THE UNIVERSITY DAILY & ANSAN S sports kansan.com Thursday, September 15, 2011 ONE BUT NOT YET DONE: HENRY AND SELBY The two guards are profiled as part of a series for the upcoming Legends of the Phog game PAGE 8 BESHEARS PROVES HE'S PAST HIS ROUGH BEGINNINGS PAGE 6 COMMENTARY COLOMBIAN CRAFTINESS Te up Mi ence and that in State are c bership th to say that the Big 12 toes of co house foe Olkala stability, like the Phem— all its anit fresh start Network terrestor and if Tex Texas Tee- bling an in Go wes Its real riv The Big mate oph Kansas St pen. Kans ner Horace Go was to team up Kansas team up to the P. Larry Sco 12 makes getting the markets, team with perennial Missouri; nations be that, then, viable able expand te of the phleas fans hate all imagly I've said it rivalries the laging and gotten. From a nonservice more sen State alon high school Arizona, while Bill a Novem- isn't that b And if does Kan be in a co feed. Or CONTACT KANSAS IN HEAT // MANUAL PLEASURE > Tackling the sticky world of relationships KJJK caller asks: I'm a virgin and I do masturbate. I easily orgasm by stimulating my clitoris with a vibrator. However, when I masturbate vaginally, I can't. I have a standard vibrator. Am I not angling it correctly? Is it not long enough? I do feel some pressure but I don't come close to having an orgasm. Please help me! Michelle answers: Let me start by congratulating you on engaging in self-discovery! Taking time to explore your body is key in the recipe for sexual success. I'm sure you're curious about the g-spot orgasm. This spot is typically located about two inches inside the vagina, above the pelvic bone. Masturbating in a back-and-forth motion with a straight vibrator won't stimulate your g-spot. Try this: 1. With your palm down, insert two fingers inside your vagina. Hook them towards your pelvis to locate the soft, rounded area just above your pelvic bone. Michelle MacBain is a graduate student from Kansas City. She studied sexuality, psychology and communication studies at KU and The University of Amsterdam. 2. Round your fingers in a "come here" motion to stimulate this area. You'll start to feel a tingling sensation. This means you hit the spot 3. Relax and enjoy. If you try for the g-spot orgasm and don't achieve climax, don't sweat it. MICHELLE MACBAIN ABOUT ME: Hometown:Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Year:Freshman Major:Photomedia Interested in:Women CATCH OF THE WEEK // DANIEL PRIOLEAU Contributed photo > A weekly peek at a fish in the KU sea. Hobbies: I like playing on X-box, going to movies and parties with friends, and watching "Burn Notice," "White Collar," "Covert Affairs," and "Jersey Shore." Turn-ons: A girl with a nice smile and an athletic body. An accent is kind of cute, too. Turn-offs: Stuck-up girls and smokers How to win my heart: If she is an all-around cool person, is nice to everyone and into sports Also, I like girls who can be kind of a dork sometimes and do funny stuff that makes me laugh. I would describe myself as: Laid-back and dorky. Most embarrassing moment: My friend and I were at McDonald's, and there were these two girls in front of us. I accidentally dumped my fries in my lap. Celebrity crush: Bevoncé. Favorite quote:"Push yourself to the limit, and when you get to that limit, push even farther." |TAYLOR LEWIS| HOW WE MET // JESSICA GREGG & TREVOR SHERPING > All great relationships had to start somewhere. He thought she was annoying. She thought he was awkward. So how in the world did Trevor Sherping, a sophomore from Mulvane, Kan., and Jessica Gregg, a sophomore from Lenexa, wind up together? It all started last year when the two lived on the same floor. After moving into Templin, some friends organized a game of hostage, a game where blindfolded players are dropped off at remote locations and must describe their whereabouts to their "rescuers" via telephone. Gregg was in the same car as Sherping. "She was in the backseat of my friend's car and was screaming because she was scared," he says. "That was my first impression of her; off the wall and crazy." First impressions: Both Sherping and Gregg admit they were initially attracted. But over time, his feelings changed and he started seeing her in a different light. Gregg, who, at the time, was more interested in Sherping's best friend, had her doubts. She was hesitant to jump into a relationship. In fact, she turned him down the first time he asked her out. It was only a matter of time, though, before her feelings started to change as well. After confessing how she felt, the two went out to dinner in what they consider their official first date. And last November, they became an official couple. Ten months later, their initial impressions are long-forgotten. Thanks to living in close quarters, they are closer than ever. "We never had that 'whole dress up and go on a date thing'," Gregg says. "Because we lived together, we saw each other every day. We saw each other at our worst times. We just saw the person as the way they were." |TAYLOR LEWIS| "decade of dominance" is one of the bigger fallacies of my lifetime. That dominance included a Fiesta Bowl win and a single Big 12 championship, but conference foes Oklahoma and Nebraska won a combined four national championships while Kansas State was apparently dominating them. Wildcat coach Bill Snyder is good, but he hasn't won a bowl game since 2002, so let's not pretend Kansas State football is bringing anything to the table in regards to conference realignment. And save the Kansas football jokes, because the Orange Bowl wasn't that long ago and a blue blood basketball program and top five rivalry trump the other Kansas school. So if the Oklahoma schools apply for admission and are accepted to the Pac-12, Kansas and Missouri would be making mistakes if they weren't asking to be next. If nothing else, fans and writers alike could take winter trips to Tempe and Santa Monica instead of Syracuse and Cincinnati. The Jayhawks scored a major victory against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in a 28-25 upset last September. This season, however, Georgia Tech's offense is even more dangerous than ever. Edited by Lindsey Deiter for this game this year, making them even more dangerous than last year's team that was upset by the Jayhawks. The Yellow Jackets still run the triple option offense, but have been hitting big plays through the air with junior receiver Stephen Hill. "He's special. He was a good player last year and we had to kind of hold on to our britches just to keep containing." Defensive Coordinator Vic Shealy said. "He got behind our safeties last year for a big play." "It's more dangerous when they have more than just the run game coming at you. We have to prepare for everything so I think we'll be OK," Keeston Terry, frehsman receiver, said. KANSAN FILE PHOTO Hill leads the Yellow jackets' receivers with 307 yards and three touchdowns, but even more impressive is his 43.9 average yards per catch. Hill is the lone offensive leader from the 2010 Yellow Jackets to return, after quarterback Joshua Washington is primarily the passing quarterback, throwing for 473 yards, but Days is the leading rusher for the Yellow Jackets, with 29 carries and 146 yards. crashed misses a goal, then rushing attack ranks third in the nation, averaging 339.5 yards per game, and their passing offense ranks 23rd, averaging 389.5 yards per game. "Guys have to show up and make plays," Bradley McDougald, junior safety, said. "If you're the quarterback player, then you have to be able to tackle him, because if he breaks your tackle, he's going to be able to run for another four or five yards and be able to pick up the first down. Guys are definitely going to have to make plays in the open field." Last week, the Jayhawks struggled to defend the pass, allowing Chandler Harnish to accumulate 315 yards through the air. Georgia Tech's option offense relies heavily on the run, which could tip the scales in favor of the 北 Jayhawks' defense that has been tough against opposing tailbacks, allowing Northern Illinois tailbacks only 58 yards last week. "That is the whole crutch of handling the option is that you have to be assignment oriented." Shealy said. "I think when you look at assignments, by nature it slows you down a little bit, and we want guys playing free and fast and canceling gaps and pushing the ball to the sideline" 1 Edited by Jonathan Shorman