mature team."
The pressure of this weekend's series against Kansas State has been unequalled by any series this season. The Lajayhawks aren't simply playing for first in the Big 12, but their bid to an NCAA regional appearance. Something the team hasn't accomplished since 2009.
The layhawks may not take that knowledge on the field, but the playoff feel entering the weekend is undeniable.
point. We aren't going to let it go without a fight."
"Down the stretch we're looking to win it," sophomore designated hitter Connor McKay said. "It's a playoff mindset every game from here on out for the whole team. We've worked all year to get to this
"He's the best guy in the country," coach Price said. "The whole key to our success this season has been him at the back end of our bullpen."
The Jayhawks have relied on solid pitching and exceptional defense throughout their rise to competing for the Big 12 title. One of the biggest keys to this defensive dominance is junior closer Jordan Piché. The NCBWA Stopper of the Year candidate recorded his Big 12 Leading 10th save against Wichita State.
It takes a special mindset to accomplish that level of success as a closer.
"It takes unbelievable confidence
in yourself", coach Price said. "You look in the big leagues and most guys are high intensity, competitive closers that almost have that football run through the wall mentality when they pitch the ninth inning. But you look at Mariano Rivera and he walks out there calm and collected and he's a thinker and Piche has that same promise about him."
Piché lives for the moment on the mound. Like the rest of the Jayhawks' pitching staff the surge of momentum hasn't been lost on Piché
"Hope is really high right now and guys are rolling really well," Piché said. "We got a lot of guys heating up with the bats and it's carrying over. I think that's a big thing for us and our momentum which is
a big key going into this weekend."
As much as the momentum has affected the Jayhawk lineup, Piche and the pitching staff are sticking to the standard line and not trying to do too much against Kansas State.
"We're just going out there and firing away," Piché said. "We know they're good hitters, but when our pitching staff is on, we can beat anybody. That what the plan is and that's where everyone's head is right now."
Kansas Baseball's Big 12 finale starts with a 6 p.m. first pitch on Friday against the Wildcats. The Jayhawks' senior right handed pitcher Thomas Taylor takes the mound for game one.
— Edited by Tyler Conover
RISE BALL
Jayhawks end regular season in Ames
JOSEPH DAUGHERTY
jdaugherty@kansan.com
Riding the momentum of the upset of No. 1 Oklahoma, the Jayhawk softball team will finish the regular season at Iowa State with a chance at its best Big 12 finish since 2001.
Last weekend, the Jayhawks hosted the Sooners in what turned out to be just a two-game series due to weather conditions. The Jayhawks split the series with the Sooners, scoring the first ever win against a top-ranked team in the second game of the doubleheader on Sunday. The Jayhawks nearly swept the doubleheader against Oklahoma, but two unearned runs in the bottom of seventh allowed the Sooners to take game one.
The Jayhawks will face the Cyclones in Ames, Iowa this weekend in a three-game series with a chance to achieve their best Big 12 finish since 2001. The Jayhawks and the Cyclones have squared off 78 times in a series that dates back to 1980. The Jayhawks lead the all time series 45-33, with an edge in victories at home and on neutral fields. The Jayhawks enter this series once again leading the Big 12 in batting average for the 13th week straight.
Iowa State was voted to finish
seventh in the Big 12 this season but is entering this weekend series in sixth place. The Cyclones are hitting .288 this season, which ranks sixth in the Big 12, Iowa State also entered the week two homeruns shy of the team record of 36. The Cyclones are allowing opponents to hit .342 and are entering this week with a record of 21-31. The inflated numbers the pitching staff has put up this season has offset the Iowa State's potent offense. As a collective staff the ERA is 6.21
"Iowa State is just one of those teams that is very well balanced, offensively, with speed and power," said Coach Megan Smith. "They do a great job of producing runs against anyone. We just have to know that they're going to fight all seven innings and they have the ability to put up runs at any point. We have to make sure our pitching is strong, hitting their spots and keeping them off balance."
Freshman pitcher Kelsey Kessler received the Big 12 pitcher of the week honor for the second time this season. Kessler is the only pitcher to shut out Oklahoma this season and also has two victories against top-25 teams this season. The dynamic duo of Alex Hugo and Maggie Hall is still going strong as both are hitting over 400
and are ranked in top 5 in batting average. Oklahoma is the only other team with two hitters in the top five of batting average.
Though last weekend was a monumental weekend for the Jayhawk softball program, the team wants to focus on what is ahead and not let the upset of Oklahoma be the highlight of the season. The Jayhawks have a chance to be above .500 in Big 12 play for the first time since having a 9-8 conference record in 2005. Kansas also holds a half-game lead over Oklahoma State for fourth place in the conference standings, so if Kansas finishes in fourth, that would be the highest finish since 2001.
"The Iowa State series is the most important series for us," Coach Smith said. "I think it's because we've had very good series with them every year that I've been here. We have been very evenly matched in back-and-forth close games. We want to finish as high as we can in the Big 12. That's our only goal right now is to finish as high as we can. We think we play well in Ames, we hope to finish fourth, and that's what our goal is."
— Edited by Elise Reuter
MICHAEL MAYER
TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
Freshman Pitcher Kelsey Kessler pitches during the softball game against the UMKC Roos. Kansas defeated the Roos 4-0.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 2B
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"What makes something special is not just what you have to gain, but what you feel there is to lose."
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Andre Agassi
FACT
FACT OF THE DAY
Three NBA playoff games this season have gone into overtime.
---
ESPN
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: How many overtimes have there been in the Hockey playoffs so far?
A: Eight
ESPN
THE MORNING BREW This year's sports bring many emotions
B because the semester is coming to an end and this is the final brew, I reflect on what has happened in
B
I reflect on what has happened in sports so far in 2013. Inspiration to tragedy, heartbreak to success, we have seen it all. In just five months, the sports world has encountered plenty of events and stories that have encompassed the media tremendously. It's hard to cover everything that's happened, but these are the most notorious stories that have taken place.
By Michael Portman
mportman@kansan.com
Starting off on a light note, there have been quite a few inspirational stories that have stolen our hearts and made us grab the tissues.
Another great story comes from El Paso, Texas. Coach Peter Morales of Coronado High School decided to play his team manager, Mitchell Marcus, who has a developmental disability, in their final basketball game of the season against the school's rivals, Franklin High School. Mitchell entered the game, and with every chance, his teammates passed the ball to him, hoping he would make one shot. As time was ticking down, he kept missing. After a few tries, Jonathon Montanez of Franklin was about to pass the ball inbounded to his teammate when he decided to show true sportsmanship and passed it
We'll start off with the story of Jack Hoffman, the 7-year-old brain cancer patient who lived his dream by scoring a touchdown for the Nebraska Cornhuskers during their spring game. Befriended by running back Rex Burkhead, Jack was given the honor of running for 69 yards into the end zone in one play, followed by a lift into the air by the Nebraska football team with the crowd standing and cheering him on.
to Mitchell who then scored his first and only basket ever. The game ended, and both teams celebrated the moment. This story spread nation-wide and the American public was able to see how moving this act of kindness was.
Along with the positives, there are always some negatives.
Along with the heartbreak came tragedy.
Heartbreak was definitely felt around the country, including here at the University. We felt it when both our men's and women's basketball teams were defeated in the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament. It was even more painful when Trey Burke hit that game-tying three. In the end, the powerful Louisville Cardinals won the men's tournament, motivated by the horrific injury of Kevin Ware.
No one will be able to ever forget about the bombings at the Boston Marathon. Three spectators were killed and more than 260 people were injured. Two days later, a university police officer was ambushed and killed during the manhunt for the two suspects. Lots of emotions and cautions came from this terrible event. The suspects have been found. One of the suspects was killed and the other one is in custody along with one of their friends. Through the tragedy, people have come together and prayed for the city of Boston.
KU
Many other stories have occurred: the questions that have surrounded the Los Angeles Lakers, baseball season being in swing, an Australian winning the Masters, the not-so-exciting NFL Draft, and plenty of others. Basketball and Hockey playoffs are taking place right now, and both have been exciting to watch.
As I conclude the last brew, I wish everybody luck on their finals and have a great summer.
This week in athletics
— Edited by Megan Hinman
Thursday
Williams Education
Fund
Dallas Football
Preview party with
Charlie Weis
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Dallas Market Center
Friday
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
I
Softball
iowa State
4 p.m.
Ames, Iowa
C
Baseball
Kansas State
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Saturday
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
I
Track
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
Track Georgia Tech Invitational All Day Atlanta, Ga.
C
Baseball
Kansas State
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Golf Central Regional All Day Norman, Okla.
I
Track Georgia Tech Invitationa All Day Atlanta, Ga.
Sunday
Softball
Iowa State
Noon
Ames, Iowa
T
Baseball
Kansas State
I p.m.
Lawrence
Women's Tennis
NCAA 1st/2nd round
TBA
TBA
Monday
Williams Education Fund
Williams Education Fund
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All Day
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vary. Email resumes to: reports@alternativeclaims.com.
Century School is Hiring Part-Time Summer-Fall Teachers Flexible Schedules. For more information Call Sara 785-832-0101
Jimmy John's is looking to hire some Delivery Drivers & Inshoppers. We make delicious sub sandwiches & we make them freaky fast. We're loud & fast paced. We love to train new people & we're hiring right now! Delivery Drivers can help you & also make great tips. If you like to meet the job that have to fun work at this, we need the job for You please apply in person at 1730 W 23rd St. Must be available during closing hrs 5pm-3am, cover all tattoos. No gauged earrings & one periar earing.
Part Time Administrative Assistant
Seeking part-time Admin Assistant to
work 20-30 hrs/wk in KC Metro.
Requires: Excellent phone skills, typing
skills, knowledge of Microsoft Office
Suite and able to multi-task. Hrs. may
vary. Email resumes to:
administrative Assistant
AVAILABLE JUNE 1ST, Candle Tree
Townhouse, 2 BR, 28A, basement,
garage, no pets, Near KU bus route.
$800 + call deposit 785-608-2873
Part-time personal care attendant for a woman w/ autism. 1-2 times per week.
Experience/knowledge helpful.
Call 785-266-5307
AAAC Tutoring Services is hiring Tutors for Fall 2013! To apply, visit www.tutoring.ku.edu.785-684-7733 EO/AA
Acro Teacher Needed Starting in Augusti
Amanda's Dance Academy
Eudora, KS - 6 miles east of Lawrence
Email or call if interested
785-690-7200
amandadanceacademy@gmail.com
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Local construction company seeking hard working & motivated individuals. Duties include but not limited to cleanup, cutting materials, installation of products and tear out. This is a great opportunity for students in the architectural field looking for hands on in the construction industry. Full time work throughout the summer and could lead to part time in the fall. Call Fred @ 785-766-7702
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Give back to the community & help those in need: PT Support Workers wanted, $8-$10-$9hr, assist people w/ developmental & intellectual disabilities w/ daily living activities. Apply online at trinythimhomecare.com. E-mail questions to trinthimCorii at scott@tho.org.
Bambino's immediate Openings Servers and Delivery Drivers. Apply in person. EOE: 1540 Wakasa Drive.
Coleman American Moving Services in Shawnee, KS is seeking loaders, packers, drivers and warehouse personnel for the summer season. Pay range is $12-$14/hr. Please call 800-239-1427 or email jason.christiansen@covan.com to apply.
JOBS
Christian Day Care needs reliable full time or part time help for summer
Call 785-842-2088
Positions Open- KU Endowment is seeking KU students to work 5 nights each week during the summer, talking with University of Kansas alumni while earning $9/hr. Excellent communication skills, dedication and a desire to make KU a better university are all a must. Email Emily at eviewu@kuendowment.org today to learn more about this exciting opportunity to build your resume and have fun in this professional environment.
Help wanted for custom harvesting.
Truck driver. Good wages. Guaranteed pay. Call 970-483-7490 evenings.
3 BR and 48R Available August.
Close to KU. All appliances. Must see.
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3 BR 1 BA $635.00+40 Wisconsin St. Avail 8/1 W/D Central air conditioners to bus跑 pet ruts OK call 218-825 or 218-788 west states.westcoast.com
4BR 3 1/2BA house for rent. Fenced backyard. W/D Central heat and air. Very spacious. Close to campus. Pets ok. Aug 1
913-205-874A After 4 PM
WANTED: Gymnastics Instructor
$12+/hr, pays gas & drive time
Call 618-975-1601 for details
Painters Needed for Residential Painting Company. $11.hr. For more information go to light painting.com.
Saddlebrook & Overland Polite
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For Rent Two bedroom home in Mission, KS Avail June 1.
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913-568-1395
Great Deposit Special! W/D, fitness center, pool, Free DVD rent, sm pet welcome! Canyon Court Apartments. 700 Coren Lane (785) 832-8805
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pointe@sunflower.com
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Large 1 BR, 1530 Tennessee, nice & quiet, $500 water paid, 785 393 6339 call or text
1, 2, 3 or 4 BR, WD included, owner managed and maintained, pets possible. Downtown and campus locations. 785-842-8473, jwapm@sunflower.com
LUXURY LIVING AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
Ranch Way Townhomes on Clinton Parkway
½ off deposit PAID INTERNET
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WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS
3 Bedroom 3 Bathroom.
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Available for current & fall move in.
Contact for more information on specials
785-749-7744
18R/1BA Studio, $420. Close to bus
route. PET KX 508. Wisonville. Avail
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w.midweststates.com.
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route. New carpet.$900/mm
Contact us at 785-218-6500 or 785-841-
2 BR, DW, W/D, wood floors, very close to campus, 1242 Louisiana, $620 water paid, 785 393 call or text
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Apartments & Townhomes
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- $200-400 off 1st month of rent
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with garages
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www.sunriseapartments.com
785-841-8400
---
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
0
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 3B
ACROSS THE ATLANTIC
Ferguson to retire from Manchester United F.C.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ireland
Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson as he celebrates after Manchester United won the English Premier League at Ewood Park, Blackburn, England. Alex Ferguson is retiring at the end of the season it was announced Wednesday May 8, 2013, bringing a close to a trophy-filled career of more than 26 years at Manchester United that established him as the most successful coach in British football history.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MANCHESTER, England — During more than a quarter of a century in charge of Manchester United, Alex Ferguson has always found the way to win — and win again.
Scrappy, abrasive and always up for a fight, Ferguson turned the club into a global power and established himself as the most successful manager in British soccer history.
And now, the 71-year-old Scotsman is going out on a high. On his own terms.
"His drive, ambition, skill, passion and vision have not only shaped Manchester United, but in many ways the game of football as we now know it," Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore said.
With his 13th Premier League title and 38th major trophy at United secured, Ferguson announced Wednesday that he is retiring at the end of the season.
Manchester United, owned by the American Glazer family and listed on the New York Stock Exchange, did not immediately announce a successor, but will need to act swiftly to stave off any market uncertainty.
"The decision to retire is one that I have thought a great deal about and one that I have not taken lightly," the Scotsman said. "It is the right time."
Since taking charge at Old Trafford in 1986, Ferguson's trophy collection also includes two Champions League titles, five FA Cups, four League Cups and the 2008 FIFA World Club Cup.
Everton manager David Moyes, a fellow Scot from Glasgow, is the front-runner. During 11 years at Everton, Moyes has overseen impressive results on a limited budget and enjoyed a long-standing friendship with Ferguson.
"He is a first-class manager," Ferguson, who is being consulted on his successor, said of Moyes last year.
United is valued at around $3.2 billion and is one of the world's
most high-profile sports brands.
"It was important to me to leave an organization in the strongest possible shape and I believe I have done so," he said. "The quality of this league winning squad, and the balance of ages within it, bodes well for continued success at the highest level."
Manchester United shares dropped more than 5 percent in early New York trading, but the losses were clawed back quickly. By late morning, the shares were trading at $18.42, down 1.3 percent.
Few managers at United — or anywhere in global soccer — will come close to matching Ferguson's achievements.
Ferguson reversed a previous plan to retire at the end of the 2001-02 season, but this decision seems final after Manchester United extended its record for English league championships to 20.
United's last home game — a chance for fans to pay an emotional farewell to Ferguson — is against Swansea on Sunday. United then travels to West Bromwich Albion on May 19 in the final match for the man who has defined the club for nearly three decades.
Ferguson will remain as a club
"His contributions to Manchester United over the last 26 years have been extraordinary and, like all United fans, I want him to be a part of its future," joint chairman Avie Glazer said.
director and ambassador.
Ferguson's style was marked by a combustible temper. He often took out his ire on players, rival coaches, referees and the media. He has banned many reporters from the club over the years when he disputed their articles or line of questioning.
David Beckham was cut above the eye when Ferguson, furious at his team's poor performance against Arsenal in 2003, kicked a boot in the changing room and it hit the midfielder in the face. Fed up with Beckham's celebrity lifestyle, Ferguson sold him to Real Madrid, but there was no lingering bitterness from the former England captain.
"The boss wasn't just the greatest and best manager I ever played under he was also a father figure to me from the moment I arrived at the club at the age of 11 until the day I left," Beckham, who now plays for Paris Saint-Germain, wrote on Facebook.
SOCCER
IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY IN LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY
Johana Portillo-Lopez, daughter of Ricardo Portillo speaks about her father's death during a news conference in Salt Lake City. A Utah prosecutor said Monday, May 6, he plans to decide soon what charges to file against a teenager accused of punching Portillo, a soccer referee who later died after slapping into a longtime colleague.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Teen charged with homicide after punching soccer referee
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY — A Utah teen accused of punching a soccer referee who later died was charged Wednesday with homicide by assault, a court issued when an attack unintentionally causes death.
Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill announced the charges, saying he will seek to try the teen as an adult.
A homicide by assault charge is less serious than manslaughter. It carries up to five years in prison for adults, but penalties can be less for juveniles.
Gill said it became clear in looking at the facts that the teenager's actions didn't warrant murder or manslaughter.
"We did not believe we could demonstrate the premeditation or intent to justify those charges," Gill told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "Those other types require another type of mental state. We did not believe that type of mental state was present."
The 17-year-old has been in juvenile detention since April 27
when the incident occurred at a recreational-league soccer match in a Salt Lake City suburb.
Authorities say the teenager was playing goalie when 46-year-old Ricardo Portillo called a penalty on him for pushing an opposing player. The teenager began arguing with Portillo and then struck him in the head.
Charging documents show witnesses say the teenager threw one punch, hitting him in the rear jaw area with a closed fist. Another witness said Portillo was writing notes on his notepad when he was hit.
Portillo was taken to the hospital in fair condition. Hours later, he went into a coma. He never regained consciousness and died Saturday.
Police say hospital staff told them Portillo had hemorrhaging and a traumatic brain injury.
The fact that the teenager is five months away from turning 18, combined with the seriousness of what happened, led Gill to push to have him tried as an adult. A juvenile court judge will ultimately rule on that request.
The chance of the teen's rehabilitation is minimal, prosecutors said in court documents.
League officials say they hadn't had any problems with the teen-ager prior to this incident.
Funeral services are being held Wednesday in Salt Lake City for Portillo, who leaves behind three daughters and four grandchildren.
A wake is scheduled to run from 1 to 7 p.m., followed by a religious service. Both are open to the public.
After the funeral, Portillo's remains will be returned to his hometown of Guadalajara, Mexico. He moved to Utah from there 17 years ago.
Family members said Portillo loved soccer, and had been working as a referee in different leagues for eight years. His oldest daughter, Johana Portillo, said he had been attacked before by players, even having his legs and ribs broken. Though his daughters begged him to quit, he said he couldn't give up his passion.
HOCKEY
14 BJUBSTU 44 26 15 SM
U. S. Nate Thompson (44) celebrates Stephen Gionta's (not in picture) goal with Nick Bjugstad (14), Paul Stasny (26) and Craig Smith (15) during the 2013 Ice Hockey IIHF World Championships preliminary round match USA vs Finland in Helsinki, Finland, on Wednesday, May 8, 2013.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
U.S. beats Finland at ice hockey worlds
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Though the 19-year-old has primarily played junior league hockey in Canada, he's a three-time world age-group champion. He's won titles in the under-17 classification, under-18, and at this year's juniors in Russia, where he was named the most valuable player and best goalie.
Gibson, who finished with 31 saves, was a bold choice which paid off for the Americans, who moved above Finland in their group — second to Russia.
HELSINKI — Craig Smith had a hat trick and teenager John Gibson was stellar in net to lead the United States over host Finland 4-1 at the ice hockey world championship on Wednesday.
In other matchups, Switzerland won its fourth straight game, beating Slovenia 7-1; Sweden stuffed Norway 5-1; and Germany posted its first win, 2-0 over Austria.
The U.S. was pinned in its own end for most of the period, and it looked as if it was still affected by a hard fought loss the night before to reigning champion Russia. But in the second period, the Americans continued to get their legs back and played more aggressively.
Smith's first goal evened the score
toward the end of the first period when he received a pinpoint pass to the far post from David Moss, who teams on the Americans' first line with Paul Stastny. Moss and Stastny each had two assists.
Smith used smart screening by Moss to make it 2-1 at 3:22 of the third period before Stephen Gionta added the third goal at 11:29, gathering the puck in the neutral zone as Juhamatti Aaltonen, the lively Finnish forward, turned it over. Before that, Gibson made a save on a breakaway by Sakari Salminen.
"He played an unbelievable game," said Smith said. "Gibson is quite mature for his age. He stepped up when he was needed, and took a big win. We are all
happy for him."
The Swiss made their point with three goals in each of the first two periods against Slovenia. Denis Hollenstein had two goals and two assists, Simon Bodenmann and Luca Cunti each added a goal and two assists, and Andres Ambuhl and Reto Suri had a goal and an assist apiece.
Smith took a pass from Stastny in the last minute and closed the scoring with an empty-netter.
Sweden started well in the third period, scoring three goals against Norway and outshooting its neighbor 48-21. Gabriel Landeskog scored twice for Sweden, which plays unbeaten Canada on Thursday. Louie Eriksson, Andreas Jamtin and Elias Falk also scored.
Both of Germany's goals against Austria were by forward Markus Kink. Rob Zepp earned the shutout with 27 saves, 24 of them over the first two periods.
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PAGE 4B
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASEBALL
Royals allow five runs, lose second straight to Orioles
Kansas City
39
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Luis Mendoza walks off the field after the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles in Baltimore, Wednesday, May 8. Baltimore scored three runs in the fifth.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BALTIMORE — J.J. Hardy homered, Chris Tillman won his third straight start and the Baltimore Orioles took advantage of three errors by the Kansas City Royals in a 5-3 victory Thursday night.
Manny Machado scored a run and hit an RBI single for the Orioles, whose season-high fourth consecutive win moved them eight games over .500 (21-13) for the first time this year.
Tillman (3-1) allowed three runs and five hits in six innings. The right-hander came in 0-2 with a 10.93 ERA in three career starts against the Royals.
Baltimore has been outhit in each of its past three games, including 7-5 in this one. The Orioles are 3-6 when outhit by their opponent.
Troy Patton pitched the seventh, Darren O'Day and Brian Matusz worked the eighth and Jim Johnson got three outs for his 13th save.
Alex Gordon hit his second home run in two games and Mike Monstakas went 3 for 4 with a homer for Kansas City.
It was the 34th successive save opportunity converted by Johnson, tying the club record set by Randv Mvers in 1997.
Luis Mendoza (0-2) gave up five runs, three earned, and five hits in six innings for the Rovals.
The game turned in the fifth inning, when the Orioles went up 5-1 with a three-run uprising fueled by three Kansas City errors and a wild pitch. After Chris Dickerson hit a leadoff double, shortstop Alcides Escobar grabbed Nate McLouth's sharp grounder and tried to get Dickerson at third, but the throw hit Dickerson to put runners at the corners.
McLouth promptly stole second, and Machado followed with a single to bring home Dickerson. Machado then stole second, and McLouth came home after Escobar couldn't handle the poor throw from catcher George Kottaras. Escobar's throw home was also off target, allowing Machado to take third, and he scored when Mendoza uncorked a wild pitch.
Baltimore took a 2-0 lead in the second when Matt Watters led off with a single and Hardy followed with a drive just inside the left-field foul pole. It was his sixth
home run of the season, the third in four games.
Mendoza didn't allow another base runner until Hardy drew a two-out walk in the fourth.
Tillman blanked the Royals on two hits through four innings, then retired the first two batters in the fifth before Gordon homered to right. That ended Tillman's run of consecutive scoreless innings at 15, a streak that began on April 27 in Oakland.
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HOCKEY
Minnesota Wild shoot poorly, lose to Chicago Blackhawks at home
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Chicago Blackhawks were beaten the last game in the corners, along the boards and by an overtime goal for the Minnesota Wild.
STALLIERG 25 EA5
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
By hurling their bodies in front of puck after puck, the Blackhawks stopped the Wild's momentum right where it started.
Chicago Blackhawks 'Bryan Bickell, second from right, celebrates with teammates after he scored against Minnesota wild backup goalie Darcy Kuemer in the third period of Game 4 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series, Tuesday, May 7 in St. Paul, Minn. The Blackhawks won 3-0. At right is Michael Rozsival of Czech Republic.
Patrick Sharp scored two goals and the Blackhawks ratched up their defense to put the Wild on the brink of elimination with a 3-0 victory on Tuesday.
"It's just been a calm, collected confidence we've had all year. I think we definitely showed that tonight," said goalie Corey Crawford, who made 25 saves for his second career playoff shutout. "So many power play situations for them, and we just kept our cool. We didn't freak out on the refs or lose it on each other. We just stuck with it."
Bryan Bickell also scored for the Blackhawks, who built a 3-1 lead in this best-of-seven matchup. Game 5 is back in Chicago on Thursday night.
"People want to make a big deal of the hits. That's fine. We've won physical games before," Sharp said. "We've won games with our speed and playmaking ability. So whatever the type of game is out there, I feel confident in our guys."
The Wild had another goalie get hurt when Josh Harding's injury forced Darcy Kuemper into action after the first intermission. Sharp scored on Chicago's first shot at the rookie 62 seconds into the second period.
"It's just been a calm, collected confidence we've had all year."
went scoreless in six such situations (including one 66 seconds into the game and a back-to-back set in the third period) and is 0 for 15 in the series.
"Just being smart in lanes and battling for pucks. That's been a positive for our team all year," said Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith, who joined the team right before the game after being with his wife earlier in the day for the birth of their first child.
Minnesota, the only one of the 16 NHL, playoff teams without a power-play goal this postseason,
When Niklas Backstrom was injured warming up before Game 1, Harding was sent in. This time, Harding was hurt after Jonathan Toews landed on top of him during a collision in the crease. Harding's legs were straddled around the left
COREY CRAWFORD Blackhawks goatie
post. He got up gingerly, staying in to finish the opening period after shaking his left leg back and forth several times and testing it with a slow skate behind the net. But Harding didn't return to the bench, and
Kuemper was in.
Harding stopped five of six shots, Kuemper made 16 saves. He also gave up Bickell's third goal of the series, in the third period on a shot that scraped the top of the net. Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville had little sympathy, and Wild coach Mike Yee declined to ask for any.
Kuemper, who made only three starts this season, had a tough initiation to the playoff. Sharp stole an off-target pass by Zach Parise at the Wild blue line, skated the other way with a one-on-one and sent a wrist shot between Kuemper's pads for a 2-0 lead that deflated the energy in the arena.
Ultimately, though, the guy between the pipes wasn't going to matter much for the Wild the way this game went.
"I was going to shoot that puck. It didn't matter who was in net," Sharp said.
"I've seen a lot of crazy things in the playoffs. You've got to predict
the unpredictable," Quenneville said.
The Blackhawks haven't been themselves as an offense in this series, save for the 5-2 victory in Game 2, but that's another testament to their dominance. They've got the depth everywhere on the roster to sustain a lagging top line. Marian Hossa, Toews and Brandon Saad have combined for only one goal, and Toews and Saad don't even have an assist yet.
But the Wild have had the same problem, and they're not nearly as equipped to withstand it. Parise, Mikko Koivu and Charlie Coyle have combined for only one goal themselves, and together they've posted a minus-14 rating over four games.
Even with Jason Pominville's sharp shot back on the point with the first power play unit, the home team kept misfiring. Whether a one-timer that zipped wide of the net or a slap shot blocked by one of the self-sacrificing Blackhawks, Chicago blocked 20 shots over the first two periods and finished with 26 for the game.
"It probably wasn't the greatest of nights. But I'll say this: If you know them the way that I do, you'd be really excited to watch them play the next game," Yeo said.
Minnesota attempted 68 shots to Chicago's 46.
And the Wild, in addition to their struggles with shooting accuracy, paid for a couple of sloppy plays. There was Parise's intercepted pass in the second period. And midway through the opening period, Hossa picked off a pass from Koivu to Parise in the Wild zone. Hossa sent the puck to Handzus, whose slap shot was tipped in by a perfectly positioned Sharp at the edge of the crease.
SIGMA KAPPA
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CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS, IT'S BEEN A WONDERFUL FOUR YEARS. WE WISH YOU THE BEST!
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ONE Heart ONE Way
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SAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PAGE 5B
-
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SUNFLOWER SHOWDOWN
PRESS Wild in St.
BIG 12 TITLE ON THE LINE
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HOGLUND FIELD, 6 P.M., LAWRENCE
17- Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34- Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
KANSAS (31-18, 12-9)
17 - Michael Suiter, So.
9 - Tucker Tharp, Jr.
3 - Dakota Smith, So.
1 - Kevin Kuntz, Sr.
20 - Justin Protacio, So.
10 - Jordan Dreiling, Sr.
34 - Alex DeLeon, Sr.
22 - Ka'iana Eldredge, Jr.
KANSAS STATE WILDCATS (34-15, 11-7)
5 - Tanner Witt, Sr.
24 - Jared King, Jr.
6 - Jon Davis, Sr.
3 - Austin Fisher, So.
7 - Ross Kivett, Jr.
8 - Lance Miles, Fr.
15 - Shane Conlon, So.
9 - Blair DeBord, Jr.
12 - Wes Benjamin, So.
11 - Thomas Taylor, Sr.
19 - Frank Duncan, Jr.
29 - Levi MaVorhis, Fr.
20 - Matt Wivinis, So.
23 - Blake McFadden, Fr.
12 - Wes Benjamin, So.
11 - Thomas Taylor, Sr.
19 - Frank Duncan, Jr.
KANSAS STATE WILDCATS (34-15, 11-7)
5 - Tanner Witt, Sr.
24 - Jared King, Jr.
6 - Jon Davis, Sr.
3 - Austin Fisher, So.
7 - Ross Kivett, Jr.
8 - Lance Miles, Fr.
15 - Shane Conlon, So.
9 - Blair DeBord, Jr.
29 - Levi MaVorhis, Fr.
20 - Matt Wivinis, So.
23 - Blake McFadden, Fr.
PITCHING
Kansas sophomore designated hitter Connor McKay hit a bases clearing three-RBI triple against Wichita State Tuesday. Add that to his recent hot performance at the plate and the sophomore is on a bit of a streak. Senior first baseman DeLeon continues his solid year at the plate. The senior leads the team with seven home runs and .324 average leads the team.
29 - Levi MaVorhis, Fr.
29 - Levi MaVorhis, Fr.
20 - Matt Wivinis, So.
23 - Blake McFadden, Fr.
HITTING
Kansas closer Jordan Piche' recorded another solid performance entering Tuesday's game against the Shockers with runners on first and third in the eighth inning. Piche' faced four batters striking out two before recording his tenth save of the season. Piche' punched out the final batter sending the Jayhawks into the Sunflower Showdown riding a wave of momentum.
FIELDING
PITCHING
Kansas continues to field the ball well behind solid pitching. Kansas pitchers are pitching to contact. The defense is getting the job done. A 97 percent fielding percentage on the season is one of the best in the Big 12 conference. The Jayhawks have their hands full against Kansas State, one of the best hitting teams in the country.
HITTING
The Wildcats not only lead the Big 12 conference in batting average, they're the second ranked team in the nation as of the last calculation. Their .323 team mark puts them in second behind New Mexico's .342. Sophomore infielder Austin Fisher leads the squad with a .356 batting average. Junior Jared King leads the team with 42 RBIs.
Kansas State pitching isn't far behind, touting a 3.76 team ERA on the weekend matchup with Kansas. Freshman right-handed pitcher Jake Mattthys leads the team with a 7-0 record and a 1.73 in 24 appearances. Another Freshman right-hander Levi MaVerhix cracked the starting rotation last week against Texas. MaVerhix is 4-0 with a 3.08 ERA.
The Wildcats are fielding at a 97 percent clip on the season. This will serve the Wildcats well in Hoglund Ballpark as the Jayhawks will look to continue their small ball tactics. Solid fielding can take the Jayhawks out of this weekend's series. If the Wildcats can't handle the bunt it could be a long weekend in the Sunflower Showdown.
FIELDING
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THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TRACK AND FIELD
Jayhawks claim No.1 spot after this weekend
COLIN WRIGHT
cwright@kansan.com
After claiming their first outdoor conference championship in school history on Sunday, the Kansas women's track and field team reclaimed the No. 1 ranking in the NCAA this week according to the U.S. Track & Field and Cross County Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). The men's squad also made a splash after their performance over the weekend, moving into the top-25 for the first time this season and sit at No. 22 in the USTFCCCA rankings.
To go along with the team Big 12 Outdoor Championship, the women's team had a slew of athletes who claimed individual titles. Senior Paris Daniels led the way, being named the National Female Athlete of the Week by the USTFCCCA after picking up 23 points in the league meet in Waco, Texas. Her victory in the 200 meters and runner-up finish in the 100 meters was essential in separating the Jayhawks from the
University of Texas Longhorns, who were the defending Big 12 Outdoor Champions.
Senior horizontal jumpers Andrea Geubelle and Francine Simpson claimed titles in the triple jump and long jump, respectively. Geubelle has the longest triple jump mark in the NCAA this outdoor season, while Simpson holds the second best long jump in the nation. Sophomore Lindsay Vollmer won the Big 12 title in the heptathlon and currently has the eighth highest heptathlon point total in the nation. Junior Jessica Maroszek threw her personal best in the disc throw in winning the conference title and currently has the fifth best mark in the nation.
Olympic gold medalist and Kansas junior Diamond Dixon captured her third consecutive Big 12 Outdoor title in the 400 meters. Her time of 51.73 is the fastest time ran in that event in the outdoor season. Dixon and Daniels, with the help of senior Denesha Morris, freshman Tianna Valentine and senior Taylor Washington, also ran on the 4x100 and 4x400 teams that captured conference titles as well.
The layhawks are led on the men's side by sophomore Michael Stigler, who holds the fastest 400 meter hurdles time in the nation with a time of 49.42. Senior Kyle Clemons has the second fastest 400 meter time in the NCAA after running a 45,10 over the weekend. The duo both claimed Big 12 titles in those respective events last weekend in Waco.
Sophomores DeMario Johnson Kenneth McCuin helped Stigler and Clemons claim the league title in the 4x400 meter relay as well. Senior Jesse Vaughn won the Big 12 with a season-best javelin throw of 67.86 meters. Josh Munsch ran his fastest 1500-meter time of the year en route to a third-place finish last weekend. The junior now ranks No. 17 in the nation in that event. Sophomore Casey Brown achieved his personal best in the pole vault, claiming second place
with a vault of 5.19 meters.
With both the men and women reaching personal best marks on the track and in the field, the Jayhawks have plenty to be excited about. The women will have an opportunity to claim their first national championship in school history in less than a month at the NCAA Outdoor Championship in Eugene, Ore., and the men have a handful of athletes that will compete for a chance to win an individual national title.
This weekend, the Jayhawks have two tune-up meets to attend as they prepare for the NCAA meets. Many of the athletes will travel to Atlanta for the Georgia Tech Invitational, while a handful of athletes will make the short trip west to Manhattan for the Ward Haylett Invitational.
Edited by Elise Reuter
KANSAS
1464
Paris Daniels, a senior from St. Louis, crosses the finish line during the women's preliminary 4x400-meter relay on friday at Memorial Stadium. Kansas took first place in the race qualifying them for the finals on Saturday.
ERIN BREFMER/KANSAN
BASEBALL
King Felix pitches well, lifts Mariners over Pittsburgh Pirates
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSRURGH
PITTSBURGH — Felix Hernandez scattered six hits and Jesus Montero broke a tie with a solo home run in the seventh inning off A.J. Burnett to help the Seattle Mariners beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 Wednesday.
Hernandez (5-2) struck out five and walked one to improve to 4-0 in his last five starts while shaving his ERA to 1.53. The right-hander shook off a shaky first inning then settled down to allow four base
runners in his final seven innings of work. Tom Wilhelmsen worked the ninth for his ninth save.
Starling Marte had two hits for Pittsburgh and Andrew McCutchen added an RBI single but the Pirates couldn't sweep the brief two-game series.
Burnett (3-3) was almost as sharp, giving up just two hits over seven innings while striking out nine. Yet he also walked four batters and gave up Montero's third homer of the season with one out in the seventh.
The showdown between the
two staff aces lived up to its billing.' Hernandez entered the game ranked in the top five in the American League in ERA and strikeouts while Burnett came in unbeaten in nearly a month and second in the National League in strikeouts behind New York's Matt Harvey.
Hernandez's only miscue came in the first. Starling Marte led off with a double — his 17th lead-off hit this season — then came around to score when McCutchen singled up the middle with one out. Garrett Jones then walked,
but Pittsburgh's promising inning disappeared when Mike McKenry hit into a double-play.
It was the fourth straight game in which the Pirates let a potentially big first inning slip away.
Burnett cruised through the
And Hernandez didn't botch his reprieve. Pittsburgh only managed to get one runner to third the rest of the way. Jordy Mercer doubled leading off the fifth and advanced to third with one out. Burnett, however, couldn't square a sacrifice bunt and Marte struck out.
first three innings, needing an economical 32 pitches to retire the first nine batters. Yet his control briefly abandoned him in the fourth and his unfamiliarity with backup catcher McKenry may have cost the Pirates a run.
Michael Saunders and Jason Bay walked leading off the fourth and were on second and third with two outs when Burnett bounced a curveball to home plate that smacked off McKenry — who was catching Burnett for just the second time in the regular season due to an neck injury to starter
Russell Martin — and rolled away, allowing Saunders to race home and tie the game.
Burnett had little trouble with one of the worst offenses in the majors until the seventh, when Montero took a 91 mph fastball and put it in the first row of seats in center. Hernandez and Wilhelmsen took care of the rest as the Mariners improved to 8-4 in their last 12 games as they try to bounce back from a horrific start.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 9; 2013
PAGE 7B
ANSAN
away, home
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HOME OF THE BRAVE
with
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COZART 2 19 CLEVELAND
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cincinnati Reds' Zack Cozart (2) is congratulated by Joey Votto (19) after Cozart hit a home run off Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Mike Minor in the third inning of a baseball game, Wednesday. May 8, 2013. in Cincinnati ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dan Uggla, Juan Francisco help Braves pummel Reds
CINCINNATI — Dan Uggla hit a pair of solo homers and Juan Francisco added his first career grand slam as the Atlanta Braves recovered from a stunning last-swing loss by beating the Cincinnati Reds 7-2 Wednesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Devin Mesoraco and Shin-Soo Choo hit two-out homers in the ninth inning for Cincinnati's 5-4 win on Tuesday night. A day later, one of the NL's top power teams got the better of it. Atlanta came into the game tied with Colorado for the NL lead with 44 homers.
Atlanta took two of three in the series, the first the Reds lost at home this season. The Reds are 13-6 at Great American Ball Park, the most home wins the majors.
Uggla had solo shots in the fourth and sixth innings off Mike Leake (2-2), his first multihomer game this season. Leake pitched into the eighth, ending a streak
of six straight subpar starts by the Reds rotation.
Francisco's slam off J.J. Hoover highlighted a five-run eighth inning. The Braves obtained Francisco in a trade with the Reds last year for Hoover.
Jordan Schafer had three hits, and Andrelton Simmons had a career-high four hits in the top two spots in Atlanta's lineup.
Left-hander Mike Minor (4-2) allowed four hits in seven innings, including Zack Cozart's homer in the third. Jay Bruce had a solo shot in the ninth off Anthony Vararo.
The game matched starting pitchers taken back-to-back in the 2009 amateur draft. Minor was taken seventh out of Vanderbilt, with Leake drafted next out of Arizona State.
There was a replay review in the fourth, when Evan Gattis hit a long foul down the third base line. Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez talked to the umpires, who
reviewed the play for 3 minutes, 5 seconds and upheld the call. Gattis struck out on the next pitch.
Up came Ugga, who homered on the following pitch to tie it at 1. Ugga is 4 for 10 career off Leake with three homers.
Cincinnati loaded the bases with no outs in the second. Donald Lutz flied out to left field, and Gattis threw out Brandon Phillips at the plate as he tagged on the play. The Braves loaded the bases with one out in the third before Freddie Freeman grounded into a double play.
Both teams wasted early basesloaded opportunities.
In addition to all the homers, there were a lot of strikeouts in a series matching teams that rank first and second in the NL at failing to make contact. The Braves fanned 32 times during the three games, giving Atlanta a league-leading 304. The Reds are next with 278.
JANITORIAL WORK
Padres sweep Marlins at home
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Marquis outpitched Ricky Nolasco, Yonder Alonso had a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning and San Diego Padres beat the Miami Marlins 1-0 on Wednesday to complete a three-game sweep.
SAN DIEGO — Jason Marquis has settled into a groove and it shows.
Marquis (4-2) allowed five hits, walked one and struck out three in eight innings, his longest stint since last Aug. 11th when he had a 5-0 shutout at Pittsburgh.
"I felt pretty good," Marquis said. "I've been working real hard to get my mechanics right the last couple weeks of spring and the first probably four starts. ... It's easier now that I've figured a few things out. I have the life back on my ball, the north-south movement. (The defense is doing a great job allowing me to pitch to contact and get some quick outs."
"Today it was all about the sinker," Black said. "It was a basic Marquis mix of fastball, sliders and today with the heavy sinker down, down, down. They hit a lot of grounders and our infielders were on their toes and made some great defensive plays especially on the left side of the infield."
and four hits, with one walk and a season-high nine strikeouts in seven innings. He had won his four previous decisions at San Diego, where he dropped to 4-2 with a 2.11 ERA in his career.
Padres manager Bud Black credited Marquis's sinker for the pitcher's effectiveness, especially noting the 14 outs he got on grounders.
The Padres have won four straight, 11 of their last 14 and nine of their last 10 at home after starting the season 5-15 overall. It was their first sweep of the Marlins at home since Mav 2005
The Marlins, who are last in the majors in runs scored with 99, scored just one run and had 17 hits in three games against the Padres. Wednesday was their sixth shutout of the season.
Nolasco (2-4) gave up one run
5th ANNUAL Hawk MUD Fest KU 13 CONGRATULATIONS go out to
*the members of our championship team: "I D H I T THAT"
*our Student Leadership Award recipients: MICAH MELIA and ALYSSA ONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Student Endowment Board would like to thank all of the teams as well as our sponsor, GTM Sportswear, for their participation in the 5th Annual Hawk Mud Fest this year. With your help, KU Endowment provided $28 million in scholarship support to 6,900 students this past year.
FLYING HIGH
100
Cards used Jon Jay's bat to overcome the Chicago Cubs
ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis Cardinals' Matt Holiday hits into a double play scoring Matt Carpenter off a pitch from Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Carlos Villanueva during the first inning of a baseball game. Wednesday, May 8 2013, in Chicago
CHICAGO — Carlos Beltran and Jon Jay drove in two runs apiece, and the St. Louis Cardinals capped an impressive trip with a 5-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday.
Beltran also had three hits as St. Louis won for the seventh time in eight games and improved to a major league-best 14-7 on the road. The Cardinals went 5-1 on a six-game swing to Milwaukee and Chicago, with the lone loss coming Tuesday in their first game of the season against the last-place Cubs.
The Cardinals trailed 4-3 before Beltran singled in Matt Carpenter in the seventh, and Jay drove in Yadier Molina with a tiebreaking single against Michael Bowden (1-2) in the eighth. Each rally featured a costly mistake by the Cubs, with Carpenter moving to third on an error by right fielder Nate Schierholtz and Molina advancing to second on a wild pitch.
Chicago had 11 hits but grounded into four double plays, one in every inning from the fifth to the eighth. The last one was particularly heartbreaking, with the potential tying run on third.
Anthony Rizzo had three hits and Schierholtz hit a two-run double for Chicago, trying for its second three-game winning streak this season. Instead, the Cubs finished a 4-6 homestand.
The afternoon game on a picturesque spring day in Chicago attracted 26,354 to Wrigley Field, and fans were treated to a little bit of everything. There were a couple of adventures on the basepaths, a rarely seen 4-2-3 groundout and a
Four Cardinals relievers combined for 3 2-3 innings of two-hit ball after Jake Westbrook had his worst start this season. Seth Maness (2-0) got five outs to get the win and Edward Mujica worked the ninth for his ninth save in nine opportunities.
bunch of singles — just three of 22 hits were for extra bases. Julio Borbon of the Cubs was called out for interference for running inside the baseline in the seventh.
Jay's sacrifice fly gave the Cardinals a 2-1 lead in the fourth inning, but the Cubs responded with three in the bottom half on two hits, a walk, an unusual carom and a perfectly placed grounder.
With no outs and runners on first and second, Schierholtz pulled a 3-2 pitch from Westbrook down the first-base line. The ball bounced off the wall in foul territory and out into right field, allowing Rizzo and Luis Valbuena to scamper home. Schierholtz moved up on a ground-out and scored on Dioner Navarro's slow roll to make it 4-2.
The Cardinals had their infield in with Navarro at the plate, but Schierholtz scored easily. With Molina standing in front of the plate and pointing to first, Carpenter still came home with the throw from second, and the Gold Glove
Molina also cut down Rizzo when the big first baseman tried to steal third following his two-out RBI double in the first. But the Cardinals had their own baserunning blunder in the fifth, when Carpenter was thrown out after he made a wide turn at second on Beltran's run-scoring single.
catcher made a strong throw to first to retire the lumbering Navarro.
Carpenter's gaffe became even worse when Matt Holliday followed with another single to put runners on first and second. Schierholtz then bailed out Villaneueva with a nice sliding catch in right to retire Craig and end the inning.
Westbrook allowed four runs -- three earned -- and nine hits in 5 1-3 innings, increasing his ERA from 1.07 to 1.62. He had allowed just four earned runs all year.
Carlos Villanueva pitched 6 2-3 innings for Chicago and was charged with three runs and seven hits.
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THURSDAY, MAY 9. 2013
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Graduation Guide
PRESENTED BY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY TRAVIS YOUNG
Thursday, May 9, 2013
PAGE 2C
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
GRADUATION.GUIDE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief Hannah Wise
Special section editor Laken Rapier
Associate special section editor Kayla Banzet
Writers Nikki Bisht Elly Grimm
General manager and news advisor Malcolm Gibson
Cover Photo Illustration by Travis Young
Designers
Katie Kutsko
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Hannah Wise
CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES!
Letter from the Editor
The day has finally come. Four years ago, five
Four years ago, five years for some,zipping up a black gown and walking through the Campanile was a dream. Sunday, May 19 will be the fairy tale ending to the KU chapter in the book of life.As cliché as it may sound,take in every second and enjoy all the traditions that surround graduating from the best university in Kansas.
Before you toast to the end of one chapter and to the beginning of another, keep a few things in mind: Thank those who have helped you along your journey. Celebrate all the crazy memories, and laugh with friends. Look back at all the lessons
Laken Rapier
Special Sections Editor
learned and forward to all the opportunities ahead. And before you smile for all the pictures and set foot down the hill, take a moment to
close your eyes, take a deep breath and let the past four (or five) years sink in. If you thought your college career was crazy, graduating will blow your mind.
Wherever your Jayhawk wings take you, remember where you came from. Although you may be flying away from the Lawrence nest, KU family will always be
there to take you under their wing. Once a Jayhawk, always Jayhawk. Rock Chalk.
Cheers, Class of 2013. You have a lot to toast to.
Laken
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Hannah Tan Shult
Angela Michelle Sutton-Schmale
Whitney Ryanne Tabares Stephanie Ann Taylor
Michael Don Cipat Tinio
Stephanie Ngoc Lan Truon
Madison & Lila Self Graduate Fellows
Molly Ann McVey Corinne E. Myers
Sarah J. Pyszczynski Andrea Romero
Peter Curtis Schillig McNair Scholars
Paige Nicole Henderson
Suraj Raj Keshary
Cody Lown
Maureen Zipporah Wangare Mungai
D. Adam Nicholson
Harrison Cody Thomas Haynes Madeline Grace Schuman
Kenneth Eugene Stowe Kristopher Noah Velasco
National Hispanic Scholars
Michael Martin Myers
Katherine Maria Restrepo
Alex Charles Applegate
Lauren Joann Beesley
Michael James Clamar
Jenny Lynn Curatola
tebekan Noene Curry Levi Theodore Dermyer
Patrick George Ploi
loshua Evan Frederick
Alexandra Nicole Free
Syra Rebecca Hagan
Dakota Lyn Henke Jeremy Hopper Ims
Whitney Noel Kleinman
Natasha Rohit Kothari
Natasha Roht Rotharr
Ethan William Locke
Rebecca Lynn Mandelbaum
Christopher Mark Novosel Natalie S. Pak
Zachary Chais Poskin Erin Annette Reid
Michael Robert Rudd Keeler Martino Russell
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Joseph David Sandt
Rodolfo Matias Torres-Gavosto
Matthew Ryan Werner
Ronjamin Mollott Whith
Benjamin Molett WI
Thomas K. Whitson
Dimitrios Alexandros Zaharopoulos
Perfect Achievement
Hanna Eileen Cosgrove
Erik Thomas Deddens
Self Engineering Leadership Fellows Mary Dorothy Adams
Christopher Michael Hudson Sida Niu
Samantha Leigh Forbes Matthew Hayes Fowler
Luke Anthony Ezell Camille Jean Fittell
Matthew Ryan Werner Eric Lee Witthaus
Hans Wolfgang Walther Emma Watson
Matthew Ryan Toft
Matthew Cox Vestal
Kyle Barris Consolver Michael Bret Cooper
Chris Wolf Emlie
Matthew J. Fortner
Kevin Kiley Glatt
Joshua Thomas Dean Steven James DeJong John Scott DjBaggie
Shannon Gray
Adam Benjamin Lewis
James Gregory Loving
Max Joseph Martin
Tyler Booth Gurss
Andrew Dylan Jack
Benjamin Vaughn Hofmeier Samuel Edward Hofmeier
Vinit Snehal Nanavaty Jeremy David Nelson
Robert William Jackson
Chad Michael Kozicki
Cooper Lucas Nickel Sida Niu
Alex Michael Rippberger Jake C. Robinson
Taylor Ramsey Patterson Graham Jordan Ray
Nicholas Lee Schulte Daniel Patrick Simon
University Honors Program Brendan James Allen
Jacob Tyler Stamadner Christopher Elliott Teters
Pierce Timothy O'Neil Francis Pamatmat
Doug Wesley Brady Jamie Lee Branch
Joseph Edward Bond Emily Ruth Boresow
Cynthia Erin Brown Nicole Paule Brown
Adrienne Van Valkenburgh Brown
Jeffrey Kevin Cailteux Kelsey Ann Carothers
Lucas Enrique Strubing Cartes Alexandra Paige Chase
Katharine Michelle Chauvin William Ryan Cleek
Jenny Lynn Curatola
Rebekan Noene Curry Jordan Elaine Dauer
Charlotte Nicole Davis Joshua Thomas Dean
Joshua Thomas Dean
Cameron James Derks
Cameron James Derks
Rena Liz Detrixhe
Glenn Richard Dunne
Erin Nicole Eifler
Sinclaire Ashley Erdwien
Bonnie Kathleen Ewart-Fisher
Carla Beatriz Fernandez
Hunter Lee Finch
Heather Colleen Himmelwright
Caitlin Haley Hotzel
Wilma Lune Franklin
Alexandra Nicole Free
Andrea
Robert Terence Knight Natasha Rohit Kothari
Kathryn Emily Hoven Nadia Ove Imafidon
Jeremy Hopper Ims
Joseph Walker Kellum Whitney Noel Kleinmanr
Cory Bennett Gutovitz
Natalie Pauline Hagman
Dakota Lvn Henke
Mican Zachary Levine
Taylor Cespedes Lewis
Ji Liu
Andrew William Jamison Jing Zhi Jian
Jing Zhi Jian Dora Kapros
Hannah L. Lubis
Michael Louis MacGregor
Logan Allen Mallicoat
Bharath Krishnamoorthi Jordan Serene Kruse
Max Joseph Martin
Sarah Rachelle McCabe
Iashore Mehta
Cooper Lucas Nickel Sida Niu
William Scott Ogan
Erin Lindsay O'Grady
Ryan Patrick O'Grady
Caroline Lee Olson
Andrew Scott Michael Justin James Miller Jordan Tyler Moore
Bernadette Ann Myers Michael Martin Myers
Danielle Christine Onions Alexandra Ruth Orr
Lucas Ryan Philipp
Zachary Chais Poskin
Xuan Oin
Erin Annette Reid
Kayla M. Pagano
Natalie S. Pak
Nilam Dinesh Patel Jay Sunil Patel
Taylor Rainsey Patterson
Jacqueline Mona Patton
Linda Marie Pattt
Emily Elizabeth Parsons
Joanna Marie Robinson
Katie Nicole Rogers
Brandie LeNae Rhodes Alex Michael Rippberg
Brandele LENae Rhodes
Alex Michael Rippberger
Ern Annette Reim
Bailey Marie Reimer
Juliet Inez Remmers
Kara Khrystine Schippers Bethany Marie Schirmer
Joseph David Sandt
Bethany Marie Schirmer Siddheat Sharma
Patrick Scott Shields Sarah Jane Shier
Stewart Katherine Simms Daniel Patrick Simon
Austin Franklin Smith Kathryn Lee Songer
Chelsea Lynn Steel
Jenna Michelle Steffen
Sarah Mary Stern
Matthew Kyle Sullivan
Sierra Marca Trul
Rodolfo Matias Torres-Gavosto Viktoriya Tulchinskaya
Kristopher Noah Velasc Kayci Lynne Vickers
Ian Walter Weidling Emily Ann Wellner
Meredith Wood Walrater Megan Anne Watson
Hannah Marie Westhoff
Thomas K. Whitson
William Owen Wright IV
Benjamin Monett Whitlow
Thomas K. Whiteon
University Scholars
Brendan James Anen Danse Bi
Cynthia Erin Brown Erin Nicole Eifler
Katrynn Emily Hoven Christopher Michael Hudson
Christopher Michael Hudson Joseph Walker Kellum Ji Liu
Jalashree Mehta
Bernadette Ann Myers
Sida Niu
Patrick Alan Patterson Laura Prohaska
Joseph David Salant
Siddhant Sharma
Laureen Marie Taulbee
ROTIC COMMISSION CANDIDATES
Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps
Nicholas Ryan Brunkhorst Britni Nicole Charles
Ivan A. Babkov
Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps and Marine Corps
Andrew Stephen Haanpaa Blake Steven Horvath
Dale Lowell Hardee
Alexander Lindblom Pendleton
Ioe Santos
Christopher Douglas McCoy Thomas Joseph McSweeney Fathan Connor Niese
Matthew Aaron Visser Jacob Donovan Walters
Nathan Phillip Slaughter daul Adam Speckin
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE DESIGN & PLANNING
Banner Carrier
Jonathan F. Hartner
Dean John C. Gaunt
School Marshals Jae Chang
Jeremy Shellhorn
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
With Highest Distinction
Jenna Michelle Carrier Melissa Lee Coppel
Tiffani Patrice Gelvin
Iosie Ann Harmon
Josie Ann Harmon
Joshua Evan Frederick
Tiffani Patrice Gelvin
Joseph Patrick Morgan
With Distinction
Cara Rae Berberet
Andrew Borkon
Anna Catherine DeFazio Xing He
Xing He Hannah Marie Hindman
Hannan Marie Hindman Morgan Danielle Hutcherson Jing Zhi Jian
Gianfranco Villagomez Saldana Kylie Olivia Trunnell
Sarah Elizabeth Limbocker
Michael Louis MacGregor
Emily Marquette Mullart
Lucas Taylor Bearly, BA Andrew Borkon, BA
Benjamin Michael Woods
Warner Lorraine Cook, BA
Dominique Edwione Coolidge,
BA
Ashley Mara Gildenberg, BA Josie Ann Harmon, BA
Andrew Warren Rossi Jablonski,
BA
Ahmad Abbas Jaffal, BA
Paul Andrew Kurtky, BA*
Stephen Christopher Meier, BA
Joseph Anne Milleur, BA*
Ryan Charles Sullivan, BA Neil Clayton Tally, BA
Peter Christian Rittmann, BA*
Robert J. Solan, BA
Amanda Emily Tonn, BA
Mychan Thi Trien, BA
Gregory Michael Walter, BA
Kourtney Marie Welch, BA*
Robert Christopher Wilson, BA*
Ellory Abernathy, BFA
Risley Anne Aimie, BFA*
Melissa Ann Altenhofen, BFA**
Carolyn Nicole Appelbaum, BFA*
Carolyn Nicole Appelbaum, BFA Andrew Christopher Armstrong, BFA\*
Emily Elizabeth Austin, BFA
Alyssa Jane Bastien, BFA
Jacob Andrew Batterman, BFA
Cara Rae Berberet, BFA
Megan Suzanne Boxberger, BFA
Andrew James Boyd, BFA*
Dela Marie Breyne, BFA
Elissa Ruth Bernstein, BFA
Lauren Nike Bock, BFA
Molly Loyle Bolin, BFA
Stephen Charles Burditt, BFA*
Jacob Samuel Burstein, BFA
Dandan Cao, BFA
Kelsey Ann Carothers, BFA
Jenna Michelle Carrier, BFA
Austin Grant Ciria, BFA*
Micaela Ann Clarke, BFA Melissa Lee Copple, BFA
Anna Catherine DeFazio, BFA Nancy DeLeon, BFA
Margaret Amelia Denton, BFA
Ashley Grace Detmering, BFA
Patrick Joesph Dobson, BFA*
Jonathan Nguyen Duong, BFA
Casey Megan Dye, BFA
Jessica Fertig, BFA*
Allison Marie Freund, BFA Amy Michelle Gairns, BA
Marcus Gabriel Gardner, BFA*
Colin Andrew Gerse, BFA*
Alex Edward Hill, BFA
Sophia Delrose Hilleary, BFA
Lisa Nicole Hilmes, BFA*
Graham James Kaiser Greene, BFA*
Jing Zhi Jian, BFA
Abigail Lena Horn, BFA Jamie Lee Housh, BFA
Christian James Henningsen,
BFA*
Aaron Michael Hamilton, BFA Daniel Max Held, BFA
Whittney Nicol Kinnamon, BFA* Shannon Lea Kloiber, BFA* Andrew James Knuth, BFA
Wesley Ryan Landis, BFA
Audrie Jane Lathrop, BFA
Ryan Patton Jones, BFA*
Taylor Linne* Kelley, BFA*
Jordany Kelly, BJA
Madison Nicole Lytle, BFA
Katherine Jean McMahon, BFA*
Joan Marie Melyn, BFA
Sarah Josephine Meyer, BFA Jessica Anne Miller, BFA*
Kaitlynn Mallory Howell, BFA Morgan Danielle Hutcherson, BFA
Alice Elizabeth Lewis, BFA
Patrick Arthur Lyon, BFA Madison Nicole Lytle, BFA
Darren Michael Kennedy, BFA
Kathryn Elizabeth Kennedy,
BFA*
Alexandra Julian Moore, BFA
Emily Marguerite Mullett, BFA
Chester Nez, BFA*
Eric Alan Norton, BFA
Robert H. O'Neill BFA
Chaun Elizabeth BPA, Palmer
Nancy Kim Pappas, BFA
I Jonathan D. Perez, BFA
James David Reynolds, BFA
Noel Angelique Rivard, BFA
Andres Antonio Rivada. BFA
Skyler Jon Schmageck, BFA
Stephanie Helene Schulz, BFA
Danielle Shae Self, BFA
Andrea Danielle Rose, BFA
Mark Philip Rush, BFA*
Jaime Del Ryan, BFA
Ryan Wayne Sowers, BFA
Galen Fleming Nicholas Spiller,
BFA*
Samuel John Willger, BFA
Claire Frances Willis, BFA*
Katherine Marie Sutphen, BFA
Sarah Camille Terranova, BFA
Nicholas Stephen Troll, BFA
Katherine Stephens, BFA
Madison Shea Twomby, BFA
Gianfranco Villagomez Saldana,
BFA
Havis Isle Wick, BFA
Mallory Fours Wiegers, BFA
Samuel John Williger, BFA
Jesse Daniel Waugh, BFA
Scott Lawrence Wayland, BFA
Whitney Whallon, BFA
Charle Frances White, BFA
Benjamin Michael Woods, BFA
Yakun Zhao, BFA
Justin Michael Zielke, BFA Erin Leigh Zingre, BFA
Daniel Crosby deMenocal III,
BFA*
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE Architecture
Paul F. Lillig, MA
Benjamin Lee Bridgewater, MA*
David Andre Charles, MA
David Nichols Neptune, MA
Jason Max Perryman, MA*
Hadi Ali Shateh, MA
Stephanie Hertel, MA $ ^{*} $
Bethany Hoppenthaler, MA*
Anne-Louise Monfort, MA*
Interaction Design
Design Management Frost, MA
Melissa Anne Sorrick, MA Amanda Lindsey Woods, MA*
Adriana Lucia Guzman Mercado, MA
Brook Nicole Graham, MA
Ren-Whei Joanna Harn, MA
Joseph Jancsics, MA
Melissa Jean Anderson, MArch*
ZacharyMart Alonso Arand,
MArch
Master of Architecture
Tara Marie Arnwine, MArch
Melanie Nicole Arthur, MArch
Mohammad Hadi Ataei, MArch
Samantha Michelle Auer, MArch Elizabeth Katherine Avenius, MArch
Gregory Michael Barry, MArch
Ryan Patrick Barry, MArch
Nickolas Aaron Baumgarten,
MArch
Matthew Timothy Bethel, MArch
Christine Marie Bono, MArch
Stephanie Ann Boyd, MArch
Lauren Leigh Brown, MArch
Elizabeth Ellen Bunker, MArch
Cali Dane Burke, MArch
Craig Curtis Calkins IV, MArch*
Zachary Cole Capehart, MArch
David Paul Cappo, MArch
Ashlee Ruth Burleson, MArch Lina Encarnacion Burnett, MArch
Colleen Marie Cassidy, MArch Thomas Allan Chambers, MArch Kelly Frances Chuck, MArch
Celeste Anne Clayton, MArch Benjamin Scott Compton, MArch
Jennifer Cathleen Conforti,
MArch
Jeffrey Charles Davis, MArch Brianna Lynn Denney, MArch Leah Marie DiCarlo, MArch
Christine Elizabeth Dietze, MArch
Mahsa Faghan, MArch
Michael Patrick Fahey, MArch
Paul L. Ferguson, MArch
Clayton Alan Feurer, MArch Michael Craig Fischer, MArch
Michael Clough Fisher, MArch
Nicholas Joseph Fratta, MArch
Joshua Evan Frederick, MArch
Christopher Rynall Gillam, MArcl
Mark Vincent Hageman, MArch William Hunter Hanahan, MArch
Kelli Michele Hawkins, MArch
Xing He, MArch
Hannah Marie Hindman, MArch
PAGE 4C
Zachary James Holbert, MArch
Owen John Huisenga, MArch
Matthew Joseph Kella, MArch Sunvoung Kim, MArch
Nathan Robert Jarvis, MArc Whitney N. Jones, MArch
Dana Elizabeth Koch, MArch
Joseph Peter Krentz, MArch
Julie Nicole Lickenbrock, MArch Sarah Elizabeth Limbocker, MArch
Michael Louis MacGregor
MArch
Joseph Peter Krentz, MArch
Keith William Moore Jr., MArch Amanda Lynn Moore, MArch
Rachel Jean Mattes, MArch
Pupn Patrick McCabe, MArc
Seamus Robert McGuire,
MArch*
Megan Elizabeth Norris, MArch Kayla M. Pagano, MArch
Aubrey Michelle Morris, MARCH
Jeremy David Nelson, MARCH
Anne Maria Negruard, MARCH
Edwin Raymond Presswood,
MArch
Ian Joseph McLaughlin, MArch
Katherine Marie Medin, MArch
Driven Michael Mills, MARCH
Matthew Alexander Ransom.
MArch
Keith Rodney Robinson, MArch Alejandro Rodriguez, MArch
Amanda Lynn Salisbury, MArch
Kara Khrystine Schippers,
MArch
Soe Thanda Shwe, MArch Adam Nicholas Smith, MA
Bryan James Stockton, MArch Marcia Porto Trein, MArch
Gregory Michael Turner, MArch
Rebecca Lindsey Uhl, MArch
Bernard Villa, MArch
Branden Michael Vissat, MArch James Agnew Walker, MArch
Urban Planning
Lauren Elizabeth Weingartner, MArch
Collin Andrew Edwards, MUP
Michael Benjamin Hyde, MUP
Melanie Benjamin Tyler, N014
Jonathon Christopher Moore,
MUP
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Dean Neeli Bendanudi
Whitney Lee Morgan, MUP Kirk James Raymond, MUP
Wade T. Sanner, MUP
james M. secede) MUF
Meghan, E. Skornia, MUP
Bradel D. Trusk MUP
Christopher M. Wichman, MUP*
Presented by
Associate Dean Douglas A. Houston
Banner Carrier Corrigan Martese Powell
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
Phillip John Bastow
Daniel Lloyd Biornson
Paul Bryon Livingston Kai Mao
Gregory David Anderson
Timothy George Ballard
With Distinction
John McGuire
Katherine Banks Ottoso Minh Le Thanh Phan
Melanie Brigitte Archange John Joseph Bartak
Connor Mark Blankenship Beau Henry Bourquin
Jordan Elaine Dauer Paula Jean Davis
Lucas Miles Commodore Jordan William Cordry
Margaret Amanda Haugh Yuhao He
Kyle Robert Ice
Allison Mackenzie Jackson
Chelsea Nicole Johnson
Ryan Scott Kanlan
Thomas Oliver Keenan Kevin Patrick Kelley
Nicholas Kelly Kleigen David Jacob Koester
Mark Christopher Max Kettlewell
Margaret Elizabeth Kopp
Baley Jean Lahaye
Daniel Gerard Leonard
Timothy Lee Schulte
Gina Marie Stanzione
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Cohenwei Li
Lingyun Li
Jordan Taylor Abramovich, BSB Omar Alamillo, BSB
Jiyuan Yang Yi Zhu
Jordan Louise Armenta, BSB
Megan Elizabeth Alley, BSB*
Brandon Michael Beek
Nellie Ann Betzen, BSB*
Beau Henry Bourquin, BSB
Christopher Lynn Brown, BSB* Scott Tyler Bruennig, BSB
Anna Faye Carswell, BSB $ ^{*} $
Adam David Buhler, BSB Cheng Cai, BSB
Adam Drew Casady, BSB* Wei Chen, BSB
Lauryn Beth Chenoweth, BSB*
Pamela Ann Clark, BSB
Alexander james Cowan, BSB Bradley Ryan Crenshaw, BSB Ha Dangan, BSB
Katelyn Jean Click, BSB $ ^{4} $
Chelsie Marie Clowe, BSB
Jordan William Cordry, BSB*
Alexander James Covan, BSP
Jordan Elaine Dauer, BSB*
Danielle Kathryn David, BSH Lindsev Brooke Davis. BSB*
Colin Gene Dickerson, BSB*
Dan Ding, BSB
Zhi Dong, BSB
Anisey Nicole Freud, BSN
Jonathan Andrew Finch, BSB
Kevin Edward Fisk, BBS*
Gerald Joseph Donohue III, BSB
Eric Anthony Driscoll, BS David Ray Dulles, PSR
Nicholas Alexander Fleer, BSB Lauren Margaret Frost, BSB
Zachary Levi Grubb, BSB Lu Guo, BSB
Courtney E. Hampton, BSB
Eric Michael Hampton, BSB*
Sarah Elizabeth Hanney, BSB
Tyler James Hatesohl, BSB
Alysna Renee Hill, BSB*
Patrick Anthony Hoene, BSB
Carey Catherine Hoffman, BSB
Hannah Marie Holcomb, BSB
Adam James Emil Hope, BSB
Rachel Kathleen Horvath, BSB*
Weniu H. BSR
Jing Huang, BSB*
David George Hutchins, BS1 Evan McMorris Iliff, BSB*
Jack Thomas Johnson, BSB* Justin M. Johnson, BSB*
Margaret Elizabeth Kopp, BSB Neal John Kremers, BSB Keilli Majid Kremers
Michael Kevin Latinis, BSB Huong Thu Le, BSB
George William Kerdolff IV, BSB Nicholas Kelly Kleiger, BSB* David Jacob Koester BSB*
Allison Mackenzie Jackson, BSB*
Huijie Jiang, BSB*
Brittany Nicole Jones, BSB* Ryan Scott Kaplan, BSB*
Jacob Thomas Leopold, BSB*
Clayton James Levret, BBS
Chenwei Li, BSB*
Katie Suzanne Leech, BSB Arden Rachel Leland, BSB*
Nathan Morris Lipsky, BSB Tingyun Liu, BSB
Daniel Gerard Leonard, BSB Jacob Thomas Leopold, BSB*
Matthew Richard Maner, BSB Kristi Colleen Marks, BSB
Paul Bryon Livingston, BSB
Michael Christopher Lund, BSB
Newton Mwangi Mahuga, BSB*
Matthew Stanton McCarney,
BSB*
James Houston McBride, BSB
Matthew Stanton McCar
Mitchell Dumond Newhouse, BSB*
Andrew Jay Miller, BSB
Jacob Daniel Perchonok, BSB
Minh Le Thanh Phan, BSB*
Jennifer Arl辟 Longkia, BSB
Stephanie Atu Owada, Madison Lynn Overman, BSB* Stanton Eugene Parker II, BSB* Naitak Invad Patel, Vindet
Corrigan Matteus Powen, BS*
James Joseph Prather, BSB*
Ruofei Qiu, BSB*
John Dougls Neimmers, BSB
Katelin Rae Neuenschwander
BKB*
GRADUATION GUIDE
Christophe Joseph Roque, BSB*
Jessica Ariel Rudkin, BSB*
Blake M. Brick, BSB*
Tanner Mark Shreeve, BSB John Logan Shuss, BSB
Logan Trevor Murphy, BSB*
John Eric Myers, BSB
Abby Nicole Reichenberger, BSB*
Katherine Maria Restrepo, BSB
Dylan N. Rogers, BSB
Jenna Collette Schwartz, BSB Song Lee Seo, BSB $ ^{*} $
Mohammad Nashwan Siddiqui,
BSB*
Stanislav Nikolaevich Sinitsyn,
BSB*
Max Gerald Sheets, BSB Meng Shen, BSB*
Joseph Martin Viviano, BSB
Patrick Michael Ward, BSB
Charles Edward Strickland,
Darin James Stroot, BSB
Calvin Woodard Tidwell, BSB
Alexandria Nicole Trumble, R
Michael Carney Swab, BSB
Xinlie Tang, BSB
Sarah Elise Whitson, BSB
Dana Anne Wilkinson, BSB
Amber Alyce Dillman, BBA
Austin Curtis Ethington, BBA*
Vincent E. Fernandez, BBA*
Hannah Marie Westhoff, BSI Vicki L. Whitaker. BSB*
Darcy Elizabeth Yunker, BSB
Matthew Ryan Williams, BSB Zeine Michael Williams, BSB
Business Administration Jason Babich, BBA*
Shara Kay Breeze, BBA
Lauren Michele Aulgur, BSB Alexander E. Blank, BSB
Samantha Joann Grace Adamson BSB
Jessica Elizabeth De Bortoli BBA*
Mark Christopher Max Ket tlewell. BBA*
Kristen Leilani Flick, BBA Jessica A. Gurney, BBA*
Erika Marie O'Donnell, BBA Sarah Elizabeth Ottens, BBA*
Heather Star Collins, BBA*
Laura Conde, BBA
Andrew Ming Huang, BBA Kyle Robert Ice, BBA*
Thomas Daniel Noel, BBA*
Emely Marie Norris, BBA*
Andrew Dean Peterson, BBA
Kariley Kiamichi Pinder, BBA*
Nate Kent Schwind, BRA*
Margaret Amanda Haugh, BBA Lisa Rene Hetrick, BBA
Bryan Alexander Croft, Bs Ben Taver Currin, BSB
Jordan Michael Dreiling, BSB Alyssa Marie Dungans, BSB
Nicholas Robert Self, BBA Sarah K. Stecher, BBA $ ^{*} $
Joshua Alek deFlon, BBA Business Administration
Dawn Renee Lewis, BBA Bradly Rey Morford, BBA
Maxwell Sommer Campbell, BSB
Lucas Miles Commodore, BSB*
Rebecca Lee Cormoran, BSP*
Alexander Joseph Haynes, BSB Jeremy Herring, $ \mathrm{BSB^{+}} $
Justin Edward Hitt, BSB*
Jordan Duane Loftus, BSB
Miles Joseph Malec, BSB*
Jennifer K. Manhnieo, BSB*
Alison P.J. Lee, BSB
Sanam Nicole Millerle, BSB* Tara Elizabeth Nickelson, BSB
Tyler Thomas Reuss, BSB Vivek Gopal Soni, BSB*
Mitchell James O'Trimble, BSB*
Tara Roth Oliver, BSB*
John Paul McKernan, BSB
Tucker Lee Noyes, BSB
Jacob Norquist, BSB
Vivek Gopal Soni, BSB* Alexander M. Todd, BSB
Samuel Joseph Albers, BSB
Tyler Thomas Reuss, BSB
Emilio Nelson Alverio, BSB
Alexander M. Todd, BSB Levi A. Weaverling, BSB*
John Joseph Bartak, BSB
Aaron Walker Bales, BSB Nicholas S. Barnes, RSR
Daniel Lloyd Bjornson, BSB
Connor Mark Blankenship, BSB
William O'Connor, BSB
William Charleston Bolen, BSB James Dennis Bono, BSB*
Alexander Watson Bublitz, BSB Kevin Michael Butorac, BSB
Taylor Renee Boyle, BSB Michael Lee Bryson, BSB
Sylvester Carl Byrd III, BSB*
Cheng Cai, BSB
Ezra Garret Carpenter, BSB Kirsan Marie Caswell, BSB*
Chenghao Chen, BSB
Matthew Allen Crabtree, BSB* Thomas Michael Cray Jr., BSB
Daniel Sheng Cheng, BSB Brennan Lane Clark, BSB
Katharine Michelle Chauvin.
BSB*
Philip Martin Cole, BSB*
Kevin Andrew Contrera, BSB
Jordan William Cordry, BSB*
Xayla Lo Cowell, BBS*
Connor Bret Drake, BSB
David Griffith DeGoler, BSB
Kuixi Du, BSB $ ^{*} $
David Ernest Euston, BSB
Adrienne Danielle Eilts, BSB Josh Alexander Emmons, BSB
Denise Prisca Fernandes, BSB*
David Fleming, BSB*
Hayden M. Fuchs, BSB
Evual Getahun, BSB
Patrick Joseph Grindinger, BSB*
Lu Guo, BSB
Kaleb Allen Gilmore, BSE Cory Lee Gleason, BSB
Christopher David Golub, BSB
Cauri Corauora, BSP
Sarah Sarah Gageman, BSB Michael Sprague Hardesty, BSB Brian Christopher Haverty, BSB*
Gauri Gorawara, BSB Jordan Lee Gray, BSB
Alexander Robert Howe, BSB
Duruo Huang, BSB*
Yun Huang, BSB*
Benjamin Maxwell Johnson, BSB*
Jack Thomas Johnson, BSB*
Justin M. Johnson, BSB*
Anna Elizabeth Hurst, BSB Jacob Etan Hurst-Sneh, BSB
Brittany Nicole Jones, BSB*
Christian Albert Joy, BSB*
Aaron Frederick Kaufman, BSB Mengyi Ke, BSB*
Thomas Oliver Keenan, BSB Brandon Tate Kempin, BSB
Joseph L. Kron, B
Fung Kwok, BSB*
Bradley James Kyles, BSB
Kyle Francis Lambrecht, BSB Patrick Lancaster, BSB
Michael fordan Lemos, BSB
Wenjun Li, BSB*
Bang Suan
Charles Robert Ludington, BSB Steven Bauer Lund. BSB*
Edward Gerald Machen, BSB Kai Mao, BSB*
Connor Patrick McGowan, BSB John Paul McKernan, BSB
Adam Donald Mcelusky, BSB
Elizabeth Anne Mowers, BSB
Joseph Browning Mortarty, BSB
John Elizabeth Murphy, BSB
Eric Myers, BSB
Christopher Kanghyun Nam
BSB*
Bona Belal Ndiaye, BSB*
Papa Belal Nulaye, BSM
John Douglas Nessm, BSB*
Christina Nguyen, BSB*
Christina Nguyen, BSB Luke Allen Nitchals, BSB
Luke Allen Mitchell, BSc.
Sean Patrick O'Connor, BSB*
Kyle Bryant Oppici, BSB
Nicholas Richard Santana, BSB*
Robert Joseph Schmank, BSB*
Katherine Banks Ottoson, BSB
Naitak Arvind Patel, BSB
Matthew David Powen, BSB
Michael Scott Pregulman, BSB
Ruofei Qiu, BSB*
Tom Bui Roberts, BSB
Laura Anne Robertson, BS
John Thomas Stout, BSB*
Courtney Marie Sheldon, BSB Meng Shen, BSB*
Christian William Shonkwiler,
BSB
Brian John Simpson, BSB
Matthew Xavier Smith. BSB*
Yuanda Tian, BSB
Calvin Woodard Tidwell, BSB
Amy Thi Van, BSB
Joseph Martin Viviano, BSB
Chennai, India, BSB
Ying Wang, BSB\*
Clark Sterling Wilson, BSB Nadia Yen May Wong, BSB
David Jay Willig, BSB
Charles Robert Worthington BSB
Jiabao Wu, BSB Hao Xu. BSB
Jiyuan Yang, BSB
Yahui Yang, BSB*
Carlye Ann Yanker, BSB
Kaiwei Zhang, BSB
Hong Zhu, BSE
Yi Zhu, BSB
Cameron Richardson Cregler, BSB
Lancer Dene Brayton, BS Andrew Lee Cha, BSB*
Bradley Ryan Crenshaw, BSB
Matthew Thomas Dickey, BSB
Jill Leanna Eike, BSB
Jason Alexander Gillam, BSB Kyle Nathan Gillogly, BSB
Seth Allen Gray, BSB*
Justin Daniel Gripka, BSB
Brun Andrew Griptka, BR
Daniel Blake Huerter, BSB* Taylor Mark Iberg, BSB
Shawn Thomas Kaylor, BSB Chad Michael Kozicki, BSB Xin Lu, BSB
Bernard Muturi Nduungu, BSB*
Abbey Rae Oliver, BSB
Eric Moore Papa, BSB
Drake Joseph Reinhard, BSB Brody Matthew Ryan, BSB*
Eric Marcus Pare, BSB Reid Oliver Pierson, BSI
Amanda Kay Maly, BSB
Clayton Cress Morrow, BSB
Faye Zahid Nazir, BSB
Isaac Wesley Severance, BSB Brian Paul Shrum, BSB*
Weston Howard Smith, BSB*
Lauren Paige Swanson, BSB Blake Elliott Tillman, BSB
Denise Prisca Fernandes, BSB*
David Patrick Ferran, BSB*
Brendan William Waters, BSB Chase Allen White, BBS Management & Leadership
Bryson Eugene Conaway, BSB
Kayla Jo Cowell, BSB
Stephen Niles Ertmer, BSB Meghan Jeanne Fadok, BSB
Sarah Grace Hageman, BSB
Jennings Jian Jiao, BSB*
Amanda Gayle Johnson, BSB Christian M. Jones, BSB
Katherine Banks Ottoson, BSB Breanna Shaye Pence, BSB
Matthew Glen Koontz, BSB
Adam Benjamin Lewis, BSB
Wanping M., BSB
Tyler Scott Magee, BSB
Ethan Guettier Ness, BSB Abbey Rae Oliver, BSB
Nicholas Patrick Rooney, BSB*
Robert Jackson Sanner, BSB*
Lauren Kathryn Shaw, BSB
Gina Marie Stanzeine, BSB*
Kory Von Sumnes, BSB
Mallory Alyse Sweatt, BSB Evan William Thomas, BSB
Meredith Wood Walrafen, BSB*
David Jay Willig, BSB*
Blake Elliott Timhall, BSB Lauren Ann Vanlandingham, BSB
Ashew Divers Wurst, BSB Matthew Wayne Zimmerman, BSB*
Lauren Michele Aulgur, BSB
James Lawrence Bailey, BSPA
Zachary Lucas Armstrong, BSB*
Richard Warner Ashley, BSB*
Alexander Emmanuel Banzon
BSB
Cody Canfield Branham, BSE Ryan Kenneth Carney, BSR
Daniel Sheng Cheng, BSB Brandon Jeffrey Colbert, F
Jessica Taylor Bartlett, BBS*
Taylor Lynn Belcher, BSB*
Elliott Bower, BSB
Paula Jean Davis, BSB Jun Dong. BSB
Stephen Niles Ermer, BCSB
Taylor Anne Ferrill, BSB
Michael Stanley FioRito, BSB Tyler Austin Fullbright, BSR
Elyse Nicole Douglas, BSB Stephen Niles Ertmer, BSB Taylor Anne Farrill, BSB
Julie Noelle Jenkins, BSI Megan Keepes, BSB*
Paige Marie Gramlich, BSB* Sara Morgan Gramling, BSB Tyler Joseph Heeenv, BSB
Chase A. Linder, BSB*
Cory J. Lucas, BSB
Steven Bauer Lund, BSB*
Megan Mae Madsen, BSB
Alexandra Anne Hines, BSB Kimberlee Hinkle, BSB Xun Huang, BSB*
Amanda Leigh Marland, BSB Alex Spencer May, BSB Lynne Brooks
Quinn Alexander Miller, BSB
Erin Elizabeth Murphy, BSB
Beth Muthoni, BSB
Ethan Ray Myers, BSE
Molly Elizabeth O'Halloran, BSB Reed Douglas Parker, BSB$^*$
Alma Cribb, Bilbao $^{**}$
Christian William Shonkwiler,
BSB
Timothy James Short, BSB*
Wesley Jordan Skilling, BSB*
George Connell Smith, BBS'
Apryl Achaia Shabaun Tillman, BSBI
Raymond Robert Toms, BSB
Christine Kay Van Allen, BSB
Lauren Ann Vanlandingham,
BSB
Kelsey Lynn Walker, BSB Nathan J. Watson, BSA Le Wei. BSB*
Kyle W. West, BSB*
Nicolas Ian Wilson, BSB*
Amiee Anayat, BSB
Bryly Anale Youngers, BSB
Hong Zhu, BSB*
GRADUATION GUIDE
Maggie Elizabeth Barber, BS
Daniel John Brinker, BSB
Timothy Brown, BSB*
Supply Chain Management
Ashley Leanne Clayton, BSB*
Ryan Patrick Crawford, BSB*
Taylor Mitchell Gold, BSB
Jennifer Louise Harsis, BSB
Raid Michael Harris, BSB
Reid Michael Harris, BSB Yuhao He. BSB
Matthew Thomas Dickey, BSB
Jonathan Andrew Finch, BSB
Eyual Getahun, BBS
Xin Lu, BSB
Jing Huang, BSB $ ^{*} $
William Patrick Mahoney, BSB
James Francis Manderscheidt
BSB
PAGE 5C
Timothy Scott Needham, BSB
Jasmine Chichi Onianwa, BSB
Sonphamha Town Pharma, BBS
Sonephasith Tony Phansiri, BSI
Katherine Ellen Redler, BSB
Richard Reginald Robba, BSB
Austin Lloyd Rowan, BSB*
Courtney Marie Sheldon, BSB
Gina Marie Stanzione, BBS*
Emily May Walker, BSB*
Jiabao Wu, BSB Wei Yin: RSR*
Jiyuan Yang, BSB
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Jonathan Chandler Ahrens
MAcc
Amanda Nicole Akin, MAcc
Tyler E. Beiker, MAcc
John Andrew Bernard, MAcc*
Corey Bonk, MAcc*
Christopher Lynn Brown, MAcc
Caleb Edward Bucher, MAcc
Alexander Lynn Cohns, MAce
Alexander James Cowan, MAce
Gentry Ray Craig, MAce
Erik James Dahl, MAce
Adam Drew Casady, MAcc
Lauryn Beth Chenoweth, MAcc
Daren Thomas Chesbrough,
MAcc
Andrew Stephen Cole, MAcc Kelsey Denise Collins, MAcc
Adrian Tyrone Davis Jr., MAcc
Lindsev Brooke Davis, MAcc
John Alexander DeLashmit,
MAcc
Michael Patrick Delich, MAcc
Dana Yuyee Diec, MAcc*
Dustin Tyler Dobbels, MAcc
Mark Ross Donachie, MAcc
Casandra Leann Engelken,
MAcc*
Timothy Michael Fields, MAcc Andrew Lawrence Foulston MAcc
Brendan Richard Hahne, MAc
Colby Grant Hilburn, MAcc
Scott D. Howell III, MAcc
Jeffrey David Gengler, MAcc
Spencer Phillip Glenn, MAcc
John Michael Grier, MAc*'
Ytle Daler Habrock, MAcc
Richard Corbin King, MAcc*
Nicholas Kelly Kleiger, MAcc*
Chia-Ying Lee, MAcc*
Jennifer Lynn Jordan, MAcc
Jennifer Rene Kaufman, MAcc
Thomas John Kennedy, MAcc
Daniel E. Jackson, MAcc
Joanan Enoch Johnson, MAAcc
Brittany Nicole Jones, MAacc
Melissa Louise Lem, MAcc*
Marcus Leo Lenihan, MAcc
Allison Marie Long, MAcc
Amanda Mae Maes, MAcc*
Ashita Mathur, MAcc*
Matthew Laurence McCall, MAcc
Kelly Eileen McKiernan, MAcc*
Shannon Denise Miller, MAcc
Heather Kathryn Mitchell, MAcc
Ashley Dawn Moretti, MAcc
Logan Trevor Murray, MAcc
Margaret Elizabeth Newell,
MAcc
Christopher Andrew Newman, MAcc*
Sean Michael Petitt, MAcc
Cassandra Erin Post, MAcc*
Jixunguar Puzey, MAcc*
Benjamin Andrew Pyle, MAcc
Andrew Scott Robison, MAcc*
Zachary Alexander Rossin, MAcc
Caroline Casey Roth, MAcc
Maria Floisa Santos, MAc*
Erika Elba Sánchez, MAcc
Erika Lian Snittker, MAcc
Erika Rose Sheahon, MAcc
Mohammad Nashwan Siddiqui,
MAcc
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Rebecca Lynn Stack, MAcc Megan R. Starnes, MAcc*
Hannah Pauline Stout, MAAcc*
Kelsey Marie Thomas, MAcc*
Jonathan Clark Wesley, MAcc*
Angie Dale Whalen, MAcc
Andrew Whittle, MAcc*
Michael Andrew Virgo, MAcc
Matthew Gordon Robert Wash-
ord. MAcc*
Rahima Mansoor Al Anqoudi,
MBA
Zachery Blair Wiebe, MAcc
Kyle D. Willibey, MAcc*
Jeremy Aaron Andrews, MBA* Rudolph Francisco Ardon Bogantes, MBA*
Bryan Dennis Ballweg, MBA* Mehmet Akif Bayle, MBA* Ryan T. Bechtel, MBA
Boone C. Bradley, MBA* Eryn Leigh Brown, MBA*
Piper Carter, MBA
Marion Gwennaille Caremel,
MBA
Joseph Anthony Custer, MBA*
Benjamin Charles Dandurand MBA*
Elizabeth L. Dean, MBA
Robert John Karl Domsch II
MBA
Emmanuel Chukwuemeka Emah-Emba, MBA
Darrell Everette, MBA Nicholas Fertig, MBA*
Mark Anthony Filipi, MBA George R. Foree. MBA
John Anthony French, MBA John Clinton Gardner, MBA*
Alexander David Rene Gertsma,
MBA*
Torey Stewart Gerwin, MBA*
Marcus Wayne Gibbens, MBA*
Benjamin Brian Gaydess-Hodgins, MBA
Amy Nicole Gill, MBA
Hirsch mf, MHA
Timothy Michael MBRA, MBA*
Chiung Kishu MBRA
Jonathan Zachary Indyk, MBA
Jessica Lauran Jongenelen, MBA*
Ryan Juliano, MBA
Feras Saleh Khunain, MBA*
Spencer Thomas King, MBA
Yoseth Leacock, MP*
Yosathone Laoprapassorn, MBA
Ellen Irene Lowery, MBA*
David Pratchett
Patrick Daniel Lozon, MBA*
Brian Patrick Madden, MBA
Andrew Robert Madl. MBA
Steven Brent Mayhew, MBA*
Jennifer McCall, MBA
Steven Nicholas McCaskill, MBA*
Marshall McGinnis, MBA
Prasanth Mohandas, MBA*
Ashleigh L. Montgomery, MR
Justin Eric Mouzokos, MBA*
Biju V. Nair, MBA
Rishanikar, Nishengkarin, MBA
Robert James Novotny, MBA*
Nanami Ohata, MBA
Brandonly Nicole Roberts, MBA Jacqueline Kay Romero, MBA Timothy John Rongish, MBA Larry Allan, MBA
Elizabeth Roshni Oommen, MBA Pratik Dhirubhai Patel, MBA
Nanami Ohata, MBA
Quang Thanh Ngo, MBA*
Jarrod Ross Ramsey, MBA*
Megan Carver Remley, MBA*
Allison Ray Renn, MBA*
Notian H. Pious, MBA Selva A. Prabhu, MBA*
Andrea Robinson Solarino;
MBA*
Peter Lee Delaserna Tosco.
MBA*
Morgan Chandler Simms, MBA*
Scott Andrew Simpson, MBA
Diana Turner, MBA
Kelly Joseph Turney, MBA*
Qian Wang, MBA*
Hugo Marc Rettien, MBA Leigh Ann Reynolds, MBA
Tyler James Soldan, MBA* Shawn ALAN Spencer, MF
sara Kirsten Wenzel, MBA*
Rachel Elizabeth Williams,
MBA*
Kurtis Don Sundgren, MBA*
Suzelle Jouane Tala Medjou,
MBA
Courtney Adair Wilson, MBA Scott A. Wilson, MBA
Business
Daniel Joseph Azzone, MS Beth Luther Cook,MS
Matthew Jack Lovell, MS Justin McGovern, MS
James Edward Everett, M
James Troy Fisher, MS
Derek Wesley Hoffman, MS
Jeffrey John Quail, MS
James JinLong Geishaker, MS
Derek Wesley Hoffman, MS
Robert Maurice Gambrell, MS Christopher John Garvin, MS
Brian Leroy Mize, MS
Justin Michael Redfern, M Chad Eric Roberts, MS
Andrew Talbert Nottberg, MS Chi H. Park, MS
Delarius Vonche Tarlton, MS
Jeremy Wheatsworth, M
Daniel Squyres, MS
Zelin Zhang, PhD*
Dean Danny J. Anderson
Ghadir Samir Ishqaidef, PhI Matthew T. Luth PhD*
Rizaldo deLeon Salvador, MS
Scott David Siemon
HONORS (TENTATIVE) With Hardest Distinction
Matthew Allen Sweeney, MS Christine M. Takats, MS
Maryemma Graham
Joel Stephen Coon
Sunita Sundararaja Rao, PhD*
Donald J. Schepker Jr., PhD*
School Marshals
Samuel Edward Hofmeier Ryan Ray House
Luke Richard Barnard
Marshall Thorne Smith
Jeremy Alan Adwell Asbley Nicole Albers
Joel Stephen Coon
Rebekah Noelle Curry
Megan Elizabeth Andrews
Jennifer Lymne Auvett
Emily Elizabeth Parsons Nilam Dinesh Patel
Diane Carol Hughes Jeremy Hopper Ims
Marshall Thomas Beauchamp
Lauren Joann Beesley
Danse Bi
Rachel Dawn Brown
HONORS (TENATIVES)
With Highest Distinction
New Admission
Scott Danforth Kristenson Carol Kruse
Alexander Baranda Balmaceda Luke Richard Barnard
Rebekan Noelle Curry Joshua Thomas Dean
Madeline Grace Schuman Sarah Jane Shier
Brandon Lee Johnson Joseph Walker Kellum
Joseph Benson Diefendorf Glenn Richard Dunne
Whitney Noel Kleinmann Blaine Alan Knox
Casey Lynn Freeman
Stanbahne Applicant
Kathryn E. Fankhauser Hunter Lee Finch
Jessica Lynn Watkins Megan Anne Watson
Audrey Nicole Peterson
Erin Annette Reid
Kathryn Lee Songe
Sarah Mary Stern
Rebecca Lynn Mandelbaum Tabitha Leigh Marcotte
Daniel Patrick Simon
Arlanna Paule Morgan
Bernadette Ann Myers
Nicole Paule Brown Ron-Tyler Budhram
Bailey Marie Reimer
Ursula Rachel Rothroch
Jenson Marie Wendle
Ian Walter Weidling
Jack Colton Campbell Xelsey Marie Cinolla
Nikki Chalmond Bogess
Tyler William Bollinger
Andrew Steven Edwards Erin Nicole Eifler
Bonnie Kathleen Ewart-Fisher
Carly Poatee Farm and
Brooke Elizabeth Finger Alexandra Nicole Free
Jennifer Marie Ciszewski
Kenneth Maechtlen Cochrar
Megan Elsa Connolly
Whitney Rachelle Fritzie Daniel Joseph Gallagher
jennifer Allison David Charlotte Nicole Davis
Luke Nathaniel Greene
Cory Bennett Gutovitz
Trinity Marie Graff
Elizabeth Ann Hastings Michelle Lea Hill
George Andrew Holtzen Kathryn Emily Hoven
Margaret Eve Hul
Cody G. Jackson
Andrew William Jamison
Taylor Marie Johnson
Hannah Michelle Johnson Elizabeth Jane Keller
Max Joseph Martin
Sarah Rachelle McCabe
Dabra Ann McCabe
Patrick Graves McEnul Ashley Marie Miller
Haley Elaine Miller Justin James Miller
Meaghan Ann Moody Matthew Brian Moore Jordan Tyler Moore
David Robert Nelson Jeffrey Allen Nguyen
D. Adam Nicholson
Cooper Lucas Nickel
Cooper Lucas Nickel
Erin Lindsay O'Grady
Danielle Christine Onions Jay Sunil Patel
Alexander Lindblom Pendleton Josh David Peterson
Kyle Benjamin Patterson
Taylor Ramsey Patterson
Danielle Colleen Pfeifer
Lucas Ryan Phillipn
Bret Allen Province Xuan Qin
Devon Lilli Price
Gabriela Catherine Quiroga Luke Anthony Ristoy
Zachary Joseph Roberts
Alec Rothman
Alexander Rouyanian Lindsay Ann Schaefer
Kaman Slade Schneider Julie K. Schrader
Briana Marisela Serrano
Lauren Marie Taulbee Jenna Marie Thomas
Harrison Whitefield Smith
Sheridan Alexander Strauss
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS
Viktoriya Tulchinskaya Megan Marie Wells
African and African American Studies John Robert Martin American
Jared M. Konecny*
Jennifer Lindsey Crowder
Heather Colleen Himmelwright
Chalice Ann Himmelwright
Brendan Edward Light
Lee Damian Wagner
Applied Behavioral Science
Marjorie Rose Cooper
Astrona
Jeremy Hopper Ims
Atmospheric $^-$
Nathan Allen Wendt
Biochemistry
Arthur Wesley Ankney
Biology
Joseph Walker Kellum Ojas Kirit Patel
Taylor Ramsey Patterson
Ian Walter Weidling Chemistry
Jacob Kiel Gentillon
Rodolfo Matias Torres-Gavosto
Classical Languages
Nobleman Nicole Curry
Nicole Lynn Gonzalez
Communication Study
Rachael Corine Snider
East Asian Languages & Cultures Sarah Jo Bregman
Bonnie Kathleen Ewart-Fisher
Economics
Wendy Anne Budetti
Megan Elsa Connolly*
Laura Elise Binnier
Daniel James Bourneuf
Shailen Rieger
Brendan James Allen Sydney Marie Andrew
Joshua Thomas Dean
Sheena M. Watkins*
Daniel James Bourne
Shelby Brienne Brown
Wendy Anne Rudetti
Megan Lisa Connolly
Charlotte Nicole Davis
Kathryn Emily Hoven
Tamir Jyude Khalas
Jordan Serene Kruse*
Sen Lin*
Sernadette Ann Myers
Ryan Patrick O'Grady
Mariah Gaulle Billion
Rebecca Lynn Mandelbaum
Sarah Rachelle McCabe
Meagan Ann Moody
Jenna Marie Thomas
Kyle Curtiss Vineyard
Andrew Clark Wagner Megan Anne Watson
Katryn E. Fankhauser Film and Media Studies
Katie Jane Mulich French and Italian
Elizabeth Claire Jarvis Bernadette Ann Myers
Taylor Marie Hersh Kathryn Emily Howe
Rami Channa Meisinger Jordan Tyler Moore
William Michael Riggs
Eric Daniel Wong
Joel Stephen Coon Sarah Brie Sexton
Latin American Studies
Sarah Mary Stern
*inquiration*
Rachel Dawn Brown
Lauren Joann Beesley Bryan Robert Harris
Bryan Robert Harris
Tianyu Huang
Malaysia BJ
Molecular Biology
Daniel Patrick Simon
Philosophy
Leonel Hernan Castro Jr.
Sinclaire Ashley Erdwien*
Political Science William Mark Bettes
Lindsay Taylor Grantham Ojas Kirit Patel
Shannon Marie Collins Kyle Benjamin Patterson
Marshall Thomas Beauchamp
Carla Beatriz Fernandez*
Religious Studies
Jeremy Hopper ImS Matthew Kyle Sullivan Political Science
Lucas Enrique Strubing-Cartes*
Psychology
Allison Anne Colburn Hunter Lee Finch
Jacqueline Mona Patton Sociology
Casey Joan Cox*
Nicole Jessica Denney
Debolina Trisha Ghosh Shelbi Janaye Hall
Gabriella Renee Harrison Kelson Nicole McCauley
Arianna Paige Morgart
Julie K. Schrader
Jenna Elizabeth Small Jessica Breann Stadler
Margaret Marie Hanzlick
Women's Studies Taylor Marie Hersh
CANDIDATES FOR
RACHELOR'S DEGREE
Robert Bogdan Halloran, BA*
Jeffrey Todd Hammons II, BA
Harris Dutwyne Retford, BGS
Clarence James Reynolds III,
BGS*
African and African-American Studies
Randall L. Dent Jr., BGS
Kevin Young, BGS Kevin Michael Young, BGS
Hannah Tan Shult, BGS*
Jordan Elizabeth Ehle, BA*
Zachary Merritt English, BGS*
Lauren Elizabeth Gayla, BOR
Ruth Kahnemann, Gölin,
Samuel M. Kahn, BGS*
Scott D. King, BGS*
Daniel Alan Schneider, BGS*
Alexander Cameron Sevedge, BA
Mitchell Tyler Walsh. BA*
Alexander Cameron Sevedge Mitchell Tyler Walsh, BA $ ^{*}$
Michelle Sabrina Marino, BA Kurt Edward Mattingly, BA* Bailey Marie Reimer, BA
Kevin Tyler Wright, BA*
Skylar Allen Wright, BGS*
Jeremy Alan Adwell, BA Lacey J. Allen, BGS
Jeffree David Withey, BGS*
Kevin Tyler Wright BA*
Chelsea Nicole Ybarra, BA Duane Evan Zlatnik, BGS*
Amanda Nicole Cauthon, BA
Marta Gayle Christie, BGS
Nate Preston Baker, BA Melissa Seo Brooks, BA*
Anthropology
Jahmal Ahmad Clemons, BA*
Joel Stephen Coon, BA
Chelsea Anne Hochstetter, BGS*
Malik Adam Jaradat, BGS*
Brooke Marie Jones, BA
Smith Emily Crowder, BA Andrew Stephen Haanpaa, BGS Ryan Stuart Harmon, BA
Harrison Cody Thomas Haynes, BA
Zebulon Robert Kissinger, BGS
Matthew Glen Koontz, BA
Kyle S. Kotzman BGC*
Paige Nicole Henderson, BA Heather Colleen Himmelwright, BA
Tyler Steven Kring, BGS
Erika Kolette Kruse, BA*
Brendan Edward Light, BA*
Bikash Robert Rothebe, BC
Dana Lynn Schwab, BGS*
Damon Jesse Simmons, BGS
Jason Jeffrey Stull, BGS*
Kyle Campbell McRae, BGSI
Aria Marie Menghini, BA
Justin Lopes, Millan, MA
Alexander Blake Miner, BGS Heather Elaine Rallo, BA*
Nathaniel Gideon Tredoux, BGS*
David Alan Trenary, BGS*
Shannon Turnbull, BA
Randy Vidales, BA
Daniela Gretchen Weiter, BGS*
Richard Lee Younger, BA
Rebecca Lynn Campbell, BGS
Carly Lynn Carman, BGS*
Rachel Clare Clarke, BGS*
Kesley Reinee Coleman, BGS Megan Marie Cook, BA* Marjorie Rose Cooper, BGS Carolyn Davis, BGS
Meghan Elizabeth Doherty, BA
PAGE 6C
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Aoigait Ann Drogosz, BGS*
Taneka LaShae Eason, BGS
Kathrine Melissa Embree, BA*
Jennifer Anne Frank, BGS*
Elizabeth Franklin, BGS*
GRADUATION GUIDE
Ashley Lauren Helbert, BGS*
Tracy Elizabeth Hogan, BA
Angela Pawn Goodrich, BOSS Tiffany Linnea Hanchett, BA Jessica Amber Hase, BA
Miranda L. Gilmore, BGS Emily Ann Gnefkow, BA* Lauren Blair Goldstein, BE
Benjamin Henry Holloway, BGS Hayley Danielse Dylapse, BGS Kelsey Lauren Izumo, BGS* *ayme Ellen Kauffman, BGS*
Meredith LeAnn Mann, BA Olivia Marie Mansheim, BA Chloe McKay BGS*
Jayme Ellen Kauffman, BGS Lauren Elizabeth Kennedy, BA
Lauren Elizabeth Kennedy, BA Marian Amanda Kohler, BGS Courtny Laudont, BGS
Kameron Wesley Moyer, BGS Timothy Ian Muetz, BA
Cynthia Peg Livingston, BGS
Catherine Rose Losey, BGS
Aubrey Michelle Loubeh, BGS
Mersadies Lynn Newton, BA Paige Jordan Nguyen, BGS
Candice Michelle Owen, BA
Shelby Lyn Lev皮ler, BGS
Nicola Maria Patricia, BCS
Courtney Renee Mead, BGS Ashley Marie Miller, BA Paige R. Morrell, BA
Meranda Mae O'Gorman, BA
courtney Elaine Osteen, BA*
Alexandra C. Otte, BA
Nicole Marie Petrie, BGS Jess Pappan Pringle, BGS
Jess Pappan Pringle, BGS
Erika Paige Bernadette
BPG
Ayako Sawaguchi, BA
Amanda Nichole Shadonix, BA*
Francine Kimone Simpson, BGS
Michael Sofis, BA*
Ashley Bernice Spencer, BGS*
Shelley Marilyn Stroh Enright
BGS*
Brienne Nicole Taylor, BGS*
Kristan Gabrielle Tinoco, BA*
Samantha Jane Joeevs, BGS*
Crystan L. Vaughn, BGS*
Cathleen Lynn Wilkinson, BGS Brittanie Michelle Williams, BGS
Brittanie Michelle Williams, BGS Shante' Renae Williams, BA $ ^{*} $
Jessica Kay Winne, BGS Lillian Ann Wood. BGS*
Heather Marie Zerger, BA*
Astronomy
Erin Elizabeth Schultz, BS Daniel Richard Webb, BA
Jeremy Hopper Ims, BS Arlo Ray Osler, BS
Atmospheric Science
Aaron Charles Doudna, BS
Katryn Gebauer, BS
Jordan Nathaniel Carroll, BS* Sylvia Elise Davison, BS*
Nicholaus Christopher Augustine, BS
Patrick William Edmonds, BS
Samantha Freeman, BS*
William Taylor Harris, BS
Nathan Allen Wendt, BS Behavioral Neuroscience
Marwa Mohamed Noaman, BS*
Kanon Taylor Peterson, BS
Michael Lee Richards, BS*
Hannah Lane Windholz, BS William Owen Wright IV, BS
Biochemistrv
Arthur Wesley Ankeney, BS Ivan A. Babkov, BA
Alexander Baranda Balmaceda BS
Aaron G. Bart, BS
Matthew Mark Behymer, BS
Aimee Lynn Bigger, BS
Alexander Michael Bowman, BS
Erica Sue Clarkson. BS*
Joshua Michael Cunningham BS*
Michel Victor Gates, BA Alexander Josef Grandsoult, BA Bavly N. Hanna, BS
Alexander Kaiser, HDS
Robert William Jackson, BA*
Dora Kapros, BS
Ryan Shawn Kurlak, BS*
Vicki Lu, BS
Ryan Sullivan Maloney, BS Vinit Snehal Nanavaty, BS Joshua Ray Neff, BS*
Roger Clark Nightengale, BS'
Kyle Gregory Niquette, BA
Pierce Timothy O'Neil, BA
Justin Scott Putoff, BS Alexander Tavel Salem, B
Sidney Lee Schrahl, BS Tiange Shi, BS*
Caroline Schaffrath Haacke, BA
'ynn Goer Schrag, BS
Alexander Tayel Salem, BA*
Matthew Allen Stroh, BS*
Michael Alan Sullivan, BA
Mark Alexander Waldon, BA William Owen Wright IV, BS (uchen Yang, BS*
Emre Agbas, BS
Alisher Abdullayev, BS*
imro Agbas, BS
Catherine Elizabeth Allan, BA*
Lindsay Allison Astleford, BS
lennifer Lynne Auccott, BS
Jennifer Lynne Aucott, BS Travis Ray Bailey, BS
Preston Riley Bartlett, BS Elizabeth Yuan Beech, BS*
Diana Lee, BSN
Shan Sai Baskey, BS
Amanda Jane Bixel, BS
Andrew Louis Girocco, BS*
Justin Dennis Cobb, BS*
Jordann Elizabeth Cogan, BS
Daniel Ann Collis, BS
Emily Anne Conard, BS
Stephanie Kay Downs, BN
Corinne Hirata Edds, BS
Chris Wolle Eliff, BS*
Tolchik Tolchik, BS*
Austin Reindert Essenburg, BS Carla Behritz Fernandez, BS* Brooke Elizabeth Finger, BS
Alexis Ann Giannotti, BS
Adam Charles Goud, BS
Trinity Marie Graff, BS
Luke Nathaniel Greene, BJ
Bared Marshall Gross, BS*
Janae Lynn Lake, BS
Erin Patton Hall, BS*
Zachary Davis Helmstead, BS Nicholas John Hidlay, BS Alexander Klaus Hild, BS
Theobore James Horn, BA
Derek Christopher Huddlestun,
BS
Seoun Wook Hwang, BS
Sahir Ijaz, BS
Ejemaree Idahota Imafidon, BS* Robert William Jackson, BA* Clay Jarrell, BS
Elizabeth Claire Jarvis, BA Hyungjoon Jin, BS $ ^{*} $
Brian Michael Johnson, BS Jessica May Joslin, BS
Brandon Michael Kelley, BS* Joseph Walker Kellum, BS Nooshin Kianti Nia, BS
Luke Christopher Kilgore, BA*
Harley Diane Knudsen, BA
Scott Danforth Kristenson, BS
Blake Thomas Kryger, BS
Stephen Phong Leng, BS
Brian Michael LeSage, BS
Kelly Nicole Lembke, BS
Cayler Scott Lee Luther, BS
Caylor Scott Lex Luther, BS
Logan Allen Mallicoat, BS
Frances saran Mandelbaum, B,
Larissa Anne Maranell, BS*
Steven A. Mathew, BS
Alexandria Gene McMahon, BA* Hannah Nicole McNiel, BS* Jon Michael Menegay, BS*
Nicholas Benjamin McCool, BS*
Jill Amela Mccormc MCcurny
Patrick Graves McEnulty, BA
David Michel Moore, BS*
Amanda Sue Moore, BS*
Shauna Moore, BS*
Patrick Graves McEnulty, BA Robert Joseph McKnight, BS
Chesapeake Elizabeth Meyer, B Halley Maley Miller, BA* Jessica Melvn Miller, BS
Alexander Lindblom Pendleton, BS
Morgan Elizabeth Rainey, BS
Brian Joseph Richerson, BS
Kaitlyn Iris Perry, B
Shenyu Qian, BS
Xuan Qian, BA
Michelle Le Mubarak, BS*
Lisa Marie Nguyen, BA*
William Scott Ogan, BS
Christopher Roy Smith, BS Miranda Sharlene Smith, BS Eric Peter Sparks, BS
Henry Donald Spingola III, BS
Chelsea Lynn Steel, BS
Jennia Michelle Steffen, BS
Madeline Grace Schuman, BS
Adam Michael Seeger, BA*
Hannah Tan Shult, BS*
Sutton Alexander Stegman, BS Michael Benjamin Stockwell, BS*
Daniel John Supica, BS Sierra Maree Taul, BA
Chase Eugene Tiemeyer, BA Jonathan Thai Truong, BS
Alex Edward Thurber, BS*
Haoo Tu, BS ZaXiCuo,BS*
Luke Richard Barnard, BS Danse Bi, BS
Coulter Payton Cranston, BA
Charles Edward Deeter, BA
Sunny L. Do, BA
Lakin James Dreiling, BA*
Andrew Steven Edwards, BS*
Ryan E. Felton, BF
Alan P. Vasquez Jr., BA*
Calvin Jeffery Kissick, BA
Makenzie Jo LaCost, BA
Stephen Charles Clark, BA William Ryan Cleek, BS
Deanna Elizabeth Lydick, BA Katherine Mae MacCormack, B9
Rodolfo Matias Torres-Gavosto,
BS
Troy Allen Jensen, BA
Faiza Fiaz Khan. BA
Sarah Grisel Puna Valencia, BA*
Erin Annette Reid, BA
rad L. Brightbill, BS*
Lauren Annette Callahan, BA Alex Scott Gilmore, BA
Christine Kay Van Allen, BA Megan Anne Watson, BA
Harrison Cody Thomas Haynes, BA
Lauren Annette Callahan, BA
jacob E. Khapp, BA Charles Robert Maloney, BA
Rebekan Noelle Curry, BA Nicole Lynn Gonzalez. BA
Communication Studies Carlos Alvarado, BGS*
David William Caton, BGS*
Leah Madeline Charles, BGS
Kyle David Click, BA*
Charles Robert Maloney, BA
Caroline Anne Atkinson, BA Abby Jeanine Baden, BGS
Elizabeth Kathleen Beatty, BA
Gabriel Ross Bellowin, BGA
David Nelson Boan, BGS*
Jeremy Lynn Bolinger, BGJ
Joshua Craig Booker, BA
Shelby Ann Borel, BA*
Samantha Claire Carmichael, BGS*
Daniel Taylor Buchfink, BGS*
Jessie Ann Caley, BGS*
Leslie Jennifer Hyman, BGS* Hannah Marie Ingle, BGS
Monica Louse Engelman, BGS
AnnaMarie Bain Ferguson, BGS*,
Zane Harris Fringes, BGS
Morgan Leigh Boub, BGS Daniel Joseph Brocato, BGS Joseph Robert Brooker, BGS
Jordan Alice Jurczak, BA
Lauren Ann Kadel, BA
Allison Elizabeth Donahue, BGS Jessika Jill Downg, BGS* Korab David Eland, BA
Gregory Vernon Huenergardt,
BA*
Samuel Jacob Conklin, BGS Kelsie Kay Cross, BGS*
Joseph Richard Fuentes, BA Shannon Jewell Garlie, BGS* Shea Irene Geyer, BGS
Andrew Barret Dickinson, BGS* Katie Vaughn Dilworth, BA
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BGS*
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Cole-Christian Leo Holinaty,
BGS
McKenna John Hall, BA
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BGS*
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Chandha Lace Johnson, BGS
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Gregory Scott Mc Avoy Jr. $ ^{*} $ BGS*
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BGS*
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Lauren Elizabeth Sutmar, BGS* Jay Dixon Swanson, BGS*
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BGS
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East Asian Languages and Cultures Sarah Jo Bregman, BA
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Carrie Kay Millison-Crouse, BGS*
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Joseph Lawrence Cronemeyer, BA
Bonnie Kathleen Ewart-Fisher, BA
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Sara Katherine Jean Brown, BA*
*Courant College, PA
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Joseph Duane Dennison, BA*
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Korey James Keen, BA
Sen Lin, BA*
Audrey Nicole Peterson, BA
Samantha Diane Phillips, BA*
Roy Lee Walden III, BA Carolisa Gail Watson, BA
Economics
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Lenvalido Antonio Filgueira
Nirma, De Shuja, ilia
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ohnson Tanner Hawkinson,
{GS*
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Eric Eugene Jensen, BGS
Yi lin, BA
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Taku Tanaka, BA*
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james Russell Walton, BS*
Sheena Watkins, BGS*
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Ashley Kathryn Woolsey, BGS*
Jinjiao Xu, BA
Fan Zhou, BA
Junran Zhu, BA
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English
Brendan James Allen, BA
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Megan Christine Becker,BA* Laura Elise Bilhimer, BA
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BA
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BGS*
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Sen Lin, BA*
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RA Edward Meredith, BGS
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ustin Daniel Rennell, BA Joshua Alexander Richards BGS*
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BA
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Mary J. Hoyles, BGS Maggie Kate Horgan, BA* James William Jeans IV, BGS* Henry Kapke, BGS
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Rachelle Lynn Landreth, BGS*
PAGE 7C
BGS*
, BGS*
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GRADUATION GUIDE
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arquhar' ,
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Geography
Sanantona Marie Spurrock
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Sarah Elizabeth Link, BA
Cody Lown, BA*
Jeff Robert Lynch, BGS*
William Michael Rigg
Daniel S. R, BGS
loann R. Smith, BS*
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Geology
James Phillip Stanfield, BGS Jacob Donovan Walters, BA
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Edward Roy Morehouse, BS Ryan J. Nicholas, BS*
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Matthew P. Rader. BS*
Mallory Frank Stevenson, BS Jacqueline West Walden, BS*
Germanic Languages and Literatures Natasha Fashion LaForce, BA Ethan William Locke, BA Bryan Patrick Thelen, BA*
Global and International Studies Braden Alexander Agpoon, BA Jessica Renee Brooks, BA*
Robert Bogdan Halloran, BA* Paige Nicole Henderson, BA Gustavo Juarez, BA*
Lauren Elizabeth Lottino, BA
Tabita Leigh Marcotte, BA
John Robert Martin, BA
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Gabriel Gamal Racca Rachid,
BA*
Megan Renee Reesing, BA Jake C. Robinson, BA*
Lucas Enrique Strubing Cartes,
BA*
David William Roper, BA* Logan Aynsley Sack, BA* Samuel Jacob Seaman, BA*
Angela Michelle Sutton-Schmale,
BA
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Julianna Alexandra Tidwell, BA Matthew Aaron Visser, BA
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History
Thomas Ryan Beaver, BGS Evan Tyler Beese, BA
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Maths College, MCS
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Ashelle Wynne Wenger, BA
Arielle Alexandra Spiridigliozzi,
BGS
Hillary Elizabeth Morgan Cartson, BA*
History of Art
Max Benjamin Weinberg, BA*
Margaret Taliaferro White, BA
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Johanna Beth McSweeney, BA
Amanda Teresa Mitchell, BCG*
Alysia Kathleen Guinn, BA
Kathryn Paige Johnson, BA
Sarah Brie Sexton, BA Hope Elizabeth Simmo
Human Biology
Lauren Macey Nelson, BA
Eric Lee Ray-Snyder, BGS
Sarah Brie Sexton, BA
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Sarah Elizabeth Anderson, BA
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A曼ka Falk, EKL
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Tucker Scott Wells, BA
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Latin American & Caribbean Studies
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Humanities
Emily Marsh Carpenter, BA
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Liberal Arts and Sciences Danielle Adam, BGS
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BGS*
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BGS*
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BGS
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James Burst West, BGS*
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Rachel Dawn Brown, BA
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BA
Sonya Fay Eberlein, BA*
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BGS*
Samantha Marie Spurlock, BA*
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*Catering Manager*
Brian William Beatty, BS* Lauren Joann Beesley, BS Ryan Boch, BS
Mathematics
Jacob David Moore, BGS Brenda Kay Revard, BGS
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Michael Morris, BS
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Matthew Paul Terry, BS
Zhoudunming Tu, BS
Tellena Louise Vincent-Heaps,
BA*
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Glenn Richard Dunne, BA William James Emmerich, I
Dana Leigh Whetter, BA
Hao Zhou, BA
Microbiology
William janes Eminerich, I
Ann Lorena Erickson, BS
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Ashley Lynn DeLuca, BS $ ^{*}$ FengJun Dong, BS
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Lexy Marie Kindt, BA
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OSm
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Alexander Romanian, BS
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Molecular Biosciences
Rustie Kra Hagemann, BS Tessa Marie Haselhorst, BS* Britty Allys Hawkins, BS Ryan Patrick McCabe, BS
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Erika Lynn Dewsbury, BS
Elizabeth Anne Vinyard, BS Kade Michael Weiser, BS*
Philosophy
Charles Henry Buck III, BA
Leonel Hernan Castro Jr., BA
Christopher Nicholas Challans
BA
Sinclare Ashley Erdwien, BA* William Lane Franklin, BA* Lindsay Taylor Grantham, BGS
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BGS*
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Arlo Ray Osley, BS
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Political Science
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Jeri Lynn Gariglietti, BA Ryan Dean Gash, BGS
Catherine Elizabeth Gunsalus, BGS
Evan Elizabeth Gates, BA Simon Jacob Gottlieb, BA Micah Graber,BA
Meghan Rachelle Knight, BA*
Dylan Spencer Kobs, BA*
Alexandria J. Jones, BGS* Nathan James Kalish, BGS Suraj Rak Keshary, BA
William Mitchell Krouse, BA* Aric M. Kuntz, BGS*
Giuseppe Morgan La Candia,
BA*
Kent William Lee,
Ailun Li, BA
Andrew Edward Lause, BGS
Michael Quinn Lavery, BGS
Kent William Lee, BGS
Alton L. BA
A Benjamin Lockwood, BA*
Alexander B. Longmire, BGS*
Emily Lubarskv, BA
Bo Carl Moodenlog, Boss
Christina Ann Mohr, BA
Jordan Tyler Moore, BA
Mackenzie Lynn Masterson, BA*
Kelly Marie McReynolds, BA
Bc Civil-Marine BAc
Christopher E. Oblon, BA
Meredith Olney, BA
Kyle Benjamin Patterson, BA Aaron J. Pearson, BGS* Austen Jane Peters, BA*
Jacob Daniel Peterson, BA Heather Marie Piernick, BA
Danielle Christine Onions, BA
John Christopher Page, BA
Linson Geneleville Pointer, BA
Andrew Steven Probasco, BGS*
Bret Allen Province, BA*
Alexandra Nicole Choucino Rose,
BA
Brooke Nicole Rempfer, BA* Matthew Sugaya Robertson, BA* Jake C. Robinson, BA*
Nikolas Clayton Quigley, BGS Gabriel Gamal Racca Rachid, BA*
Laura Kay Schaible, BGS*
Alexa Danielle Sharwell, BGS
Sarah Jane Sher, BA*
Lucas Enrique Strubing Cartes;
BA*
Caitlin Doris VerBrugge, BGS
Danielle Audrey Verley, BA*
Julian Viso, BGS
Jean D. Thoma, BGS
Bruce Paul Tuschhoff, BGS
Ryan Douglas Umberger, BGS
Kristopher Noah Velasca, BA
Matthew Aaron Visser, BA Eduardo Bolton Vista, BGS Brian Scott Vollhaupt, BGA
Anna Katherine Waldschmidt,
BA*
Arooj Zafar, BA
Psychology
Jennifer Anne Aleshire, BA Alexandra Ann Allen, BA
Heather Louise Allen, BA* Rehab Nedal Alsadeq, BGS
Zachary Michael Ernzen Arehart,
BGS*
Tara Nichole Augustin, BA Danielle Rae Augustine, BGS Collin Scott Baffa, BA*
Mallory Elizabeth Bahmani, BA* Christopher Michael Baker, BA Shawne Bark, BA
Dillon Dean Barnes, BGS*
Jessica Barbara Barnes, BGS*
Marshall Thomas, Beauharnp
Jessica Barbara Barnes, BGS* Marshall Thomas Beauchamp, BA
Lauren Noel Berry, BA
Ronnie Gayle Blackburn, BA*
Barbara Madison Blankenship,
PAGE 8C
BGS
Kathryn Nichole Blum, BGS'
Bela L蔚 Boosten Boom, BGS
William Connor Boyle, BGS
Lilian Leen Boom, PA
Michael Stephen Brooks, BGS*
Adrienne Van Valkenburgh
Brown. BA
Cynthia Erin Brown, BA Emily Anne Brown, BA
Kelsey Ann Collins, BA
Rachel Kelley Burton, BA
Megan Phoebe Butts, BA
Amanda R. Campbell, BA*
Epstein Campbell, BA*
Eric Michael Christopherson, BGS
Alexandra Paige Chase, BA Xiaojing Chen. BGS $ ^{*} $
Lauren Grace Deaver, BA'
Alyse Nicole Decker, BGS
Xiaoling Diao, BGs
Reisley Ami Colmins, BA
Lakisha Shantell Cooper, BGS*
Marjorie Rose Cooper, BGS*
Joseph Benson Diefendorf, BGS Samuel Thomas Douthit, BA* Erin Nicole Eifler, BA
Lauren Allison Eighme, BGS Emilie Anne Ellenz, BA
Mette Esbensen, BA $ ^{*} $
Christina Ann Espinosa, BA* Adeshola Fatuyi, BA*
Alannah Elizabeth Felix, BA Carla Beatez Fernandes, BA
Caleb Zacchaeus Gardner, BGS* Christina Jane Gelyin. BA
Cara Benitz Fernandez, BA
Jamie Lynn Finkelman, BGS
Zohar Flacks, BS
Madeline Rae Giesler, BA Kiley Jean Gilmer, BGS
Natele Nicole Grossei, BGS
Colleen Bridget Gusecki, BAJ
Jeffrey Allen Hagihara, BA*
Lauren Marie Giroux, BGS Natalie Nicole Gloshen, BGS
Eric Keller Johnson, BA
Hannah Michelle Johnson, BA
*Ann Ann Kaminski, BA*
Jonathan Waynewright Kendall,
BGS*
Jordan Michael Jakubov, BGS Nur Hafiz Binti Jamal, BA Xing JI, BA
Tyler James Kitson, BA Hillary Anne Klein, BGS
Briffey Raquel Klopter, BGS Kaylee Leake, Koch, BA Natasha Roit Kohlari, BA
Brianna Jenan Kennedy, BGS* Kristen Nicole Kennedy, BA Hyun Jin Akum, BA
Nicholas Eugene Marlo, BGS* Allison Lindsay Marquis, BGS Krista Dawn Marvin, BA
Nakula Romi Kohli, BA
Andrew Badke Landon, BA
Sophie McKenzie Lapkin, BA
Sara Elizabeth Logan, BA*
Zachary Paul Logan, BGS*
Alexander Jon Latham, BA
Martha Ridge Leonard, BA*
Yifeng Li, BA
Megan Elise McVay, BA Valerie Ann Melin, BA
Makenna Ellen Mathy, BGS
Michelle Leigh Maxson, BGS*
Alli McGuinn, BGS*
Benjamin Nickolas Montague,
BGS
Abby Vivitla Montgomery, BA
Justin Mark Moore, BGS*
Stephanie Mulhall, BGS
Amanda Jones Murphy, BA
Amanda Irene Murphy, BA Kelsey Marie Nance, BGS*
Kenzie Marie Nance, BGS
Courtney Elizabeth Newman, BA
Logan Phillip Nispel, BGS
Logan Phillip Nispel, BGS
Eugene Gildenberg, PhD
Svan Michael O Brien, BA
Katlyn Alexandra O'Connor,
BGS
John Michael O'Donnell, BA*
Jenna Gabrielle Olitsky, BA
Nathaniel Joseph Page, BA*
Brian Michael Palermo, BA*
Andrew Joseph Parent, BGS Jay Sunil Patel, BA
britni Louise Persinger, BA*
Hunter Thomas Petermann, BA
Rubie Marie Peters, BGS
Ryan Mitchell Peterson, B Kayla Fay Phillips, BA
Sale Matthew Pick, BGS*
Dana Rachel Piper, BA
Cora Marie Powers, BGS
Christine Elizabeth Pringle, BA* Erika Paige Bernadette Rater BGS*
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Jennifer Rae Redenbaugh, BGS Skyler Quinn Richardson, BA
Juan Manuel Rivas Jr., BA
Clark Harrison Roberts, BGS* Seth Kerrigan Roberts, BGS*
Katherine Robinson, BA* Katie Nicole Rogers, BA*
Katie Nicole Rogers, BA Erin Colleen Savas, BA
iabrina Ann Scholz, BA* Meredith Schroeder, BA
Eric Michael Sears, BA Savanna Jo Shuck, BGS
Sydney Leigh Shultz, BC
Kaley Diann Silva, BA*
Stewart Katherine Simms, BA Nathan Phillip Slaughter, BA Brittany Sloan, BGS
Michelle Danielle Smart, BGS Hannah Laine Smith, BA
Kaitlyn Stephanie Smith, BA Shalae Dian Snyder, BGS*
Katherine Elizabeth Stanley, BA Abigail Kathleen Stanton, BGS* Jordan Lee Stach, BCS
Jean Frances Sullivan, BGS
Marcus Meyer Tralla, BA
Deborah M. Wagenheim, BA*
Antoin Marteze Wagner, BGS*
Maureen Ziporah Wangae
Mungai, BA
Jessica Michelle Washington, BA*
Emerald Alexis Welch, BA
Bailey Rene Widener, BA
Scott H. Wiggins, BGS*
Christopher David Wiker, BGS*
Religious Studies
Justin Phillip Held, BA Jeonghveok Heo. BA*
Slavic Languages and Literatures
Kristy Lynn Anderson, BA
Michaela M. Boman, BA*
Colin Thad Chillen*
Sociology
Zachary William Thomas Early, BA
Harrison Whitefield Smith, BA
Kerry Christine Ball, BA Susan Elaine Bandy, BA
Princess Sally DURY, BKS
Kirstin LeAn Brown, BGS
Micah Daniel Canfield, BGS
Lucie Marie Costanza, BA Ryan Gene Dahlke, BA
Morgan Ashley Druhan, BA Hunter Lee Finch, BGS
Alexandra Nicole Free, BA John F. Green, BGS
Amy Renae Gretencord, BGS
Rusty Lee Haughawout, BA
Maryanne
Monica Maria Kennedy, BC
Kyle S. Kotzman, BGS*
Jessica Emilia Lopez Causey, BA Hannah L. Lubis, BA
Sarah Alexandria Mahoney, BA*
Lindsey Manning, BA
Carisse Dawn McCall, BGS*
Alexandra Nicole McGee, BGS*
Bart Cash McNeel, BA*
Julie Ann Morris, BGS*
Courtney Marie Navarro, BGS Courtney Elizabeth Newman, BA
Renae O'Keefe, BA
Catherine Elizabeth Piccone, BGS
Laura Katherine Spangler, BGS Emma Nicole Springer, BA
Vikram Jeet Rana, BGS*
Christopher James Reilly, BGS
Christopher Kent Reinhardt.
BGS*
Spanish
Sheridan Alexander Stewart, |
Megan Leigh Sturdivant, BA* |
Brian Francis Taylor, BGS
Jack Dalton Theophilus Wright,
BA*
Kari Leilani Telander, BGS Jamie VanHouten, BGS
Kristopher, Noah Velasco, BA
Korinne Therese Wanek, BA
Ryan James Wolfer, BGS*
Sarah Elizabeth Anderson, BA
Gabrielle Cecile Baker, BA
Sarah Margaret Ray Bassett, BA
Hillary Nichole Berry, BA
Megan Phoebe Butts, BA
Miguel de Jesus Camacho, BA*
Sin Tung Jacqueline Chan, BA
Jane M. Christophels, BA
Jennifer Marie Ciszewski, BA Amanda Elizabeth Cobb, BA
Molly Ann Hendrickson, BA Michelle Lea Hill, BA
Robert Tyler James, BA Daniel Lee Jung, BA
Joseph Michael Conaghan, BA
Matthew Ryan Constable, BA*
Mary Louise Conaghan, BA*
Rachael Ellen Gray, BA* Yahsamin Hajiari, BA
Whitney Noel Kleinmann, BA Harrison James Kogl. BA
Taylor Cespedes Lewis, BA
Lauren Elizabeth Lottino, BA
Lauren Elizabeth Hipp, BA George Andrew Holtzen, BA
Zachary Collin Mc Quiston, BA Stephen Christopher Meter, BA
Stephen Christopher Meter, B Alyssa Nicole Milner, BA
Mallorie Leigh Moore, BA Alexandra Louise Munk, B/
Thompson Silas Minter, BA Ariadne Montiel, BA*
Jacqueline Mona Patton, BA Audrey Nicole Peterson, BA
Michael Paul Franklin Nobo, BA
Meredith Kathleen Nolte, BA*
Natalie B. Pal, BA*
Danielle Colleen Pfeifer, BA
Adjunct PhD, B14
Adam Jacob Plotkin, BA* Addison Lea Polk, BA*
Penny Marie Savely, BA Shelley Marie South, BA*
Benjamin Mollett Whitlow, BA Sarah Emigh Zoretic, BA
Gobanke Denko Reimer, BA
Ursula Rachel Rothrock, BA
Priya Sahni, BA*
Speech-Language-Hearing Ashley Nicole Albers, BA Eliza lo Allegre, BA
Samuel Charles Speer, BA
Michaela Marie Thibault, BA
Kaleb Channing Weaver, BA Megan Marie Wells, BA
Amanda Marie Tutora, BA
Nicolette Marie Arnold, BA Debra Lynn Asher, BGS
Amanda Christine Bart, BA Hannah Elise Bassett, BA
Hannah Michelle Dagen, BA Nicole Jessica Denney, BEG Michele Lynn Duryne, BGS*
Nora Abdulmasser Halawani, BA*
Shelbi Jenaav Hall, BA
Kiritun Ray Franklin, BA
Debolina Trisha Ghosh, BA
Amy Ann Green, BA
Jennifer Earline Hardesty, BGS Gabriella Renee Harrison. RA*
Emily Kate Heiden, BA
Kali Marie Haden, BCS
Shauni Michelle Hoekman, BA Callie Lynn Imel, RCS
Jennifer Abby Levy, BGS
Bhumi Jayanti Patel, BGS* Stacie Sue Pyle, BA
Amber Lynn Kadolph, BA Somayeh Kamyab, BA*
Arianna Paige Morgart, BA Jake Robert Nuffer, BA
Lindyn Christine Roush, BA Kathleen Eileen Ruzicka, BA
CO-MAJORS
Whitney Maurine Page, BGS Natalie S. Rak, BA
Jenna Elizabeth Small, BA
Abigail Lynne Smith, BA
Sarah Elizabeth Strom,
Jordan Ann Taylor, BA
Danielle Christine Onions, BA Holly Brend Smith, BGS Angelique Lauren Taylor, BA
Carissa Dawn McCall, BGS Haley Flaine Miller, BA
Saoussen Nour El Imene Cheddadi, MA
Angela Louise Lindsey-Nunn,
MA
Candidates for
Anthropology
Clarice Fernandes da Cunha Loureiro Amorim, MA*
Sarah Danelle Weaver*
Devon Lovell Lee, MA*
Ryan Jerald Johnson, MA
Devon Lovell Lee, MA*
Chloe Darielle Scott, MA
American Studies
Alicia Ann Madison, M.
Theresa Marie Miller, MA*
Lauren R. Moore, MA
Sydney Merideth Silverstein,
MA*
Jason Matthew Hirst, MA Veronica Jane Howard. MA*
Kristopher R. West, MA Justin Lvnn Wipf, MA $ ^{*} $
Burke K. Pyman, M.A.
Brandon John McFadden, MA*
Atmospheric Science
Kathryn R. Clark, MS
Atmospheric Science Elisabeth F. Callen, MS* Elinor Chase, MS*
Shu Chen, MS
Biochemistry and Biophysics Katelyn N. Deckert, MA* Chem
James Brandon Mills, MS* Pavithra Vani Nama, MS*
Classics
Elizabeth Dorothy Adams, MA
Stephen Este Paul Froedge, MA
Allyson K. King, MA
Christopher David King, MA*
Clinical Child Psychology
Spencer Christian Evans, MA*
Rebecca M. Kanine, MA*
Economics
Erik C. Mortensen, MA
Benjamin M. Slagowski, MA
Trumillia Yolanda Lunnie-Thomas, MA
Sally Rosanne Campbell, MA Katrina Z. Cook, MA $ ^{*} $
Cara Aileen McCarthy, MA*
Frank Carl Siraguso, MA*
Brian Benjamin Danley, MA Yue Feng. MA
John Nana Darko Francois, MA Sabrina Hossain, MA
Martha Lynn Baldwin, MA*
Allison McKenzie, Pe
Jennifer Ann Boden, MA $ ^{*} $
Fares Sabree M. Rawah, MA*
Sarah Regina Schmidt, MA*
Anson McKenzie Barwick,MA* Jennifer A. Brussow, MA*
Andrew C. Keinsley, MA Lingfei Li, MA*
English
Sabrina Hossain, MA
Andrew C. Keinsley, MA
Liting Su, MA
Nitzan Meltzer, MA
Alayna R. Ziegler, MA Fine Arts
Breck Elizabeth Gordon, MA*
Hayley Annette Hund, MA*
Gabriela Nelda Lemmons, MFA French
Clare Cristin Echterling, MA
Colleen Patricia Morrissey, MA*
Erin Mickael Moore, MA*
Jared T. Doke, MA*
Kristina Mhoon Roney, MA Bethany L. Ruhl, MA
Danielle Kristin Golon, MA*
William Kyle Wamser, MA*
Geology
Christine Cornwell, MS*
John W. Counts, MS*
lustin M. Fairchild, MS*
John W. Counits, MS Justin M. Fairchild, MS
Benjamin Paul Haring, MS*
Pursell Hunter MS*
Nazim Fodil Louni, MS*
James T. Lyons, MS
Andrew Thomas McCallister,
MS*
Jose A. Velez Gonzalez, MS*
Joseph C. Miller, MS*
Gabriel Eduardo Veloza Fajardo,
MS*
Aimee Ashley Scheffer, MS* Ayrat Sirazhiev, MS*
Mark A. Villarreal II, MS*
Germanic Languages and Literatures
Jenny Snyanova Faher, MA*
Emily Catherine Rielley Lyon,
MA$^{+}$
Kristine Frances Clark, MA* Rachel Marie Dennev.MA*
Dakota James Wallace, MA $ ^{*} $
Adam Butler DiGaudio, MA*
Jennifer Louise Gotte, MA
Brian Jasen Henderson, MA*
Reid Epler Furman, MA $ ^{*} $ Jennifer Louise Gotie, MA $ ^{*} $
Sean Kyle Horton, MA*
Kristine Elizabeth Knutter, MA George Pitt Lachicotte, MA*
Joseph J. Malizia Jr., MA* Brian Mehan, MA*
Gina Maria Ortiz / Jones, MA*
James Alexander Kiev, MA*
James Kline, MA*
Mark Allen Murphy, MA*
Jason Palermo, MA*
Christopher James Rierson, MA* Lauren Elaine Roberts McEnaney, MA
Joseph Andrew Royo, MA*
Linda Carol Ryan, MA*
Gerald Dell Tuck III, MA
Kenton Derek Van Jr., MA*
Joe F. Wildman, MA*
Carlette in Durley, MA
Harley Lee Davidson, MA*
Allison Lee Davidson, MA*
Harley Lee Davidson, MA
Allison L. Schmidt, MA*
Jaclyn L. Smith, MA
Nicholas J. Cunigan, MA Garrett L. Davey, MA*
Laa Spencer Taber, MA
Claire Marie Wolnisty, MA*
John M. Zdeb, MA
Amanda J. Martin, M$
Lauren E. Miller, MA
Brandy Raylene Fogg, MA* Jason William Hale, MA*
Raven Aurora Narramore, MA'
Thomas Edward Smith, MA
Valerie Lamyavat Swittar, MA
Valerie Lamxayat Switzler, MA*
Latin American & Caribbean Studies
Latin American & Caribbean Studies
Lindsay E. Dudley, MA
Molly Marie Martin, MA*
Jorge Roberto Soberon Hernandez, MA
Maria Teresa Martinez-Garcia,
MA
Sally Ann Ocampo, MA
Matthew Thomas Orzulak, MA
Eun Sun Tark, MA*
Honkey Han, MA*
Mathematics
John Patrick Reynolds, MA
Andrew Jacob Stever MA
Antonis Pantakis Stylianou, MA*
Christopher Daniel Trotter, MA*
Molecular, Cellular
Namita Ashwin Balwali, MA Chris Merkes, MA
Melissa A. Doebele, MA Alexis J. Fekete, MA
Braden Ross Conrad-Hiebner, MA*
Tracy Marie Gilbertson, MA* KeAnne Lee Langford, MA*
Alexander L. Ford, MS*
Brett Dale Keenan, MS*
Benjamin Hatch Miller, MA Sabrina Dawn Owens, MA
Megan G. Perez, MA Jami Deann Roskamp, MA
GRADUATION GUIDE
Philosophy
Physics
Justin Robert Clarke, MA*
Jeremy C. Delong, MA*
Gopolang Mokoka Mohlabeng, MS
Wade Drury Rush, MS*
Political Science
Kee Hvun Ahn, MA*
Jacob R. Longaker, MA Daniel J. Mccarville, MA $ ^{*} $
Derek John Glasgow, MA*
Jacob R. Longaker, MA
Phillips A. Klingenberg, MHA Michael Oliver Shelton, MA Kato Waage, MA*
Psychology
Scott Daniel Drotar, MA
Claire Rochelle Gravelin. MA*
Jared Kenneth Harpole, MA
Ratie M. Ren, MA
Kyle M. Lang, MA
Zachary Denver Langford, MA*
Iuwon Lee. MA
Alexandra Kristen Roth, MA
Lake Kitchen School, M1
Michele Shyuan Tsai, MA
Groussonet, MA
Stephanie Renee Peterson Kuceru,
MA
Andrew Thomas Blakemore, MA
Timothy Edwin Brown, MA*
Tashia Danielle Dare, MA
Jaimie Leah Gunderson, M
Religious Studies
Sociology
Spanish
Slavic Languages and Literatures
Deborah E. Brigmond, MA
Timothy Francis Kenny, MA*
Megan Hilliard Luttrell, MA
Aric Logan Toler, MA
Emily R. Stratton, MA
Brittany Aurelia Morin-Mezzadri,
MA*
David Heath Cooper, MA
Andrea Gomez Cervantes, MA
Melissa Mama Maki, MA
Mirla Andrea Gonzalez, MA
Valeria Baena-Robledo. MA
Troy Cifford Dargin, MA
Jennifer Hollis Garrison, MA
Lauren A. Grant, MA
Harrison Thomas Swartz, MA
Evanne Drake Weil, MA
Speech-Language Pathology
Chelsea Morgan Ashcraft, MA Jennifer L. Gabriele, MA
Jennifer Erin Byrne, MA Emily Jo Catlin, MA
Speech-Language Pathology Brittany Roddicker, MA
Bridgette C. Stramel, MA
Jamie Louise Swafford, MA
Molly Amanda Thurman, MA
Gracen Louise Hawley, MA
Lauren Allie Henion, MA
Lyda Carol Kendrick, MA*
Julian Achim Kuettner, MA*
Cydney A. Bunner, MA
Erin Marie Schmitt, MA
Alisa Susan Miller, MA
Biaggio G. Ortiz, MA
American Studies Hong Cai, PhD* Sang Jo Kim, PhD*
Katarina Nicole Tusten, MA
Crystal LaVonne Weippert, MA
Laura Danielle Weppert, MA
Anthropology
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Norberto Francisco Baldi Salas,
PhD
Erin Caitlin Dempsey, PhD*
Antoinette Catherine Egatto, PhD*
Adam Thornton Brewer, PhD
Andreo B. Curtis
Mohammad Riffan Said Alhana-
da. PhD*
Fadi Jamil Najem, PhD
Steven W. Payne, PhD Maren E. Turner, PhD
Kyle Evan Kemege, PhD
Huan Rui, PhD
Jintao Zhang, PhD*
Joseph Erik Banning, PhD Justin Carl Cooley, PhD Matthew S. DeVore, PhD*
GRADUATION GUIDE
o, PhD.
Megan K. Dorris, PhD Amanda Michelle Glass, PhI
Asha Nilanthi Hewarathna PhD*
Stranghti Javinech Mandhla
Fheodore R. Keppel, PhD
Thomas H. Linz, PhD
Brad M. Neal, PhD*
Jasanith Jayasinghe Manik Jayasin
inghie Mudiyanselage, PhD
KyuOk Jeon, PhD*
Jenifer Kaye Settle, PhD* Gregory J. Smith, PhD
Child Language Abel PhD*
Clinical Child Psycholoey
Robert Ryan Pangilinan Torreg rosa, PhD*
Paul Kalani Makanui, PhD*
Sangeeta D. Parikshak, PhD*
Lauren Drerup Stokes, PhD*
Christopher Charles Cushing, PhD*
Lauren Drerup Stokes, PhD* Mary Alice Horn Wilson, PhD
Communication Studies
Dricker, PhD*
Kundai V. Chirindo, PhD*
Virginia Jones, PhD*
Ryan M. Milner, PhD* Jacob Harmon Stutzman, PI
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Laci Manette Gerhart Barley PhD
Bastian Bentlage, PhD*
Sarah Ann Bodbyl, PhD*
Joanna Jewell Cielocha, PhD
Andrea Louise Crowther, PhD
Cheryl A. Murphy, PhD*
Andrea Romero. PhD
Andrew B. Schwendemann,
PhD*
Yong-Chao Su, PhD*
Lili Chen, PhD*
Peng Chen, PhD
Ryadh Mohammed A. Alkhareif,
PhD
Ibrhamina Diallo, PhD
Taniya Ghosh, PhD
English
Han Li, PhD Sung Jin Lim, PhD*
Josephine Cruz Lugovsky, PhD*
Andrew J. Monaco, PhD*
Kendra L. Fullwood, PhD
Margaret Rayburn Kramar, PhD*
Susan K. Thomas, PhD*
Geography
Brian Flanagin, PhD*
Emmanuel Awidau Birdling, PhD
Laura Lynette Dornak, PhD*
Aaron Hastings Gilbreth, PhD*
Alan Fredrick Halfen, PhD*
John Hamilton Kelly, PhD
Heather Renee Puttam, PhD
Lisa L. Rausch, PhD
Ashley Brooke Zung, PhD
Karla Louise Leslie, PhD*
Zhaoqi Li, PhD
Germanic Languages and Literatures David Michael Gruenbaum, PhD*
History
Konstantin Valentinovich Avram-
konstantin PhD*
Joseph Geoffrey Derek Babb, PhD*
David Edward Hunter-Chester, PhD*
Margarita Vladimirovna, Karny-
sheva, PhD
Karenbeth Garvin Zacharias, PhD*
History of Art
Gates M. Brown, PhD Brady J. DeSanti, PhD*
Custin, THD
Francis Joon Hong Park, PhD*
Ben Thomas Post, PhD
Janne Candy Blake PH
Neil Shafer Oatsvall, PhD Francis Joon Hong Pei
Hui Wang Martin, PhD
Ellen O'Neil Rife, PhD
Mujdey Deafallah Abudalbuh.
PhD
ose Aleman Banon, PhD* Kelly Harper Berkson, PhD
Kristi Nicole Bond, PhD
Alonso Jose Canales Viquez,
PhD*
Hiba Esmail Gharib, PhD*
Sok Ju Kim, PhD*
Hyunjung Lee, PhD
Stephen James Politzer-Ahles, PhD
Maila Capuno Brucal Hallare, PhD*
Mathematics
Jarod V. Hart, PhD
Fei Lu, PhD
Seungly Oh, Phl
Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology
Sukanya Chaudhury, PhD Kelli Marie Williams. PhD*
Branden K. Stone, PhD Lucas Jesse Underwood, PhD
Microbiology
Benjamin Neal Combs, PhD
Elvis Huarcaya Najarro, PhD*
Casey Lee McNeil, PhD*
Christine Ann Phillips-Krawczak, PhD*
Nicholas Keith Simmons, PhD Russell William Waltz, PhD
Shankar Agarwal, PhD* Guo Chen, PhD
Andrew C. Overholt, PhD
Nathaniel Ray Maddux, PhD
Natalv Ozak Munoz, PhD*
Srirasha Pothapragadha, PhD*
Matthew Scott Richard, PhD*
Caitlin A. Parkhur, PhD*
Jeffrey S. Wood, PhD Guowei Xu, PhD*
Political Science
Pedro De Abreu Gomes Dos San
tos, PhD*
Ryan Joseph Gibb, PhD
Kellee Jo Kirkpatrick, PhD
Micheal C. Struemph, PhD Heather Elaine Yates, PhD
Psychology
Stephanie Lian Anderson, PhD Thu Thao N. Bui, PhD
Mark Sai Leong Chan, PhD $ ^{*} $
Tara J. Collins, PhD $ ^{*} $
Jared Kenneth Harpole, PhD Waylon Justin Howard, PhD*
Waylon justin Howard, PhD
Tresna Denae Hutcheson, PhD*
Juwon Lee, PhD
Rebecca Jo Chambers Lepping, PhD
Alexandra Kristen Roth, PhD Kathryn N. Stump, PhD*
Michele Shyuan Tsai, PhD Sociology
Stephanie Kristine Decker, PhD*
SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Spanish
THURSDAY,MAY 9,2013
Jonathan Scott Cooper Margaret Hanzick利斯汀 Elizabeth Moore Kristin Elizabeth Moore
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
With Highest Distinction
Jenny Lynn Curatola
Rena Liz Detrixhe
With Distinctor
Kole William Britton
Andrew Bryan Childs
Daniel John Schmeidler II, BFA*
Brandy Warren Supernaw, BFA*
Sarah Catherine Swyers, BFA*
Beth Alm Charlton, BA Daniel Richard Cizadla, BFA Jenna Katherine Coon, BFA*
Jonette Fitz Reminis
Elizabeth Janae Sims
With Disting
Chris John Hannemann, BFA
Jessica Morgan Kelley, BFA
Hillary Ann Pontter, BAE
Morgan Alexis Ream, BAE*
Breanna Danielle Brown, BAE* Elizabeth Jude Calloni, BAE Taylor Katherine Baine, BAE
Taylor Katherine Newman, BAE*
Zachary Paul Palasz, BAE
Hillary Ann Pontier, BAE
Emily Katherine Atchison, BA Kristin Elizabeth Moore, BA
Haley Renee Freeman, BFA*
Truman Cobb Glover, BFA*
Film and Media Studies Marianne Elizabeth Anderson, BGS
Lucy Marie Shopen, BFA Kenna Ann Sullivan, BA
Caroline Katherine Howard, BFA
Haley Marie Hughes-Pfeifer, BFA
Tessa Marie Reuber, BFA*
Travis Weston Andregg, BGS
Holden Beier-Green, BGS$^a$
Dylan Wesley Booth, BA
Kole William Britton, BA
Design
Marysa Erin Sacerdote, BFA John Ross Vohs, BFA
Jonathan Scott Cooper, BGS Brian Edmund Costello, BGS Kyle Everett Dockello, BGS*
Athenia Marie Carrera, BA
Andrew Bryan Childs, BA
Douglas Bryan Cake, BG3
Morgan Delaney Bryant, B.
Alicia Marie Carrera, BA
Andrew Wallace Donley, BGS*
Samuel Thomas Douthit, BA*
Isaiah J. Dover, BGS
Donald Leopoldo Joe Cooper,
BGS
Jonathan David Dudrey, BGS*
Robert Jeffrey Gaughan, BGS*
Paige M. Girard, BA
Paige Elizabeth Hunter, BGS Drew Barton James, BA
John Alexander Haslett, BGS
Randall John Heeren, BA
Jeremy Bret Helt, BA
Kevin Andrew Kitsis, B
Joseph E. Knoll, BGS*
Seth A. Macchi, BGS*
Andrew Howard Pittel, BGS*
Andrew Christopher Pouch,
BGS*
Laise Pereira do Nascimento, BA Cory Scott Peterson, BGS
Alexander Paul Meisch, BGS* Meshia Vaughn Montauce, BA Katherine Elyse Morris, BGS
Colin Andrew Murphy, BGS Elsa Rhae Pagerel, BGS
Spencer Thomas Shoemaker,
BGS*
Edward Gene Schroer, BGS*
Chen Sha, BA
Lauren Lanexa Baldwin, BFA Kenda Sue Bradley, BFA
Mark Ryan Sidener, BGS
Brandon Patrick Sieve, BGS
Matthew Hunter Steele, BA*
Joy Ashley Stewart, BGS*
James Spencer Swartz, BGS Derek Michael Terry, BGS
Joy Ashley Stewart, BGS*
Daniel J. Suffield, BGS*
John Allan Vick Jr., BGS Kristen Marie Walker, BGS*
History of Art
Sarah Josephine Meyer, BFA
Elizabeth Anne Morin, BFA*
Polanya Anne Morin, BFA*
Ashley Nicole Caldwell, BFA* Emily Elizabeth Emke, BFA*
Rachel Elizabeth Thomas, BFA
Amelia Marcella Wyckoff, BFA
Erin Leigh Zingre, BFA
Thomas Patrick Browne III, BGS Shannon Leone Buhler, BGS
Jenifer K. Harmon, BGS
Stephanie Jo-Rita Johanning,
BGS*
Ashely Nicole Caldwell, BFA*
Emily Elizabeth Emke, BFA**
Carla McBride, BFA
Christina Jane Rojas, BGS
Dange Maurice Sanders, BGS*
Laura Beth Shartzer, BA
Patronia Victoria Oiats, BFA Jennifer Nicole Pack, BFA
Raymond Isaac Dean, BGS*
Margaret Marie Hanzlick, BA
Rachel Elizabeth Thomas, BF $ ^{\Delta} $
Theatre
Charles Michael Stock, BGS Hilary Ann Surface, BA
Kenny Farr Gnahramani, BA
Rapa Nai Gustafson-Ika, BFA*
Bridgett Harvey, BFA
Paige Elizabeth Crosswhite, BFA* Amanda Susa Dame, BFA
Brittnee Nicole Catlin, BFA*
Ashley Lauren Chokihit, BFA*
Brittany Renee' Choikihit, BFA*
Michelle jane deChadenedes, BA* John Patrick Dennis, BFA Rena Liz Detrixhe, BFA Cody S. Dunyon, BFA*
Matthew Joseph Hull, BFA
Julie Adrianna Hutchison, BFA
Alexander Lutz, BFA
Mikhailuro Lens Izagurte, BFA
Breanna N. Johnson, BFA
Jill L. Kilgore, BFA*
Katheryn Ann Krouse, BFA*
Laura Marie Maloney, BFA
Johanna Katherine Mhl, BFA
Kensley Ariel Wilson, BFA Yi Zong, BFA
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Elizabeth jane law
Marika Katharine Anne Wade
BFA
Elizabeth Janae Sims, BFA
Gina M. Adams, MFA
Jacob Benton Burmood, MFA
Damia Victoria Smith, MFA
Allison Felice Wegren, MFA
Jonathan D. Metzger, MFA
David Kyle Miller, MFA
Film and Media Studies Eric David Lackey, MA\*
Wesley Adam Lawson, MA Amit Dinesh Patel, MA*
Susan Clark Bubna, MA
Heather A. Tinker, MA*
Theatre Desi
Theatre
Visual Art Education
Ashleigh Kathleen Garcia, MA*
Katharine Taylor Padberg, MA*
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Chris Robinson, PhD*
Boone Jackson Hopkins, PhD*
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELER'S DEGREE
Public Administr
School of Public Affairs & Administration
Public Administration
Jacob Tyler Allen, BGS
Steven Henry Bryant, BGS*
Steven Henry Bryant, BGS*
Sakina Henderson, BGS*
Christopher Allan Hull, BGS*
Andrew Ryan Johns, BGS
Aroni Khalid, BA
Anna Rosine Leitch, BGS Yile Li, BGS*
Brian Patrick Litwin, BGS
Lisa Marie Mescher-Schlueter,
BA
Ryan Michael Mullen, BGS*
John Payne Murray, BGS*
John Christopher Page, BA
Lisa Ridgeway Vanatta, BA*
Steven J. Roy, BGS
Rachael Corine Snider, BGS Jill Elizabeth Stevens, BGS Cortney L. Zelaya, BA*
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE Public Administration
Michael J, Applebly, MPA*
David Allen Brown, MPA*
Kyle Richard Burns, MPA
Jon Carl, MPA*
Stephanie Campbell Cunliff, MPA
Gregory Dean Edson, MPA*
Michael Gotfredson, MPA
ashley Lynn Graff, MPA
Karina Dawn Holtzman, MPA Samuel Lawrence Houghteling, MPA*
Ariel Jacqueline Klugman, MPA
Jeanne Colleen Koontz, MPA*
Emily M. Kotay, MPA
Katherine C. Howard, MPA*
Min Gang Kim, MPA*
Katherine Ann McCollom, MPA* Davis Keith McElwain, MPA Alyssa Ann McMullin, MPA
Wesley Ryan Samms, MPA
Jacqueline Tierney Schwerm,
MPA
Rob M. Shippy, MPA
Jamie Renee Shockley, MPA
Robert Anthony Soria, MPA
Caitlin M. Stene, MPA
Brian Wayne Redelsheimer,
MPA*
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Public Administration
Berry, PhD
Maneekwan Chandarasorn,
PhD*
Alisa Volodymyrivna Moldavanova, PhD
Angela Maria Paez Murcia, PhD
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Presented by
Dean Rick Ginsberg
Dakota Myles Strange
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
Matthew Lee Aitchison Mallory Taylor Bayles
Matthew Lee Aitchison
Mallory Tayler Bayles
Annie Christine Bigby
Father Christine
Joseph Weir
Emily Ruth Boresow Rebecca Jane Coonrod
Kendra Ann Goering Stephanie Susan Hall
Emily Marie Laskowski
Lucas John Schippers
Bethany Maria Schipper
Bintylaen Lauren Douglas
Alexandra Louise Gealy
Aaron Myles Geist
Katherine Clair Cristiano
Bethany Marie Schirmer
Lauren Elizabeth Self
With Images
Stephanie Brooke Heyden Rae Ann Jacobs
Laura Morgan Ahlert
Zennon Rufus Black
Ariel Morgan Puccetti
Anna Elizabeth Seitz
Carmel Elizabeth Seitz
Rathin Ym Amanda Jor
Amy Mire McAfee
Melissa Nangle
Cassandra Marie Slocum Shawn Michael Stene
Nicholas Andrew Pahls Amber Janette Pickering
Sarah Eleanor Sweenie Meaghan Lindsay Travis Jenee Marie Vickers Katherine Millwell Hill
Katherine Michelle Wilber
Lindsey Nichole Heft, BS Ashley Paige Kampfer, BS
CANDIDATES FOR
BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Athletic Training
Nicole Lynn Balderston, BS
Vanessa Regina Ernst, BS
Lindsey Nichole Heft, BS
Ashley Paige Kampfer
Regina Elizabeth Oeding, BS
Matthew Ryan Pahls, BS
Monica Panayi, BS
Community Health ae Backman, BSE
Acasa Ree Buckman, BSE Adam Robert Beckman, BSE* Alyssa Frances Benson-Williams, BSE
Catherine Marie Smith, BS Branden Scott Stephens, BS
Elizabeth Marie Berlin, BSE*
Whitney Lee Berry, BSE*
Molly R. Boehner, BSE*
Hilary Heath Borgmier, BSE Andrea Marie Bornman, BSE* Brooke Nicole Brull, BSE
Meghan Brittany Burns, BSE
Clinton Alex Bush, BSE
David A. Casey, BSE
Nicole Marie Chrispulos, BSE
Corinne Rae Christensen, BSE*
Bridget Anne Clarke, BSE*
BASISWASH, BSE
Alexandra Morgan Consolvers
ALEXBA*
BSE*
Kelsey Jean Coplen, BSE*
Leah Ashley Cullen, BSE
Stephanie Jo Dawson, BSE*
Crystal Chanae Doffoney, BSE
Kelsei Michelle Feagan, BSE
Brianna Nicole Fenn, BSE*
Kelsey Dawn Fortin, BSE
Kelsey Dawn Fortin, BSE
Emily Anne Goodman, BSE*
Kelsey Anne Gordon, BSE*
Amy Marie Grow, BSE Ithar Hassaballa, BSE*
Sean Dennis Lamping, BSE Devin Tyler Lasley, BSE
Lindsay Nicole Legako, BSE Amanda Marie Manke, BSE Mollie Marie Marcolla, BSE
Hope Ranae Robinson, BSE* Jaymi Maria Schmidt, BSE* Shelly Rae Schmits, BSE
Alexandra Elaine Smith, BSE
Ashley Kaye Marie Smith, BSE*
Gina Maria SBEr. SPE*
Elementary Education
Laura Morgan Ahlert, BSE
Amanda Jayne Allen, BSE*
Libby Catherine Bash, BSF
Steven Michael Mason, BSE*
Jacqueline Suzanne McGrath,
BSE*
PAGE 9C
Catherine Bash, BSE Mallory Taylor Bayles, BSE Annie Christie Bigsw, BSE
Katherine Hettwer Melton, BSE* Morgan Anne Nyberg, BSE Alysae S. Patak, BSE
John Thomas Tricks, BSE
Lynda Beth Westervelt, BSE
Christopher Michael Yabut, BSE
Alexandra Kathleen Boothby,
BSE*
Mackenzie Elizabeth Braatz, BSE
Bailey Kristine Carlson, BSE
Tiffany Lynn Chappell, BSE
Sarah Patricia Collins, BSE
Katelyn Elizabeth Curnes, BSI
Charla LaDawn Dixon, BSE
Terri Lynn Downs, BSE
Amanda Catherine Gallagher, BSE
Alexandra Louise Gealy, BSE
Jessica Michel Gulemau, BSE*
Kylie Nicole Harmon, BSE
Bilia Elli Elle Harris, BSE
Emily Diane Hastings, BSE Julie Hespe, BSE
Eliot Keith Holmes, BSE
Kara Nicole James, BSE
Paige Johnson, BSF
Kathryn Amanda Jones, BSE Michelle Frances King, BSE Jordan Marie Klein, BSE
kaster Ash Loner, BSE
Jennifer Marie McCandless, BSE
Nicholas Andrew Pahls, BSE
Ryan Ross Petty, BSE
Johann Riemin BSE
Christina Rose Klisares, BSE
Anna Sauder Leek, BSE
Ariel Morgan Puccetti, BSE Allison Cristine Putman, BSE Staci Cristine Regine, BSF
Caitlin Maureen Lindsey, BSE Ji Liu, BSE
Ashley Meredith Smith Maybon BSE
Katie Elizabeth Rosenberg, BS
Bethany Marie Schirmer, BSE
Lauren Elizabeth Self, BSE
Amanda Jane Shaw, BSE
Shelby Ann Sorensen, BSE
Katherine Elizabeth Stearns, BSE
Margaret Helen-Louise Stubbs,
BSE
Sarah Eleanor Sweenie, BSE Kylie Alison Travers, BSE Meaghan Lindsay Travis. BSE
Rachel Beth Bolter, BSE
Amy Parker, BSE
Amber Janette Pickering, BSE Health and Physical Education Colby John Artman, BSE
Kelsey Brooke Baldwin, BSE
Ryan Avery Black, BSE
Mylcoel Bowen, BSE
Myceli Joseph Bowen, BSE Michael James Campbell, BSE Nicholas John DeRhamce, BSE
Nicholas John Derrancesco, BSE
Daniel James H入侵, BSE*
Robert Lee Johnson, BSE
Alison Kav Meleser, BSE*
Archer William Pozek, BSE* Ryan David Ramirez, BSE*
Middle-Level Education
Anthony Bruce Roberts, BSE Shayla Suzanne Sibse, BSE Joseph A. Stegman, BSE Rebeka Dianne Stowe, BSE*
Adam Matthew Miller, BSE
Joshua Mosher, BSE
Ian Lane Phelps, BSE
Secondary Level Education Benjamin Michael Appel, BSE Tiffanie Lynn Beasley, BSE Brandon Michael Bell, BSE Emily Ruth Barcossa, BSE
Katherine Elizabeth Dillon, BSE Christopher Ryan Marx, BSE*
Abigail Feagan Brown, BSE Douglas Jay Burnett, BSE* Sarah Rose Buschini, BSE Sean Michael Cahill, BSE
Brittany Lauren Douglas, BSE
Mariel Avery Dryton, BSE
Alicia Jeanette Fulson, BSE
Caroline Elizabeth Godfrey, BSE
Kendra Ann Goering, BSE
Stephanie Susan Hall, BSE
Winston Chelsea Hollinger, BSE
Amanda Lynn Herrington, BSE*
Paula Thomas Howard, BSE
Shannon Pearl Jobe, BSE
Ashleigh Jennings Meyer, BSE Audrey Gail Moylan, BSE Melissa Nangle, BSE
Morgan Lee Nilhas, BSE Sally Gene Nulton, BSE
Katelynn Dansa Poore, BSE
Bradley John Rector, BSE*
Andrew Jones, BSE*
Brent Raymond Schulte, BSE Taylor Christian Scrivner, BSE David Shelden, BSE
Taylor Kay Elizabeth Smith, BSE Cody L. Swartz, BSE
Matthew Joseph Thierolf, BSE Solitaire Kay Ware, BSE
Sport Science
Samuel Patrick Ahern, BSE*
Matthew Lee Aitchison, BSE*
Kelsey Windsor Alsdorf, BSE*
Abby Leigh Anderson, BSE*
Nicholas James Anguiano, BSE
Nicholas Bradley Aday, BSE *
Amy Lane Belle, BSE
Anthony Mykel Barta, BSE
John Michael Baumchen, BSE*
Spenser John Bennett, BSE
Madison Lacey Bertrand, BSE*
lil
PAGE 10C
Eric Benjamin Brunner, BSE
Trent Edward Carter, BSE*
Rui Miguel de Setas Castro e Silva, BSE*
Colin Michael Chiles, BSE Steve Lee Christiani, BSE* Ryan Persons Clough, BSE
C. Jonathan Reynolds Denning,
BSE*
Tyler John Dickerson, BSE Scott Michael Duesing, BSE Thomas Charles Earle, BSE Davin Jae Edelen, BSE
Aaron Matthew Fisher, BSE
Alexandra Ziegenbein Flint
BSE*
Adeline Marie Fike, BSE*
Angela R. Finch, BSE*
Jessica Linnea Frank, BSE
Jennifer Lyn Frewin, BSE
Aaron Myles Gist, BSE
Virginia Corinne Davis, BSE Michael Sunjay Dawar, BSE
Kevin Wayne Trays, BSE
Sydney Bren Headick, BSE?
Megan E. Blenak, BSE
Kristin Marie Hemker, BSE
Stephanie Brooke Heyden, BSE
Melissa Kay Hoover, BSE*
Davin Jae Edeleen, BSE
Cody Allen Fawl, BSE*
Haley Michael Harrington, BSE Ross Adam Hart, BSE*
Samantha Elizabeth Hougland. BSE
Ali Marie Isenberg, BSE*
Jordan Michael Jakubov, BSE*
Calli Constance Jones, BSE*
Ashley Marie Kelsev, BSE*
Bryan Chase Knighton, BSE Wesley Thomas Kosel, BSE* Eric Michael Landson. BSE
Emily Marie Laskowski, BSE
Cory Ryan Lauridsen, BSE*
Casey Jay Leach, BSE*
Patrick Hamilton Limis, BSE
Kathryn Leona Lupton, BSE
Nusrat A. Malek, BSE
Bryan Katie DeQuinn
Anthony Michael Medina, BSE
Ross Edward Melen, BSE
Ross Cirio Gimarro, BSE
Ryan Michael Levitt, BSE* Patrick Anthony Lillis, BSE
Adam Michael Marrello, BSE
Amy Marie McAfee, BSE*
R.C. Mackenzie, M.C.
Lengnig Rake Merrill, BSE*
Matthew Dulter, BSE*
Dylan Wade Mumaw, BSE*
Jodi Lume Murris, BSE*
Sarah Marie Myers, BSE Anne Marie Nick, BSE*
Lauren Ariel Osdoby, BSE* Jordyn Michelle Perdue, BSE* Amanda Nicole Peters. BSE
Obianjuj Kasie Nnalue, BSE
Shauna Marie O'Dell, BSE
Jun Tack OH, BSE
Catherine Elizabeth Robidou BSE
Bret Michael Richardson, BSE
Drew Michael Richter, BSE
Crystal Ann Rivera, BSE
Zachary Michael Phillips, BSE*
Joel Andrew Plummer, BSE*
Aaron P. Razak, BSE
Tyler Charles Rockers, BSE
Leo Paul Rogers III, BSE*
Joshua Stephen Rudolph, BSE
Amanda Kari Sachdeva, BSE
Andrew Donald Sachs, BSE
Anna Elizabeth Seitz, BSE Treyton Brice Sidwell, BSE* Syspos Michael Sincas, BSE
Lucas John Schippers, BSE Anna Elizabeth Seitz, BSE
Theresa Ann Sommerhauser,
BSE*
Emily Ann Starr, BSE*
Shawn Michael Stene, BSE
Aubrette Helen Stephens, BSI
Paige Nicole Stephens, BSE
Lange Stephens, BSE
Dakota Myles Strange, BSE
Taylor Andrew Stuckey, BSE
Jonathan Douglas Todd, BSE
Jesse C. Torneden, BSE*
Dustin Joel True, BSE
Breeze Spring Trytek, BSE
Evan Paul VanBecelera, BSE
Kendra Michelle Viar, BSE
Jennifer Valker Volkner, BSE
Valerie Ann White, BSE*
Benjamin M. Wilson, BSE
Alexandria Michele Winchester BSE
Trey Steven Zartman, BSE*
Joseph Alan Ziska, BSE
Emily Larry Cinnibbon
Emily Angeline Cappel, BSE
Maria Rene Cook, BSE
Rae Anne Jacobs, BSE
Shelley Anne Larson, BSE
Ashley Elizabeth McConnell,
BSE
Alanna Marie Meyer, BSE Jessica Lynn Miller, BSE
Cassandra Marie Slocum, BSE Jenee Marie Vickers, BSE
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Counseling Psychology
Jaree Danielle Basgall, MS
Joshua Michael Brown, MS Erik W. Clarke, MS*
Marlon Beach, MS$^*$
Jagriti Bhattarai, MS
Adam Matthew Gallenberg, M
Andrea Lynn Herre
Laurel Leadwig, MS
Yuila Lei, MS
Erin Marie Minor, MS*
Suzanne M. Peterson, MS
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Danielle Nicole Maendele Saylor Perkins, MS*
Arwa Abdulaziz M. Abuhaimid, MSE*
Holly Anne Adams, MSE
Hony Anne Adams, MSE
Bander Muhammad AlMatari,
MSE*
Ebitsam Dafer Alqahtani, MSE* Muneera Abdullah A. Alshehri MSE
Allison Theresa Barkley, MSE*
Erica Anne Bartlett, MSE*
Natalie Marie Baumchen, MSE*
Michelle Denise Beasley, MSE*
Philip R. Bennett, MSE
Ruby Bisarya, MSE*
Bryan Morton Bond, MSE*
Wade Allan Booth, MSE
Kathleen Marie Bichelmeyer,
MSE
Honey M. Brokover, MSE
Aubrey Lynn Brooks, MSE
Laura C. Brunin, MSE*
Travis Michael Bowles, MSE Mindy Sue Brinker, MSE
Megan Lynn Bryant, MSE*
Breanne Buchanan, MSE*
Elizabeth Clare Buddig, MSE*
Courtney Elizabeth Burdick,
MSE
Chelsey E. Butts, MSE Emily Nicee Calder, MSE
Emily Nicee Calder, MSE Deborah Joanne Campbell, Gregory Ryan Carey, MSE
Alexis Brianne Childs, MSE Hyesook Cho, MSE*
Maria Ramos Carrizosa, MSE Tse-Ming Chen. MSE*
Nidia Beatriz Columna Perez,
MSE
Kimberly Marie Conway, MSE Michael Alan Cooper, MSE Joseph Colby Cormack, MSE*
Joseph Colby Cormack, MSE* Dominic J. Cozzi, MSE*
Anna Christine Creaden, MSE
Keisha Lynn Cross, MSE
Mallory Bluths, MSE
Lindsey Kathryn Demke, MSE* Sarah Genevieve DePriest, MSE*
Emily Karn yi Dekke, MSE*
Sarah Genevieve DePrist, MSE*
Kelly Lynn Deutschman, MSE*
Janelle Nicole Dirks, MSJ Erin L. Ellis, MSE*
Ashley Elizabeth Sell Epp, MSE* Mary Elizabeth Esselman, MSE* Jennifer Lynn Farrell, MSE*
Jonathan Weston Farrell, MSE*
John Thomas Farris, MSE
Maha Hassan Fasi, MSE*
Cassandra Rose Gentry, MSE Marc David Gibbens, MSE* Nathan H. Girard, MSE*
Calvin Saran Feigny, MSE* Elizabeth Nicole Filkins, MSE Alex Randall Fischer, MSE*
Jessica Ann Goode, MSE
Jessica Lee Gowen, MSE*
Nancy L. Griego, MSE*
Shaymarie Kristen Genosky, MSE*
Mebasla Amir Franken, MSE Kyle Elizabeth Fritzel, MSE Casey Nicole Gaston, MSE* Susanna Gaston, MSE*
Taylor Blair Higbee, MSE*
Kristen Lee Hinshaw, MSE*
Brittney Le Hoffmann, MSE*
Kristin Nicole Herschberger,
MSE
Mallory B. Hancock, MSE* Cecilia Dianne Handy, MSE* Cole Michael Habert MSE*
Amy Elizabeth Howe, M Kang-Yao Hsu, MSE* Yingjun Hu, MSE
Michelle Lynn Huffman, MSE
Madelyn Elizabeth Huggins, MSI
Megan Leigh Jacob, M691
Leah Kathleen Jardine, MSE*
Joshua C. Jetton, MSE*
Tonia Michelle Karpowicz, MSE
Lynette Kamachi Johnson, MSE*
Austin Ryan Jones, MSE
Philip Anthony Jones, MSE
Sunhee Kang, MA
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE Counseling Psychology
Chanthone Khounvongsa, MSE Todd K. Klamm. MSE
Katy Ann Kendrick, MSE
Kimberly Marie Knackstedt, MSI
Leslie Marie Knowt, MSE
Lindsay O Bryon Linker, N.
Tatiana Alekandrovna Long
abach, MSE*
Christine Diane Laskowski, MSE*
Keny Marie Matlack, MSE
Meghan Michele McCaffrey,
MSE*
Paige Ariel Lowenstein, MSE* Gillian Epu L莲uevano, MA Victoria Ruth Macfarlane, MSE*
Candice Ann Ackerman, PhD*
Diane Yvonne Genther, PhD*
Quoc My Le, PhD*
Grady Alexander Millikan, MSE Jacob Neal Minniear, MA Jock Neal Minniear, MSE
John Webster Emmanuel Taylor, MSE*
Stephanie Ann Taylor, MSE*
Karlse Kathieen Thomas, MSE
Nicole Torneden, MSE*
Jason Torres-Bodman, MSE
Courtney Anne Maphies, MSE*
Tracey Elizabeth Martin, MSE
Jordan Allen Post, MSE*
Cody M. Pritchard, MSE
Katherine Marie Meserko, MSE*
'ictoria Jean Meyer, MSE
Jamelle Ann Zablow, MSE*
Kim Karen Zeiler, MSE
Songtian Zeng, MSE
Lauren Ruth Zupon, MSE*
Heidi JoAnn LeSage, MSE Alyson R. Lewis, MSE*
Jacob Neal Minniear, MSE
Cheri Springer Plyon, MSE
Kinana Jihad Qaddour, MSE
Brian James Quick, MSE*
Stacy Lynn Rietzke, MSE Andrew S. Ring, MA
Stefanie Nicole Perkins, MSE*
Sarah R. Peterson, MSE*
Alison Elizabeth Prilley, MSE Kelsey Christine Ploeger, MSE Dylan G. Porter, MSE*
Nichole Elizabeth Reiske, MSE* Elizabeth A. Reynolds, MSE*
Rachelle Lynn Pauly, MSE*
Dillon D. Pearson, MSE
Catherine Stanley Slocum, MSE*
Drew Alan Smith, MSE
Ratherne Lynn Spore, MSE*
Brittany Anne Stevens, MSE*
Courtney Joanne Stoverink, MSE*
Kimberly Irene Moore, MSE
Nontalie lamia Morrow, MSI
Catherine Elizabeth Martincich
MSE
Kathryn Elaine Wells, MSE Judith Irene Wells, MSE* Zachary Glenn White, MSE* Rebecca Sue Wilkes, MA
Katherine Ann Szczesny, MSE*
Alisa D. Tate, MSE
Nicole Marie Richardson, MSE*
Jennifer Rebecca Rieck, MSE*
Erick James Brieton, MSE*
Sarah E. Schreffler, MSE*
Jordan A. Scott, MSE
Brebeca Ann Seitter, MSE*
Edward Robert Shafer, MSE*
Paula Lean Shaver. MSE*
Eryka Jordan Rowlen, MSt.
Lacey Christine Rozycki, MSE* Jacob Allen Everett Rudy, MSE Jessica Kaulene Saddler, MSE*
Thomas Charles Motl, PhD*
Rhea Lillian Owens, PhD*
Jeremy Michael Vitt, MSI
Mary Joo Vyhanek, MSE*
Luyan Wang, MA
Andrea Renee Sorrels, MSE*
Cassie Nicole Spohn, MSE
Education
Jeffrey Gorrell Rettew, PhD*
Daniel Troy Suitor, PhD
Khaled Abdullah Saeed Alshehri, PhD*
Karen Anelice Acosta Caballero,
PhD*
Bander Muhammad AlMatar,
PhD*
Ryan Marshall Alexander, EDS Justin P. Allen, EDS*
Philip David Adam, EDD+
Heather Michelle Aldersey, PhD
Phillip David Adam, EDD*
Barbara Merle Wells, PhD*
Karen B. Baehler, PhD
Moatasim Asaad Hussain Barri, PhD
Eric F. Buller, EDD*
Chi-Hsun Chiu, PhL
Chun-Yu Chiu, PhD Yu-Chi Chou, Phd
David Paul Conrady, EDD
Kristin Elizabeth Bennett O'Brien, EDD*
Emily Suzanne Coonfield, PhD*
Jason Robert Dandov, PhD*
Jason Robert Dandoy, PhD*
Jessica Morgan Dunn, PhD*
Martha Denton Elford, PhD
Erik L. Fister, EDS*
Grace Lutchee Franks, P
Daniel Gruman, EDD
Zairil Nor Deana Md Desa,
PhD*
Shana Jackson Haines, PhD Daniel Bernard Hajovsky, EDS* Joseph E. Hornback, EDD
Lei Guo, PhD
Carissa Reene jackson, PhD
Chandra Alise Jennings, PhD
Kirati Khusanadon, PhD
John Russell Laffoon, EDD Hsin-Lin Lu, PhD*
Claudia Mercado, EDD*
Sarah Nicole Meyer, EDD
Todd Michael Miller, EDSS
Marco Antonio Mora Piedra,
PhD
Khalid Hussain Moukali, PhD* Yuka Nato-Billen, PhD* Amy Allison Neufeld, PhD Leslie Claine Neufeld, PhD*
Stephanie L. Parks, PhD*
Jennifer Lynn Perez Bessolo,
EDD
Nanette Lea Perrin, PhD*
Natalie J. Peters, EDS*
Amie Bet Palkton, EDD*
Amie Beth Raiston, EDD Matthew Jay Ramsey, PhD
Claudia Louise Reinfelds, EDD*
Jin-Young Roh, PhD
jessica Oeth Schuttler, PhD*
Courtney Michelle Shepard,
EDS*
Nicole Y. Singleton, PhD Cooper Singman, PhD*
Cooper Singman, PhD*
Jason Patrick Slimon, PhD*
Laura Kay Smith. PhD*
Elizabeth Spencer Smock, EDD Cheryl Kay Snyder, PhD
Terri Cooper Swanson, PhD
Diane Elizabeth Traversia, PhD
Chunmei Zhend, Phi
Karla J. Wiscombe, EDD*
Hongying Yu, Ph.D*
Sarah Anne VanCse, EDD*
Anne Elizabeth Wallace, EDD*
Todd A. Wheed
With Highest Distinction dev Harrison Bell
Interim Dean Stan Rolfe
Banner Carrier Matthew Hayes Fowler
Susan M. Williams
With Distinction
Ameera Fatin Binti Abdull Hadi
Mary Dorothy Adams
Anas W. Alqanen
Benjamin Vaughn Hofmeter Christopher Michael Hudson
Bryce Garth Allenbrand Sydney Alexa Autry
John Santo DiBaggie
Shannon Gray
Evan Lee Hickey
Owen Robert Martin
Haley Jolene McKee
Sida Niu
Alec Douglas Rockwell
Matthew John Rolfes
Paul Turner Rose
Veeranun Rungamornchai John Stephen Samuelson
Austin Franklin Smith
Matthew Guy Vestal
Matthew Ryan Werner
Bradley Allen Strathman
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS
Anas W.I. Alanqar Paige Ainsley Brewer
Chemical Engineering Anas W.I. Alanqar
John Santo DiBaggio Shannon Gray
Alexandra Rochelle Hyler
Bharach Krishnamoorthi
Sida Niu
Zachary Chais Poskin
Bradley Allen Strathman
Austin Franklin Smith
Matthew John Rolfes
Emma Watson
Petroleum Engineering
Computer Science
Patrick Scott Shields
Electrical Engineering Robert Terence Knight
Aerospace Engineering Jordan Wyatt Ashley, BS air Ali Bacchani, BS
Nicholas Ryan Brunkhorst, BS Adam D. Silva, BS
Ameera Fatin Binti Abdull Hadi Affira Binti Ali
Samona L. Estwick, BS Shina Gupta, BS
Robert Brock Harden, BS Joshua T. Holland, BS
Christopher Paul Melvin, BS Coryln Eise Mickelson, BS Kirill Nadtachiv, BS
Architectural Engineering
Alan Phi Vu Nguyen, BS Graham Jordan Ray PS
Brandie LeNae Rhodes, BS*
Thomas James Stastny, BS*
Mary Dorothy Adams, BS Staci Reanue Ashcraft, BA Eric Spencer Baum. BS
Nicholas William Benson Boyts,
BS
Alex Michael Bruggen, BS Michael Robert Bull, BS* Cameron James Derks, BS
Andrew Timothy Da Deves, BS Eric James Devlin, BS
Brad Michael Eisenbarth, BS Samantha Leigh Forbes, BS* Lauren Elizabeth Gilbert, SW
Tyrick Adelson Monnett, BS Maxwell George Phillips, BS* Erik Michael Raith, BS
John Thomas Romine, BS Michael Robert Rudd, BS
Veeranun Rungamornchai, BS Aaron Michael Schneider, BS
Kelsey Marie Tarletsky, BS*
Jack Killian Walliser, BS
Eric Lee Witthaus, BS
Chemical Engineering
Abdullah Mohammed A. Alo raini, BS
Emily Marie Bracciano, BS Paige Ainsley Brewer, BS Atiele Ashton Brownfield B
Aaron Michael Bryant, BS
Paul Santosh Charles, BS
Erika J. Chikly, BS
Bryce Wyatt jaeger, BS Paul David Kersey, BS
Mackenzie Anne Christie, BS Brandon Lewis Daniels, BS Erik Thomas Deddens, BS
Brent William Fettell Crouch, BS Camille Jean Fittell, BS
Alexandra Rochelle Hyler, BS Andrew Dylan Jack, BS
Rachel Renee Gittemeier, BS Shannon Gray, BS
Brianna Paige Herbert, BS Tien Nguyen Hoang, BS
Kenneth Ryan Moulder, BS
Cesar Eduardo Munoz, BS
Randy Ngelale. BS
Bradley Allen Strathman, BS
Ming Li Tan, BS
GRADUATION GUIDE
Sida Niu, BS Hsin Ti Qu, BS
Michael Don Cipat Tinto, Emma Watson, BS
Alec Douglas Rockwell, BS Matthew John Rolfes. BS
Samuel Philip Schroeder, BS Nicholas Lee Schulte, BS Raoul Jones Sequeira, BS
Jennifer Marie Simpson, BS Austin Franklin Smith, BS
Zachary Chais Poskin, BS Andres Ramos, BS
Landon Alexander Relph, BS*
Brandon James Ricke, BS
Victoria Lee Robbins, BS
Kathleen Marie Wheatley, BS
Civil Engineering
Benjamin Anthony Allushuskj.
BS
Mychal Anthony Augustine, BS*
Jacob Jon Baty, BS
Gabriel Laurence Bliss, BS Nicholas Vaughn Burkeme
Nicholas Vaughn Burkamper, BS
Zachary Christopher Ceman, BS
Zhen Chen, BS*
Matthew Hayes Fowler, BS
Cody Frazier, BS
Joseph Michael Iovellini, BS
Auston W. Jacobsen, BS*
Robert F. Jeronimus, BS*
Edward A. Guernsey, BS*
John Clinton Hamilton, BS
Benjamin Charles Huff, BS*
Hannah Delyn Metcalf, Bs
Joel Josam Mlaki, BS
Jokee Jokee PS
josiah benton Kramer, BS*
Christopher James Lamb, BS*
Adam Jeremy Lyon, BS*
Austin Michael MacDonald, BS Christopher George Manship BS*
Brian Christopher McInnes, BS Dylan T. Medlock, BS
johnathan mcclellan, BS
Benjamin Alexander Mugg, BS
Tim J. Musil, BS*
Stefanie Nicol Neal, BS Simon Kamau Nguji, BS
Christopher Mark Novosel, BS Jennifer I. Penfield, BS
Bammy (Mary Petz), BS*
Andrew Thomas Petz, BS*
Viet Dinh Phan, BS*
John Oliver Shoup, BS Jason M. Sneegas, BS*
Matthew John Pjesky, BS*
Grant Keller Polley, BS
Samuel F. Stallbaumer, BS Ian Mason Sutherland, BS*
David Scott Teefey, BS*
Computer Engineering
Jeffrey Michael Winegardner, BS*
Christen Renae Yaw, BS*
Brandon Joseph Boyer, BS
Jeffrey Kevin Cailteux, BS
Jerod David Davis, BS
Nathan Eugene Disidore, BS Tyler Kevin Hayden, BS Ashley Besh Jurgensen, BS
Elizabeth Sue Alonza, BS
Ola Claire Mambe Djouma Bang
gole, BS*
Rebekah Anne Patterson, BS Joseph Michael Pince, BS Parker Joseph Both, BS
Balaji Bhaskar, BS Robert F. Blair, BS
Keeler Martino Russell, BS
Todd Aaron Schuring, BS
Jonathan Wayne Stacy, BS
Matthew Ryan Werner, BS
Bobcatus Todd Carson, BS
Corbin Scott Charpentier, BS
Wen Hao Chen, BS*
Jonathan Ryan Henderson, BS Karel Joshua Hill, BS
Alexander Troy Elting, BS Patrick George Flor, BS
Zane Michael Handley, BS Peng Hao, BS
Thomas Alexander Peterman, bs-
Sam Gus Riss, BS
Nathan Michael Schwermann, BS
Kyle Allen Seneke, BS
Siddhant Sharma, BS
Patrick Scott Shields, BS
Brian James Smith, BS
Nathan Gear Smith
Trevor Michael Smith, BS* Matthew Robert Snively, BS Michael Joseph Tebb
Michael Joseph tabone, BS Christopher Elliott Teters, BS
Gabriel G. Feuerborn, BS Matthew R. Hannon, BE Dakota R. Lyn Henke, BS
Brett Michael Hermann, BS*
Grant W. Jamison, BS
Matthew Alexander Jenkins, BS Robert Terence Knight, BS
GUIDE
GRADUATION GUIDE
nald, BS Manship,
Chan Yang Lee, BS
Nolan Vincent Lem, BS
Daniel R. Lierz, BS*
Reba R. Liggett, BS*
Andrew Ryan Mertz, BS Lynsey Marie Metz, BS Joseph Taylor Moss, BS
Patrick M. McCormick, BS Thomas Joseph McSweeney, BS
Timothy Jerome Nunnink, BS Robert I. Perez, BS
Engineering Physics
Justin Steven Robertson, BS*
Fengzhou Sun, BS
Abbishek Chakrabarti, BS
James James Claman, BS
Hanna Eileen Cosrove, BS
Mechanical Engineering Mohammed Abdullah Algahtani BS
Hanna Eileen Cosgrove, BS
Matthew Davis Crawford, BS
Benjamin Vaughn Hofmeier, BS
Rose Kathryn Sackuvich, BS*
Matthew Guy Vestal, BS*
Bryce Garth Allenbrand, BS Maxwell Thomas Apple, BS Colby Paul Arnold, BS
Michael Thomas Balsbaugh, BS* James David Baughman, BS* Wade Michael Billings. BS
Robyn Warren Burrows-Ownbey,
BS
Justin T. Burwinkle, BS*
Tanner Kyle Butz, BS
Evan Shands Captain, BS
lesse Coatnev, BS
Jonathan Winn Collins, BS*
Patrick Gordon Collins, BS*
Trudy Merle Curley, BS
B. Bray Carlyle, BS
Robert Anthony Czyz, BS
Benjamin Warner Davis, BS
Berrien Jeffery Davis, BS
Byron Jeffrey Davis, BS*
Colin Marshall Davis, BS*
Andrew Da Luna Davis*
Colin Marshall Davis, BS
Andrew Dale DeLapp, BPS
Anthony Levon Dejene, BS
Jeffee Sea Dickinson, BS
Stephanie Diane Estrin, BS
Mitch T. Fayrow, BS
Robert William Drown, BS Robert Lee Duren III, BS* Jordan Tyler Dykes, BS*
Ellen Riley Frizzell, BS Peter Haik, BS
Matthew Kyle Martin, BS*
Owen Robert Martin, BS*
Dale Lowell Hardee, BS Kevin D. Helton, BS
Adam Bainbridge Jeffries, BS
Travis Jacob Knoll, BS*
Daniel B. Kolsky, BS*
Tyler Stephen Herrig, BS
Samuel Martin Hippe, BS
Evan Lee Hiskey, BS
Alexander Michael O'Neill, BS*
Kyle Reid Ornce, BS*
Joshua McClelland Petersen, BS Ryan Eugene Poff, BS
Nathan C. Mumford, BS
Jared Chesapeake Nance, BS
Kyle Jacob Nealson, BS
Haley Jolene McKee, BS
Corey Samuel Merriman, BS
Nimish S. Modha, BS
Arturo Daniel Papa-Silva, BS Christopher Ryan Patton, BS Katelyn Nicole Peters, BS
David Tyler Fond, BS
Aaron Scott Porter, BS
Dillon S. Prohaska, BS
Andrew David Rogers, BS
John Stephen Samuelson, BS
Joseph David Sandt, BS
Eric David Quarnstrom, BS^
David Benton Roberts, BS
Heather MichelleBS
Emily Frances Schapker, BS* Robert Joseph Schmank, BS* Kiley Lisa Sheehy, BS
Matthew Ryan Toft, BS Andrew H. Turner, BS
Benjamin Paul Wilson, BS
Shin Yang, BS*
Zachary Alan Zwibelman, BS
Ameera Fatin Binti Abdull Hadi,
BS
Segun Atonja, BS
Salam Mansour H. Al Ghafli, BS
Hussam Sadiq AlQatari, BS*
Aifra Briati Ali, BS*
Mohammed Abdulrahman A.
Alshahab. BS
sydney Alexa Autry, BS
Charles Robert Babb III, BS
Nicholas John Cory, BS
Aadish Gupta, BS
PAGE 1D
John Michael Horton, BS
Christopher Thomas Kuhman,
BS
Jun Yih Lee, BS
Yue Liu, BS
CANDIDATES FOR
Paul Turner Rose, BS Kuok Chi Yap, BS
Hasan M. M Naser, BS Randy Eugene Perdue, BS
MASTER'S DEGREE Aerospace Engineering
Sarah Logan Kulhanek, MS*
Travis Cole Locke, MS*
Ryan Michael Barnhart, MS* Richard B. Bramlette, MS* Dustin Jones Court, MS*
Architectural Engineering Linjie Li, MS Zachary Kana Yakel, MS
Bioengineering
Kaity M, Fucinaro, MS*
Bhargavi Krishnan, MS*
Hyuntaek Oh, MS*
Sarah B. Schmitt, MS
Cynthia Mary Schwartz, MS*
Sami Shalhoub, MS*
Derek Jay Wassom, MS*
Chemical Engineering Alexander Mironenko, MS* Qing Pan, MS
Civil Engineering MS*
Sarah Louise Darmitzel, MCF*
Yale Douglass Harris, MS
Raju Acharya, MS*
Sarah Louise Darmitzel
Kyle Douglas Harris, MS
Matthew L. Hinsaw, MS*
Vinur Kau, MS
Nicholas Laga, MS*
Elisso S. Longoria, MS
Michael John McKie, MCE*
Stephanie Marie Moreno, MS
Hariharan Naganathan, MS
Amr Daniel Nagati, MS*
*
Benjamin E. Prewitt, MS
AJ Rahman, MS
Temple I. Richardson, MS* Nicole Leigh Schneider, MS* Matthew Allen Scott, MS* Brian W. Scovill, MCE*
Brian W. Scolvyn, MCEJ
Jayne Mlee Sperry, MS*
Dana Lynne Weir, MCF*
Brian W. Scovill, MCE*
ayne Mlee Sperry, MS*
Computer Engineering
Jeffrey Carl Wheeler, MS Michael L. Whitten, MS Aaron Robert Williams, MS
Hommed Joumah F. Alenazi,
MS*
Purity C. Kipkoech, MS Zhi Li, MS
Computer Science
Jasenthu Liyana Avindra Umesh Fernando, MS*
Megha Gupta, MS Brigid Rose Halling, MS
Brigid Rose Halling, MS
Marianne J. Jantz, MS
Ranjith Pazhangeril Krishnan,
MS
Yuanliang Meng, MS
Yuanliang Meng, MS
Boe I. Neueenschwander, MS
Surya Tej Nimmakayala, MS
Maeta Tej Nimmakaya, MD
Muthukumaran Pitchaimani, MS Balasubramaniam Sridhar, MS*
Manogna Thimma, MS*
Greeshma Umapathi, MS*
Gianpierre Villagomez Saldana,
MSI.
Construction Management Danielle Thompson, MCM*
Electrical Engineering Ryan Arnott MS*
Nicholas Marshall Bergmann,
MS*
Shashanka Jagarlapi, MS*
John Keith Jakasky, MS
Sree Harsha Kakarla, MS
Matthew Baitch Kitchen, MS
Paul Timothy Lenzen, MS Tianchen Li,MS
Engineering Management Saleh Abdullah Saleh AL-Amoudi, MS*
Jose Francisco Florencio Neto,
MS
Pradheesh Shanmugam, MS Yefeng Sun, MS
Reid W. Crowe, MS
Faisal AlMadani, MS$
Ravi Baburaian, MS
Stephen Anthony Ingalls, MS*
Denise K. Karimi, MS
Jason J. Kieffaber, MS
Sikander S. Hassan, MS*
Shawn Patrick Henry, MS*
Neil Allen Hughes, MS
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
jerome K. Estes, MS
Matthew Joseph Hackman, MS
Karen Sue Hand, MS
Kristin Elizabeth Determan, MS
Bryan Alan Dumler, MS
Kevin Dunn. MS*
Matthew David Bleything, MS*
Grant William Bussard, MS
Joshua Oliver Coulter, MS
Kevin Michael Manning, MS*
Ryan Thomas Manning, MS*
Abhinay Kuchikulla, MS Fei Lok, MS*
Rajyalakshmi, Sirisha, Mokkarala,
MS*
Svetoslav Georgiev Simeonov, MS*
Judith Marilyn Rickenbacker
Dixon, MF
Aaron Stephen Newman, MS Jose Antonio Nicolas, MS*
Environmental Engineering Yue Zhong, MS$^*$
William L. Smith Jr., MS
Jean D'Ann Stein, MS*
William L. Smith JR MS
Jean D'Ann Stein, MS*
James Christopher Sullivan, MS*
Sinyee Crystin Tan, MS*
Urvashi Thakkar, MS*
Environmental Science
ck Brahmer, MS
Debra Cathleen Wray, MS*
Yezid Mohamed Yessoufou, MS*
Patrick Brahner, MS
Jeremiah Andrew Johnson, MS*
Eric K. Nielsen, MS*
Jennifer Ann Raney, MS*
Spoorthi Tammareddi, MS*
Joseph Patrick Yelton, MS*
Michael Veach, MS*
Shuai Wang, MS
Carl Allen Chesser, MS*
Sameh Ahmed Elghzai, MS*
Priya Nagarajan, MS*
Vadivalagan Vadivelpillai, MS*
Brian N. Blackwell, MS
Austin Joseph Hausmann, MS*
Thomas Thayer Hirst, MS
Fabian Philip Schmidt, MS Bryan A. Strecker, MS* Nicholas E. Tobaben, MS* John Presston III, MS*
Yussy R. Mendoza, MS*
Michael Joseph Powell, MS*
L Colter Ragone, MS*
Mechanical Engineering
N. Blochwalt, MS
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE Aerospace Engineering
Keith Jack Richardson, MS*
Crain P. Pooney, MS*
Petroleum Engineering Ping Lu, MS* Woan Jing Teh, MS*
Emily Julianna Arnold, PhD Himanshu Amol Dande, Phl
Bioengineering
Gonzalo Garcia, PhD
Piyush Mukesh Mehta, PhD
Se yool Oh, PhD
Vidyashankara Iyer Gowrishankara, PhD*
Jong Cheol Jeong, PhD
Jae Hyun Kim, PhD
Ranganathan Parthasarathy, PhD
Huizhong Cui, PhD
Vidushenkar, June 2
Meng Li, PhD
Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Satya Aravind Gangu, PhD Mathur Ghante, PhD
Mark Anthony HURT, DE
Amanda Sue Hartman, PhD
Yilei Huang, PhD*
Civil Engineering
Jywa NAwu Nimoa, PhD Tiffany Chiemi Suekama, PhD Yaqin Wu, PhD* Zhuanzhuan Xie, PhD*
Patrick Glenn Clark, PhD Hongliang Fei, PhD*
Computer Science g. PhD*
Maryamossadat Nematollahi Mahani, PhD*
Environmental Engineering
Sergio Alain Guerra Castrejon,
PhD*
Nicolas Sean Frisby, PhD*
Martin Kuehnhausen, PhD
SCHOOL OF HEALTH PROFESSIONS
Kenneth Dewayne Brown, PhD
Mechanical Engineering Joshua Eddie Johnson, PhD Molly Ann McVey, PhD* Tristan C. Moody, PhD
Electrical Engineering Peter Adany, PhD*
Histan C. Moody, PhD Daniel Nunez Irrazabal, PhD*
Presented by Dean Karen L. Miller
Banner Carrier Karah Jo Beeves
Carrie M. Hohl, PhD*
School Marshals Norbert Belz Heather Gibbs
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
Megan Boxx
Kelsey Lynn Broslavick
Annie Virginia Brown
Tanya J. Byarlow
Laura DeLozier
Allie Kristina-Marie Jenkins
Alexandria Monet Karasek
With Distinction
Hejab Jufayn M. AlMutairi Karah Jo Beeves
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Priya Shirish Kumar Bhakta Mandy Marie Dart
Clinical Laboratory Science Seth Adam Atchison, BS Damien James Bailey, BS
Scott Richard Smith, BS
Mary V. Teller, BS
Lori Kay Yearout, BS*
Cytotechnology
Brendan Michael Handy, BS*
David Karl Kress II, BS*
Thomas Lloyd Turpin, BS*
Health Information Management
Udoamaka Ndidi Asagwara, BS
Angela Renaa Besta, BS
Kelsey Lynn Broslavick, BS
Tanya J. Byarlay, BS
Mandy Marie Dart, BS
Craig Adam Dawson, BS
Latha Nagesha Rao Honnrur, BS
Allek Kristina-Marie Jenkins, BS
Alexandria Monet Karasek, BS
Martha Nyambura Kinyua, BS
Lindsay Taylor Rice, BS
Hillery Marie Samskey, BS
Amy Grace Calet, BS
Valerie Ann Shea, BS
Morgan Leigh Stewart, BS
Kendall Alan Swint, BS
Occupational Studies Key Rechard, RS
Crista Ray Bechard, BS Christy Bell, BS
Natalie Storm Blair, BS Emily Claire Bourgeois, BS Megan Pearl, BS
Jordan A. Branfort, BS
Annie Elizabeth Breitwieser, BS
Annie Virginia Brown, BS
Josiah A. Wilmoth, CSI
Erin M. Hagemann, BS
Wittieria Scone, Hewell
Anna Marie Keeney, BS Rachel Miriam Kraig, BS
Ashley Brooke Moore, BS Sarah Joy Petersen, BS
Brianna M. Sage, BS
Jacee Jo Simmons, BS
Sarah Marie Smith, BS
Margaret Elizabeth Stokel I
Kelly Lynn Theresa Rutherford,
BS
Emily Elizabeth Waldo, BS Megan Kay Williams, BS Kristen Erin Wollen, BS
Ashley Dawn Vogts, BS Emily Elizabeth Wolda, BS
Monica D. Ahumada, BS*
Dalal Mohammed D. AlBuhayri,
BS*
Respiratory Care
Hejab Jufayn M. AlMutairi, BS
Mussaea Saeed H. Alshahrani,
BS
Ziyad Dhafer A. Alshehri, BS
Areej Ahmed A. Alomali, BS*
Tara Christine Anderson, BS
Karah伊 Beeves, BS
Jason Douglas Bryant, BS
Lindsay Michelle Ewing, BS
Lindsey Nichole Flippin, BS
Max Galaguz, BF
Joseph Henry Ibarra, BS
Mary Margaret E. La Shure, BS
Jierui NI, BS
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Samantha Erin Bendet, MS* Priyanka L. Bhamidi, MS* Julie Nicole Boyer, MS*
Jane Nicole Boyer, MS Megan Marie Brinker, MS Angela Marie Chase, MS
Danielle N. Christifano, MS
McClaire McCain Cody, MS*
Randall Gene Evans, MS*
Courtney Leigh Kreul, MS*
Cheng Li, MS
Lindsay Leigh Loevenstein, MS*
Shea Nolele Lootolian, MS*
Ashley E. Moore, MS
Deborah Avo Obadan, MS*
Loran M. Park, MS
Erin M. Plumberg, MS Elizabeth Jean Rogg, MS
Jenna Ashley Silverthorne, MS
Marylin Smith, MS
Sara Lee Smith, MS*
Sara Ann Staubach, MS
Jennifer Lynn Vyduna, MS*
Molecular Biotechnology
Steven Mcgreal, MS
Subina Piyush Mehta, MS
Ying Miu, MS
Ryan Bartholomew, MS Alissa Paige Blau, MS
Supraja Prakash, MS
Nurse Anesthesia
Alyson Renee Algrim, MS Ryan Bartholomew, MS Alissa Paige Blau, MS
Heather Renee Fenton-Garner,
MS*
Nicholas James Shields, MS Kristine D. Spanheimer, MS
Mississippi Bld. MD,
Timothy Mark Candelaria, MS
Lauren Nicole Clark, MS
Christine Elvish Elly MD
Amy Marie Huser, MS
Paige Alaine Kenney, MS
Lauryn Elizabeth Rametta, MS
Andrea Rosewell, MS
Christina Marie Schunke, MS Phillip Shepard, MS
Megan Nelson Saatkamp, MS Sarah A. Sadler, MS
Erica Ann Floodman, MS
Stephanie JoHanna Hampton,
MS
Nicholas James Sibley, MS Kristine D. Spaneheimer, MS Mandy Jo Thompson, MS Jay H. Thorpe, MS
Framingham Lane Clark, MOT
Kelley R. Coakley, MOT
Sara C. Dehner, MOT
Carly Renee Goodwin, MOT
Rahul Kumar J. Nguyen, MOT
Hannah Elaine Clarke, MOT
Kelley R. Coakley, MOT
Carly Renee Goodwin, MOT Megan Elizabeth Griffin, MOT
Occupational Therapy
Sarah Eve Harrison, MOT Alyson Joy Haynes, MOT
Katherine Ann Killingsworth,
MOT
Alison Lea Nuttle, MOT
Lexie Jenae Pfeifer, MOT
Sarah Marie Koerper, MOT
Callie Mea Krajewski, MOT
Magdalene Wingkwan Lam,
MOT.
Yin Man Lam, MOT
Kelsey Kathleen Lueger, MOT
Kristopher Allen Nelson, MOT
Alison Lea Nuttle, MOT
Maggie Nicole Powers, MOT
Andrew E. Reed, MOT
Leina Mae Rogers, MOT
Justin M. Scheer, MOT
Erin Dawn Schneweis, MOT
Margaret Christine Strode, MOT
Natalie Neilson, MOT
Margaret Christie Strode, MOT
Natalie Marie Tarbutton, MOT
Katie Jones Turner, MOT
Kathryn Elizabeth Varner, MOT Christy A. Weller, MOT
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Elaine M. Bruhn, AuD
Kathleen B. Burkett
Kathryn Jo Bunker, AUd
Kathleen Teresa Costigan, AUd
Emile Adlie Galemore, AUd
Mahalet Candace Jiregna, AUd
Ceri G. Lofflin, AUd
Janna L. Sorensen, AUd
Jessica Rachel Stamey, AUd
Elizabeth C. Stewart, AUd
Medical Nutrition Science Susan Ann Scholtz, PhD*
Occupational Therapy Sunni Lyn Alford, OTD*
Physical Therapy
Abigail L. Ashenden, DPT Cory R. Aufdenberg, DPT* Michael S. Russo, BPDT*
Marjorie Rose Bennett, DPT Debra A. Bowman, DPT Amanda Britton, DPT
Amy Leigh Bullerman, DPT
Jenna Raelyn Cox, DPT
Alicia Elise Crowl, DPT
Chanel Irene Marie Ebert, DPT
Brian Patrick Eric, DPT
Alyssa Minette Ervin, DPT
Mary Morgan Gaffney, DPT
Jessica Marie Gentry, DPT
Dennis Bradley Dempfurth, DPT*
Patrick David Gorman, DPT Teresa Kuhn Gunnison, DPT Ann Marie Hammond, DPT
Ann Marie Hammond, DPT
Emily Suzanne Haynes, DPT
Jason David Herold, DPT
Jennie Christine Larson, DPT Bridget Varanuch Lavaveshkul, DPT
Bekecca Lynn Folkock, DPT
Kenneth Ray Pringle, DPT
Debra Lynn Rico, DPT*
Jennifer K. Leonard, DPT
Anna Hallum Merrill, DPT
Travis Scott Messer, DPT
April Julene Meller, DPT
Donna Lee Newman, DPT Rebecca Lun Palladak, DPT
Courtney Rae Rooney, DPT
Maharyu Suarez Shabbazi, DPT
Cara Elizabeth Stingley, DPT
Constance Marie Teague, DPT
Nora Beth Utech, DPT
Alisa Vaysfligel, DPT
Robert Tyler Voorhies, DPT Sarah J. Williamson, DPT
Rehabilitation Science AlhamJad Al-Sharman, PhD David Jemad Burnett, PhD
Therapeutic Science
Andy J. Wu, PhD
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATIONS
School Marshals
Timothy A. Bengtson
Terry Bryant
Kelsey Marie Cipola*
Margaret Kathleen Clark
Nadia Oye Imafidon*
Presented by Dean Ann M. Brill
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
With Highest Distinction
Caitlin Christina Klag
Laura Elizabeth Lind*
Stephen Evans Nichols
Banner Carrier
Sarah Mary Stern
Hepatitis B and Necrosis
Ursula Rachel Rothrock Kimberly Ann Scherman* Sarah Mary Stern
With Distinction
Chelsea Elizabeth Didde
Marit Charlotte Lanier Ehmke
Isaac Elisha Gwin*
Sarah Rachelle McCabe Demetria Chinoso Ogech Oblor*
Trevor Donald Osler*
Blair Julia Reich
Ellen Elizabeth Reinecke
Rebecca Gail Ross
Sara Kany Smooth
Anna Elizabeth Allen, BSJ*
Viraj Amin, BSJ*
Sarah Danelle Weaver*
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Caroline Anne Atkinson, BSJ Kayla Noel Banzet, BSJ
Jessica Erin Blakeborough, BSJ Amanda Lee Blue, BSJ
Tyler James Conover, BSJ
Jonathan Scott Cooper, BSJ
Nathaniel Brett Crawford, BSJ
Amanda Marie Gage, BSJ*
Matthew Dale Galloway, BSJ
Matthew Tyler Gasper, BSJ
Kathleen Laura Gier, BSJ
Kelsea Marie Eckenroth, BSJ*
Marit Charlotte Lanier Ehmke,
BSJ
Abigail Phynis Goehnasen, BS
Alexander Joseph Gold, BJS
Rachael Ellen Gray, BJS*
Isaac Elisha Gwin, BJS*
Megan Elizabeth Hinman, BSJ
Margaret Eve Hull, BSJ
Rova Ibrahimy, BSJ*
Nadia Oye Imafidon, BSJ*
Jenna Annelise Jakowatz, BSJ
Jeffrey George Karr, BSJ*
Sean William Kellerman, BSJ Thomas Crawford Knapp, BSJ Nicole Haley Levin, BSJ*
Taylor Cespedes Lewis, BSJ Xin Li, BSJ\*
Steven Patrick Loomis, BSJ
Sasha Leigh Lund, BSJ*
Izatz Mohammed Maai, BSJ*
Kathryn Nigelky Maai, BSJ*
Sarah Rachelle McCabe, BSJ
Claire Elizabeth Mcnerny, BSJ
Katie Michelle Miller, BSJ
Tanvi Nimkar, BSJ
Demetria Chinoso Ogechi Obilor, BSIJ
Ethan Micah Padway, BSJ*
Paulina Renae Pengelley, BSJ
Victoria Brianne Pitcher, BSJ*
David Martin Powls, BSJ*
Joseph Katterley, BSJ
Laken Avonne Rapier, BSJ
Blair Julia Reich, BSJ
Stephane Albert Roque, BSJ Andrew Karlin Rusczczyk, BSJ Barbara Elise Rosalie
Christopher Robert Schaeder BSJ
Kimberly Ann Scherman, BSJ*
PAGE 2D
Rachel Elizabeth Schwartz, BSJ Vikaas Shanker, BSJ
Lauren Danielle Shelly, BSJ Sara Kay Sneath, BSJ
Patrick Joseph Strathman, BSJ Kelly Nicole Stroda, BSI*
Julianna Alexandra Tidwell, BS
Jessica Lynn Tierney, BSJ*
Taylor Anne Balis, BSJ
Jocelyn Lindsey Bauer, BSJ
Brendan Michael Begley, BSJ
Rachel Virginia Ablan, BSJ
John-Michael Joseph Angottii
BSJ
Colin Curtis Wright, BSJ Maggie Elizabeth Young, BSJ
Sarah Danelle Weaver, BJ* Brent Douglas Whitten, BSJ
Raquel Mandrell Brown, BSJ Virginia Rose Brown, BSJ
Hayley Katryn Budden, BSJ
Sarah Pember Burns, BSJ
Pilchuck Blanchard
Alexander Marshall Belot, BS
Lauren Emily Benson, BSJ
Brent Jones Bergner, BSI
Patrick O'Keefe Campbell, BSI*
Andres Manuel Carrizosa, BSI*
Stephanie Lynn Cavnston, BSI*
Courtney Louise Chaffee, BSJ Beth Ann Charlton, BSJ
Margaret Kathineen Clark, BSJ
Jahmal Ahmad Clemons, BSJ
Natalie Regan Clifford, BSJ
Elizabeth Janice Coffee, BSJ
Andrew Patrick Coggins, BSJ Joseph Michael Conaghan, BSJ
Kelsey Lynn Connolly, BSJ
John Francis Cunnion, BSJ
Trevor Aaron Daven, BSI
Zachary Lawrence Davis, BSJ LaRenn DiPede, BSJ
Chelsea Elizabeth Didee, BSJ
Sara Brooks Douglass, BSJ
Whitlee Anp Douthitt, BSJ
Brittani Morgan Dremann, BSJ*
Jamen Dean Droge, BSJ
Korab David Eland, BSJ
Katherine Brooke Farrell, BSJ
Elise Alexandra Farrington, BSJ
Holmley Finnigan, BSJ
Gavin Walter Fodemski, BSJ*
Haley Nicole Finucane, BSJ
Erika Christine Fisher, BSJ*
Emily Jean Fiske, BSJ
Jeannette Elizabeth Francis, BSJ
Jordan Elizabeth Frederick, BSJ
Alexandria Freeze, BSJ
Yezenia Sara Gonzalez, BSJ
Lily Ann Gorosh, BSJ
Patrick L. Griffith, BSJ
Carolyn Elizabeth Grossman, BSJ Jonah Vincent Grotz, BSJ*
Madlyn O'Connor Friedenfeld, BSJ
Laurie Anne Gallagher, BSJ
Emily Beth Gatewood, BSJ
Christina Lee Gibson, BSJ
Briana M. Gillenon, BSJ
Lauren Elizabeth Hipp, BSJ Ryan Brack Hobbs, BSJ
Emily Kathryn Heyrman, BSJ
Blair Anna Hickey, BSJ
Brian Allen Hillen, BSJ
Katherine Marie Hardy, BSJ
Emily Jane Harpster, BSJ*
Qinyi He, BSJ
Kenny Anousone Inthavong, BSJ
Morgan E. Jackson, BSJ
Elise St. John Jamison, PSI
Margaret Mae Hollomone, BSJ
Annie Christine Holland, BBSJ
Jeffrey George Hubig Jr, JSB
David William Hughes, BS*
Ashley Monique Jimerson, BSI*
Brittany Simone Jimerson, BSI*
Madeline Rose Johnson, BSI*
Nicole Suzanne Johnson, BS Travis Drew Johnson, BJS Benjamin Ejst Juster, BSJ
Heather Claire Kaplan, BSJ
Claire Catherine Kaufman, BSJ*
Murphy Kay Kaufman, BSJ*
Caitlin Christina Klag, BSJ
Shira Bhir Klezmer, BSJ*
Xinyi Kok, BSJ
Jordan Serene Kruse, BSJ*
Stephanie Lynn Kusek, BSJ
Ricala Cre L'Heureux, BSJ
Morgan Elyse Lang, BSJ
Adam Samuel Levine, BSJ Kathleen Ann Lewis, BSJ
Sabina Meyer Liedtke, BSJ
Laura Elizabeth Lind, BSI*
Amy K. Long, BSI
Julie Kaitlin Louvau, BSJ*
Jane Catherine Mahoney, BSJ*
Georgia Arden Mason, BJS
Maegan Aileen Mathiasmeier.
BSJ*
Zachary Collin Mc Quiston, BSJ
Shelly Elizabeth McConnell, BSJ*
Landon Roberts McDonald, BSJ
Kara Ashley Mclain, BSJ
Phaen Michael Meenther, BSJ
Lauren Elizabeth Moeller, BSJ
Colleen Elizabeth Monaghan,
BSJ
Nathan Michael Medhurst, BSJ Lauren Elizabeth Moeller. BSI
1
Michael Adrian Montano, BSJ Mallorie Leigh Moore, BSJ
Travis Christopher Moore, BSI
Damian Joseph Mora, BSJ*
Andrew Connor Morris, BSI
Richard Joseph Nachbar Jr., BSJ
Sarah Curtis Nettels, BSJ
Ross Elliott Newton, BSJ
Stephen Evans Nichols, BSJ
Lucy Colleen O'Connor, BSJ
Emily Louise O'Neill, BSJ
Maggie Elizabeth O'Toole, BSJ Zachary Kyle Oltsik,BSJ
Luciana Ortega-Garcia, BSJ
Trevor Donald Osler, BJSJ
Shelby Elynn Parker, BSJ
Chelsea Elizabeth Paulman, BSJ*
Kristen Elaine Peavey, BSJ
Natasha Danaelle Pickett, BSJ
Nicholas William Pompeo, BSJ Daniel Clifford Pruett Jr., BSI
Daniel Campbell Fletcher JP, BSJ
Lindsay Caroline Puckett, BSJ
Litao Qian, BSJ
Claydon Young Raymer, BSI*
Elizabeth Ellen Reinecke, BSI
Daffodil Lew Reumund, BSI
L Marie Rhodes, BSI
THURSDAY,MAY 9,2013
Alexandra Lauren Rogers, BSJ Rebecca Gail Ross, BSJ
Jolene Marie Sammons, BSJ
Julie Elizabeth Schobert, BSJ
Kristi Katlyn Coston, BSI*
Shannon Lynn Seglem, BSJ Danielle Shae Self, BSJ
Jason Matthew Sholl, BSJ*
Elizabeth Marie Smith, BSJ*
Angela Michelle Soden, BSJ*
Katherine Marie Sommerfeld,
BSJ
Shannon Nicole Spatz, BSJ
Sarah Mary Stern, BSJ
Stephanie Kristina Stoss, BSJ*
Emily Louise Strom, BSJ*
Sarah Lou Stuart, BSJ*
Jilian Ann Sullivan, BSJ
Alexandra Elyse Surface, BSJ
Brooke Allison Taylor, BSJ
Sarah Rebecca Thomas, BSJ Jasmine Y. Tinner, BSJ
Kailen Alexandria Tubbs, BSJ
Amanda Marie Tutora, BSJ
Madison Marie Wagner, BSJ
Lauren Ashley Walker,BSJ*
Qing Wang, BSJ
Abby Lauren Weltner, BSJ
Madelin Joan West, BSJ
Michael Robert Wilson, BSJ
Daniel Christian Woods, BSJ*
Ruyi Yang, BSJ
Alvaro Javier Zavala Abed, BSJ
CANDIDATES
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE Journalism
Danyelle Kay Buschbom, MS Kimberly Joy Campbell, MS Yixin Chen, MX Yixin
Allison Apple, MS
Yixin Chen, MS Jan McAllister Cummings, M
John Stephen Gray, M.
Elaine Elizabeth Harber, MS
Alice Claire Hunt, MS*
Alexandra Brooke English, MS
Jessica L. James, MS
Sarah Kelly, MS*
Melissa Anne Kopp,
Sarah E. Legg, MS
Li Li, MS*
Natalie R. Long, MS*
Laura Marie Markey, M*
SCHOOL OF LAW
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Jurie Doctor
Dean Stephen W. Mazza
Jennifer Marie Schaub, MS
Ashley Elizabeth Schulte, MS
Telinder Singh Schulli, MS
Porscha Jean Nicole Weddington, MS
Michael Joseph Albani, JD Abdul-Kareem Ali, JD
Benjamin Scott Allison, JD Kirk Michael Anderson, JD Michael R. Andruskid, JD
Martin B. Dickinson Stephen R. McAllister
Banner Carrier
Jennifer Marie Vogel
Haley Catherine Bowman, JD
Ryan Hirsch Boyer, JD*
Charles Paul Bradley, JD*
David Thomas Austin, JD
Austin Ramsey Bangerter, JD
Jeffrey Barnhouse, JD
Brooke Weatherholt Brestel, JD
Christopher Sean Bates, JD*
Jordan Walter Bergkamp, JD*
Suzanne Elizabeth Billam, JD
Dayton Patrick Botts, ID
Samuel Jackson Barton, JD Carl Joseph Barvick, JD
Russell Cory Brown, JD
Jessica Caitlin Burger, JD
Samuel Burtler IV, JD
Trent Robert Byquist, JD Michael Joseph Cappo, JD
Alexa jayne Michelle Carter, JD Adam Michael Chingen, JD Douglas John Coe, JD
Katherine Juliot Collins, JD Kimberly Michelle Condon, JI
Jessica Lynn Derakshanian, JD
Ashley Elizabeth Dillon, JD
Emily Elizabeth Disney, JD
Graham Reed Doeren, JD
Thomas Christopher DeBacco
ID
John Russen Davies, JD
Ebonie Sonte Davis, JD
Erin Liane Davis, JD*
Robert John Karl Domsch II, JD Tyler Matthew Dumler, JD Waled Aly Elshan, JD
Tyler Jeffrey Emerson, JD
DeAngelo Antione Evans, J
Stephen Alan Fetch, JD
Jeffrey H. Coppaken, JD Samuel Zenas Davidson, JD
Kaitlyn Elizabeth Fitzgerald, JD Erin Lea Fleming, JD
Alex Palo Flores, JD
Jenesto B. Florio, JD
Elsa M. Fraire, JD
Kathryn McClure Gorham, JD
Matthew Allen Gorney, JD
Matthew William Gorney, JD
Andrew Thomas Geren, JD Scott Andrew Girard, JD
Theodore Goodloe Richardson,
ID
Steven Christopher Hilburn, JD Jonathan L. Hines, JD
Samantha Michelle Heady, JD Steven Anthony Hengeli, JD
Samantha jane Horner, J
Clarissa A. Howley, JD
Liliana Huang
Andrea Rose Kalish, JD* Dawson Matthews
Matthew Parke Holmes, JD Samantha Jane Horner, JD*
Douglas Matthew Keane, JD Shannon Betty Keating, JD Michael Keanan, JD
Llyde Huang, JD
Joy Lisanne Isaacs, JD
Roche Philips
Joy Lisanne Isaacs, JD Casey Blake Johnson, JD* Andrea Rose Kelish, JD*
Spencer Thomas King, JD Kyle A. Kitson, JD
Brittany Ellyn Lagemann, JD Jonathan Andrew Lee, JD* Jie Li, JD
Sarah Rose Kranier, JD
Alexander Joseph Krantz, JD
Jack Kynion, JD
Lindsay Ruth Long, JD
Jacob Kalei Lowerthal, DJ
Lauren Elizabeth Luhrs, JD
Jamie F.
Morgan Tracey McCreary, JD Jordan Michael McGreey, JD* Joseph D. McLean, JD Brian W. McMillon, JD
Alessandra Kathleen Hinkle McCoy, JD
Laura Marie Markey, JD
Jade Marie Martin, JD
Matthew Ferris Namee, JD*
Rachel Elizabeth Nelson, JD
Juliette Nguyen, JD
Jill Ann Renae Mitchell, JD
Andrew Warren Morgan, JD
Nick Patrick Myers, JG
Phillip Wayne Pemberton, JD Ehren Gabriel Penix, JD Nicholas Joseph Peterson, JD Kelsey Ann Petrosky, JD
Lauren McQueen Gulliver Pearce JD
Matthew William Mehr, JD Adam Tillman Miller, JD
Crystalyn Marie Oswald, JD
Kim Adele Overdyck, JD
Brian Palmer, JD
Julie Elizabeth Parisi, JD Torrance Reed Parkins, JD
Matthew David O'Neill, JD Jose Don Ordonez, JD
kyle Douglas Kitchee, JD*Victor M. Vossebo III, JD*Xavier Rubio Abril, JD*Eric Allen Sader, JD*
Isabel Grace Segarra Trevio, JD
Daniel Michael Shaw, JD
Richard Allan Shie, JD
Clark A. Quigley, JD Sharon Maria Ramos, JD James Porter Rankin Jr., JD Matthew Robert Riley, JD
Katharine Kaur Sangha, JD
Kevin Robert Sauer, JD
Sarah Begins Schmidt, JD
Brebek Lynn Pinkston, JD
Matthew James Potteroff, JD
Jose Kevin Primo, ID
Joseph Allen Schremmer, JD
Natalie Claire Scott, JD
Bruno Germain Simoes, JD
Rabindra Kumar Singh, JD
Logan Francis Sliva, JD Brett Jeffrey Smith, JD
Robinhard Kumar Singh, JJ
Kelsey Leigh Slack, JD
Logan Francis Sluice, JD
Cody Ray Smith, JD
Jacob Nicholas Smith, JD Kaitlin Marie Smith, JD Lindsay Smith, JD*
Randy J. Thomas, JD
Ryan William Thornton, JD
Peter Tilley, JD
Andrew Michael Stein, JD Ross Henry Stewart, JD
Charles Robert Stinson, JD Robert E. Stites, JD
Matthew Lloyd Tillma, JD Rene Bernadine Ugarte, JD
Leslie Shannon Swimmer, JD Tsz Yeung Tam. JD
Jennifer Marie Vogel, JD Clayton Phillip Volker, JD Casey I. Walker, JD
Darin James Van Thournout, JD Robert Elliott Vincent, JD
Cassandra L. Walter, JD Evan James White, ID
Grant W. Williams, JD
Jonathon Paul Winter, JD
Natasha Marie Wiseman, JD
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Juridical Science
Law and Letters in Elder Law Katherine Lee McBride, LLM* Nicholas David Purifoy, LLM
Yueting Jiang, SJD Jaeseung Kim, SJD
Austin Keith Parker, SJD
Bryant Emerson Parker, SJD Sanhai Palshi, SJD
Sanchai Polchai, SJD*
Jalal Hashim Y. Sahlool, SJD
Hazem Hussien Sherief, SJD
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Interim Executive Dean Douglas A. Girod
Daniel Carrier
Erin Renee Locke
Kaley Judith Morris Pippin
School Marshals
Abebe Abebe
jennifer lacksor
Kaley Judith Morris Pippin
Erin Renee Locke
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE Microbiolov
Rachel Lee Olsen, MA
Pathology
Hanan Sataa Elsaraj, MA*
Health Services Administration Cori Elizabeth Ast. MHSA
Steven Christopher Hilburn,
MHSA
Melissa Lynn Kenner, MHSA
Molly Quinn Lack, MHSA
Brandon Manuel, MHSA
Virgin Martín, MHSA
Casey M. Renner, MHSA*
Jarom J. Schmidt, MHSA
Lindsey Michelle Herrick Sutanto,
MHSA
Lindsay Elizabeth Sickel, MHSA
Sumere Marie Smith, MHSA*
Charity Stowers, MHSA
Kaston Dariel Anderson-Carpenter, MPH*
Debra Susanne Swinehart,
MHSA*
Public Health
Kelsey Layne Bartolich, MPH*
Pamela Ann Behnk, MPH
David Luke Chon, MPH
Carlene A. Mayfield, MPH*
Elizabeth Kirwan McClain, MPH
Aurora Bayan Molitoris, MPH*
Maihoa Nguyen, MPH*
Larry K. Watts, MHSA Robert Reifort Wiggin, MHSA*
Hilary Lynn Dopfel, MPH
Kelcey Ellis, MPH
Michael Dale Hansen, MPH*
Christina Marie Hester, MPH
Sarah C. Johnston. MPH*
Gregory Scott Lindholm, MPH Simi Mani, MPH
Olusegun A. Olaosebikan, MPH* Joseph Anthony Pacheco, MPH Linda G. Redding, MPH*
Jose Luis Martinez Cornejo,
MPH*
Tirzah Rebecca Rice, MPH*
Ashley Marie Roedel, MPH*
Kevin Edward Ruprecht, MPH Chad Daniel Sanner, MPH
Rebekah Ann Simmons, MPH* Shannon Elizabeth Steinbauer, MPH
Fannette Marie Thornhill-Scott, MPH
Biostatistics
Dakota Quynn Hoagland, MS
Zhiwu Li, MS
Janelle Rose Noel, MS
Huiquan Zhang, MS
Clinical Rese
Mouin Sami Abdallah, MS* Dory Robert Abou Jaoude, MS
Kelstan Lynch Ellis, MS*
Aaron Heller, MS*
Boutros Nasri El-Haddad, MS
Kelstan Lynch Ellis, MS*
Aaron Heller, MS $ ^{*} $
Kyle Lamar Miller, MS Vinh K. Pham, MS
Jane Bowen Taylor, MS Min Yoo, MS
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Subhashchandra Subrao Naik, PhD
Cell Biology and Anatomy
Anastasia Aleksandrova, PhD*,
Rau Eduardo Diaz Jr., PhD*
Caleb W. Grote, PhD
Brianne Lynn Guilford, PhD Microbiology
Kiaofei Gao, PhD*
Omar Abdulla Almoghrabi,
Edgar Ronald Austria, MD
acob Lee Baalman, MD
Medicine
Leenah Abugisisa, MD Brock Alman Alexander, MD Lindsav Michelle Allan. MD
jacob Lee Baalman, MD
Kathryn S. Balbierz, MD
Alycia C. Barland, MD
Miranda Nicole Barnes, MD
Maggie Murfin Barknethouse, MD
Elizabeth Ann Barton, MD
Allison Jade Baughman, MD Charles D. Bengtson, MD Courtney Rae Bettinger, MD
Ashley Elizabeth Bloom, MD Michelle Brase, MD
Tekalign Assefa Burka, MD James William Bush, MD
Matthew William Brooks, MD Jessica Lindsey Brozek, MD Tabakian Asfoe Budke, MD
Donald Richberg Campbell, MD Bradford Lee Cardonell, MD Elizabeth Cathcart-Bake, MD
Vamsee Krishna Chaguturu, MD
Stephanie Nicole Clark, MD
Candice Renee Coffey, MD*
Charles William Conley, MD
Branden Wiley Comfort, MD
Sarah Dawn Corn, MD
Todd Michael Crane, MD
Todd C. Crawford, MD
Molly M. Daugherty, MD
Trent Wilkins Davis II, MD
Laura Michele Dcleore, MD
Megan Ashley Dingwall, MD
Kaitlin Marie Ditch, MD
Kristin Juneau Wendt Dolan, MD Jessica Rene Easton, MD
Brett Christopher Eebing, MD
Allison Marie Edwards, MD
Camilla Elise Elven, MD
Daniel Christopher Ensley, MD Jennifer Thompson Eyler, MD Abigail E. Faulman, MD
Hannah Donn Fisher, MD Joshua Froese, MD
Holly Renee Gault, MD
Matthew Eugene Gibson, MD Jason Alan Gregory, MD Katie Rose Corlissi, MD
Justin Thomas Hoskins, MD John Christopher Hunninghake, MD
Paige Allison Hutsey-Harwell, MD
Jennifer Lila Isham, MD
Megan Marie Jack, MD
L. Andrew Jensen, MD
Sarah Marie Kelting, MD
Jessup Wade Kenyon, MD
Sofia Kerbawv. MD
Murtaza Sardar Khan, MD Julie Christine Kielt, MD
Matthew John Kielt, MD Austin L. Koch, MD
Codyjo Kenneth Kraemer, MD Tom C. Kriley, MD
Leah Elizabeth Kuhlmann, MD
Erin O'Donnell Lawson, MD
David Yu, MD
Johnathan K. Leck, MD Jessica Rose Leiker, MD
GRADUATION GUIDE
Christopher Joseph Leto, MI Terin Nicole Lewis, MD
Katelyn Rose McAnany, MD Cole Jamison McEwen,MD
Bannery Rose Malashock, MD Hannah Rose Malashock, MD Joshua Matthew Marr, MD Scott Michael Mateson, MD
Joshua Matthew MArl, MD
Scott Michael Mattson, MD
Katelyn Rose McAnany, MD
Jerry Basosila Locheke, MD Erin Renee Locke, MD
Cole Jamison McEwen, MD
Amanda Marie McIntosh, MD
Jennifer Ann McRae, MD
Kyle Steven Mock, MD
Mark Christian Daniel Moody,
MD
Allie Beth Lohrmeyer, MD Randall Drew Madison, MD
Clayton Stephen Milner, MD Jeffrey William Mincher, MD
Kristen Alane Mosier, MD
Nicole Arrielle Mosley, MD
Kathleen Marie Murphy, MD
Caitlyn Ngoc Nguyen, MD
Kysha Coleen Nichols-Totten, MD
Nathan Blake Norris, MD
Megan Renee Northup, MD
Rose Lewtine Adhambro Ochieng,
MD
Anthony Robert Onofrio, MD Michael Bradley Page, MD Caitlin Jo Palke, MD
Whitney Kaye Pressler, MD Tara Larin Price, MD
William Els Poulson, MD Michael Reed Powell, MD Sara Danielle Powell, MD
Kaley Judith Morris Pippin, MD Rupa Reddy Polam, MD
Kahil Nabil Saad, MD
Sabina B. Safder, MD
Pratt B. Safder, MD
Jenna Kennedy Sloan, MD
Sarah Kendall Smith, MD
Elizabeth S. Smender, MD
Johnson Elliott, MD
Bonne Ann Tackett, MD
Brandon Johnson Tackett, MD
Joseph Robert Spaniol, MD
Chad Edmond St. Romain, MD
Chad Clinton Mic Stewart, MD
Justin Tyler Stowell, MD
Brett R. Schoen, MD
Abbie Lyn Schuster, MD
Nolan Bruce Seim, MD
Nichole Rae Seiter, MD
Mohamad Kareem Shaath, MD
Rehaan K. Shaffie, MD
Zahra Shirazy, MD
Amanda Christine Sommerville,
MD
Kundau Keivin tanganyika, MD
Christopher Patrick Tanzie, MD
Steven Oliver Tenny, MD
Aaron Scott Thiessen, MD
Aaron Scott Thiessen, MD
Adam Eugene Thiessen, MD
Taku Mazu Thiessen, MD
Tyler Moore Thress, MD
Dereck Douglett Totten, MD
Ryan A. Townley, MD
Anna Sergeevna Trikhacheva, MD
Gustaf M. Van Acker III, MD
Anne Lye Veezeau, MD
Jonathan David Warren, MD
John-Michael Thomas Watson,
MD
Brandi Michelle Tyler, ML
Carson Tyler Williams, MD
Kristin E. William, MD
Silas Williams, MD
Jacob David Waxman, MD
Erin Kelsey Webb, MD
James Benjamin Weihe, MD
Rachel Telise Weihe, MD
Daniel Nathan Willis, MD Kyle Nathaniel Wilson, MD
Jered Lawrence Windorski, MD Joshua David Wyckstand, MD Patrick Allen Zeller, MD
Aritra Bhattacherjee, PhD Elizabeth A. Dille, PhD
Molecular and Integrative Physiology Valentine Ayuk Agbor, PhD* Aritra Bhattacherjee, PhD Elizabeth A. Dille, PhD
David J. Guggenmos, PhD*
David Jeanne Luense, PhD*
Aracely A. Lutes, PhD*
William Grover Messamore,
PhD*
Bliss E. H. O'Bryhim, PhD Carrie M. Quinn, PhD* Jennifer E. Selfsledge
Todd Christopher Bradley, PhD Damayanti Chakraborty, PhD Pharmacology
Pharmacology Amanda Lynne Hays, PhD* Kristin Leigh Russell, PhD
Toxicology
Mitchell R. McGill, PhD
Broadway Real Collision, Pk Dc
Clarence David Williams, PhD*
Kai Wu, PhD*
Oksana Ivanovna Anand*
Bhavika Bhan*
Hemant Boolani*
Jenna Y. Chaung*
Bassem Mounir Chehab*
Christopher S.R. Dakhil*
Emily Renee Diederich*
Mathew Brain Good*
Amanda Nicole Gudgel*
Mehmoond Hussain Hashmi*
Jersey P. Micallak
Sumanth Mulamalla*
Irissan Ro Noumani
Jesse Rai Newman
Sameer Raj Pandeya*
April Lynn Parks*
Sanneel Raj Pandey
April Lynn Parks*
Vaishali Patel*
Richard Emeka Pieri*
Carrie Lynn Pohl*
S
GUIDE
Moody,
D
MD
MD
D
s-Totten,
D
MD
Ochieng,
MD D
ID
, MD
t, MD
, MD a,MD tie,MD
D* PhD*
physiology
D*
)
)*
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samore,
)
D*
WSHIP
GRADUATION GUIDE
Rajitha Laleendra Premaratne*
Rajattha Ealaendeh Praema
Krishna V. Rangarajan*
Asad Saleem Sheikh*
Mandeep Singh*
Kelly Jo Steffen*
Jeremy Coleman Strom*
Karen Nicolas Tamano*
Ahmad Tuffaha*
Ryan W. Westoff*
Stanley K. Zimmerman*
Pathology, Anatomic and Clinical Khalid Amin* Daniel John Lalich* Quinn M. Saigh*
Psychiatry Neelofar Lalani*
Radiology, Diagnostic
Ernest J. T. Madarang*
Shannon Ray Peck*
Anesthesiology
CERTIFICATE OF RESIDENCY
Eric C. Bradstreet*
Samuel Michael Davis*
Randy John Eilert*
Tiona Jill Langton*
Andi McCown*
Phuong Hien Nguyen*
Kripa J. Patel*
Gregory John Ramirez*
Timothy P. Ratio*
Youssef A. Sawers*
Jonathan S. Williams*
Nicolette Wise*
**dermatology**
Heather Klein Hamilton*
Emily Horner*
Tracy Michelle Katz*
Family Practice
PAGE 3D
Holly Marie Allen Terrell*
Susan V. Areeckal*
Karlyn Leigh Armbruster*
Steven R. Ballard*
Caleb Jesse Bowers*
Andrew Cheng*
Kari Rose Clouse*
Regan Michelle DeHart*
Christopher Downes*
Darlene L. Espinosa*
McGarrett Montgomery Gro
Marta Ellen Hantke*
Christine Sarah Humphrey*
Melissa Ann Kalb*
Christopher Dennis Klouzek
David Lee*
Jason V. Leep*
Yan-Hua Katy Liu*
Sarah Elizabeth Mandigo*
John Nicholas May*
Vishal R. Patel*
Deepa Perumal*
Andrew William Pope*
Sara Elizabeth Purdy*
Alison Kyley Raymond*
Dan David Reimer*
Melissa Garber Rosso*
Brian E. Stith*
Scott Anthony Street*
Bryan Kent Stucky*
Michael Swartzon*
Kristin Rae Thornton*
Robert Leroy Ullom*
Veronica N. Villarreal*
Marcus Henry Weiser*
Beverly M. Wilson*
Mike S. Zuniga*
Internal Medicine
Bashar Abdalla Ababneh*
Basil Ahmad Abu-El-Haija*
Kamran Aghae*
Dina Z. Corbin*
Heather Dianne Cunningham*
Dereje Gebreselassie Desta*
lass El Lakkis*
Jennifer Lynn Fink*
Laura Kathleen Frye*
Kimberly Renee Graham*
Nathan R. Heckerson*
Muhammad Aleem Imran*
Vikhil Jain*
Amhmed Aheem Inhirat
Ashal Jain*
Rami Adib Jambeih*
Anup Kumar Kasi Loknath K
mar*
Jeremiah Robert Kempke*
Anna Marie Kumru*
Amanjot Singh Lehl*
Collin Jane Lovitt*
Heather Jeanne McWilliams*
Rayane Nassar*
Florella Nawar*
Chadi Obeid*
Seyed Kavous Pakseresht*
Bassem Hanna Rouphael*
Andre Saad*
Deepti Satelli*
Bassam Syed Shakil*
Cole R. Spresser*
Ourania T. Stephanopoulos*
Laura Ann Thomas*
Rexy A. Thomas*
Niralee Vaishnav*
Jorge Abner Valdivia*
Amanda Michelle Valliant*
Amanda Helen Regier Waltner*
Internal Medicine and Psychiatry Bradley Ray Dyer*
Neurological Surgery Joshua A. Klemp*
Neurology
Brennen Leigh Bittel*
Omar Jawdat*
Lori Davis Noorollah*
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Kimberly Ann Brey*
Linden R. Collins*
Alhambra Frarey*
Kari Elizabeth Hamlin*
Alexandria Renee Keys*
Ashley Suzanne Robbins*
Steven Kyle Thompson*
Jewelia Denise Wagner*
Ophthalmology
Timothy P. Lindquist*
Ryan Rober Pine*
My Le Shaw*
Orthopedic Surgery
Christopher Lee Anderson*
Ryan P. Dunlay*
Timothy N. Ghattas*
Stanley Preston Jones*
Todd Joseph Lansford*
Rhianna Melissa Little*
Erik Thomas McGoldrick*
John Paul Schoepel*
Otolaryngology
Pediatrics
Toluwalase Ayodele Ajayi*
Monica Liliano Arango*
Cristy Lynn Baldwin*
Lan Thi Dang*
Anna E. Esparham*
Jordan T. Jones*
Rima Nawaf Mohammad Kha sawneh*
Kayla Danielle Maalouf*
Kathryn Louise Petelin*
Thuylinh Ngoc Pham*
Amber Shannon Ratliff*
Caroline Elizabeth Woods*
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Timothy Douglas Bundy*
Akhil M. Chhatre*
Jennifer Lynn Dwer*
Ralph Leo Aquadro III* Levi James Young*
Psychiatry
Veronica Lynn Amey*
Erick M. Brown*
Brin H. Humphrey*
Harnek Singh Kahlon*
Syed Arsalan Karim*
Emilia Paulina Kaufman*
Zishan Khan*
Timothy J. McCord*
Moneeshindra Singh Mittal*
Olga Sanford Kereches*
Reshmi Saranga*
Radiation Oncology
Radiology, Diagnostic
Adam Sammy M. A. Alli*
Erich N. Bryan*
Scott David Culbertson*
Nathan Bradley Dobbs*
Daniel Taylor Finn*
Kirsten Lee Gaarder*
Daniel Joseph Hulse*
Michael Jon Sanders*
Daniel C. Spear*
Surgery
Marcus Anthony Barber*
Paul Michael Bjordahl*
Christian Daniel Jones*
Carrie Ann Laituri*
John Forrest McConeghey
Theresa Oey-Devine*
Clinton Lyle Seifert*
Gie Na Yu*
Urological Surgery Stephen Michael Graham* Andrew C. James* Daniel Woodruff*
Urological Surgery
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Banner Carrier
Stanton David Nelson
*With Distinction*
Laura Elizabeth Christy
Rebecca Michelle Faulkner
Bradley Joe Feagan
Nicole Lyne Limones
Stanton David Nelson
Joseph Allan Stuean
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Presented by Dean Robert L. Walzel Jr.
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
With Highest Distinction
Kimberly Marie Davidson
With Distinction
Eric Scott Killen, BM
Leah Phyllis Bernstein, BM
Michael Bret Cooper, BM*
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Breanna Gail Ellison, BM Jamie Lee Sanborn, BM
Music Composition
Music
Music Education
Frank Howard Plummer Jr., BM
Sarah Sybille Bodle, BA
Quin Davis Jackson, BA*
Chorong Jaen, BA*
Eric Abney, BME*
Erica Jean Brooks, BME
Laura Elizabeth Christy, BME*
Alexandra Jeanette Drake, BME
Bradley Joe Feagan, BME
Tyler Norman Graves, BME
Melissa Lynne Hill, BME*
Kirsten Anne Hoogstraten, BME
Samantha Kay Houston, BME*
Rachel Lynn Lampton, BME
Joshua Bryce Maddux, BME
Melissa Ann Palmer, BME*
Alexander Shaver Piazza, BME
Flora Jean Sanders, BME
Emily Catherine Scholle, BME
Riley Ann Shaw, BME*
Katia Kristine Sittmann, BME
Rebecca Louise Smith, BME
Rebecca Ann Stapfer, BME
Joseph Allan Stuever, BME
Kendra Liane Temaat, BMLE
Molly Cathleen Wilkinson, BME
Music Therapy
Heather Lynn Barney, BME
Elizabeth Ann Boresow, BME
Kimberly Marie Davidson, BME*
Kathryn Jane Doyle, BME
Rebecca Michelle Faulkner, BME
Daniel Benjamin Goldschmidt,
BME
Bethany Louise Ingle, BME*
Bing Li, BME*
Kirsten Marie Schick, BME*
Sin Tong Wong, BME
Nicholas Paul Mourlam, BM
Organ
Piano
Breanna Gail Ellison, BM David Scott Ferguson BM
David Scott Ferreira, BM Stanton David Nelson, BM
Deneige Christine Marie Barr,
BM
Saxophone
Theatre and Voice
Alexander Barton Goering, BFA Edward Lee Schubel, BFA*
Trombone
David Scott Ferneau, BM
Brian Jeffrey Scarborough, BM
Violin
Nicole Lyne Limones, BM*
Voice
Michael Bret Cooper, BM* Allison Michele Lewis. BM
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Christopher P. Bohling, MM*
Ian Christopher Boswell, MM*
John Brabant, MM
Miriam E. Brack, MM
Jeffrey M. Carlson, MM*
Stephen A. Dagrosa Jr., MM*
Lacey Elizabeth Eaton, MM
Evan N. Flynn, MM
Catherine Ann Grosscup, MM
Qichen Jiang, MM
Jooyi Jung, MM
Diane Marie Kalinowski, MM*
Arthur Edward Lafex, MM
Chi Kit Lam, MM
Ji Hye Lee, MM
Lisa Noelle Mullinger, MM
Mark Paisar, MM
Dessy Valentina Pranowo, MM
Benjamin Cowles Roman, MM*
Madison Minken Root, MM
Anna Rose Scott, MM
Bradley William Walker, MM
Ryan Gregory Webber, MM
D Joseph Winans, MM
Ieng Wai Wong, MM
Biyun Xue, MM*
David Dwight Bowman, MME*
Troy Clifford Dargin, MME
Sasanna E. Efseaff, MME*
Aaron Andrew Hall, MME
Robin Jean Harris, MME*
Jamea J. Sale, MME*
Bradley Joseph Wilson, MME*
Benjamin Tipman Wray, MME*
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE Music Education
Music Education
Lauren Matheson Anderson,
MME*
P
Barbara Ruth Jurgensmeier,
MME*
Music Theravv
Melissa C. Brunkan, PhD*
Jeremy Norbert Johnson Manternach,
PhD*
Music Education
James Robert McAllister, PhD*
Musical Arts Crystal Alexander-Duckett,
Musical Arts
Kristi Ann Williams Baker, DMA*
Daniel Jared Bruggeman, DMA
Laura Hrivnak, DMA
Christopher Alan Krampe, DMA*
Sarah Jane Labovitz, DMA*
James H. Lee, DMA
Chia-Te Liu, DMA
Charles Michael Martinez, DMA*
Brian Scott Mathias, DMA*
William Munoz-Aponte, DMA*
Jared Lucas Ostermann, DMA*
Charles W. Page, DMA*
Janis Porietis, DMA
Michael Erin Scott-Nelson, DMA
Heller Heller Smith, DMA*
Dong-Hyun Son, DMA
Lia M. Southern, DMA
Maya Tuylieva, DMA
Jose Javier Valerio, DMA
Jeremy Glen Wohletz, DMA*
Yaokun Yang, DMA*
SCHOOL OF NURSING
Presented by Dean Karen L. Miller
Beatrice Anne Black
Banner Carrier
School Marshals Nancy Barr Jill Peltzer
Beatrice Anne Black
Lindsay A. Davis
Macy Millikan
Shannon Marie Schreiner
HONORS (TENTATIVE) Highest Distinction
Distinction
Emily Ann Brandmeyer
Rebecca Marie Chase
Lauren Michal Courtney
Jennifer Leigh Guevel
Branka Milojevich Johnson
Nicole Marie Kuntzsch
Jill Mader
Meghan Anne Malone
Nellie J. Metz
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS Nursing
Laura Elizabeth Allen
Emily Ann Brandmeyer
Doug Wesley Doug
Kaitlyn Marie DeBacco
Jenna Marie DeGennaro
Megan Elizabeth Godwin
Jennifer Leigh Guevel
Branka Milojevich Johnson
Lora Kathleen Joyce
Erin Jessie Kruse
Meghan Anne Malone
Rebecca Leigh Sims
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Nursing
Breana May Alholm, BSN
Melissa Anne Allbee, BSN
Laura Elizabeth Allen, BSN
Layne Gardner Anderson, BSN
Kellen Bryn Ankerholz, BSN
Quinn C. Ayres, BSN
Mary Ellen Baird, BSN
Kelsie Jordan Ball, BSN
Ann Louise Bannister-Lanter
BSN
Abbey Marie Bauman, BSN
Brooke Janae Beasley, BSN
Jessica Marie Benson, BSN
Beatrice Anne Black, BSN
Leah Nicole Blanshan, BSN
Doug Wesley Sander, BSN
Sylvia Aba Brainoo, BSN
Emily Ann Brandmeyer, BSN
Heide Lynn Chaney, BSN
Rebecca Marie Chase, BSN
Lashley Lynch Clark, BSN
Sheena Coleman, BSN
Ocolete Cook, BSN
Michelle Maranne Cossairt, BSN
Lauren Michal Courtney, BSN
Kayla Ann Cross, BSN
Melissa W. Cutting, BSN
Lindsay A. Davis, BSN
Kaitlyn Marie DeBacco, BSN
Jennna Maria Degenno, BSN
Jacquelyn Euzanne Dwyer, BSN
Kelli Jo Eccles, BSN
Cassie Alysse Edwards, BSN
Olubukola Faseru, BSN
Brooke Ali Fehringer, BSN
Barbara Rosa Fennelly, BSN
Ashley Steele Ferguson, BSN
Kristi Renee Fisk, BSN
Tracy Lee Fry, BSN
Shantyl Marie Galloway, BSN
Ashley Nicole Garren, BSN
Jessica Lynn Geiss, BSN
Elizabeth Pauline Glenger, BSN
Stephanie Marie Ginther, BSN
Kirsten M. Gleason, BSN
Megan Elizabeth Godwin, BSN
Laura Jewett Gorney, BSN
Shiao Fui Guement, BSN
Jennifer Leigh Guevel, BSN
Hannah Marie Gunnison, BSN
Mallory Blake Henrich, BSN
Amanda Rae Hernandez, BSN
Hope Hewitt, BSN
Kristen Ann Hodnik, BSN
Tara Brooke Holzer, BNS
Angela Nguyen Hornbeck, BSN
Dawn Rishelle Hudson, BSN
Luna Riseau Hudson, BSN
Tyler Warren Jenkins, BSN
Branka Milojevich Johnson, BSN
Jennifer Lauren Fox Johnson,
BSN
Brenda Mihoejevien Johnson, BSN Jennifer Lauren Fox Johnson BSN Lora Kathleen Joyce, BSN Julie Kampsen-Lemke, BSN Andrew Kastner, BNS Morgan Kelley, BSN Rachel Elise Kirsch, BSN Christina Mary Koehler, BSN Kayleigh Kayleigh Koster, BSN Erin Jessie Kruse, BSN Nicole Marie Kuntzsch, BSN Kristin Larios, BSN Jillian Leigh Lenertz, BSN Amy Michelle Lietzow, BSN Ashlee R. Lohman, BSN Jill Mader, BSN Meghan Anne Malone, BSN Taylor Mary Irene Martindell BSN Josefine Martinez, BSN Marilee Jo McCreeley, BSN Erin Elisabet Medina, BSN Lauren A. Melcher, BSN Libbie Sue Merritt, BSN Amber S. Messmer, BSN Nellie J. Metz, BSN Natalie Alexandra Mildfelt, BSN Macy Millikan, BSN Logan Nadine Moore, BSN Megan A. Navis, BSN Valerie Ann Nijuguna, BSN Jessica Grace O'Connell, BSN Ellen Kathryn O'Neil, BSN Elaine Rose O'Neill, BSN Debbie K. Ohrt, BSN Richard Christopher Parsons.
Emily Suzanne Ponchur, BSN
Alexa Jade Poore, BSN
Steven Matthew Rains, BSN
Kendall Marie Reese, BSN
Diana Nataly Reyes, BSN
Kiley Rickabaugh, BSN
Sara Riedel, BSN
Hannah L. Rollwagen, BSN
Kylie Anne Rothlisberger, BSN
Hailey Renee Saunders, BSN
Madison Kathleen Scheve, BSN
Shannon Marie Schreiner, BSN
Alison Melete Shearer, BSN
Rebecca Leigh Sims, BSN
Meredith Emily Smith, BSN
Joanne Onylle T. Sopoco, BSN
Amy Marie Stallbaumer, BSN
Erika Marie Statzel, BSN
Donna Eileen Stevens, BSN
Sherri Lee Suffin, BSN
Laura Nicole Traff, BSN
Emily J. Vance, BSN
Jaynell Kay Vaughn, BSN
Deirrion Wassmer, BSN
Jami Rae Weaver-Warren, BSN
Jessica Dawn Wedel, BSN
Leslie Weiser, BSN
Michelle Patricia Wilmore, BSN
Catharine A. Woiderski, BSN
Kelly R. Worth, BSN
Heather Jean Wright Renick
Ebony Marie Wright, BSN Marissa Renee Wuller, BSN Jeremy Alan Wynne, BSN
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Nursing
Whitney A. Abbott, MS*
Chika Achebe, MS
Chelsea Jere Albert, MS*
Nicole Dawnelle Apprill, MS*
Belinda Bagby, MS
Kaitlyn Lynn Balough, MS*
Amy Bild, MS
Sara Billings, MS
Regina Faye Borthwick, MS
Julia Christine Bradbury, MS*
Rachel Lynn Brewer, MS*
Sarah Margaret Browning, MS
Terry L. Busch, MS
Anna Elizabeth Cattau, MS
B breath Roxanne Chambers, MS
Kimberly Ann Chang, MS*
M Jessie Tess Curran, MS*
Katelyn Rose Dunleavy, MS
Heidi Eck, MS*
Melissa Anne Ehling, MS*
Jessie Nichole Fazel, MS*
Melissa Ann Ferguson, MS*
Stephanie Dawn Fogo, MS*
Megan Freise, MS*
Callie Maureen Fulton, MS*
Mia Georgann Gallagher, MS*
Jessica Erin Gassman, MS*
Celeste Gray, MS
Angeline Kay Hauck, MS*
Brett Michael Haynes, MS*
Taryne Hensley, MS*
Alison Elizabeth Hiatt, MS*
Kala Ilene Hillery, MS*
Kelli Kae Hoffman, MS*
Kristen Marie Jarvis, MS
Ava Louise Jones, MS*
Lisa Marie Kerley, MS*
Shareen Khani, MS*
Allyson Ann Knox, MS*
Jessica Kramer, MS
Erin Krause, MS
Emnet Ashenafi Lemma, MS*
Lori Ann Lueger, MS*
Cynthia Badger Lundberg, MS*
Brooke Nicole Lutz, MS*
Christina Marie Mathos, MS
Lindsay Marcy, MS
Jenna Anne Mendoza, MS*
Kailey Ann Mesler, MS*
Rebecca Annalis Miller, MS
Jody Lynn Mitchell, MS*
Mona Jolene Moran, MS
Sarah Myers, MS*
Tisha Lynn Nickel, MS*
Lauren Michelle Nugent, MS*
Susan Eileen O'Neil, MS*
Brooke Lin Ottesen, MS*
Miguel Angel Perez, MS*
Gretchen Anette Perry, MS*
Monica Davis Pfeiffer, MS
Lisa Gail Powell, MS*
Victoria A. Ravnor, MS*
Veronica Richards, MS
Ashley Ann Robbins, MS*
Cherie Tuason Rourke, MS*
Deborah Ann Ruggles, MS
Jennah M. Sander, MS
Diana Kit-Yin Schneider, MS*
Christine M. Schumacher, MS*
Cheryl Lynn Seacat, MS*
Craig Stephen Shipley, MS*
Cassandra Allyson Showalter, M*
Laura Marie Siles, MS*
Alissa Ann Smith, MS*
Kristin Michelle Starr, MS*
Lindsey Michelle Herrick Sutar
Deanna Michelle Swaggerty, MS*
Lisa Marie Tarbell, MS*
Martha Caroline Tucci, MS
Shawna Lee VanLeeuwen, MS
Jaclyn Marie Vath, MS*
Cara Elizabeth Vogl, MS*
Karen Ann Wenner, MS*
Marion Adams West, MS*
Brigid Kerry Weyhofen, MS
Ronald Brent Williams, MS*
Amanda Sue Wilson, MS*
Shannon Marie Wimsett, MS*
Katelyn Rose Dunleavy Winkler,
Kayla Elizabeth Young, MS* Katherine Agnes Yunghans, MS
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Nursing Philosby
Besher Gharaibeh, PhD*
Sylvia B. Heinze, PhD*
Premruetai Noimuwai, PhD*
Marilyn Schallom, PhD
Becky Sue Spencer, PhD*
Connie Stopper, PhD*
Suzanne Martin Stricklin, PhD*
Nursing Practice
Kathryn Darlene Eaton, DNP
Paula Marie Ellis, DNP*
Anoinette J. Falker, DNP
Diane Marie Hanna, DNP*
Jana L. Harris, DNP
Paula Marie Israel, DNP*
Heather Katz, DNP
Linda Kroeger, DNP
Michele Elaine Reisinger, DNP*
Sharon Lou Saim, DNP
Lorene L. Stephan, DNP
Gall L. Withers, DNP*
With Highest Distinction tacy Marie Duis
Presented by Dean Kenneth L. Audus
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
Banner Carrier Robert Lawrence Harding
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
School Marshals
Dennis W. Grauer
Joe E. Heidrick
Robert Lawrence Harding
Elijah David Hershey
Craig Andrew Penner
Alyssa Christine Potter
Brittany Charlotte Potter
Jareb Tyler Stallbaumer
Brandon David Thomas
With Distinction
William Joseph Anderson Christopher Kyle Carter Harrison Austin Perdew Jeremy Lehman Snyder Abby Rae Switzer
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGRFF
Pharmaceutical Studies inu Abi, BS
Binu Abi, BS
Linsee Michele Addington, BS
Jared Christopher Albright, BS
Amisha B. Amin, BS
William Joseph Anderson, BS
Casey Dawn Andrews, BS
Godfrey Archibong, BS
Samuel Lee Areends, BS
Rebeca Sue Arneson, BS
Jamie Lyn Arnett, BS
Mishawn Lynn Audrain, BS
Jennifer Lynn Bain, BS
Noah Lane Ball, BS
Travis Timothy Baughn, BS
Jeanne Denise Beaver, BS
David Wayne Beck, BS
Nathaniel William Beck, BS
Hannah Jo Benyshek, BS
Emily Ann Bergkamp, BS
Jacquelyn Basia Bernick, BS
Elizabeth Beverlin, BS
Sanket Hasmukbhhai Bhakta, B
Kayla Lee Bigelow, BS
Matthew Hodson Bilhimer, BS
Ali Mahmoud Bishr, BS
Bridget Lynn Blowey, BS
Maggie Marie Blowey, BS
Craig Douglas Bower, BS
Maren F. Bradley, BS
Mahala Rose Branson, BS
Jeremy Richard Braton, BS
Robert Alan Brewer, BS
A
PAGE 4D
Nicholas Stuart Britt, BS
Timothy Shawn Broaderway, BS Brittany Christine Brooks, BS Kavleigh Jo Brooks, BS
Elizabeth Anne Buchanan, BS Jessica Lynn Buchheit, BS Ginny Rijk Buchheit, BS
Alexander J. Chan, BS Bin Bin Chen, BS
Let Leu Kuen Cheung, BS Ashley Taylor Clark, BS Kristy Caroline Cluff, BS
Natalie Anne Colamarino, BS Kristen Noel Cole, BS
CHELSEA DAVID CARPENTER, BS
Rebecca Lynn Carpenter, BS
Gordon James Carroll, BS
Christopher Kyle Carter, BS
jennifer Lanette Carver, BS
Jason Cha, BS
Christopher Michael DeLeersny der, BS
John Albert Dechand, BS
Lukas Ryan Demal, BS
James William Dent, BS
Erfritz D. Dominique, BS
Eranne Gwen Daugharthy, BS
Frederick Joseph Davids, BS
Michael R. Davis, BS
Kristina Elizabeth Dozon, BS
Simona Dragieva, BS
Storm Maria Dietz, BS
Prage Nicole Ellis, BS
Clinton Gaither Ellis, BS
Lacy Don Evans, BS
Aaron Benedict Feldkamp, BS
Erika Lynn Fitzgerald, BS
Justin H. Flint, BS
Matthew J, Fortner, BS
Sarah Elizabeth Franklin, BS
Jennifer Elizabeth Freeman BS
Reema Vipin Gandhi, BS
Ge Gao, BS
Breah Michele Giefer, BS Nellie Rae Ann Gillies, BS
Heather Michelle Goertz, BS Jeffrey Luke Goodwin, BS Celine Therese Govert, BS
Celine Therese Govert, BS Erin Elizabeth Graham, BS
Adam Michael Greenhaw, BS
Julia L. Gutkin, BS
Matthew Thomas Haley, BS Robert James Handke. BS
Kyra Rebecca Hagan, BS Jodi Hageman, BS
James Hankue, BS
Jordan Elisabeth Haney, BS
Justin Jerry Haney, BS
Heather Nichole Hansen, BS Robert Lawrence Harding, BS Ashleigh Rae Harper, BS
Amber Marie Harrouff, B
Sarah Jean Hart, BS
Jason W. Heardt, BS
Hannah Elaine Holloway, BS
Bridi Lynne Holt, BS
Brani Lee Honkins, BS
Elijah David Hershey Tedra Irene Hett, BS
Benjamin James Henning, BS
Danielle Marie Herrmann, BS
Elijah David Hershey, BS
Tedra Irene Hott, BS
Jenna Noelle Hodges, BS Zane Samuel Hoffman, BS
Annelio Hoffman, BS
Bethany Ann Hoffmann, BS
Rachel Ann Hogue, BS
Travis Matthew Hilburn, BS Samuel Robert Hinton, BS Jenna Noelle Hodges, BS
Angela Marie Horsfall, BS Mara Lee Huck, BS
Douglas Carmichael Hynek, BS Nicholas Ryan Jackson, BS Brian Jang, BSI
Brian Andrew Johnson, BS Cameron Na'im Johnson, BS Amy A. Karim, BS
Alysia Brooke Kaspar, BS Donald Lee Keeney III, BS Stacy Michelle Keller. BS
Kelissa Dawn Kersenbrock, BS
Christine Daeun Kim, BS
Jordan Nolan King, BS
Nicholas Sean Kolega, BS
Jane Marie Kolich, BS
Wesley Allen Kosko. Re
Nikki Laudac Routh, BS
Nikilh Rajendra Kulkarni, BS
Brittany Lynn Lanning, BS
Tiffany Andrea Lanzrh, BS
Jennifer Kristine Larson
David John Lawn, BS
Tabia L. Leepers, BS
Megan Lynn Logan, BS
aurie Kay Lomeli, BS
tachel Louis, BS
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
Ivy Ruth Lovendahl, BS Sarah Elisabeth Luby, BS Jacob Michael Lundy, BS
Thomas Joseph Lupton, B.
Nealy Renee Lutz, BS
Sarah Lutz, BS
amme Mariah Ma, BS
carolyn Ann Magee, BS
courtney Jois Maisog, BS
Tamara Hatez Maliiah, BS
Ashley Nicole Martin, BS
Brian Robert Martin, BS
Danielle Dakota Mattox, BS
Michael Mayabi, BS
Meagan Marie Mason, BS Michael John Mason
Michelle Lynne McCullough, BS Brandon McCune, BS
Aaron Jacob McConnell, BS
Anthony Lane Merino, BS Megan Laura Meyer, BS
Jacob Walter Michalski, BS Angela Margaret Miller, BS David R, Mody, BS
GRADUATION GUIDE
Sarah Elizabeth Monson, BS Jessica Rae Mosiman, BS
Irene Wanjiku Muchori, BS
Allison Louise Mulberry, BS
Cole Mutz, BS
Jonathan Robert Myers, BS
Muhammad Rabbie Najjar, BS
Megan Renee Nance, BS
Miranda Niele Navon, BS
Anthony DeNesis Jr., BS
Kristen Vivian Nelsen, BS
Traci Renee Olberding, BS Kathryn Helen Oliver, BS
Joanna Marie Nichols, BS Andrea Geneine Nobert, BJ Andrea Olbers Obss
Margaret Linden Olmer
Marissa Anne Olson, Bn.
Daryl A. Ortgies, BS
Amber Nicole Osborn, BS Jacob Ryan Osmundson, B:
Laura Catherine Parkhurst, BS
Maitri N. Patel, BS
Raksha Sanat Patel, BS
Sweta Al帕 Patel, BS
Elizabeth Ann Pederson, BS Craig Andrew Penner, BS
Clang Andrew Peiffer, BS
Harrison Austin Perdew, BS
Mitchel Houston Puckett, BS
Sarah Elizabeth Pollock, BS
Wan To Poon, BS
Thanth Phuong Pham Nguyen, BS Kathy Phum, BS
Alyssa Christine Potter, BS Brittany Charlotte Potter, BS
Lindsay Marie Pruitt, BS Anne Marie Quinn, BS
Katherine Wassmund Rechtien, BS
Kayla Lynn Ramsey, BS Laura Jeanne Randall. BS
1
Traci Lynn Reid, BS
Alyce Estelle Reneberg, BS
Amber Lavon Rice, BS
Matthew Scott Ricke Kay Anne Riedl, BS
Matthew Joseph Rinehart, BS
Shanon Ashley Robertson, BS
Joanna Marie Robinson, BS
Joanna Marie Robinson, BS Joseph Winston Rogers, BS
Natasha Nicole Romero, BS Erin Ames Ross, BS
Cara Marie Royal, BS Sara Ann Salava, $ ^{R} $
Ryan Christopher Sayler, BS Justin Edward Schneweis, BS Mallery Leanne Schroeder, BS
Tyler James Schuessler, BS Nicholas Schulte, BS
Trenton Howard Scott,
Brent Andrew Sear, BS
Lydia Louise Seger, BS Phillip Wayne Serrano
Katelyn Joy Sluga, BS
Cody Lee Smith, BS
Philip Wayne Seymour, BS
Hetal Girishkumar Pravinbhai
Shah, BS
Jeremy Lenman Snyder, BS
Tabatha Jeanette Snyder, BS
ehannon Paige South, BS
Denver Wesley Shipman, BS
Rochelle Dawn Shoemaker, BS
Ashley Mae Shogren, BS
Ethan Roark Spicer, BS Corey Michael Srna, BS
Stephanie Taylor, BS Brandon David Thomas, BS Chad Franklin Thomas, BSc
Marissa Pearl Taylor, BS Stephanie Rene Taylor, BS
Christopher Touoboun Tsotezo,
BS
Whitney Ryanne Tabares, BS Anna P. Tarnowski, BS Andrew Ryan Tate, BS
Jeffar Richard Tobaee, BS
Idia Tokunboh, BS
Raydee Tran, BS
Quoc Cong Tran, BS
Nicholas Davidson Trombold, BShun-yan Tse, BS
Rebecca Lynn Valburg, BS
Kendra Louise Van Hercke
Grace Lauren Unruh, BS
Olivia Claire Unruh, BS
Patrick Nolan Wenger, BS
Sara Elizabeth Wetzel, BS
Thomas K. Whitson, BS
Laura Jean Wichern, BS
Sara Jane Wilhite, BS
Lucas Aaron Walker, BS Eric Mitchell Wallisch, BS
Miste Dawn Weigel, BS Kacy Leigh Wells, BS
James Coung Vo, BS Ngoc Yen T. Vo, BS
Shelby Lynn Brittney Williams,
BS
Jara Lachel Volmer, BS
Fiston K. Vuvu, BS
Amanda Rae Vander Tuig, BS Bradley Joe Viehweg, BS
Jennifer Marie Wood, BS
Anna-Maria Christina Wright,
BS
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Mexican Chemical
Thomas R. Williams, BS
Jill Margaret Winter, BS
Macey Elizabeth Wolfe, B
Dek Kei Wong, BS
Aberham Teferi Yigezu, BS Megan L. Ziegler, BS
Ruzhang Liu, MS*
Elyse Marie Pettrunak, MS* Eva Susanne Stephens, MS*
Nabil Abdulhafiz A. Alhakamy, MS*
Pharmaceutical Chemistry
Adel Ali B. Alhowyan, MS$Jessica Mae Haywood, MS$Christopher Mae Kuehl, MS$
Marlyn Dian Laksitorini, MS $ ^{*} $ Elise Topol Miller, MS $ ^{*} $
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE Medicinal Chemistry
Shuxia Zhou, MS*
Sammuel Vincent Anderegg, MS
Jay Curtis Christenson, MS
Carson Powell Padgett, MS
Ruzhang Liu, PhD*
Laura Beth Peterson, PhD*
Kassibla Elodie Dempah, PhD
*ei Hu, PhD*
Santoshanand Vijay Thakkar PhD*
Heather Ann Menchen, PhD* Liang Zhang, PhD*
Sarah J. Pyszczynski, PhD
Laura Alexa Anguiano, PhD* Chengyuan Li, PhD*
Benjamin Charles Dandurand, PD*
Shuxia Zhou, PhD*
Emily Ann Bergkamp, PI Elizabeth Beverlin, PD
Kayleigh Jo Brooks, PD Kelli A. Bryant, PD
William Joseph Anderson, PD Samuel Lee Arends, PD
Frederick Joseph Davids, PD James William Dent, PD Stacy Marie Duis, PD
Sarah Elizabeth Franklin, PD Ge Gao, PD
Al Mannhoud Bism, PD
Craig Douglas Bower, PD
Maren E. Bradley, DP
Jeffrey Luke Goodwin, PD
Jodi Hageman, PD
Scott Thomas Fehr, P Justin H. Flint, PD
Benjamin James Henning, PD Danielle Marie Herrmann, PD Elijah David Hershey,PD
Jeremy Richard Braton, PD Brittany Christine Brooks, PD
Heather Nichole Hansen, PD Robert Lawrence Harding, PD Sarah Jean Hart, PD
Travis Matthew Hilburn, PD Samuel Robert Hinton, PD Bethany Hoffmann, PD
Douglas Carmichael Hynek, PD
Brian Andrew Johnson, PD
Christine Daeun Kim, PM
Bethany Ann Hofmann, PD Angela Marie Horsfall, PD
Christopher Lee Klockau, PD Jane Marie Kolich, PD
Jordan Nolan King, PD
Anthony Lane Merino, PD
Michelle Lynne McCullough, PD Brandon McCune, PD
Angela Margaret Miller, PD Jessica Rae Mosiman, PD
Nealy Renee Lutz, PD Sarah Lutz, PD
Katlyn Marie Leslie, PD
Thomas Joseph Locker, I
Tiffany Andrea Lanzrath, PD Janelle Kristine Larson, PD
Thomas Joseph Locker, PI Laurie Kay Lomeli, PD
Irene Wanjiku Muchori, PD Muhammad Rabbie Najaj, PI
Jacob Ryan Osmundson, PD Sweta Anil Patel, PD
Danielle Dakota Mattox, PD
Lisa Linh Pham, PD
Trishna Asha Patel, PD
Kathv Pham. PD
Craig Andrew Penner, PD Harrison Austin Perdew PD
Sarah Elizabeth Pollock, PD Wan To Poon, PD
Alyssa Christine Potter, PD Brittany Charlotte Potter, PH
Allyce Estelle Reneberg, PD Joanna Marie Robinson, PD Morgan Lee Sandell, PD
Laura Jeanne Randall Traci Lynn Reid, PD
Ryan Christopher Sayler, PD
Amy Elizabeth Schrumpf, PD Tyler James Schuessler, PD
Hetal Girishkumar Pravinbhai Shah, PD
Cody Lee Smith, PD
Nicholas Andrew Smith, PD
Sadia Shae Smith, PD
Abby Rae Switzer, PD Andrew Ryan Tate, PD
Braandon David Thomas, PD Christopher Touoboun Tsotezo, PD
Dorothy Blair Taylor, PD Marissa Pearl Taylor, PD
Olivia Claire Unruh, PD
Amanda Rae Vander Tuig, PD
Kacy Leigh Wells, PD
2
Thomas K. Whitson, PD Thomas R. Williams, PD Megan L. Ziegler, PD
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WELFARE Presented by
Dean Mary Ellen Kondrat
David Roderick Strother
HONORS (TENTATIVE)
With Distinction
Marion Esther Blough Dayna Michelle Brown
Chelsea Cheyenne Harrington
CANDIDATES FOR BACHELOR'S DEGREE
Social Work
Marion Esther Blough, BSW
Dayna Michelle Brown, BSW
Krista Bundy, BSW
Andrea Christine Aldrich, BSW*
Justice Avery Almeida, BSW
Joseph Paul Arevalos, BSW*
Taylan Jewell Barker, BSW
Mary Francis Bauer, BSW
David Stephen Bell, BSW
Joseph Paul Arevalos, BSW Olivia Kaye Barker, BSW
Yessica Elizabeth Diaz, BSW Bridget Dietz, BSW*
Mariah G. Burris, BSW
Jh Rachelie Cutsaw, BSW
Sandra Maire Dexter, BSAW
Dawn Michelle Dias, BSW
Aubrey Burton, BSW
Catalyn Joy Collins, BSW
Christa Susan Cook, BSW
Mia Christine Dufek, BSW
Dani Kay Earnhart, BSW
`ennifer Louis Leanne, BSW`
Chelsie M. Ellenbecker, BSW
Ashlee Nicole Ellis, BSW
Jennifer Nicole Ensminger, BSW
Lauren Kay Escareno, BSW
Kavia Ann Falk. BSW*
Erin Lynn Frazier, BSW Alisa Marie Galvin, BSW
Thomas Patrick Grafton, BSW Clara Nell Hanson, BSW*
Chelsea Cheyenne Harrington, BSW
Kelli Ann Heathman, BSW
Doreen A. Hibbard, BSW
Megan Negin Hidek, BSW
Brianna Jean Myer Hird, BSW*
Jennifer Nicole Hodges, BSW*
Breanna Nicole Krikhart, BSW
'ennifer Claire Kucholtz, BSW
Michelle Anne Lawson-White, BSW
Sonya Marie Ledbetter, BSW
Jessica Paige Levi, BSW
Karyn Langlois, BSW
Rachel Michele Claudette Lynn, BSW
Emily Anne Manning, BSW Stephanie N. Martin, BSW
Caitlin McKenzie McClellen,
BSW
Cassandra Lyndsay McDaris,
BSW*
Ruth Ann McLeod, BSW Molly McMurtrey, BSW
Maureen Bogan Merceer, BSW
Maureen Elizabeth Mikinski,
BSW
Douglas Raimun Mowery, BSW
Carolina Navarro, BSW*
Hannah Elizabeth Pragman, BSW
Michael Paul Franklin Nobo,
BSW
Anna O'Connor, BSW
Francesca Rochelle Pack, BSW
Melissa Jane Percifield, BSW
Ashley Kristine Richard, BSW
Caitlin Elisabeth Riley, BSW*
Heather Nichole Ramey, BSW
Anastasia Dezoere Ramirez,
BSW
Kylie Jo Schwartzkopf, BSW
Jessica Rose Seitter, BSW
Pilar León, BSW
Caitlin Elisabeth Riley, BSW* Maria Azucena Rivera, BSW Emily Jane Rogers, BSW
Philip Scott Selby, BSW
Sadia Maria Simon, BSW
Autumn Marie Runyan, BSW Erin Colleen Savas, BSW
Stephanie Lynn Smiley, BSW
Amanda Elizabeth Stratman,
BSW
Michelle Lynn Tucker, BSW
Amanda Jean Vengilal, BSW
Angela Michelle Viles Shop,
BSW
Allyson Nicole Wagner, BSW
Laurie Anne White, BSW
Colleen Therese Young, BSW
CANDIDATES FOR MASTER'S DEGREE
Social Work
Monique Rachelle Atway, MSW Melissa Ann Austin, MSW
Dustin August Allen, MSW Na Keya Ashe, MSW
Anna Kathleen Bailey, MSW Emily Rosell Bairos, MSW
Elizabeth Barberena, M
Sara Ann Barlett, MSW
Brittany Bennett, MSW
Meagan Clare Bennett, MSW Janice Marie Bieker, MSW
Alexandria Renee Bohn, MSW
Sarah Dala Boyer, MSW*
Ronda Brin, MSW
Mary Jean Brogan, MSW
Julian Brown, MSW
Kimberly A. Brown, MSW Emily Budt, MSW
Samantha Eileen Bunnyfield;
MSW
Catherine Rose Butel, MSW
Cassandra Kay Byfield, MSW
Rebecca Ann Callahan, MSW*
worsley Campbell, MSW*
Amber Jo Marie Carlile, MSW Naomi Cataudella, MSW
Meghomala Chakrabarti, MSW Maggie Chiu, MSW
Brittany Nicole Cohoon, MSW Alisa Collins, MSW
Matthew Lee Combes, MSW Kendra Ruth Coop, MSW
Jane Ellen Cooper-Henderson, MSW
Michelle Coulter Morrell, MSW Angela Cowan, MSW
Elise Marie Seely Crain, MSW Mackenzie Crawford. MSW
Casey Cassandra Cross, MSW Amy J. Davis, MSW
Stephanie Davis, MSW Molly DeCoursey, MSW
Sarah Elizabeth Deets, MSW Megan Janae Dieme, MSW
Brent Timothy Doster, MSW Rachel Doull, MSW
Sarah Elaine Doyle, MSW
Krista Louise Duke Fort, MSW
Jennifer Joy Dunbart, MSW
Victoria Ann Hensley, MSW*
Emily M. Hernandez, MSW*
Michelle Diane Heston, MSW*
Britt L. Frank, MSW
Effie Dana Freeland, MSW
Mary P. Friesen, MSW
Jessica Allison Emig, MSW*
Danielle Renee Ferrer, MSW*
Emily H. Foster, MSW
Aaron Patrick Euleshain, MSW
Rachel Jane Edmonds, MSW
Gayle Ann Elliott, MSW
Amy Catherine Gray, MSW
Suzanna Laurel Green, MSW
Whitney Leigh Gudgel, MSW
Elena Grace Froelich, MSW*
Cindy Tatiana Garcia, MSW
Sdvnev George, MSW
Emily Kay Harman, MSW Taylor Anne Haun, MSW
Aimee Jonell Heyne, MSW Amy Hodgdon, MSW
Megan LaDell Hogan, MSW
Sophia Nichole Hubbell, MSW
Whitney Elaine Hutsell, MSW
Alicia Renae Johnson-Turner, MSW
Ethan Richard Kent, MSW
Lynda Kay Ketchum, MSW
Dashiell Keys, MSW
Sarah Quarrier Kidder, MSW
Ashley Christine Knedlik, MSW
Lisa L. Knight, MSW
Brittany Ann Kroeger, MSW Sheri Leigh Kuntz, MSW
Brett Longmore, MSW
Lauren S. Lydon, MSW
Diana A. Munoz-Galvan, MSW
Tammy D. Murillo, MSW
Broni J. Mariani, MSW
Mackenzie Rae Neil, MSW
Amanda Beth Newell, MSW
Kimberly M. Nitz, MSW
Amanda Marie Maloney, MSW
Dorothy Hyde Matheny, MSW
Jeffrey Scott McAdams, MSW Kevin McGuire, MSW
Kathleen Anne Mcgrath, MSW
Sarah Elizabeth Melius, MSW
Elaina Jovce Miller, MSW
Patricia Elise Pepple, MSW
Abra Marie Petrie, MSW
Kollegen Pfannentrolle, MSW
Ashley Chauntel Peaches, MSW Ariel Penner, MSW
Lacey Lee Hagner, MW
Yolanda Bueno Pierce, MSW
Kelley Pierson, MSW
Haleigh Erin Riemer, MSW
James Roberson, MSW*
Mia Rae Robinson, MSW*
Aimee Denise Ramirez, MSW
Danielle Jennifer Renyer, MSW
Daniel David Reusser II, MSW
Jessica Anne Romine, MSW
Eric Allen Sader, MSW
Toni Savage, MSW
Patricia Ann Scott, MSW
Sunnie Dreu Shedd, MSW
Katherine K. Shedd, MSW
Misty Dawn Schaefer, MSW
Katherine M. Schuler, MSW
Patricia Ann Scott, MSW
Meredith June Soukr, MSW
Ridari Jane Spruill, MSW
Debra Pomry Starr, MSW
Stacy A. Steely, MSW
Kathryn Riley Snowwater,
Mallory Simmons, MSW
Diju Skariah, MSW
Cara Lynn Smith, MSW Jill M. Smith. MSW
Sagan Alyssa Carden Smith MSW
Amanda Hathorne Solsburg;
MSW
Leah Mae Stewart, MSW Jeffrey Alan Stolz, MSW
David roderick Strother, MSW
Adrienne Leigh Struble, MSW
Steffani Kaye Tomson-DeGreeff
MSW
Roni Jean Townsend, MSW
Kathleen Carole Tripp, MSW
Theresa Elaine VandenBoom
MSW
Elizabeth Ann Vogel, MSW
Lindsey M. Voss, MSSW
Pamela Jean Wagner, MSW
Jayne Ellen Wakefield, MSW
Amy Telthorst Weisser, MSW
Erika Lynn Welch, MSW*
Michelle Williams, MSW
Samantha Ann Williams, MW
Kaei Dene Wilson, MSW*
Xael Deam Wilson, MSW
Dylan James Woods, MSW
Lena Marie Woods, MSW
Dionca Jean Wounded Head Higgins, MSW
CANDIDATES FOR DOCTORAL DEGREE
Social Work
Skye Nichole Leedahl, PhD Sarah Irene Pilgrim, PhD* John B. Thompson, PhD*
GRADUATION GUIDE
GUIDE
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PAGE 5D
Each tassel color represents a different school
Architecture, Design & Planning: Light Purple
Business: Light Brown
- Liberal Arts & Sciences: White
- Engineering: Orange
Journalism: Cardinal
- Education: Light Blue
Health Professions: Salmon
- Pharmacy: Olive Green
Music: Pink
- Nursing: Apricot
- Social Welfare: Citron
Doctoral and master's candidates have black tassels, law graduates purple ones.
KU THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
Congratulations FROM THE STUDENT SENATE to all of our amazing graduates.
Thank you for your dedication and service throughout these years!
STUDENT SENATE THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
meeting adjourned.
PAGE 6D
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
CELEBRATION
GRADUATION GUIDE
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Graduates celebrate commencement in Memorial Stadium while abiding by alcohol policies enforced by the Office of Public Safety.
Graduation alcohol policies to be enforced
NIKKI BISHT
nbisht@kansan.com
Commencement is around the corner. Of course, graduates are going to celebrate their years of hard work — especially the morning of graduation. Seniors have been known to walk from the Campanile to Memorial Stadium with champagne bottles in hand.
According to a statement issued by KU Public Affairs, "The consumption of all alcoholic and cereal malt beverages on campus is strictly prohibited during the Commencement ceremony."
Alex Allen, a senior from Overland Park, and her friends plan to bring champagne to celebrate their success.
"It would only enhance the experience of celebration by popping open a champagne bottle while with all my friends on the hill walking towards our future," Allen said. "It
would be an everlasting memory."
Because there is such a large group of students graduating, it can be hard to patrol. However Jill Jess, University spokeswoman, finds the act happening less.
"In past years, many students had begun celebrating before the afternoon ceremony," Jess said. "With the move to a morning time, we did see fewer students with alcohol. The situation actually
"Our society tends to
be aware of any punishment.
"Our society tends to include alcohol in celebrations. However, alcohol is not allowed on campus."
"Most graduates are cooperative if officials ask them to turn over alcohol or other prohibited containers," Jess said. "Anyone found to be consuming these will be asked
seems to be resolving itself to some degree with the change to a morning ceremony."
To prevent drinking, the Office of Public Safety will be stricter at commencement, and students who choose to bring champagne should
JILL JESS University Spokeswoman
to pour them out or give them to KU officials. As long as they aren't causing other problems, graduates shouldn't face consequences."
much.
Allen does not think bringing alcohol is bad as long as it does not disturb too
"It is not to hurt anyone or interfere with anyone else's celebration, so I do not see a problem with nor understand why people would" Allen said. "Liquor would be different, but champagne is a symbol of
celebration in our culture. I'm not trying to cause trouble or get into trouble. I just want to have a good time."
Officials recommend that graduates should avoid bringing alcohol altogether and enjoy their accomplishments with friends and family.
"Our society tends to include alcohol in celebrations," Jess said. "However, alcohol is not allowed on campus. There is plenty of time for responsible celebrations that include alcohol, if desired, outside of the commencement proceedings. Commencement is a celebration, and we anticipate a wonderful day and a festive mood on campus. We hope our graduates celebrate safely, and we congratulate them on the hard work they have accomplished during their time at KU."
Edited by Taylor Lewis
SUMMER 2017
DANIEL PALEN/KANSAN
Although hundreds of students traditionally walk down the hill with an alcoholic beverage, the consumption of alcohol is still strictly prohibited.
CLASS OF 2013!
Your graduation gift is a one-year membership in the KU Alumni Association your connection to all things KU! Compliments of the KU Alumni Association and KU Endowment
KU
- Your alumni membership is effective June 1,2013 - May 31,2014
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
The University of Kansas
- To take full advantage of your benefits you must have a current mailing and email address (not a ku.edu address) on file with the KU Alumni Association
- Email kualumni@kualumni.org or call 785-864-4760 to update your mailing and email addresses
KU
ENDOWMENT
The University of Kansas
Member benefits
- Access to 300,000 Jayhawk alumni through
- 10% discount at KU Bookstores (in store and online)
- Online career center
- our online directory to build your network
- Six issues of Kansas Alumni magazine
- Access to alumni chapters throughout the state, across the country and around the world
- Alumni news, event invitations and announcements
Watch your email for a welcome message from the KU Alumni Association it will include your official electronic membership card
- Invitations to alumni events
Visit www.kualumni.org to learn more about the KU Alumni Association. Questions? Call 785-864-4760.
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY
2013
summer session
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REGISTER NOW! First classes start May 28
Diverse Offerings Choose from over 250 classes
Convenient and Flexible 4-,5- and 8-week sessions
- Students from metro-area Kansas * counties pay in-state tuition.
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Everything you need to enroll is at:
umkc.edu/summersession
UMKC
Kansas City Strong
UNIVERSITY PROUD
GRADUATION GUIDE
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PAGE 7D
/KANSCAM
Y
COMMENCEMENT
Environmental activist to speak at 2013 ceremony
ELLY GRIMM
egrimm@kansan.com
The tradition of graduation will continue for its 141st year on Sunday, May 19 at Memorial Stadium Beginning at 10:30 a.m.
The graduates will assemble on Memorial Drive at 10 a.m. followed by the introduction of the processional near the campanile. In Memorial Stadium, graduates will walk through a walkway surrounded by faculty members. Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little will recognize and present degrees to professional schools collective and the ceremony will conclude with everyone singing "Crimson and the Blue."
This year's commencement speaker is Wes Jackson, who bounded an agricultural development organization the Land Institute in 1976 and is a candidate for a Doctor of Science for notable contributions to the environment.
He is one of three honorary degree recipients.
According to the commencement website, he has received the Pew Conservation Scholars award; a MacArthur Fellowship; the Right
"Wes is an excellent role model... His experience should inspire all of our graduates..."
BERNADETTE GRAY-LITTLE Chancellor
Livelihood Award, given for "outstanding vision and work on behalf of our planet and its people"; and the Louis Bromfield Award, as well as the Distinguished Service Award and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Distinguished Alumni Awards from the University.
The other two 2013 honorary degree recipients are Karole Armitage (Doctor of Arts) for notable contributions to dance and choreography and Wendell Castle (Doctor of Arts) for notable contributions to art, design and studio crafts.
"Wes is an excellent role model for our graduates," said Gray-Little in a quote from the KU Commencement website. "After earning a master's degree from KU, he has gone on to become a leader in the drive to ensure we fulfill our role as stewards of the earth. His experience should inspire all of our graduates to use their talents for the public good."
There will be a live stream of the commencement that will start shortly before the ceremony.
Edited by Taylor Lewis
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PAGE 8D
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
GRADUATION GUIDE
---
TECHNOLOGY
Save important emails before losing access
KAYLA BANZET
kbanzet@kansan.com
For the last four years, students have been able to access their University email account to stay in contact with professors and students. However, once a student graduates, they lose access to their email.
Students can no longer access their University email account 210 days after they are no longer enrolled at the University. This also includes Hawk Drive and personal
websites hosted by the University, according to KU Information Technology.
It is essential to get all important information and messages off of the account before the deadline expires. Once the email account expires, students will no longer be able to access their files. Years of hard work could potentially be lost if the proper steps are not followed. For step-by-step instructions on how to save or move University e-mail messages, visit kuit.service-now.com. This website provides instructions on how to archive emails and forward emails.
Make sure to transfer files from the Hawk Drive to a local drive or storage media. Enroll and Pay can be accessed for tax purposes and transcript requests. Technology questions can be answered after a student graduates, according to KU Information Technology. For questions, call 785-864-8080 or follow KU IT on Facebook and Twitter.
KU Test Prep GRE GMAT LSAT Use your smartphone and snap this for an additional $50 discount! Need a test score for grad school? Improve your results with a KU Test Prep course. testprepku.edu
9143602875
Schedule of Events
CENTER FOR GLOBAL &
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES GRADUATION
RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Friday, May 10. 2013 at 2 p.m.
Kansas Union, Malott Room
DINNER FOR SCHOOL OF MEDICINE GRADUATES
Tuesday, May 14, 2013 at 6 p.m.
InterContinental Hotel, 401 Ward
Parkway, Kansas City, MO 64112
LESD!AN, GAY, BIGEXUAL,
TRANSGENDER, & QUEER (LGBTQ)
CENTER CENTER, 30 ANNUAL
LAVENDER GRADUATION
Thursday, May 16, 2013 at 7 p.m.
Kansas Union, Alderston Auditorium
FRIDAY,MAY 17,2013
RECOGNITION CEREMONY FOR GRADUATING INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Kansas Union, Woodruff Auditorium at 1 p.m.
at 1 p.m.
A reception will be held afterward in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WELFARE
RECOGNITION FOR BACHELOR'S OF
SOCIAL WELFARE CANDIDATES
Lied Center at 1 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNICATION
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNICATION
STUDIES UNDERGRADUATE
RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Kansas Union, Woodruff Auditorium at
3:30 p.m.
Reception follows in Big 12 Room,
Kansas Union.
MASTER'S OF SOCIAL WORK
CANDIDATES AND RECOGNITION OF
DOCTOR OF PHILOSPHY CANDIDATES
Lied Center at 3:30 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF SOCILOGY
RECOGNITION FOR SOCIOLOGY
MAJORS
MIDDLE Kansas Union, Kansas Room at 4 p.m. Reception follows in the Malott Room, Kansas Union.
RECEPTION: DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH Policy and Management, Department of Biostatistics, and Departments of Preventive Medicine/Public Health: Kansas City and Wichita KU Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Blvd
4024 Varnes Center at 4 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY
UNDERGRADUATE RECOGNITION
CEREMONY
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall at 4 p.m.
POLITICAL SCIENCE GRADUATION CEREMONY
Kansas Union, Woodruff Auditorium at 6 p.m.
Reception follows in Big 12 Room Kansas Union.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS MASTER'S DEGREE HOODING/DOCTORAL RECONOGNITION CEREMONY Lied Center at 6 p.m.
ENGLISH HONORS RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Kansas Union Ballroom at 6:30 p.m.
SCHOOL OF THE ARTS CONVOCATION
RECOGNITION CEREMONY FOR
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE
STUDENTS
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
at 6:30 p.m.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
UNDERGRADUATE RECOGNITION
CEREMONY
Lied Center at 8:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, MAY 18, 2013
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING RECOGNITION AND AWARDS CEREMONY Allen Fieldhouse at 8 a.m.
UNIVERSITY STUDENT AWARDS
RECEPTION
Kansas Union, Kansas Room at 8:30
a.m.
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM GRADUATE
RECOGNITION & MASTER'S DEGREE
HOODING CEREMONY
Lied Center at 8:30 a.m.
Reception follows on the lawn of
Stauffer-Flint Hall
.PHI BETA KAPPA INITIATION Kansas Union, Woodruff Auditorium at 8:30 a.m.
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
GRADUATION CEREMONY
ECM Center, 1204 Oread Ave at 9 a.m.
SCHOOL OF HEALTH PROFESSIONS
RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall,
600 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kan.
at 9 a.m.
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES DISTINCTION / HIGHEST DISTINCTION & MASTERS HOODING Lied Center at 10:30 a.m. Please note: The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences does not have a general ceremony for all undergraduate students. You are encouraged to participate in the rich tradition of KU Commencement on Sunday, May 19 at 10:30 a.m., and to check with your major department for other events
SCHOOL OF MUSIC GRADUATION CEREMONY
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION CONVOCATION
Allen Fieldhouse at 10:30 a.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall at 10:30 a.m.
RUSSIAN, EAST EUROPEAN AND EURASIAN STUDIES GRADUATION & AWARDS RECEPTION
Bailey Hall, Room 318 at 11 a.m.
SCHOOL OF NURSING RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall,
600 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kan. at
11:30 a.m.
DEPARTMENT OF APPLIED BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE GRADUATION CEREMONY Kansas Union Ballroom at noon
Kansas Union Ballroom at noon Reception follows in the Ballroom Parlors, Kansas Union.
CENTER FOR GLOBAL &
CENTER FOR GLOBAL &
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
INTERAGENCY MASTER'S PROGRAM
GRADUATION RECEPTION
Kansas Union, Malott Room at noon
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
RECOGNITION PROGRAM
RECOGNITION PROGRAM
Kansas Union, Woodruff Auditorium
at 1 p.m.
Reception follows in Alderson
Auditorium, Kansas Union.
SCHOOL OF LAW HOODING CEREMONY
Lied Center at 1 p.m.
Reception follows in Green Hall.
SPEECH-LANGUAGE-HEARING/
INTERCAMPUS PROGRAM IN
COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE
RECOGNITION CEREMONY
Budig Hall. Room 120 at 1 p.m.
Reception follows on Wescoe Hall
Patio.
DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS COMMENCEMENT RECEPTION Blake Hall, Room 114 1 a p. m.
JOINT HODDING CEREMONY FOR MASTER OF HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION, MASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH, MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CLINICAL RESEARCH, AND MASTER OF SCIENCE IN BIostatistics KU Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Blvd.
Student Center at 1 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING & COMPUTER DESIGN
OPEN HOUSE
Electrical Engineering in 3005 Eaton Computer Engineering in 3001 Eaton Computer Science in 2060 Eaton Eaton Hall at 1 p.m.
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY SENIOR
RECOGNITION AND PHARMACY
PHARM.D. HOODING CEREMONY
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
at 1 p.m.
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS
GRADUATION CELEBRATION
Snow Hall, Room 120 at 2 p.m.
DOCTORAL HOODING CEREMONY Lied Center at 3:30 p.m.
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE, DESIGN &
PLANNING RECONGIZATION CEREMONY
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
at 3:30 p.m.
Tickets are required.
OFFICE OF MULTICULTURAL AFFAIRS
GRADUATION BANQUET
Kansas Union, Kansas Room at 5 p.m.
MULTICULTURAL SCHOLARS
PROGRAMS GRADUATION BANQUET
Kansas Union Ballroom at 6 p.m.
PROGRAM FOR GRADUATING SENIORS
WHO HAVE COMPLETED THE
UNIVERSITY HONORS PROGRAM
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
at 6 p.m.
Budig Hall, Room 120 at 7 p.m.
UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY PROGRAM
RECOGNITION
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE HOODING AND AWARDS
Lied Center at 7:30 p.m.
COMMENCEMENT
Sunday, May 19, 2013 at 10:30 a.m.
Memorial Stadium
MONDAY, MAY 20, 2013
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GRADUATION GUIDE
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
PAGE 9D
ESIGN &
MEMORY
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TRAVIS YOUNG/KANSAN
I am a graduate of the University of New York at Manhattan. I have earned a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration from the University of New York at Manhattan and a Master's degree in Business Administration from the University of New York at Manhattan. I am also a member of the Professional Football Association (FIFA) and the American Football Conference (ACC). I play as a defensive back for the Arizona Cardinals.
BE sure to choose your outfit accordingly. Pockets are always a good idea for holding phones, cameras and keys during the walk down the Hill.
Sensible shoes, simple accessories key for walk
STYLE
LAKEN RAPIER
lrapier@kansan.com
Graduation will be filled with countless thank yous, congratulations, champagne toasts and, of course, pictures. In order to stand out from the generic Instagram or Facebook posts, here are a few secrets to look your best on the big day.
A few essential items everyone attending commencement will need — in addition to a camera, of course — are sunglasses, sunblock and comfortable shoes.
Footwear for males is as straight-forward as it gets. The most important detail for men to keep in mind when selecting graduation shoes is to ensure the shoes match their belts.
However, when it comes to shoes for women, the options are endless. Keep in mind comfort when selecting footwear to jazz up the traditional black gown. Not all shoes are created equally, especially when it comes to strutting your stuff through the Campanile and down the hill. The obvious choice is sandals or flats, but if you are looking for added height, I would suggest wedges. Tripping wouldn't be the best memory to take from graduation.
Contrary to popular belief, you do have to wear something under your gown - regardless of how it is or how late you wake up. The gowns are black, but they are also extremely thin and somewhat transparent.
For the boys wanting to dress to the nines to impress Mom and Grandma, consider wearing a bow tie. They are the latest fashion trend to hit Kansas. Bowties offer a fun alternative to the traditional tie and add a nice pop of color. For those who will be making a fashion statement in another way, a men's basketball jersey is a popular choice and will keep you from getting too hot.
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Ladies, ditch the traditional white summer dress and flaunt a colorful sundress. Select a timeless statement dress that you will still love for years to come when you're looking at pictures.
For accessories, keep it simple. Between the hat, tassel and sunglasses, a lot will be going on. Opt for simple studs or small earrings
— bigger isn't always better. The same applies for necklaces. There is no need to walk down the hill with a Flavor-Flav sized necklace hanging from your neck. Select a simple necklace that doesn't take away from your dress.
Another important detail to look for in a dress, or any graduation outfit for that matter, is pockets. Regardless of how dressed-up
you choose to get for the big day,
remember to pick an outfit with pockets.
Your keys, camera and phone will need a home while you walk down the hill.
When pulling together your final, cohesive look, keep hair in mind. Hat hair is inevitable after wearing the grad cap all morning and afternoon. Either keep in mind a hat-friendly hairstyle or decorate your cap to be something you won't mind wearing all day.
Last but not least, consider this your official reminder to get your gown pressed, or at the least spritz it with a little wrinkle release.
Edited by Sarah McCabe
10
A
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PRESENTED BY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PHOTO BY TYLER ROSTE
PAGE 10D
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for tu it
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Page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 13, 2013
Finals Guide
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief Hannah Wise Special section editor Laken Rapier
Associate special section editor Kayla Banzet
Writers
Kelsey Barrett
Nikki Bisht
Elly Grimm
Emma LeGault
Megan Lucas
General manager and news advisor Malcolm Gibson
Cover Photo Illustration By Travis Young
Designer
Hannah Wise
Table of Contents
PUZZLE. 4
ADDERALL. 5-6
PUZZLE. 7
COFFEE. 8
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HEALTH. 13
STRESS RELIEF. 14
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Page 3
Letter from the Editor
Finals, woof. I'm not sure what to say about finals besides that they suck and rock at the same time. Who doesn't love rekindling their flame with Mountain Dew at 2 a.m. in the stacks at Club Shutz? That feeling, you know, when you get so tired everything becomes funny, that's my favorite.
I won't waste your time, or mine, telling you the key to a successful finals week because there is no secret. Everyone has different studying habits and ways of learning. This is your time to buckle down and do work. So find a quiet place, grab a bottle of water and your favorite caffeinated beverage, put your headphones in and do your best to avoid the deadly distractions of social media.
It's a time to make more notecards than necessary and get less sleep than required. Stop complaining about finals, it won't make them easier. Don't dramatize your final essay or response paper, it won't make it shorter.
This is your last week in Lawrence with all your friends, make the most of it. Go have brunch with your friends, take a walk by Potter's Lake, play hide-n-seek in the stacks. Don't let finals take over your insanity, just your sleep.
Laken Rapier
Special Sections Editor
Here are some motivational sayings to carry around throughout the week. If these don't keep your spirits up, nothing will.
"Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."
Ferris, from Ferris Bueller's Day Off
"A creative man is motivated by the desire to achieve, not by the desire to beat others."
Ayn Rand
"Be miserable. Or motivate yourself. Whatever has to be done, it's always your choice."
Wayne Dyer
Victor Kiam
"Even if you fall on your face, you're still moving forward."
"Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome."
Booker T. Washington
"Get busy livin', or get busy dyin'." Tim Robbins as Andy Dufresne in "The Shawshank Redemption"
"The flower that blooms in adversity is the most rare and beautiful of all." Pat Morita as The Emperor in "Mulan"
"Laughter through tears is my favorite emotion."
Dolly Parton as Truvy in "Steel Magnolias"
"Oh yes, the past can hurt. But you can either run from it, or learn from it."
Rafiki, from The Lion King
Do, or do not. There is no "try".
— Yoda
(from The Empire Strikes Back)
And I'll leave you with this, "just keep swimming."
— Finding Nemo
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Page 5
ALL ABOUT ADDERALL
Going to chemical lengths to study
EMMA LEGAULT
elegault@kansan.com
The hottest new study buddy comes in the form of a small, circular peach-colored pill.
Meet Adderall: performance enhancement for your brain.
The drug, commonly prescribed for those with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), is making its way into the purses and desk drawers of those who don't have prescriptions; they think it will boost focus and concentration, ultimately resulting in better grades and final exam scores.
It's becoming a social norm, often referenced on social media. In a study conducted from Nov. 2011 to May 2012, researchers at Brigham Young University found that the number of times the term "Adderall" appeared in tweets peaked on Dec. 13 with 2,813 and on April 30 with 2,207—right around final exams.
necessity to get through the day. When Hillary Podrebarac isn't on her medication, she feels distracted, unmotivated, fidgety and has an impulse to blurt out whatever thought pops into her head.
Podrebac, a freshman from Lawrence, was diagnosed with ADHD in November. In high school, she was known for being a good, but rather talkative student.
"People would make jokes out about it, but I was unable to stop even though I knew I would get in trouble," she said.
There were more than 200,000 tweets involving Adderall over the course of the six-month period. Examples of these tweets included "adderall + school = winning," "Aderall stockpile for finals," and "We would all graduate with a 4.0 if adderall was sold over the counter."
When she walked into a packed lecture in Budig 120 for the first time, she realized that she wouldn't have a string of support telling pay attention in the room of more than 500 students. She sought the help of her doctor and a therapist.
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For students with ADHD, the drug is a
"It made me feel really stupid," she said. "As soon as I was on the medication and started doing better in my classes, I realized, OK I'm not stupid. I just wasn't able to focus."
TARA BRYANT/KANSAN
During finals, many students abuse the prescription drug Adderall to enhance their focus while studying so they can get better grades on their tests.
When she takes her medication (Vyvanse, another prescription drug for ADHD, during the day and Adderall in the evening) Podrebarac is notably more productive and confident.
Podrebarac has always wanted to work in the medical field, so when her grades in chemistry and biology — both large lecture classes
— were slipping, she had no back up plan.
"I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I'm going to have to reevaluate my life. What do I want to be?'
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Page 6
ADDERALL FROM PAGE 5
Monday, May 13, 2013
Since being on the medication and regaining my confidence and realizing I can do it, it's made me stay with what I really want to do," she said.
If she's having a focused day or if she doesn't have homework, Podrebarac doesn't always take her nighttime Adderall. A friend suggested she sell her excess medication during finals last semester. Podrebarac declined, her reasoning being it can actually have an opposite effect on people who don't have ADHD.
"It just kind of seems like a silly thing to me," she said. "There are other alternatives that are actually going to make you feel better."
When Michelle Nguyen, a freshman from Wichita, is approached to sell her prescribed Adderall, she said it frustrates her.
Finals Guide
"I'm not offended, but it's annoying," she said. "If someone knows you take it, they come at you."
Nguyen said people who have never talked to her before will approach her to buy her Adderall.
She thinks the drug's effect on these students is more psychological than physical.
"I feel like they do have the ability to study, they use Addlerall as an excuse," she said.
A student, who wished to remain anonymous, said he has used the drug during finals in the past to buckle down and keep himself from being distracted.
He said he felt extra focused and driven to do his best, but as an already focused student
it wasn't something he needed. It was more of an experiment. Like Nguyen, he found it to be more of a placebo effect.
"I don't feel like I see this incredible jump in abilities or anything like that," he said. "If anything, taking it just puts you in the right mind set to get that sort of work done. That's the way I look at it."
And like many others, he doesn't have a prescription. Outside connections and friends of friends are his hookup. The prices depend on dosage: a 10 or 20 milligram tablet typically costs two dollars, and a 30 milligram tablet is usually five dollars.
Jordan Razook, a freshman from Wichita, who formerly sold pills from his prescription, said the price depends on familiarity.
"If they want it and they're going to pay me for it, I'll provide it," he said. "If I know the person, I'll sell it pretty cheap, maybe like two or three bucks, but if they didn't know me, like five bucks."
Razook stopped getting refills about a year ago because it made him feel "tweaks"
He said he knows people who use their prescriptions mostly to sell the pills for the extra cash.
"I know people who would sell the majority of their prescription, they make a lot of money off of it actually," he said. "And you can use that to buy more when your prescription runs out."
According to StreetRx.com, a website that displays prices of recent illegal drug transactions by location and type of drug, prices in Kansas for Adderall in the week of May 6
ranged from a "reasonable" $5 for a 30 mg pill to a $79 transaction for 20 mg.
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The man who granted anonymity said acing an exam while on Vyvanse or Adderall can be justifiable.
"You're still sitting there, you're still putting in all the hours and all the work. You're just doing it under the influence of a drug that makes it easier" he said. "You're not being dishonest in any way. You're just going about it a different way."
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In his opinion, if someone is interested in the drug they should try it.
The reality is that the underground market for Adderall is thriving on campus, and the situation isn't unique to the University.
"It's not like people are testing you to see if you've taken it. It's not that big of a deal right now. The consequences don't outweigh the means."
— Edited by Tara Bryant
"It just goes to show you that whenever there's a large gathering of college-age kids that have all this work to do," he said. "Adderall is going to be involved no matter where you are."
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Coffee is not always the answer during finals week. It is sometimes best to find alternatives to caffeine.
Mixing coffee with many energy drinks and other stimulants not effective
MEGAN LUCAS
mlucas@kansan.com
Before grabbing an energy drink or cup of coffee during finals week, consider side effects and healthier alternatives.
Dustin Rowe a senior from Sedgewick, normally consumes about two cans of Dr. Pepper a day. His intake typically triples during finals week.
Rowe began drinking soda during college.
"This past semester I have drank more pop than I have my whole time in school," Rowe said. "It keeps me awake and makes me focus."
Chelsea Butler, a freshman from Olathe drinks around two to three cans of Diet Coke a day, along with coffee. During finals week, that amount of Diet Coke increases to three to four cups.
According to Health Educator Liz Kocon,
"I started drinking caffeine my junior year of high school because of my AP classes and debate," Butler said. "It relieves my stress and keeps me awake."
coffee beans are a natural source of caffeine and can be beneficial. Kocon recommended going to coffees and teas for a caffeine source.
"Stay away from energy drinks, because they are artificial," Kocon said. "When it comes to coffee, eight to 12 ounces a day is fine—one to two cups a day. If you are ordering a fattening drink, have skim milk and no whipped cream."
Consuming a large amount of caffeine can increase the heart rates and cause vomiting and shakes. Mixing caffeine with stimulants such as Adderall and a lack of sleep can be dangerous.
"Caffeine has the same affects as Adderall," Kocon said. "Your body temperature rises, and it can feel like you are about to pass out."
Kocon suggested receiving protein for energy from meats, eggs and nuts, along with greens and fish in order to stay awake.
"Our college population has a lack of sleep due to late nights and early mornings," Kocon said. "Caffeine is a way to function."
Edited by Elise Reuter
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BYE-BYE LIBRARY
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Think outside the box for study spots
Clark Waldon, a senior from Kansas City, studies for a final at Java Break on Mass. Street. Now that finals week has arrived students will start flocking to local cafes to begin their studying.
NIKKI BISHT
nbisht@kansan.com
TYLER ROSTF/KANSAN
Finals are just around the corner. Stress levels are most highly high and the one thing on students' minds is studying to do well. But studying does not have to take place at the library. After all, finals week at the University's most popular libraries-Anschutz and Watson - will be cramped, filled with tension, and unexciting.
To change up your study spots this final season, try some different locations off campus. Lawrence has a variety of places that offer Wi-Fi, coffee, special drinks, food, and different environment to mix it up rather than being inside a library. Here are a few places you can visit during final week.
Alchemy Coffee, a new local business located on the corner of 19th and Massachusetts Streets. Benjamin Farmer, owner of Alchemy Coffee, founded his shop just six weeks ago. You can find everything from quality hot or iced coffee and tea to biscotti and different kinds of cookies.
"I like to keep it (the coffee supply) small and focused and good quality, because that's what people come back for," Farmer said. "The coffee is smooth, flavorful, and tastes good."
During the finals week, Farmer is offering a 25 percent discount off Cold Brew drinks to any who comes in with a student ID. Additionally Alchemy Coffee will be open until 10 p.m., instead of the usual 8 p.m.
Many students are drawn to Java Break located 7th Street, adjacent Massachusetts Street. It is open 24/7; the employees pull all-nighters for the customers. Java Break's more popular item is the cereal bar, and the variety of drinks.
"I like to study at Java Break during finals because it's cozy and there's good Chai," said Meghan Palmer, a sophomore from Lenexa. "The atmosphere at Java is eclectic. Each room has a bit of a different feel. I always get a dirty chai tea with less milk. They have great pastries as well."
A more well-known coffee shop is Starbucks, located on corner of 7th and Massachusetts Street. Starbucks is known for its fancy frozen drinks, hot coffee, and many more items on the menu.
Starbucks employee Hannah Temple has noticed the extra business that pick up during finals week.
"Before finals week and during, there are a lot more people in here asking for drinks with more caffeine or asking for extra shots (of
espresso)," Temple said.
Finals week is chaotic and unpleasant, but get off campus to study. Try to study at one of these places or discover a place you've never been to.
Lawrence does have many local businesses to study at.
Edited by Dylan Lysen
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WE DELIVER
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MINSKYS.COM LAWRENCE 785-856-5252 DINE IN CARRY OUT DELIVERY
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Minsky's CAFE & BAR PIZZA
PURCHASE A Large Gourmet Pizza FOR THE PRICE OF A Medium Gourmet Pizza
DINE IN, CARRY OUT OR DELIVER. NO EXPRESS.
VALID ONLY AT MINSKYS' LAWRENCE LOCATION.
NOT VALID WITH OTHER PRIMENTS (BOOBS, OR PACKAGE DEALS).
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Finals Guide
Monday, May 13,2013
Page 13
BRAIN FOOD
Healthy food vital for success
KELSEY BARRETT
kbarrett@kansan.com
College students seem to be pressed for time year-round, and adding final exams, projects and essays only pushes their limits. The last few weeks of the semester tend to be demanding on students regarding health and mental performance. Many students resort to junk food or fast food for its convenience, but what they might not consider is how it could affect their performance in the classroom.
Chat online with a health consultant
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According to Student Health 101, it is important to avoid foods containing saturated fat, processed flours, preservatives and artificial sugars and coloring. Your body designates more energy into breaking down these substances, leaving less energy for brain function. Less energy for brain function means lower performance on final exams. They also recommend avoiding prepared foods because they only provide empty calories and cause a spike in blood sugar, followed by the infamous crash.
Caffeine is another resource many students resort to in order to get their energy fix. It is a stimulant found in many soft drinks, coffee and energy drinks. However, it is only a temporary fix. According to Student Health 101, fatigue can only truly be fixed by getting more sleep. Caffeine can be addictive, dehydrate the body and cause a dangerous elevation in heart rate and blood pressure. Dark chocolate can be used as a substitute, as it helps raise energy while having a lower fat content than other chocolates, the site says.
Eating a well-balanced breakfast before an
Student Health 101 encourages students to focus on consuming energizing foods like fruits, vegetables and meals prepared at home. When going out to eat or picking up fast food essential vitamins and minerals are lost. A lack of those nutrients can cause a significant change in mood, which could ultimately affect study patterns. The key to getting the most out of food is to gravitate towards fresh, unprocessed and simply prepared meals, according to the site.
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exam, or any day, is almost just as important as the act of studying. Lani Banner, a nutritional health coach with Natural Grocers, said. Missing morning meals reduces students' ability to learn and concentrate effectively. A quality breakfast should include a protein, a healthy fat and several servings of fruits and vegetables, Banner said. Waking up earlier, providing options, and preparing meals or snacks ahead of time are all habits that can help ensure a valuable start to the day, Banner said.
Student Health 101 provides some tips to help students stay on track during hectic times. The main thing is to set aside time to plan out meals and prepare some in advance. Keep longlasting items on hand like pasta and rice. It also helps to get your friends involved. To alleviate some of the time consumption of cooking, assign someone to make dinner each night and share among friends.
For further information and tips to stay healthy to increase your performance during finals week and other busy times, subscribe to the Student Health 101 newsletter by providing your email at http://readsh101.com/. You can also chat with a health coach online for free through the Natural Grocers website: http://www.naturalgrocers.com/nutrition/ask-a-question.
Edited by Ashleigh Tidwell
ERIN BREMER/KANSAN
Students are opting for nutritional meals including fresh fruits and vegetables in their daily dining routines. Maintaining a healthy diet on campus is tough, but many dining areas provide healthy meal options.
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Page 14
Finals Guide
Monday, May 13, 2013
Blowing off STEAM
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
BURGE MOLLIN/ARANSAN Relieve some stress and play outside. Whether that be riding your bike with friends or simply taking a walk on campus, exercising is an important part of being successful during finals week.
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egrimm@kansan.com
During finals week, students tend to get stressed out with all the tests to study for and projects to complete. However, there are several ways to combat this stress throughout the week:
GET EXERCISE
There are free classes offered for students at the Ambler Recreation Center, including Powerstep, Pilates, Yoga, Yogilates and Turbo Kick.
"It's a chance for the students to get out of their study corners or wherever they're studying to come take a break, because exercise has helped individuals take a break and get out and socialize," said Ben Saathoff, the assistant director of fitness/wellness at the rec center. All classes are available to all students, and the full schedule is available through recreation.ku.edu.
Students also have their own exercise regimens, some may include simply taking a walk to clear the mind, which is what Jordan Kane, a sophomore from Overland Park, does.
"It helps take my mind off of stuff and gives my brain a chance to energize" she said.
STUDY BREAKS
Another way that students can relieve stress is by taking study breaks. Emma Bader, a sophomore from Lawrence, says they help her keep calm throughout the week.
Students usually find time to relax with friends throughout the week.
FINDING FRIENDS
"They help me feel more refreshed, and then I understand the material better and don't feel so overloaded," she said.
"We meet up, hang out and just relax," said Damion Watson, a freshman from Kansas City, Mo. "It helps take my mind off my tests."
Ameenah Johnson, a freshman from Kansas City, Kan., adds to this, saying that she and her friends also listen to music while they hang out
"It relieves stress and makes it easier for me to study," she said.
VIDEO GAMES
For gamers on campus like Milton Farm, a freshman from Marino Valley, Calif., video games can be a release.
"I can let out my stress and frustration at the game I'm playing in a controlled environment," he said.
CATCHING UP ON INTERNET TV
Some students also relieve stress by catching up with their favorite shows online. Tiana Charles, a freshman from St. Louis, says one of her favorite online shows is "Worldstar Hip Hop."
"It makes me laugh and helps relieve the stress I have," she said.
COOKING CLASSES
If you're a chef in the making, why not take a cooking class? The Merc, located on 9th and Iowa, has a couple of classes during finals week that students can attend for $20 each.
"It's a fun evening to put stress and daily life aside, and it's a setting where you won't be thinking about other stuff," said Anita Sampat, class manager at The Merc.
Edited by Alyssa Scott
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PAGE 10D
GRADUATION GUIDE
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013
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Page 16
Monday, May 13, 2013
Finals Guide
Color me, Jay!
After finals
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