PLAY OUT & ABOUT // IF YOU HAD A TV SHOW, WHAT WOULD BE YOUR OPENING SONG? > Random people. Random answers. GARRETT DWORKIN LENEXA | SENIOR Ben Folds Five- "Battle of Who Could Care Less." It's catchy, and I'd want to have a hip theme song. LIZ FRANGER MOUNT PROSPECT. ILL. JUNIOR "Treat Me Like Your Mother," by The Dead Weather. The song is about detecting lies, and my TV show would be a talk show where I could ask tough questions and get truthful answers. Plus, it would make me seem like a hardass. DRUE SELLS OVERLAND PARK | JUNIOR Elton John- "Benny and the Jets." It would just make a great opening song. I dig the piano part. MACKENZIE PRICE OVERLAND PARK | SOPHOMORE "Dayman," from the TV show It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. Charlie is hilarious, and I have an uncle who looks like Danny DeVito- no lie. If I had a show, they would both for certain be in it. LAUREN GORDON CHANUTE | FRESHMAN Does it have to be appropriate? If not, then "Look Back At Me" by Trina. It's a... jam. JOEL COON TOPEKA | SOPHOMORE "Search and Destroy" by The Stooges. It's just the first thing that came into my head. Analyze that. LAURA WEAVER SHAWNEE | SOPHOMORE The song "I Wonder" by Rodriguez. It's a nice, chill song about the mental quandaries of people. That would introduce a show about me. //LINDSEY DEITER FORMALDEHYDE belongs in your Biology Lab. METHANOL belongs in the antifreeze in Your Car. ACETIC ACID belongs in floor wipes to clean up a spill at The Union. All three were in your last cigarette. If you're ready to quit smoking, Kansas Tobacco Quitline and Student Health Services KanUquit counselors are ready to help you quit. KU Student Health Services KANUQUIT (785) 864-9573 Contributing to Student Success library expansion approved The expansion will include the construction of a new parking lot and the addition of 100 public computers. INDEX Classifieds... 9A Crossword... 4A Cryptoquips... 4A Opinion... 5A Sports... 12A Sudoku... 4A Sunny TODAY'S WEATHER SATURDAY All contents, unless stated otherwise. © 2010 The University Daily Kansan SUNDAY Aaron Harris/KANSAN A VISIONARY, A BUSINESSMAN AND A BAKER You Bakery, on Jan. 28. The owners said they hoped to fulfill students' and residents' desires for late night sweets after a late night on the town, while staying up to study or while staying in with friends. They said their goal was to have the cookies at their customers' doorsteps as fast as Jimmy John's does. Rafferty is the visionary. He came up with the idea for the bakery after seeing something similar succeed while he was at school in Colorado. He said he thought one in Lawrence could make money, too. Rafferty, McCallough and Olsen said they put a lot of time and effort into making the company run smoothly. "the best cookies ever." "I decided to go ahead and make the recipes myself just because it would be better for our ingredients and our storage purposes," Olsen said. "This doesn't necessarily make a lot of sense unless you know exactly what is in our cookies, which is a secret." McCallough is the businessman. "I ordered their cookies last Thursday with my friends and I have never had a better chocolate chip cookie," said Shannon Spurlock, a junior from Burlingame, Calif. "All of the cookies they serve are great. I would know because I ordered one of every kind to be sure I ate While Lucky You Bakery has not been open long enough to determine how much it makes on an average night, business has tripled since opening weekend, said McCollough. So far, the owners have handed out a few flyers and have mainly relied on word of mouth, Facebook and Twitter to generate business. they had received they said they were especially excited about what they had learned. "It has been a cool lesson of interdependence to see how we all click together," McCollough said. As for where they are headed, none of them really know. With brownies to join their menu soon, Rafferty hopes for expansion. He said some day they may even like to have a store front. "We want it to grow." Rafferty said. "We want to do continue perfecting what we do, but we don't know how large the market is. It's going to be a journey." **Above:** Bailey Olsen, a senior from Overland Park, measures ingredients for a cookie mix. Olsen, Jack Rafferty, a senior from Shawnee, and Will McCullough, a 2004 alumus, opened Lucky You Bakery, a cookie delivery service, two weeks ago. **Top:** Bailey Olsen, a senior from Overland Park, Will McCullough, a 2008 KU alum, and Jack Rafferty, a senior from Shawnee, own a local cookie delivery business called Lucky You The cookies cost $6 for six or $12 for 13. Lucky You Bakery is open for delivery Thursdays from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. and Friday and Saturday from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. Customers can order online at luckyyoubakery.com or by calling (785) 865-1466. - Edited by Helen Mubarak CONTRIBUTED PHOTO The Suarez sisters work to uncover bones from an unknown dinosaur species found at a dig site in Utah. The twin sisters named this species Geminiraptor suarezarum. DINOSAUR Species named after graduates BY LISA ANDERSEN landersen@kansan.com In 2004, twin KU graduates Celina and Marina Suarez discovered a new dinosaur species; now the species is officially named after them: geminiraptor suarezarum. The 29-year-old geochem- ists from San made the discovery while doing research at a separate site in Utah. The two began following a layer of rock that strayed from the site. Marina wandered into a gully paleontologists. The dinosaur was identified as a troodontid, a small two-legged carnivore After spotting limb and toe bones, the sisters came back the next morning with a group of where they saw bones sticking out from the rock. SEE DINO ON PAGE 5A "I remember my sister saying 'Wow! jackpot!'" Celina said. "We were pretty excited and knew we had found a significant site." GOVERNMENT School of Social Welfare faces cuts BY CLAYTON ASHLEY cashley@kansan.com The Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center in Lawrence is facing a state funding cut for the fifth year in a row, creating a potentially negative effect on the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare. Dave Johnson, CEO of Bert Nash, was candid about his plans for the potential $372,000 cut. "This particular cut we're going to fight as hard as we can," he said. Gov. Sam Brownback's proposed 2011 budget calls for $15 million in SEE BUDGET ON PAGE 5A