THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 4 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2012 HOROSCOPES Because the stars know things we don't. Aries (March 21-April 19) More possibilities appear over the next seven months. You make beneficial contacts and earn new security. Others appreciate your natural charm. Luck is on your side. Today is a 4 Stash away treasures for later. Recordkeeping is getting easier with your flexibility. You'll find plenty of uses for the money you save. Your confidence grows. Today is an 4 Taurus (April 20-May 20) Gemini (May 21-June 20) Seek balance and relax. A creative project is very rewarding, in many ways. Contact associates in other countries. For the next seven months, you'll learn more about your partner. Today is a 4 Change is becoming child's play. Your work is easier, thanks to new technology and outside-the-box thinking. You are immensely popular now. Today is a 5 Cancer (June 21-July 22) Find extra inspiration by going outdoors or for a short hike. Let your ideas simmer overnight. You're lucky in love now. You're luckier than usual in general. Today is a 5 Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Note the destructive criticism, but don't fall for it. Focus on the positive, and fire up the optimism. You're a powerful financial engine. Promise the family you'll be with them later. Today is an 4 Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Abundance is available all around you. Open your eyes and soak up the love and support of your community. Learning is a snap. Meditate now. Today is a 4 Britain's Prince William and wife Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, pose for a photo in Honiara, Solomon Islands on Sunday. The royal couple is on a nine-day tour in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee. Work with a female prosper. You have more than expected now. Earn more money. Accept encouragement, especially when you most need it. It's there. Today is a 3 Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You'll be more effective from now on. Grab the passion of the moment by the horns, and ride it like a bull. There may be more than you thought. Believe you can prosper. Abundance is available. Today is a 5 Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Housework is particularly satisfying now, but so is office work. Find a balance, even if it requires venturing into new territory. A female makes it all work. It can be fun, depending on your attitude. Today is a 5 ASSOCIATED PRESS Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18) Do the jobs that pay best first. Send your invoice right away, and get paid sooner rather than later. Group objectives are becoming more attainable for the rest of the year. Today is a 4 You're very cute now, so take advantage. For seven months, tie up loose ends in career training. Balance it by relaxing. Learn something new. Today is a 3 Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Topless photos result in Royal complaint ASSOCIATED PRESS LONDON — Lawyers for Britain's royal family will make a criminal complaint against the photographer who took pictures of Prince William's wife Kate sunbathing topple in the south of France, William's office said Sunday. The palace has already launched a civil lawsuit against France's Closer magazine, which published the paraparazzi snaps of Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, relaxing during a holiday at a private village in Provence. The couple is hitting back hard against publication of the pictures, which William's office called a "grotesque" abuse of the young royals' privacy. A spokeswoman for William's St. James's Palace office said the couple's lawyers would file a complaint with French prosecutors on Monday against the unidentified photographer or photographers involved. "The complaint concerns the taking of photographs of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge whilst on holiday and the publication of those photographs in breach of their privacy," she said on condition of anonymity in keeping with palace policy. The palace said it would be up to French prosecutors to decide whether to investigate and pursue a criminal complaint for breach of privacy or trespassing. The couple's lawyers are already due in a Paris court Monday seeking an injunction against Closer's publisher, the Italian media group Mondadori. It also publishes Italy's Chi gossip magazine, which says it will publish 26 pages of the images on Monday. The palace will seek damages from the publisher, which is owned by former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi. The palace said it was considering "all proportionate responses" against Chi, though no decision has been made on legal action against it or the Irish Daily Star which reproduced the Closer photos on Saturday. No British publication has run the pictures, and Britain's tabloids have lined up to denounce them as an invasion of the duchess' privacy. The strong response stands in contrast to the reception of naked photos of Prince Harry partying in Las Vegas, which appeared online last month and were later published in Britain's Suntabloid. The palace shrugged off the photos, snapped during a game of strip billards, and took no action against those who published them. Some see British papers' reluctance to run the Kate photos as a sign that the country's once-rambunctious tabloids have been cowed by a scandal over phone hacking and other wrongdoing, which brought public opprobrium and an ongoing media-ethics inquiry. The incident also has evoked memories of the paraparazzi hounding of William's late mother, Princess Diana. A coroner's inquest found that pursuing photographers were partly responsible for her death in a Paris car crash in August 1997. British company Northern and Shell, which co-owns the tabloid with Ireland's Independent News and Media, or INM, said it was "profoundly dismayed" the Dublin newspaper had run the pictures. Its chief, Richard Desmond, said he planned to pull out of the joint venture that runs the tabloid. Independent News and Media chief executive Joe Webb In bad news for the Irish Daily Star, both its owners criticized it for publishing the Kate photos. offered his "deepest apologies" and said the company would be "launching an internal inquiry to ensure there will never be a repeat of this breach of decency". But Webb said in a statement he hopes to preserve the Irish Daily Star and its 70 employees. In Italy, the newspaper La Repubblica — a longtime foe of Silvio Berlusconi — criticized Chi's decision to publish the photos, saying they were incompatible with his status as politician and statesman. Bertuslson's daughter Marina, who heads Mondadori, defended her father, saying he could not interfere with the publisher's "editorial autonomy." The storm over the photos erupted as William and Kate made an official tour of Singapore, Malaysia and the South Pacific. They arrived in the Solomon Islands on Sunday and will end their trip Tuesday in the island nation of Tuvalu. CROSSWORD 13 Eggs 14 Rage 15 Rewrite, maybe 16 What "old soldiers" do 18 Take out of context? 20 Inbox fillers 21 Santa's bagful 23 — tac- toe 24 All- American dessert 28 Use an old phone 31 Allow 32 "No man is an island" writer John 34 Brewery product 35 Item on stage 37 What George Washington couldn't do 39 Central 41 Sagacious 42 Ranking 45 In truth 49 Ultra-formal 51 Neighborhood 52 Top-rated 53 Coffee vessel 54 Shade of blue 55 Raised 56 —- relief 57 Slave to cross-words? DOWN 1 Mimicked 2 Took the bus 3 Slinky's shape 4 Jewish village 5 Treat container for 12-Across 6 "Hail, Caesar!" 7 Host Lettermar 8 Scared 9 Re our legal system 10 Seed covering 11 Deli loaves 17 911 responder (Abr.) Solution time: 24 mins. CHECK OUT THE ANSWERS http://udkne.ws/RdiMWX CRYPTOQUIP 19 Three-sloth 22 Tendorn 24 Matter-horn, for one 25 Apiece 26 Type of food poisoning 27 Peps up 29 Boxing legend 30 CSA VIP 33 Otherwise 36 against (opposing) 38 Infuse with CO² 40 Payable 42 Mop the deck 43 Hammer wielder of myth 44 Theater-goer's souvenir 46 Enrages 47 Tilt 48 Connecticut campus 50 A Gershwin SPORTS Today's Cryptoquip Clue: S equals T Boxing great wins humanitarian award ASSOCIATED PRESS PHILADELPHIA — Retired boxing champ Muhammad Ali was known as "The Greatest" inside the ring. But some say the moniker has been even more fitting in the years since he hung up his gloves. All came to Philadelphia on Thursday to receive the Liberty Medal for his longtime role as a heavyweight for humanitarian causes, civil rights and religious freedom. Among those celebrating his latest honor at the National Constitution Center were former NBA star Dikembe Mutombo and Joe Louis Barrow II, the son of boxer Joe Louis. "Knowing you since I was a little boy has given me a ringside seat to history," an emotional Barrow said. "But it's your character outside the ring that speaks to the hope of the least and lost among us." The 70-year-old Ali, hobbled by a 30-year battle with Parkinson's disease, did not speak. But he stood with assistance to receive the medal from his daughter Laila Ali. He looked down at his medal for several moments and then waved to the crowd. The award comes with a $100,000 cash prize. Ali was born Cassius Clay but changed his name after converting to Islam in the 1960s. He refused to serve in the Vietnam War because of his religious beliefs and was stripped of his heavyweight crown in 1967. A U.S. Supreme Court ruling later cleared him for a draft evasion conviction, and he regained the boxing title in 1974 and again 1978. at the ceremony Thursday, Mutombo recalled the impression Ali's visit made on him as an 8-year-old growing up in that country. "He changed my life," said Mutombo, who also is a trustee of the Constitution Center. "I can never forget how inspired I was to see a black athlete receive such respect and admiration. He changed how the people of Zaire saw themselves, and in turn how the world saw them." One of his most famous fights took place in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where he battled George Foreman in the "Rumble in the lunale" in 1974. Since ending his boxing career in 1981, Ali has traveled extensively on Ali received the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 2005. He also has established the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Research Center in Phoenix and a namesake educational and cultural institute in his hometown, Louisville, Ky. The National Constitution Center, which opened in 2003, is dedicated to increasing public understanding of the Constitution and the ideas "You know, my father loves people and people love my father, and I learned that at a very young age, as people would always come up to him wherever we went," Laila Ali said. "My father has always lived his life to make this world better for others." and values it represents. It awards the Liberty Medal annually to a person who displays courage and conviction while striving to secure freedom for people around the world. international charitable missions and devoted his time to social causes. Previous Liberty Medi recipients include rock singer and human rights activist Bono, former South African President Nelson Mandela and former President Jimmy Carter. Six winners later received Nobel Peace Prizes. Also presenting the honor to Ali on Thursday were U.S. Olympic athletes Claressa Shields and Susan Francia. Last month, the 17-year-old Shields became the first U.S. girl or woman to win a gold medal in boxing. Francia is a two-time rowing gold medalist from Abington, just north of Philadelphia. TREAT YOURSELF DELUX MANICURE & PEDICURE ACRYLLIC/ GELL NAILS SHELLAC NAILS experience a new kind of luxury CHIEU'S NAILS Student Discount $5 OFF w| Student ID when you spend $20+ 601 Kasold next to Ace Hardware. Lawrence, KS. 785.841.6969 Thurs Oct 25 GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTLRNALS UPTOWN THEATER 3700 Broadway, KCMO QUIXOTIC LIED CENTER Friday November 9 Free State Brewing Co Concert Series MOUNTAIN SPROUT CHUCK MEAD DEVIL MKEES THREE JAMES MEMOURTRY JUNIOR BROWN INTFAMOUS STRINGBOTTES 1