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tuesday, march 28, 2006

VOL. 116 issue 119 www.kAnsAn.cOm


All contents, unless
stated otherwise,
2006
The University
Daily Kansan few showers rain/wind
59 37
Partly Cloudy
weather.com
Comics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10A
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9A
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10A
Horoscopes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12A
Top, bottom 5 moments in 06 season
The Kansas womens basketball team had
plenty to cheer about this season, along with
its share of disappointments. The Kansan ranks
the high and low points. PAGE 12A
Tennis bounces back with victories
Kansas won four matches during spring break,
including a match against LSU. Three sweeps
improved teams confidence heading into the
remaining matches of the season. PAGE 12A
67 55 67 45
The sTudenT vOice since 1904
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wednesday thursday
Today
Kansas battles cancer
t legislature
By Catherine OdsOn
codson@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The KU Cancer Center is pre-
pared to grow with or without
support from the Kansas Legis-
lature.
Roy Jensen, cancer center di-
rector, said the center was fnal-
izing fnancial plans to become
a regional cancer center that
would bring top researchers and
clinical trials to Kansas.
The cancer center plans to al-
low Kansans access to clinical
drug trials at physicians offces
throughout the state through
the Midwest Cancer Alliance,
part of the centers plan to be
recognized by the National Can-
cer Institute as a comprehensive
cancer center.
Despite concern, the centers
benefts would not leave the
Kansas City area, the network is
designed to beneft all Kansans,
not create a fortress in Kansas
City, Jensen said.
Gov. Kathleen Sebelius al-
located $5 million of state
money to the center in her
proposed budget, but legis-
lators are wary of awarding
the large sum without any at-
tached legislation.
Legislative concern led to
proposed bills to control the
research and networking of the
cancer center.
The House passed a bill, the
ethical research act, last week
that encouraged the use of adult
stem cells in research by offering
tax write-offs to donors, but re-
jected a proposal to ban human-
animal hybrids.
In testimony to the House
Appropriations Committee,
Jensen said that he saw the
governors $5 million alloca-
tion as a fxture in the state
and cancer center budgets as a
step toward achieving recogni-
tion from the National Cancer
Institute.
Funds like those from the
state can be used to cover costs
grants cannot, he said.
see CanCer CenTer on page 4a
Bill to allow donations
Donating money to breast cancer research
could be as easy as flling out another line of a
tax form. Under a bill currently in the Kansas
House, Kansans would be able to directly do-
nate to breast cancer research at the KU Cancer
Center on their tax refund forms.
The breast cancer checkoff was added to a
bill requiring a checkoff for emergency military
relief, providing for living expenses for fam-
ily members of active duty military personnel,
be added to the Kansas individual income tax
form.
Kansans can currently donate to the Chick-
adee Checkoff, which funds the Kansas Non-
game Wildlife Improvement Program, and the
Senior Citizens Meals on Wheels Contribution
Program.
Members of the House taxation committee,
including chairman Kenny Wilk (R-Lansing),
supported the causes, but expressed concern
about the $160,000 cost of amending the tax
forms and equipment.
That cost could be a recurring expense as
more checkoffs are added.
The Chickadee checkoff is more than 20
years old, but the Meals on Wheels checkoff is
only three years old.
Once it starts, Wilk asked, where does it
stop?
Last year, the Chickadee Checkoff received
$142,000 of donations from 2,000 people and
the Meals on Wheels program gained $202,000
from 13,300 donors.
Sen. Barbara Allen (R-Overland Park), a
breast cancer survivor, said there was no clear
prediction of what the new checkoff would gain
fnancially.
She predicted a large volume of people do-
nating small amounts of money to this popular
cause.
This broadens the whole pie of money avail-
able for cancer research, she said.
The bill passed unanimously in the Senate in
February, and the House committee on taxation
recommended the House pass the bill.
Catherine Odson
Center plans growth
regardless of legislature
G
ov. Kathleen Sebelius
allocated $5 million of
state money to the center
in her proposed budget,
but legislators are wary
of awarding the large sum
without any attached
legislation. Legislative
concern led to proposed
bills to control the re-
search and networking of
the cancer center.
t speaker
t lawrence
City upgrades
to obstruct
some streets
By Kristen JarBOe
kjarboe@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
This week, yearly improve-
ments to water, sewer and storm
sewer infrastructure will contin-
ue throughout Lawrence.
These projects are just regular
things we do all the time, Bob
Skinner, feld operations man-
ager for utilities distribution, said.
Near streets such as Kansas and
Vermont, we needed to get the
old water lines out to have bet-
ter fre protection and reliability.
Weve just had some maintenance
issues in the past that needed to
get taken care of.
These improvements will cause
some traffc problems on Mas-
sachusetts Street and close Fifth
Street and Mississippi to Indiana
streets to through traffc.
Travelers on Massachu-
setts Street will encounter
some delays. Utilities Engi-
neer Philip Ciesielski said that
there would be no way to get
around traffic disruption. He
said they wouldnt complete-
ly shut down the street and
would still maintain two-way
traffic. There is the possibil-
ity that the right hand, south-
bound lane may be closed. But
alternative actions to clear up
traffic are still being discussed
in the contract.
Storm sewer improvement
is being done near Iowa Street,
south of 33rd Street. Accord-
ing to a city press release, when
work on storm sewer and street
widening closes 33rd Street,
Transit Bus Routes seven and
eight will not serve 31st or 33rd
streets, east of Iowa Street.
EditedbyVanessaPearson
1
2
3
4
5
5
Vermont Street
The Lawrence Department of Utilities will begin
to install a new water line along Vermont Street,
from 2368 Vermont St. to Nebraska Street this week. The
water line at Vermont and Kansas streets is another proj-
ect that will begin today and go into Wednesday. Parking
will be restricted in the surrounding area.
1
Monterey Way
The project on Monterey Way involving the storm and water line is nearly fnished. Bob
Skinner, feld operations manager for utility distribution, said the water line was fnished,
but he was not sure of the street conditions. There still may be traffc issues near the surrounding
streets such as Peterson Road and part of Kasold Drive.
3
Sixth and Indiana streets
Sanitary sewer improvement is continuing on
Sixth and Indiana streets and will be fnalized in
the next two to three weeks. The Utilities Department did
not receive any traffc complaints near Sixth and Indiana
streets. Because Sixth Street was re-paved last year,
the contract allowed them to only work underneath the
street and not tear it up.
4
17th and Massachusetts streets
Sewer improvements on 17th and Massachu-
setts streets should begin in the next couple
weeks, said Dave Wagner, assistant director for the De-
partment of Utilities. Contracts are fnalized and signed
by the same contractors, so as soon as work near Sixth
and Indiana streets becomes fnalized, work will start
near Massachusetts Street.
2
Kasold drive
Because of the March 12 storm damage, three
large utility poles will be replaced on Kasold
Drive. The work started last Friday and will continue to-
day. Work by Westar Energy contractors will divert the
northbound lanes of Kasold Drive, from 22nd Terrace to
Augusta Drive. For the four-block lane closure on Kasold
Drive, northbound traffc will be diverted into one south-
bound lane.
Michelle Grittmann/KanSan
Jack Kemp, vice presidential running mate to Senator Bob dole, speaks
about the ease of communication with todays technology as he demon-
strates the convenience of having a cell phone. Kemp spoke at the Lied
Center Monday night.
Kemp highlights taxes effect on dreams
By anne Weltmer
aweltmer@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
In a speech that traveled to
all sides of the map, Jack Kemp
promoted democracy, advo-
cated capitalism, and delivered
a powerful rebuke of American
tax policy, which he said pre-
vented people from achieving
the American Dream.
Kemp, Senator Bob Doles
1996 vice presidential running
mate and a member of the U.S.
House of Representatives for 18
years, spoke to a crowd of KU
Business students and members
of the Lawrence community at
the 38th Annual J.A. Vickers Sr.
and Robert F. Vickers Sr, Me-
morial Lecture Series Monday
night at the Lied Center.
He said democracy is the
ultimate destiny of mankind be-
cause its the only system that
works.
Kemp immediately left the
podium to get a little closer to
the audience, making his anec-
dotal speech less formal. In be-
tween interjecting stories of his
professional football years and
his grandchildrens skiing in
Vail, Colo., he delivered a clear
message about capitalism and
democracy.
He said his own father was a
truck driver who got a loan to
start his own trucking company
in Los Angeles with just one
truck. He was the only worker,
and he loaded, drove and un-
loaded everything himself. He
delivered his clients goods on
time, every time, and devel-
oped a large clientele. He was
able to generate enough proft
to expand his business to two
trucks. Kemp said his motiva-
tion was to put his four children
through college, which he never
attended.
Kemp said Adam Smiths lais-
sez faire economics were not
regulated enough, but that he
wasnt a Marxist.
Sounds like Im an econom-
ic determinist. I am, he said.
The wealth of a nation is in the
waitress who hopes to someday
open her own restaurant, and in
his father, who dreamed of start-
ing his own trucking company
and achieved it, he said.
Today the sometimes 50 per-
cent tax rates or more make it
impossible for people to achieve
the American Dream, he said.
The tax code stinks, he
said. He said capital gains taxes
hurt the poor next generation
that dreams of becoming rich. It
keeps the woman who wants to
work on welfare because if she
gets a job, she not only loses
the welfare check, but also gets
taxed on her income. he said.
see KeMp on page 4a
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activ-
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Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4962) is published daily during the
school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Weekly during the summer session excluding holidays.
Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120 plus tax. Student subscriptions of are
paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk
Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045
KJHK is the student
voice in radio.
Each day there
is news, music,
sports, talk shows
and other content
made for students,
by students.
Whether its rock n roll or reg-
gae, sports or special events,
KJHK 90.7 is for you.
For more
news, turn
to KUJH-
TV on
Sunflower
Cablevision
Channel 31 in Lawrence. The student-
produced news airs at 5:30 p.m., 7:30
p.m., 9:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. every
Monday through Friday. Also, check
out KUJH online at tv.ku.edu.
Tell us your news
Contact Jonathan Kealing,
Joshua Bickel, Nate Karlin,
Gaby Souza or Frank Tankard
at 864-4810 or
editor@kansan.com.
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1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
media partners
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news 2A The UniversiTy DAily KAnsAn TUesDAy, mArch 28, 2006
Q
uote
of the
Day
F
act
Day
of the
If you play this stuff back-
wards, it says, This sucks!
Beavis or Butthead (we couldnt fnd
which one said it) about the INXS song
The Devil Inside
A polar bears heat is so
well-contained that a heat-
sensitive camera cant detect
a bear sleeping on the ice.
Bonus fact: Polar bears hiss
like cats when theyre mad.
Source: pbs.org
wondering what people are talking about?
Heres a list of Mondays most e-
mailed stories from Kansan.com:
1. Changed lineup brings a
victory for baseball team
2. Avid K-State fan converts
to Jayhawks lover
3. Love of grammar and
penmanship lands teach-
er on evening news
4. Shortage of doctors for
the elderly expected to
worsen
5. What you missed
CaMpUS
Campaign manager
to talk about election
Joe Trippi, the former cam-
paign manager for Howard
Deans 2004 presidential
campaign, will give a lecture
at 7:30 tonight in Hansen Hall,
located inside of the Robert J.
Dole Center of Politics.
The lecture, entitled Catch-
ing Lighting in a Bottle: The
Rise and Fall of the Dean Cam-
paign, will chronicle the ups
and downs the Dean campaign
experienced in the 2004 elec-
tion year.
Trippi was responsible
for organizing a successful
Internet grassroots fundraising
movement as Deans cam-
paign manager.
Through the Internet, he
started a small-donor fundrais-
ing technique with all dona-
tions averaging less than $100,
all of which helped Dean raise
more money than any Demo-
cratic presidential campaign in
history.
He is also responsible for
using the Internet as a social
network to connect Dean
campaign supporters through-
out the nation and started a
campaign blog.
Both practices have now
been adopted by other politi-
cal campaigns.
Trippi will also sign copies
of his book The Revolu-
tion Will Not Be Televised:
Democracy, the Internet, and
the Overthrow of Every-
thing, which was released
in 2004.
DeJuan Atway
CaMpUS
Building damage cost
may continue to rise
Campus buildings that were
damaged in the March 12 mi-
croburst are being temporarily
fxed to prevent rain from leak-
ing into the buildings.
About eight contractors are
working on the campus, install-
ing temporary protection on
roofs and assessing the cost
of permanent fxes, Jim Long,
vice provost of facilities plan-
ning and management, said. A
fnal estimation of damage is in
the works. As of Friday after-
noon, $5.4 million in damage
was tallied to 126 buildings.
We originally estimated
between six and seven million
in costs associated with the
damage, Long said. We still
expect the fnal amount to fall
in that range.
Who will foot the bill for the
damage is still unclear. The
University has approached
both the State of Kansas and
FEMA, but neither organization
has formally responded to the
requests. Monday, the workers
moved from examining the
exteriors of the affected build-
ings to the interiors, looking
for things like water damage in
classrooms.
Michael Phillips
Third dean of libraries
candidate to speak
The third of five candi-
dates for the dean of librar-
ies position will conduct a
public forum from 3 to 5
p.m. on Thursday at Alder-
son Auditorium in the Kan-
sas Union.
The candidate, Bradley
Schaffner, will visit campus on
Thursday and Friday.
Schaffner is the head
of the Slavic division of
Harvard Universitys Wid-
ener Library. Before joining
Harvard in 2004, he was
a tenured librarian at the
University for 15 years and
worked as a librarian at Indi-
ana University.
Additional information
about each candidate can
be found at www.lib.ku.edu/
dean.
The University hopes that
the new dean will begin work
in August. The new dean will
replace Stella Bentley, the cur-
rent dean, who is retiring this
summer.
Melinda Ricketts
on CaMpUS
n Allen Macfarlane, Kansas
Geological Survey, is hosting
a seminar entitled The Pro-
totype Plume Busters Soft-
ware: A New Tool for Com-
puter Assisted Instruction at
noon today in 321 Anschutz
Library.
n John Burt Foster Jr., George
Washington University, is
giving a lecture entitled
Hadji-Murad: From Rus-
sian to Western to World Lit-
erature as part of the Brown
Bag Discussion Series at
12:30 p.m. today in 318 Bai-
ley Hall.
n Verena Winiwarter, Univer-
sity of Applied Life Sciences
Institute for Soil Research,
is hosting a seminar on soil
and its fertility in pre-modern
Europe at 3:30 p.m. today in
the Conference Hall of Hall
Center for the Humanities.
n Joe Trippi, 2004 presidential
campaign manager for How-
ard Dean, and John Toohey,
Dole Fellow, are hosting a
seminar on the evolution of
electronic media and the role
the media plays in shaping
and infuencing public policy
at 4 p.m. today at the Dole
Institute of Politics. Trippi will
also be giving a lecture en-
titled Catching Lightning in
a Bottle: The Rise and Fall of
the Dean Campaign at 7:30
p.m. at the Dole Institute.
n The flm Brokeback Moun-
tain is showing at 7 and 9:30
p.m. today in the Woodruff
Auditorium at the Kansas
Union. Admission is $2 or free
with an SUA Activity Card.
on THe reCorD
n An unknown suspect en-
tered a Lawrence residents
vehicle and removed a
handicap hang tag and
laundry detergent between
9 p.m. Thursday and 10
a.m. Friday. The vehicle
was parked in KU lot #114,
located near Stouffer Place
Apartments. The estimated
value of the loss was $20.
Michelle Grittmann/KanSan
Jonathan pryor, Columbus junior, kisses his partner David Ta, Wichita senior, as part of the Pride Week Kiss-In.
Queers and Allies Pride Week activities are occurring this week on Wescoe Beach. We should be allowed to make
a point. We should be allowed to show affection, too, Pryor said, regarding the negative bias toward gay public
displays of affection. Pryor and Ta have been dating for three months.
Pucker up!
oDD newS
prize for weight loss
inspires commitment
FOND DU LAC, Wis. Tim
and Molly Haack are a com-
bined 125 pounds lighter and
their wallets are $1,200 fatter
after winning a weight loss
contest.
The contest, sponsored
by radio station WTCX-FM of
Fond du Lac, encouraged pairs
or partners to lose weight
together and rewarded those
who lost the greatest per-
centage of body weight in 12
weeks.
Molly Haack said losing
weight was as much mental
work as it was physical.
You have to decide to do
it and be committed to it, she
said. And now Im a better
wife, mother and employee
because I take better care of
myself.
The Associated Press
Dakota Sioux scrabble
to save their language
HANKINSON, N.D. Those
who hope they can stop the
Dakota Sioux language from
dying have hit on the perfect
word: Scrabble.
A special Scrabble tourna-
ment in the language made
its debut Friday, pitting teams
from Sioux reservation schools
in North Dakota, South Dakota
and Manitoba.
The game is part of the
tribes campaign to revitalize
the Dakota language, now
spoken fuently by a dwin-
dling number of elders. One
survey predicted the last
fuent Sisseton-Wahpeton
Dakota speaker would die in
2025.
The Associated Press
Stressed? pull over,
get a nice massage
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
Stressed out during a long
drive? Road hogs driving you
up the wall?
The Malaysian government
is only too happy to help. The
countrys frst highway drive-
in massage parlor opened
Monday, with the aim of
reducing accidents by easing
tense muscles of stressed-out
drivers.
The parlors will be equipped
with automatic massage
chairs.
I hope highway users will
use this facility, Works Minis-
ter S. Samy Vellu said.
Hundreds of thousands of
Malaysians commute along
a web of highways daily,
but accidents and deaths
typically rise during festive
occasions when millions leave
Kuala Lumpur and major cities
during extended holidays.
The Associated Press
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AT T H E T O P O F T H E H I L L
tuesday, march 28, 2006 the university daily Kansan 3a news
March 28, 2006
THIS WEEK
PAID FOR BY KU
ON CAMPUS
KJaywalk Contest!
All throughout March, stu-
dents who use Jaywalk will
be entered into a drawing
for prizes donated by KJHK.
Winners of the drawing will
be announced on April 1,
2006. The grand prize win-
ner will receive a Marantz
PMD-325 CD player. Two
runners up will receive a
Timex Ironman watch and a
third runner up will receive
a KJHK care package that
includes Roasterie coffee
and KJHK t-shirts.
Jaywalk is a free service funded
by KUs Student Senate. Jay-
walk provides volunteers who
escort any KU student to any
on-campus location between
9 p.m. and 1 a.m. Sunday
through Thursday. Contact
Jaywalk at Anschutz Library or
by calling (785) 864-3222.
For more information, visit the KJHK Web site
at www.kjhk.org
Held At: Oldfather Studios
(located at 9th and Avalon, right off of Iowa)
Guidelines: 1) Must be 10 minutes or less
2) Must demonstrate both the theme and
object of the festival
Rules: NO RULES
Films Due By: Friday April 14th by 4:00 PM in Oldfather
Studios at the front desk (DVD, MiniDV, VHS)
Awards: Trophies are given to most original, viewers
choice, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place
* Snacks and drinks will be provided at the screening
For questions contact Taylor Sloan (movieswimmer@hotmail.com)
THEME: THIS IS THE END OBJECT: A TOWEL
Filmworks
Film
Festival
April 23rd at 7:30 PM
Pathways is a non
prot therapeutic
riding center
dedicated to helping
others through
interaction with
animals. Pathways
provides therapy
programs for people
with physical and
cognitive disorders
as well as those with
social, emotional, or
behavioral issues.
Those interested in volunteering
should either call or email for
more information
(785)764-1557
pathwaysaat@yahoo.com
Love animals?
Call for Artists
for the F-WORD Artwalk
Artists of all media needed for a
progressive woman artist/woman
inspired artwalk to be held April
28th.
Submit digital images to:
comstwomen@ku.edu
Submission deadline is
April 21st.
(The F-Word is female/feminist)
Alternative
Weekend
Break!
Interested in doing some
community service?
Try out an Alternative Weekend
Break and you'll have the
opportunity to plant an on-site
garden in Edwardsville
Applications are available online at www.ku.edu/~albreaks
<http://www.ku.edu/~albreaks>
Applications are due Friday March 31st by 5pm
Thursday, March 30, 9:00pm
Hawks Nest, KS Union
The Trees Learn Osmosis
An Evening with Cameron Cooke
(TLO) Club presents:
The TLO Club is looking
for KU students to read
their original work (po-
etry, fiction, etc) at this
event. Anyone interested
in reading or anyone
interested in our orga-
nization please contact
Teresa at
tloclub@yahoo.com
www.xanga.com/tloclub
t NATION
Ted S. Warren/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kyle Moore, the father of Melissa Moore, 14, who was one of the six people
killed when a gunman opened fre on a party in Seattle early Saturday morning,
stands Monday in front of a memorial set up near the steps of the house where
his daughter was killed. The gunman took his own life after fring on the party.
Shooting kills six,
ends with suicide
By Jackson Holtz
The AssociATed Press
SEATTLE The young
man who killed six people at a
house party over the weekend
had brought three guns, more
than 300 rounds of ammuni-
tion, a baseball bat and a black
machete, and told guests as he
blazed away, Theres plenty
for everyone, authorities said
Monday.
Aaron Kyle Huff, 28, was
clearly intent on doing homi-
cidal mayhem, Deputy Police
Chief Clark Kimerer said.
However, investigators still
have no idea why, he said.
We may be asking these
questions over the next year or
two, Kimerer said. Hopefully
we will fnd some answers.
Huff committed suicide when
confronted by an offcer outside
the house early Saturday. Toxi-
cology results will not be avail-
able for several days, Kimerer
said.
Police said the victims, many
of them dressed up as zombies
in black with white face paint,
had met Huff earlier in the night
at a rave called Better Off Un-
dead and invited him to a party
at their rented home.
Huff left the party at about
7 a.m. and returned wearing
bandoliers of ammunition
and carrying a 12-gauge pis-
tol-grip shotgun and a hand-
gun.
As he walked back to the par-
ty, Huff used spray paint to write
NOW on the sidewalk and a
neighbors stairs, police said.
He killed two people on the
front steps, then killed three
more people in the living room
and went looking for more vic-
tims, police said.
He tried to enter a locked
bathroom, jiggled the handle
and fred a few rounds through
the door, missing a frightened
couple.
As shots rang out, neighbors
called 911. When police con-
fronted Huff, he put the shotgun
in his mouth and pulled the trig-
ger.
What he might have done if
he was able to leave this scene
and continue this rampage, I
shudder to contemplate, Ki-
merer said.
t SpeAker
Moore: Humor gets me through
Representative fields
questions at Burge Union
Patrick Kramer/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
While flming a music video, Marcus Quese IMC Frejo, center right, raps to the camera during the shoot at the Native American Rights Fund in Boulder,
Colo., on Monday. Frejo is part of the Native hip-hop group Culture Shock Camp from Oklahoma City.
Rap for your right
By Melinda Ricketts
mricketts@kansan.com
KAnsAn sTAff wriTer
Monday evening Rep. Den-
nis Moore said that most of the
issues that are facing Congress
now are so grave that he has to
fnd humor where he can.
He did just that during the
open forum at the Burge Union.
While he was making his open-
ing remarks, a blue KU Young
Democrats banner covering the
entire wall behind him came
crashing down. He quickly re-
sponded, I hope thats not a
sign of things to come.
Moore, who has already
served in the U.S. House of
Representatives for four terms,
is planning on running for an-
other term.
After he made a few brief re-
marks, he felded questions on
topics ranging from genocide to
partisanship to military death
gratuities.
Moore said that there are four
groups of people that he primar-
ily tries to look out for: children
whose parents cant or wont
look out for them, people with
disabilities, senior citizens and
veterans, military families and
military personnel. Beyond that,
he said, he really believes in per-
sonal responsibility.
If youre able-bodied and
between 18 and 65 then you
should provide for yourself, he
said.
Most of his answers were
heavily infused with personal
anecdotes that he used to ex-
plain his views.
I look at every issue and try
to make educated, concerned
judgements on issues before
Congress and just act on a parti-
san basis, Moore said.
He said that he felt that partisan-
ship in Congress has reached levels
that are unhealthy for the country.
Sometimes when youre
there in Congress you just feel
like youre butting your head
against a wall and you cant
get anything accomplished, he
said.
Moore ended the session on
a patriotic note, talking about
how far the United States has
come since the civil war when
only white, male, property own-
ers could vote.
Were still not perfect, we
still have a long ways to go, but I
think we have the greatest coun-
try in the whole world, he said.
Marc Langston, Whichita
sophomore and president of KU
Young Democrats, said that be-
fore the forum he hadnt realized
that Moore was so concerned
about issues regarding the mili-
tary troops.
He has worked really hard
for students and I dont think he
emphasized that enough being
in front of students, Langston
said.
Edited by Gabriella Souza
news 4a The UniversiTy Daily Kansan TUesDay, march 28, 2006
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Careers in the Arts allows all students interested
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AT T H E T O P O F T H E H I L L
Cancer Center
continued from page 1a
Marci Nielsen, assistant vice
chancellor for health policy, said
she was thrilled the legislators were
interested in meeting the cancer
centers goals, but the proposed leg-
islation wouldnt help the center.
The proposed Kansas cancer
act not only calls for expanded
cancer research, but also estab-
lishes organizational require-
ments for the cancer center and
gives administrative power to
the Kansas Bioscience Author-
ity, a independent board cre-
ated by the Kansas Economic
Growth Act.
Rep. Bonnie Sharp (D-Kan-
sas City) said the cancer cen-
ter could proceed without the
detailed legislation that draws
administrative power away from
the experts at the center. Orga-
nizations like the Kansas Bio-
science Authority are just part
of the equation for success that
requires a lot of commitment
by a lot of other people, she
said, to take advantage of Kan-
sas existing capital resources.
Rep. Brenda Landwehr (R-
Wichita) said she thought every
legislator was behind the cause of
defeating cancer, but some want-
ed structure in the $5 million ap-
propriation to the cancer center.
The priority is setting the
cancer center up for success,
Landwehr said, requiring a
community effort that requires
taxpayers to become fnancial
partners in the center. The can-
cer act establishes an adminis-
trative structure for the center
involving outside offcials and is
the only bill designed to control
the $5 million.
Edited by Gabriella Souza
t NASA
Mission resurrected;
asteroids to be explored
NASA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
This undated artist concept released by NASA shows the Dawn Mission spacecraft. NASA resurrected the Dawn
Mission to explore two of the solar systems largest asteroids Monday, just weeks after the project was killed
because of budget woes. The space agency scrapped the mission earlier this month to orbit the asteroids Ceres and
Vesta.
P
owered by a xenon ion
engine, Dawn would
be the frst spacecraft to
circle the asteroids Ceres
and Vesta, which are in
the asteroid belt between
Mars and Jupiter.
t irAq
Military raid, bombing halt talks
By Steven R. HuRSt
The AssociATed Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq Shiite
politicians raged at the United
States and halted negotiations
on a new government Monday
after a military assault killed
at least 16 people in what
Iraqis claim was a mosque.
Fresh violence erupted in the
north, with 40 killed in a sui-
cide bombing.
The frestorm of recrimina-
tion over Sundays raid in north-
east Baghdad will likely make it
harder for Shiite politicians to
keep a lid on their more angry
followers as sectarian violence
boils over, with at least 151
dead over the two-day period.
A unity government involving
Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds is a
benchmark for American hopes
of starting to withdraw troops
this summer.
There were numerous confict-
ing statements from Iraqis and
the Americans about the raid.
Iraqi police, Shiite militia off-
cials and major politicians have
all said the structure attacked
was the al-Mustafa mosque. But
the U.S. military disputed this,
saying no mosques were en-
tered and that the raid targeted
a building used by insurgents
responsible for kidnapping and
execution activities.
In a conference call with re-
porters early Tuesday, Lt. Gen.
Peter Chiarelli, deputy com-
mander in Iraq, and Maj. Gen.
J.D. Thurman, commander of
the 4th Infantry Division, which
is in control of Baghdad, said
25 U.S. forces were in a backup
role to 50 Iraqi Special Opera-
tions troops.
The mission, the generals said,
was developed by the Iraqis on
their intelligence that an Iraqi
dental technician, kidnapped 12
hours earlier because he could
not come up with $20,000, was
being held in what they called
an offce complex.
Its important to remember
we had an Iraqi unit with us, an
Iraqi unit of 50 folks and they
told us point blank that this
was not a mosque, Chiarelli
said. Its not Mustafa mosque.
Mustafa mosque is located six
blocks north on our maps of this
location.
Associated Press reporters
who visited the scene of the
raid identifed it as a neighbor-
hood Shiite mosque complex.
Television footage taken Mon-
day showed crumbling walls
and disarray in a compound
used as a gathering place for
prayer. It was flled with reli-
gious posters and strung with
banners denouncing the at-
tack.
Kemp
continued from page 1a
She would have to earn twice
as much to have as much to
spend as she did on welfare, he
said. He said the world today
was kind of like Charles Dick-
ens words, It was the best of
times. It was the worst of times.
Today, 171 democracies exist in
the world, which is a vast im-
provement, but even the United
States has work to do, he said.
He criticized his own Repub-
lican party for creating a law
that criminalized aiding possible
illegal immigrants because every
U.S. citizen was an immigrant at
one time.
Despite the harsher econom-
ic conditions, Kemp encouraged
students by saying that the only
thing really standing in the way
of their own success is them-
selves.
We live in a world where you
can make it happen, he said.
Edited by Vanessa Pearson
By AliciA cHAng
The AssociATed Press
LOS ANGELES NASA
resurrected an ambitious mis-
sion to explore two of the solar
systems largest asteroids Mon-
day, just weeks after budget
woes killed the project.
The space agency scrapped
the Dawn mission this month to
orbit the asteroids Ceres and
Vesta, nearly half a year after it
was put on hold because of cost
overruns and technical prob-
lems. The projects cost is now
estimated at $446 million.
NASA decided to review the
cancellation after the Jet Propul-
sion Laboratory, which managed
the mission, made an appeal.
NASA Associate Adminis-
trator Rex Geveden, who led
the review, said the Dawn team
has made signifcant progress in
addressing the technical prob-
lems.
There are always pretty tall
challenges, and it looks like
Dawn is prepared to take those
on and beat them, Geveden
said.
Dawn is now scheduled for
launch in July 2007. The mis-
sions cost was capped at $373
million, but NASA will pony up
an extra $73 million to launch
the spacecraft, instead of spend-
ing $14 million to terminate it.
Powered by a xenon ion en-
gine, Dawn would be the frst
spacecraft to circle Ceres and
Vesta, which are in the asteroid
belt between Mars and Jupiter.
Ceres and Vesta are believed
to have formed in different parts
of the solar system about 4.5
billion years ago, and studying
them could provide clues to how
the sun and planets formed.
The delayed launch should
not affect the spacecrafts ar-
rival time, Geveden said. Dawn
was scheduled to reach Vesta in
2011, then fy to Ceres in 2015.
Scientists were outraged when
NASA axed the Dawn mission
after a March 2 congressional
budget hearing. The agency cit-
ed a report by an independent
team that found more than two
dozen problems that needed to
be resolved.
The cancellation came at a
precarious time at NASA, which
had been forced to cut or delay
several science projects to help
pay for the development of new
manned vehicles to return to the
moon next decade.
As avian bird fu marches
across Asia and Europe, talk of
pandemic worldwide illness
caused by a virus no one has
immunity to is in every news-
paper and on every radio and
television.
Scientists, pharmaceutical
companies and government of-
fcials are preparing for bird fus
potential arrival in the United
States by tightening tracking
of migratory birds, monitoring
infuenza cases more closely,
stockpiling antiviral drugs and
developing plans for vaccina-
tion and quarantine should a
pandemic occur.
The psychological effects of a
potential pandemic seem as seri-
ous as the physical ones. People
could react as they did to Mad
Cow disease in this case,
cutting out chicken to be on the
safe side, which could harm the
poultry industry. It has done so
in Asia and Europe.
In the town of Ibilisi, Geor-
gia, near Russia and Turkey,
two young girls died of a com-
mon strain of infuenza, not
bird fu. Yet the whole town has
nearly shut down. School atten-
dance decreased by half, restau-
rants stopped serving chicken
and eggs, and the streets are
emptier because people are sim-
ply staying indoors, reported
the New York Times.
The usual conspiracy
theories emerge, too. Tamifu
is manufactured by Roche, the
pharmaceutical company that
Secretary of Defense Don-
ald Rumsfeld owns stock in.
According to The Insider, a
United Kingdom online journal
devoted to conspiracy theories,
hes made $5 million off of it.
Other theories say that H5N1
fears and preparation and
protection from H5N1 are
played up by the Bush adminis-
tration to restore peoples faith
in the government after Hur-
ricane Katrina.
But is all of the chatter simply
the result of an overactive
media, or of a government made
nervous by nature because of
Hurricane Katrina? What are
the real probabilities of avian fu
developing into a pandemic?
The answer to that question is
scary: Nobody really knows.
Many scientists expected
avian fu, an infuenza virus of
the type H5N1, to develop into
a pandemic ten years ago, said
Gianofranco Pezzino, director
of the Kansas Health Institute.
Although it shows signs of
pre-pandemic behavior, such
as mutating into new strains
and having potential to infect
humans, H5N1 isnt classifed
as a pandemic. Its not global,
and as it exists now, the virus
only transfers from birds to
humans not from one human
to another.
And it doesnt seem likely to
transfer between humans any-
time soon. In studies published
by researchers in Japan and Hol-
land, the virus stays too deep in
the lungs to be transferred by
coughing and sneezing, like the
common, seasonal fu is.
But if H5N1 doesnt develop
into a pandemic, some other
virus probably will, and soon.
As for which virus or where it
will come from, its all educated
guesswork at best.
The bottom line is that viruses
will always keep scientists guessing.
Viruses can always surprise.
Viruses do what viruses do. And
we dont know as much as wed
like to think we do, said Gail
Hansen, state epidemiologist
with the Kansas Department of
Health and Environment.
Its this lack of a sense of
control that needs to be battled
the most. Preparation is neces-
sary, both to quell the fears of
American citizens and to stop or
slow a pandemic if it strikes.
n Evanhoe is a Derby senior in
chemistry.
www.kansan.com page 5a
Spring Break is over and theres
lest than two months of classes
left this semester. If youre a senior
graduating, that is its time to
start thinking about senioritis.
Theres more beers at the
Crossing, more skipped classes
and more of the Yeah, this
papers not going to get any bet-
ter rationale.
Dont be afraid to give in to
this thinking.
Its natural. In the last two
months of schooling, students
can treat themselves before that
frst job, that frst big move or
that frst indefnite stay at their
parents home. There has been
plenty of time to be a good stu-
dent and there will be plenty of
time to do well in the real world.
Give yourself a little pat on the
back during this transition, if
youve earned it.
College is, after all, about
more than just school.
Dont be stupid about it, of
course. Not graduating or nearly
not graduating because you
didnt have the fortitude to go
to classes or get work done isnt
senioritis, its moronitis.
But theres one group of students
to whom this affictions aftermath
will affect more: Those who are
continuing their education.
Students temporarily forgoing
their foray into the real world
to get more education will have
their fnal transcripts noted.
Graduate and other post-grad-
uate professional schools require
students to turn in a transcript
after graduation. Of course, by
this time the student will have
already been accepted into his or
her school. But senioritis isnt an
excuse for that odd looking D
in the Art of Walking class you
snuck in during your senior year.
For these students, the well-
intended advice to keep studying,
keep reading textbooks and keep
going to class rings truer. Not only
will their fnal senior marks be
scrutinized more by schools than
employers, but these students
diligence during these warm
months will be appreciated more.
A solid fnal semester gives
the impression of gearing up for
more rigorous study. It shows
the avoidance of the habitual let-
down at the end of school.
Both traits smack of being
ready for post-graduate work.
And, unfortunately, and maybe
unfairly, senioritis doesnt really
apply to these students. The Ur-
ban Dictionary defnes senioritis
as an crippling disease that strikes
seniors, causing laziness and a
lack of studying. These under-
grads arent near the end of their
college careers quite yet.
Save it for the third year of law
school or the end of a masters
program in economics. (Senioritis
is not recommended for or diag-
nosed by most medical students).
Or, if youre really assiduous,
go for doctorateitis. There is
nothing like the release of coast-
ing for two months after 10 years
of schooling. Youll have really
earned it then.
John Jordan for the editorial
board
So Im in Vegas right
now and a guy just asked
me what state Kansas was
in. Wow, its really Vegas.
n
To all the young men at
the University of Kansas,
if your name is Bradley,
dont even think about
giving me your number.
n
I just pooped a chiclet.
n
You know youre a
pothead when you almost
cry vacuuming out the
bottom of your car.
n
Spring break in Manhat-
tan sucks.
n
Hey Free-for-All, just
calling to say happy
spring break. Aw man, I
got barbecue sauce on my
hands.
n
Chuck Norris is who
Willis was talking about.
n
Holocaust movies are
not good movies to watch
if you want to get play.
n
Watch out Texas, now
Kansans can carry con-
cealed guns, too.
n
Phoggy Dog, I know Im
moving kind of fast, but
will you be my girlfriend?
n
Will you take me to Taco
Bell? Oh, this is just an
answering machine? Fine,
Ill get it myself.
n
John Goodman fights
for what he believes in.
n
Saying that you gradu-
ated from K-State is about
like bragging that you
used to live in Leaven-
worth Prison.
n
Is it sad that Ace of
Bass is on the radio and
Im totally rocking out
right now?
n
When I smoke a cigar, it
makes my head light and
my pants tight.
n
Jack Bauer once forgot
where he put his keys. He
then spent the next half
hour torturing himself un-
til he gave up the location
of the keys.
n
God bless everybody
that sacrificed their spring
break to go and help
clean up Katrina. You guys
are amazing.
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
opinion
opinion
Talk To us
Jonathan Kealing, editor
864-4854 or jkealing@kansan.com
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t coMMenTary
t our opinion
As concern increases, future
of avian fu is up in the air
For seniors,
its time
for
reflection
Graduating students
should indulge senioritis
t coMMenTary
Issue: Slacking off before
graduation
Stance: Seniors deserve
relaxation, but they
should remember how
grades affect admission to
post-graduate institutions.
Becca evanhoe
opinion@kansan.com
Scott Shorten
opinion@kansan.com
For many of us seniors
whose undergraduate careers
have come nearly to an end,
we have a fleeting chance to
take one last moment amidst
our other daily events and
chaos, to reflect on all that
we have done with our time
at this university. And more
importantly, if necessary, to
use what little time we have
left at our disposal to tie up
some of those more slippery
objectives.
As for myself, I have often
thought about my four years
here mostly wondering
whether if, in two months,
I will walk away from KU
knowing that I did all I could
to make my college experience
worthwhile from educational,
organizational and, as equally
important I think, social view-
points. Will I look back on
the University and beam with
pride of the things I may have
been able to accomplish for
myself, or will I focus instead
on the fact that I left so much
undone and so many opportu-
nities unrealized? Will I recall
more vividly the things I have
taken great satisfaction in, or
the things of which Ive been
greatly ashamed?
Either way, I think that we
would all be well-advised to
appreciate both the positives
and the negatives as neces-
sary and important: The pride
of successes for allowing us
to hold ourselves in high es-
teem as we move forward into
future challenges; the shame
of our errors and pains of
our defeats as prickly fiends
to our otherwise complacent
consciences, driving us to
reconcile our hearts and to
rectify our wounded self-con-
fidence. Without our pride,
we run the risk of fading
into the masses of men and
women who lead, as Thoreau
suggests, lives of quiet des-
peration.
Yet the converse of this is
just as poisonous unless
we remember our short-com-
ings, we may be apt to attri-
bute more to ourselves than
we have earned, feeling smug
and beyond the trouble of
engaging ourselves in new and
worthy causes.
Fellow seniors, if youve
got some things you still want
to do before you go off to the
rest of your life, then the time
is now. Younger classmates,
you may have a bit longer.
Regardless of classification,
though, I give you this advice:
Risk failure and go about
your affairs so that your
memory of them will be as
devoid of the pangs of regret
as possible. Then you will
never be left wondering to
yourself, Did I miss out on
something?
n Shorten is a Stillwell senior
in business administration.
As of March, 2006:
n Bird fu is found in 45
countries.
n150 million birds have
died or have been exter-
minated because of the
virus.
nAt least 150 bird species
have been infected.
nH5N1 has infected 179
people in eight different
countries since 2000. Of
those, 78 died.
Source: World Health Organization
bird Flu Facts
All
Free
for
Call 864-0500
Free for All callers have 20 sec-
onds to speak about any topic they
wish. Kansan editors reserve the
right to omit comments. Slanderous
and obscene statements will
not be printed. Phone numbers of
all incoming calls are recorded.
GRE is better measure than GPA
Editors note: The comment
below is an online response to
a March 17 letter-to-the-editor
entitled, Too much emphasis
placed on GRE. The com-
ment appears unedited.
I hardly think GPAs are a
better measure of a students
potential success. Grades are
the equivalent to wooden
nickles in academia. How
many times have you or a
student you known negoti-
ated their way to a better
grade? How many times has
a 78 percent gotten bumped
up to an 80 percent, or a B-
by some charitable teacher?
How many student take
classes taught by teachers
with the reputation of going
easy in the gradebook and
evading the teachers who
force you to earn your grade?
Grades were a joke in high
school and continue to be
in undergraduate courses. I,
for one, am glad that schools
have gotten hip to the fraud
that the letter grade system
is and started forcing stu-
dents to earn their way into
admission with an objective
measure of a students skills.
t your opinion
6a The UniversiTy Daily Kansan TUesDay, march 28, 2006 news
By DaviD Espo
The AssociATed Press
WASHINGTON The Sen-
ate Judiciary Committee ap-
proved sweeping election-year
immigration legislation Monday
that clears the way for 11 mil-
lion illegal aliens to seek U.S.
citizenship without having to
frst leave the country.
After days of street demon-
strations that stretched from
California to the grounds of
the U.S. Capitol, a coalition of
Democrats and Republicans
also agreed to strip out proposed
criminal penalties for residents
found to be in this country il-
legally.
All Americans wanted fair-
ness and they got it this eve-
ning, said Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, the Massachusetts
Democrat who played a pivotal
role in drafting the legislation.
The 12-6 vote was unusual,
with a majority of Republicans
opposed to the measure even
though their party controls the
Senate.
Committee Chairman Arlen
Specter, R-Pa., voted for the
bill but signaled that some of
the provisions could well be
changed by the full Senate once
debate begins there Tuesday.
In general, the bill is designed
to strengthen the Border Pa-
trol, create new opportunities
for so-called guest workers and
determine the legal future of the
estimated 11 million immigrants
living in the United States ille-
gally.
At several critical points,
committee Democrats showed
unity while Republicans splin-
tered. In general, GOP Sens.
Lindsey Graham of South Car-
olina, Sam Brownback of Kan-
sas and Mike DeWine of Ohio,
who is seeking re-election this
fall, sided with Democrats.
That created a majority that al-
lowed them to shape the bill to
their liking.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-
Calif., won approval for a fve-
year program to permit as many
as 1.5 million agriculture work-
ers into the country. It will
provide the agriculture industry
with a legal work force and of-
fer agriculture workers a path
to citizenship, she said. The
vote was 11-5, with Republi-
cans casting all the votes in op-
position.
In addition, Kennedy pre-
vailed on a proposal to allow an
additional 400,000 green cards
for future immigrants, regard-
less of the industry where they
fnd jobs.
Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and
other conservatives said any-
thing but a requirement for il-
legal immigrants to return home
amounted to amnesty, and he
said he had national opinion on
his side.
Well over 60 percent of
Americans in all the polls I see
think its OK to have temporary
workers, but you do not have to
make them citizens, said Kyl,
who is seeking re-election this
fall.
We have a fundamental dif-
ference between the way you
look at them and the way I look
at them, Kennedy observed
later.
The committee met as several
thousand demonstrators rallied
at the foot of the Capitol. Many
were members of the clergy
who donned handcuffs and
sang We Shall Overcome, the
unoffcial anthem of the civil
rights era.
The frst Christian value is
love thy neighbor, read some of
the signs.
After a weekend of enormous
rallies as many as 500,000
in Los Angeles thousands of
students walked out of class in
California and Texas to protest
proposals in Congress to crack
down on illegal immigrants.
In Detroit, protesters waved
Mexican fags as they marched
to a downtown federal offce
building.
Do you see the community?
Do you see how many people
didnt go to work today, asked
Janet Padron, a 22-year-old resi-
dent of Allen Park, Mich.
Her remark underscored one
of the complexities confronting
Congress and the Bush adminis-
tration as they grapple with the
issue of immigration.
Senators on all sides of the
issue agreed that illegal workers
hold thousands of jobs that oth-
erwise would go unflled at the
wages offered.
The agriculture industry is
almost entirely dependent on
undocumented workers, Fein-
stein said. It is unrealistic to
think the workers will go home
because they work here, and the
agriculture industry is depen-
dent on them.
t immigration
Guest worker bill approved
Emily Dudderar/THE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS
Azeneth Rangel, 2, of Wyoming hides her face behind an American fag during the rally for immigration rights Mon-
day in Grand Rapids, Mich. Azeneths family moved to the United States 18 years ago from Guanajuato, Mexico.
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t mens basketball
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
All agree on these All-Americans
By Jim OCOnnell
The AssociATed Press
J.J. Redick of Duke and Adam
Morrison of Gonzaga spent all
season locked in a bicoastal
scoring race. Fittingly, they
ended it as the only unanimous
selections for The Associated
Press All-America mens bas-
ketball team.
Redick, the most prolifc
three-point scorer in college
history, was a repeat choice.
He and Morrison were joined
on the frst team Monday by
Redicks teammate Shelden Wil-
liams, Randy Foye of Villanova
and Brandon Roy, Washingtons
frst All-America in 53 years.
Redick and Morrison gave
fans a Can you top this? scor-
ing competition that ended with
both receiving all 72 frst-team
votes from members of the na-
tional media panel that selects
the weekly Top 25. The voting
took place before the NCAA
tournament.
Morrison, the only junior
on an otherwise all-senior frst
team, won the scoring title with
a 28.4 average, just ahead of
Redicks 27.4. Morrison shot
43.7 percent from 3-point range,
while Redick hit 42.1 percent
from beyond the arc.
It is a testament to the type
of season each of us has had,
Redick said. Adam is certainly
a great player and it is an hon-
or to be unanimous pick along
with him.
Morrison said being an All-
America isnt something you
think about receiving when
you start your collegiate career,
but to be associated with some
of the great names of college
basketball is an honor. I guess
to be a unanimous pick with
J.J. seems only ftting since the
two of us have been followed
so closely this year. Hes a great
player.
Morrison is Gonzagas sec-
ond All-America, joining Dan
Dickau in 2002.
This is the second time in
three years there were two
unanimous selections. In 2004,
Jameer Nelson of Saint Josephs
and Emeka Okafor of Connecti-
cut were unanimous.
Redick is the frst repeat frst-
teamer since Jason Williams, an-
other Duke guard, in 2001 and
2002.
Redick and Williams, a senior
center who averaged 18.4 points
and 10.3 rebounds while shoot-
ing 58 percent from the feld, are
the ninth set of teammates to be
selected to the frst team and the
frst since Jason Williams and
Shane Battier of Duke in 2001.
Both J.J. and Shelden are
deserving of this honor. They
have produced on the court
at a high level all season, and
throughout their entire careers
at Duke, coach Mike Krzyze-
wski said. They both under-
stand that individual awards
like this come about as a result
of throwing themselves into
what is important for our team.
It is quite an accomplishment
for teammates to be named frst
team All-America by The Asso-
ciated Press.
Duke, the overall No. 1 seed
in the NCAA tournament, was
the only team besides Connect-
icut to be ranked No. 1 in the
AP poll this season. The Blue
Devils won both the regular
season and tournament cham-
pionships in the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 The universiTy daily Kansan 7a sporTs
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11th & Haskell
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JOBS
JOBS JOBS
Golf Shop- Customer Service Positions
Full and Part Time Available. Competitive
Wages, Flexible Hours. Lake Quivira
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fessional at 913-631-7577.
EARN MONEYAND HAVE FUN THIS
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Degree preferred, experience required.
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APARTMENTLEASING CONSULTANT
PTposition for enthusiastic, dependable,
self motivated individual. Good customer
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Camp Counselors needed for great
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PA. Gain valuable experience while work-
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$800 weekly guaranteed stuffing
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BAR TENDING!
Up to $300/day. No experience nec. Train-
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ATTENTION BUSINESS STUDENTS!
Summer work.
Make $8,400 - Sales, marketing, manage-
ment - Must be willing to travel. - Call
402-730-2292
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We need paid survey takers in Lawrence.
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College Students:
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CAMPCOUNSELORS wanted for private
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STUFF
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Now hiring for lifeguards and snack bar
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Restaurant and Banquet Servers. Day and
Evening Shifts Available. Apply in person.
Tuesday-Saturday.Lake Quivira Country
Club. 913-631-4821.
SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY!
Work outside, with other students, have
fun, and make $8-12 phr. Get experience!
Call College Pro Painters now!
1-888-277-9787. www.collegepro.com
Pre-school Teacher
Full time, summer and fall, 8:30-5:30; for
Christian Montessori program; m have
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courses. Sunshine Acres, 842-2223
PLAYSPORTS! HAVE FUN! SAVE
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Secure your Summer Job
Shadow Glen the Golf Club is looking for
bright and outgoing Wait Staff. Free Meals,
Flexible Schedule, Part-time, and Some
golf privileges.
No experience necessary, will train.
Located 20 minutes from KU. Please call
913-764-2299
SUMMER MANAGEMENT JOB!
100s of jobs available! Work outside, gain
leadership skills, advancement opportuni-
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School-Age Teacher
June-mid Aug; full time, 8-5, Christian pro-
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Acres 842-2223
Lead teacher needed for 3 YR old class-
room. Please call for qualifications. Chil-
dren's Learning Center. 205 N. Michigan
785-841-2185 EOE
Outgoing, Energetic Person need for
part-time leasing position at Aberdeen
Apartments. Professional attire required.
Afternoons & weekends mandatory. $8/hr
starting. Approximately 30 hours per week.
785-749-1288. Bring resume to
2300 Wakarusa Drive.
NOW HIRING ALLSHIFTS
Spangles Restaurant
Interviewing on Tues, Wednesdays and
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P/Thelp wanted Prairie Highlands Golf
Course, hourly + tips, food & beverage
position. Must be 21+. 913-856-7235 ext. 4
8A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 2006 SPORTS
Kansan le photo
Junior guard Sharita Smith guards Kansas State freshman guard Shalee
Lehning during a game on March 2 in Allen Fieldhouse. Kansas three losses
to Kansas State were one of the bottom moments for the Jayhawks this
season.
WOMENS GOLF
Kansas brings home
top tournament honors
The Kansas womens golf
team took home rst place in
the Mountain View Collegiate
in Catalina, Ariz. March 24-26.
The Jayhawks shot a three-day
total of 884, one stroke ahead of
second place Nebraska. On the
nal day they shot 290, the best
round of golf the Jayhawks had
played all season.
Individually, senior Chelsey
Pryor shot a 217, which was
good enough for sixth place in
the event. Sophomore Annie
Giangrosso followed close
behind, tying for seventh place
individually with a 218. Junior
Amanda Costner nished in a
tie for 14th place with a 221, and
senior Meredith Winkelmann
shot a 228, tying for 35th. The KU
victory was the teams rst since
the Marilynn Smith/Sunower
Invitational in the fall of 2004.
I am so proud of our girls,
Kansas coach Erin ONeil said. I
know what this team is capable
of and I hope this a springboard
for the rest of the season.
Stephen Bergman
Tennis
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12A
In the sweep against UMKC,
Kansas allowed only one game
point, which came in the second
set of the last match in the No. 6
spot, which was held by sopho-
more Stephanie Smith. By add-
ing three sweeps during spring
break, Kansas now has a total of
ve sweeps this season. The Jay-
hawks have eight matches left
before the Big 12 Tournament.
We played really well, it was
denitely a good, good change
for us to play some teams to
get our condence back going
again, Hall-Holt said.
LSU was the highest ranked
team by the International Ten-
nis Association that Kansas has
defeated this season.
They are a really good team
and I think that is what started
our comeback, I guess you could
call it, senior Christine Skoda
said about LSU.
Freshman Ksenia Bukina
overcame a losing streak dur-
ing spring break. She lost her
three previous singles matches
to Iowa, Oklahoma State, and
Kansas State, respectively. She
responded by winning her sin-
gles matches against Southern
and LSU. She did not com-
pete individually in the past
two matches against UMKC
and Saint Louis, forcing every-
one on the team to move up
one spot. Bukina competed in
doubles matches against Saint
Louis.
As a result of her losing streak,
she has dropped from the ITA
singles rankings, but still holds
the No. 1 spot at Kansas.
After the four-game winning
streak, Kansas now has a re-
cord of 9-6. Because all of the
matches were against non-Big
12 teams, that still leaves Kan-
sas tied for last place in the Big
12, along with Iowa State and
Missouri, with a conference re-
cord of 0-3.
The remaining eight Kansas
matches will be against Big 12
opponents.
Kansas will face Oklahoma
on April 1 in Lawrence at the
Robinson Courts.
Edited by Vanessa Pearson
Referee
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12A
There have been quite
a few times where I had to
break up ghts, Eicove said.
Kurt Schooley, assistant director
of Recreation Services Sport Pro-
grams, has been a Kansas high
school basketball ofcial for eight
years. Schooley said the students
went through three, four-hour
training sessions. He said while
the training ofcials received was
above average for intramurals,
it would not turn anyone into a
NCAA-quality ofcial.
If theyre giving effort and get-
ting better thats all I can ask,
Schooley said.
Eichhorn said even with the
constant jeers from players and
fans, the hours were exible and
there were numerous opportunities
for advancement.
Its the best job you can have
on campus, Eichhorn said.
Edited by Gabriella Souza
WNIT
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12A
with less than a minute
left in regulation to send the
game into overtime. The vic-
tory against Wisconsin marked
Kansas rst victory against a
major-conference team after
playing mid-major schools for
the rst two months. Kansas
overcame a 14-point decit,
the third largest in school his-
tory, to win the game. Kemp
established a new career-high
with 28 points.
BOTTOM 5:
1. Three losses to Kansas State
The streak has hit dou-
ble-digits. Kansas has now
dropped 11 consecutive games
to its in-state rival, dating back
to the 2001-2002 season. The
senior class of Hallman, Kemp
and Brown never defeated
Kansas State in its four years
at Kansas. Despite the six-
point loss in Manhattan early
in the conference season, the
result in the final two games
was never in doubt. The three
losses came by a combined 44
points.
2. Mississippi 78, Kansas 76 (March
19)
Kansas squandered a 16-point,
second-half lead in its loss in the
rst round of the WNIT. The Jay-
hawks built their lead off strong
bench play from Zinic and junior
guard Shaquina Mosley.
The KU defense was not able
to control Mississippis Ar-
mintie Price in the nal 14 min-
utes. The Rebels used a 29-11
run to tie the game with seven
minutes remaining. Price n-
ished with 31 points, tying the
most given up all season by the
Jayhawks.
3. Colorado 74, Kansas 65 (Jan. 10) /
Colorado 77, Kansas 71 (Feb. 1)
The Buffaloes nished the
Big 12 season with three con-
ference victories two of those
victories came against the Jay-
hawks. The Jayhawks rarely led
in either game, despite strong
performances from Brown in
both games. Kansas chances
of moving up in the conference
were hampered by this season
sweep.
4. Baylor 90, Kansas 40 (Jan. 28)
The 50-point loss in Waco,
Texas, was the worst loss in pro-
gram history. Kansas kept the
game close for most of the rst
half, but the defending national
champions opened up their
ve-point lead to 23 by halftime.
Baylor scored 37 points off 23
KU turnovers in the record-set-
ting loss. Kansas only had one
player, Kemp, in double gures.
She had only 10 points.
5. Missouri 64, Kansas 57 (Feb. 11)
Kansas controlled the game
for 35 minutes, then Bond struck
for Missouri. Bond scored 12 of
her game-high 31 points in the
nal ve minutes of the game.
Missouri shut down Kansas of-
fense with four steals on four
consecutive possessions to
open up a nine-point lead. The
Jayhawks three seniors scored
47 of the teams 57 points. The
remaining 10 points came from
freshman guard Ivana Catic and
sophomore forward Taylor Mc-
Intosh.
Edited by Frank Tankard
J o e ' s p a s t r y & s a n d w i c h e s a t
TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 2006 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 9A CLASSIFIEDS
FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
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ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE SERVICES CHILD CARE TICKETS TRAVEL
ROOMMATE/SUBLEASE
1 & 2 BR apartments. Now leasing and for
fall. Exercise facility and pool on bus route.
Eddingham Place Apartments.
Call 841-5444.
Put down a low deposit today and hold an
extra-large apartment for spring, summer,
or fall! We'll take care of you now so you
have no worries tomorrow! Park 25 Apart-
ments, 9A3, 2401 W. 25th, 842-1455
Lawrence Property Management. Now
leasing 2 & 3 BR's. www.lawrencepm.com
785-832-8728.
Dont forget the
20% student discount
when placing a classified.
With proof of KUID
2 BRloft avail. Aug $550/mo. First
month-$250. Close to campus.
4/5 BRavail. Aug. Fenced yard, deck
$1600/mo. First mo. $800. Close to
campus. Matt 979-5587
3 BR 1 1/2 BAhouse avail. now or June 1st.
1537 New Hamp. DW, CA, W/D hookups,
$1100/month. Lisa 913-271-3520 or Lois
785-841-1074.
3-4 BR. town home available for fall, all
with 2 car garages. 2-4 baths available.
No pets. $930-$1700/month. Call
766-1443
2 & 4 BR luxury loft apartments avail.
now. Located in a historic building in
North Lawrence. $850-2BR $1500-4BR.
For information, call 550-8499.
Spacious 2 bdrm apts. available June 1st.
Also 2 bdrm apts available Aug. 10. Btw
campus & downtown, close to GSP-Corbin.
$375 each plus 1/2 of utilities. No pets.
Call 841-1207 or 550-5012.
2 BR, 1 BA1935 Bungalow close to KU
Med Center. $125, 000. Updated kitchen,
new vinyl windows, lrg backyard. 2507 W.
45th Ave. Kansas City, KS. Contact Ellen at
913-244-8420.
1-4 BRs on or near campus. Avail now or
Aug. 1 One month deposit. Family owned
and run. Off street parking 842-2569
Available June small 1 bedroom base-
ment apartment in renovated old house,
13th and Vermont, D/W, window A/C, wall
to wall carpet, cats OK, $369 call 841-1074
3 BRapart. 2901 University Dr. Newly
remodeled, all new appliances. Very spa-
cious. 1 1/2 BA. Fireplace, sky light, W/D
hookup, patio, garage, close to campus.
No smoking/pets. Rent $975
Call 748-9807
Small 3 BR apt in renovated old house,
avail Aug, Wood floors, ceiling fans, dish-
washer, claw foot tub, window A/C, and
storage attic, 13th and Rhode Island, walk
to KU, cats OK, $790 call Jim and Lois at
841-1074
314 W. 14th St. 1 and 2 BR apartments.
Newly remodeled. All utilities paid.
$650-$850. No pets 550-0895
3 BR, 3 BA, 2 car garage avail. now or
Aug 1. Near bus route. Newer construction
One mo. deposit $1050/mo 842-2569
1 BR apart. avail. June 1st, another 1 BR
apart. avail. August 10th. Between campus
and downtown. Close to GSP-Corbin. $450
each. No utilities. No pets. 841-1207 or
550-5012 1 BR apartment avail. 8/1/06 &
2 BR apartment avail. 1/1/07 in very nice
older, large, remodeled, quiet home on
Kentucky, close to campus. No smok-
ing/pets. Tom at 766-6667
2 bedroom apartment in renovated old
house, available June, wood floors, dish-
washer, W/D stack unit, claw foot tub,
13th and Vermont, cats OK, $769 call
841-1074
Available August small 2 bedroom apart-
ment in renovated old house, large bed-
rooms, small living room, D/W, off street
parking, wood floors, 13th and Connecti-
cut, easy walk to KU, $595 cats OK, call
841-1074
Avail August small 3 BR house, 14th and
Vermont, central A/C, wood floors, ceiling
fans, off street parking 13th and Vermont,
easy walk to KU, tiny dogs OK, $929, call
841-1074
Large 2 BR apt in renovated old house,
avail Aug, wood floors, ceiling fans, win-
dow A/Cs, D/W, W/D hookups, walk to KU
& downtown, cats OK $779 Jim and Lois
at 841-1074
Sublease anytime thru 7/31. Nice 2BR.
W/D, Near Campus on Bus Rt, New
Floors & Paint. 470/mo 316-734-2698
Summer sublease avail. 5/23-7/31 at The
Legends. Furnished, W/D, DW. Perfect
apart. and facilities. 785-856-4800
2 female roommates wanted. 27th &
Crestline. $300/mo. Plus utilities. Call
913-638-1884.
Studio, 1, 2, 3 BR apartments near KU.
750 sq ft., 2 BR residential/office. Room,
possible exchange for labor. 841-6254
2 BRapart. 2901 University Dr. Very nice
and spacious. All appliances, W/D
hookups, fireplace, sky lights, patio, and
garage. Close to campus. Perfect for
couples! Rent $620. No smoking/pets.
Call 748-9807
2, 3, & 4 BR houses and apts. W/D. Near
downtown. Owner-managed. Price
$600-$1500+util. 785-842-8473
1, 2, 3, & 4 Apts. & Houses
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
www.holiday-apts.com
Call 785-843-0011
Available now! 2 BR apartment next to
campus at Jayhawk Apartments. 1030
Missouri. $600/mo, $600 deposit. August
leases also available. Call 556-0713.
Looking for spacious? Must see this! 3+ BR
(+ = office/den), 2 BA, fireplace w/ shelves,
huge kitchen, new DW. CA, W/D hookups,
attached garage w/ opener + off-street
parking. Basement family room + storage.
Yard care. Near bus and shopping. No
pets. Lease, starting July or August. Refer-
ences required. $990/mo. Negotiable.
Call 843-7736.
3 BR house for rent. Graduate students.
W/D, CA, refrig. Available August 1st.
Adjacent to the rec center. 785-528-4876.
Available June cute 3 bedroom renovated
older house, walk to KU or downtown,
Central Air, new 90% efficient forced air
gas furnace, wood floors, ceiling fans,
fenced yard, D/W, W/D hookups, tiny
dogs OK, $1100 call Jim & Lois at
841-1074
House for rent. Avail. Aug 1st. Very nice 3
BR, close to campus. CA, W/D, FP, Inter-
net throughout. $1050/mo No Smoking,
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KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
In a Class of its Own.
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Legal
Psychological
Tanning
Every Tuesday in
The University Daily
Kansan
Serving
KU
EntErtainmEnt
Greg Griesenaver/KANSAN
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH
You could easily be on a tear as the day
begins, and beating your chest in victory
by the evening. Your mood swings could be
dramatic, mainly because you see life dif-
ferently. A frm grip on your potential makes
a difference.
Tonight: Easy does it.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH
You might want to rethink a recent decision,
especially if it is causing tension within a
partnership or relationship. Knowing when
to back out could be important. You might
want to slow down and simply think through
a situation.
Tonight: Easy does it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH
Think before you leap into action. Your smile
goes a long way toward winning friends,
even some who might throw a tantrum right
now. You could see your way to changes
that are more positive if you anchor in and
don a very serious attitude.
Tonight: Smile away after all the serious-
ness!
CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH
Your perspective might change because of
information heading your way. Decide to
step up to the plate and take more respon-
sibility. If you are willing to lead and move
a situation, success will surely greet you.
Tonight: Out late.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH
Working with individuals makes a big dif-
ference in what happens. You might want
to rethink your actions, especially as you
might have been unusually ornery. A serious
approach draws positive results.
Tonight: Happy as can be.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH
Others will stand up to you and force you to
regroup and think through your plans. You
might be a bit out of sorts as a result. You
need to talk to a trusted adviser rather than
react. Youll get a different slant.
Tonight: Quiet works.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH
You often have a lot to say. Todays words
could be more hurtful than you realize. You
might need to slow down before you cause
yourself a problem. Ease up and work with
someone you care about.
Tonight: Listen to the other side.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH
You might come out OK as long as you cut
risking, especially fnancially. Clearly, you
cannot determine others responses, though
you might want to. Someone might present
a far different opinion from the one you are
working with.
Tonight: Relax.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HH
You could be pushing way beyond the norm.
Others simply might not be ready to hear
you at all. Loosen up and work with a pres-
ent situation. If you fex, the outcome will be
much better -- promise.
Tonight: Now, let off steam.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH
Your words could get a strong reaction, or
you might be going ouch from someone
elses reaction. You might not always know
what works best. Slow down and think
rather than react.
Tonight: A favorite dinner.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH
Your expenses might not be the way you
like them. You can say no or fnd an
alternative. Be willing to explore your
options no matter what someone else does
or thinks. Find tried and proven sources for
suggestions.
Tonight: Talk to a source.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH
You hit fak no matter which way you turn.
Dont let frustration get the best of you.
Stay even and fnd the proper path for the
moment. Answers head your way. Be easy-
going, and you will enjoy yourself.
Tonight: Treat yourself.
t DamageD circus
t lizarD boy
t Penguins
t fancy comix
t horoscoPes
Andrew Hadle/KANSAN
Doug Lang/KANSAN
Sam Hemphill/KANSAN
The Stars Show the Kind of Day Youll Have:
5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffcult
10a thE UnivErsity Daily Kansan tUEsDay, marCh 28, 2006
Editors note: The Kansas
baseball team opened Big 12
Conference play this season
against Baylor and Nebraska,
going 1-2 in both series. Kansas
baseball writers Alissa Bauer
and Shawn Shroyer provided
a team-by-team breakdown of
each Big 12 Conference oppo-
nent.
No. 10 Texas (19-10, 4-1 Big 12)
Fast fact: The Longhorns
have appeared
in three of the
last four Col-
lege World
Series Cham-
pionships, winning two (2002,
2005), and will try to become
the frst team to win back-to-
back national championships
since LSU (1996, 1997).
Key additions: Freshmen in-
felder Bradley Suttle and out-
felder Jordan Danks were
drafted last spring and now are
playing well for the Longhorns,
but outfelder Kyle Russell has
been the most impressive Texas
freshman. Russell is batting .375
with 27 hits, 18 runs, fve home
runs and 28 RBI.
Player to watch: Junior outfeld-
er Drew Stubbs. He has started
all 29 games for the Longhorns
and is batting .314 with 33 hits,
30 runs, four home runs and 21
RBI. One pitcher to keep an eye
on is sophomore Adrian Alaniz
(4-0). In eight starts, Alaniz
leads the team in victories and
has a 1.92 ERA and 36 strike-
outs, which are second best on
the team.
When Texas will face Kansas:
May 5-7 in Austin, Texas.
No. 3 NeBraska (17-3, 2-1)
Fast fact: The Huskers reached
the College
World Series
last season, but
have reached
the College
World Series in
back- t o- back
years only once (2001, 2002).
Key addition: Junior college
transfer outfelder Luke Gorsett
has started all but one game for
Nebraska, is batting .373 and
leads the team with 28 hits, nine
home runs, 21 RBI and an .813
slugging percentage.
Player to watch: Nebraskas
success will rest on its pitching
staff, beginning with junior Joba
Chamberlain (3-1). This season,
Chamberlain is second on the
team with a 1.32 ERA and 34
strikeouts. Senior closer Brett
Jensen (3-0) is one of the top
closers in the nation and has
four saves in 10 appearances.
When Nebraska faced Kansas:
Nebraska won the March 25-26
series, 2-1.
No. 29 Missouri (15-8, 5-1)
Fast fact: The Tigers last Col-
lege World Se-
ries appearance
was in 1964.
Key additions:
Sophomore in-
felder Brock Bond transferred
to Missouri from Arkansas and
is batting .355 with 27 hits, 20
runs and 10 RBI. Freshman Da-
vid Cales is a dual threat, hav-
ing made six appearances in the
feld and 11 out of the bullpen.
Player to watch: Junior Max
Scherzer (3-1). He was named
Big 12 Pitcher of the Year last
season and has lived up to the
preseason hype with a 2.88
ERA and 31 strikeouts in just
25 innings pitched this season.
Scherzer isnt the only ace on
Missouris staff, though. Junior
lefty Nathan Culp (5-2) has a
2.36 ERA and leads the team in
victories, strikeouts (32) and in-
nings pitched (45.2).
When Missouri will face Kansas:
March 31-April 2 in Lawrence.
No. 24 Baylor (16-8, 3-3)
Fast fact: Baylor tied Big 12
records and set
program records
with fve players
drafted in the
frst 10 rounds
of last springs
draft and had a
total of seven players selected in
the frst 15 rounds.
Key additions: Baylors most
valuable addition is a player who
was on the team last year but
has played a new role this year.
Senior Zach Dillon led the team
in RBI last season as the teams
designated hitter. Now hes be-
hind the plate playing catcher
and has still been productive.
Dillon is batting a team-best
.370 with 27 hits, 16 runs, two
home runs and 18 RBI.
Players to watch: Starting pitch-
ers sophomore Tim Matthews,
junior Cory VanAllen and se-
nior Ryan LaMotta. The trio has
a combined 8-6 record and 3.71
ERA. With a mediocre offense
supporting them, these play-
ers will need a better collective
winning percentage and ERA to
make it to the postseason.
When Baylor faced Kansas: Bay-
lor won the March 17-19 series,
2-1.
No. 23 oklahoMa (20-6, 2-1)
Fast fact: 2006
will be Sunny
Golloways frst
full season as
head coach at
Oklahoma.
Key additions:
Sophomore infelder Aaron Reza
is batting .294 with 25 hits, 22
runs, one home run and 18 RBI.
Junior Joseph Hughes has a 1.64
ERA in 11 innings as a reliever
and a .355 batting average in 31
at bats as a position player. Both
transferred to Oklahoma this
season from junior colleges.
Player to watch: Senior pitch-
er Daniel McCutchen. He has
been drafted three times in his
amateur career and leads Okla-
homa with 55 strikeouts in 56.1
innings pitched. Senior Steven
Guerra (8-0) has won every
game hes appeared in and has
a 2.55 ERA.
When Oklahoma will face Kan-
sas: April 28-30 in Lawrence.
Shawn Shroyer
No. 24 kaNsas sTaTe (17-3, 1-2)
Fast fact: In 1905, the Chicago
Cubs visited Manhattan and de-
feated K-State,
13-0. The Cubs
stopped in Man-
hattan on their
way back from
spring training
in Arizona.
During their 16-game winning
streak, the Wildcats faced only
one ranked opponent, for only
one game (a victory against No.
19 Wichita State on March 14).
Key addition: In his nine games
played, freshman centerfelder
Tyler Link is hitting .438 and
has attempted and stolen fve
bases.
Player to watch: Senior out-
felder Joe Roundy. He held
a 16-game hit streak that was
snapped along with his teams
16-game win streak on Saturday
against Missouri. Roundy leads
the team with a .468 batting av-
erage, nine doubles and 27 RBI.
When Kansas State will face
Kansas: April 21 in Lawrence,
and April 22-23 in Manhattan.
oklahoMa sTaTe (15-7, 0-3)
Fast Fact: Oklahoma State coach
Frank Anderson
is known for his
pitching. An-
derson was the
pitching coach
at Texas during
its 2002 national championship
campaign.
Key addition: Freshman infelder
Jordy Mercer. Mercer hit .500 and
tallied 38 RBI as a senior at Talo-
ga High School last season.
Player to watch: Last years Big
12 Freshman Player of the Year
Corey Brown. Brown leads the
team with eight stolen bases and
16 RBI.
When Oklahoma State will face
Kansas: April 14-16 in Stillwater,
Okla.
Texas a&M (17-10, 2-4)
Fast fact: The Aggies frst victo-
ry of the season
was also coach
Rob Childress
frst career vic-
tory. This is his
frst season as
coach.
Key addition: Junior pitcher Matt
Ueckert. The Rice transfer is 4-1
this season with a 3.38 ERA.
Player to watch: The Austins
Junior third baseman Austin
Boggs leads the team with a .320
average and 10 doubles. Junior
pitcher Austin Creps (3-2) an-
chors the pitching staff with a 0.76
ERA in 47.2 innings pitched.
When Texas A&M will face Kan-
sas: May 19-21 in Lawrence.
Texas Tech (19-9, 2-3)
Fast fact: Last season, the Kan-
sas-Texas Tech
series was cut to
only two games
because of
heavy rainfall in
Lubbock, Texas.
The game was
never made up.
Key addition: Freshman in-
felder/pitcher Drew Evans is
struggling in the frst half of his
frst season, but came in with big
numbers behind him. Evans hit
.405 with nine triples and 41 RBI
for Amphitheater High School in
Tucson, Ariz. He also struck out
79 batters on the mound.
Player to watch: Freshman out-
felder Roger Kieschnick. He leads
the team batting .393, but also leads
the team in strikeouts with 26.
When Texas Tech will face Kan-
sas: April 7-9 in Lawrence.
Alissa Bauer
t Big 12 ConferenCe BaseBall
Baseball swings into conference action
SPORTS CALENDAR
TODAY
nSoftball at UMKC, 5 p.m., Kansas
City, Mo.
nSoftball at UMKC, 7 p.m., Kansas
City, Mo.
nMens golf at San Jose State, all
day, Santa Cruz, Calif.
WEDNESDAY
n Baseball vs. Wichita State, 7
p.m., Hoglund
Ballpark
Player to watch:
Brock Simpson.
The sophomore
outfelder went
4-of-5 with three
singles and a
triple against
Nebraska during
the 7-6 KU victory
on Sunday.
THURSDAY
n Softball vs. Creighton, 2 p.m.,
Arocha Ballpark
n Softball vs. Creighton, 4 p.m.,
Arocha Ballpark
FRIDAY
n Baseball vs. Missouri, 6 p.m.,
Hoglund Ballpark
SATURDAY
n Baseball vs. Missouri, 2 p.m.,
Hoglund Ballpark
n Softball vs. Oklahoma State, 2
p.m., Arocha Ballpark
n Rowing vs. Tulsa/Drake, TBA,
Lawrence
n Tennis vs. Oklahoma, 11 a.m.,
Robinson Courts
SUNDAY
n Baseball vs. Missouri, 1 p.m.,
Hoglund Ballpark
n Softball vs. Oklahoma State, 1
p.m., Arocha Ballpark
n Tennis vs. Iowa State, 11 a.m.,
Robinson Courts
Simpson
Big 12 All
Missouri 5-1-0 15-8-0
Texas 4-1-0 19-10-0
Nebraska 2-1-0 17-3-0
Oklahoma 2-1-0 20-6-0
Baylor 3-3-0 16-8-0
Texas Tech 2-3-0 19-9-0
Kansas State 1-2-0 17-3-0
Kansas 2-4-0 17-10-0
Texas A&M 2-4-0 17-10-0
Oklahoma State 0-3-0 15-7-0
Source: big12sports.com
Big 12 standings
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BASEBALL
Free popcorn awaits
students at game
If you like popcorn, you are
a blue shirt away from getting
some for free. Fans who wear
blue to Wednesdays baseball
game against Wichita State will
receive free popcorn, the Ath-
letics Department announced
Monday.
The frst pitch is set for 7
p.m. at Hoglund Ballpark.
For more information about
promotions call the athletics
department at 864-3946.
Eric Jorgensen Talk To Us: Tell us your news. Contact Eric Sorrentino or Erick Schmidt at 864-4858 or sports@kansan.com
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 The universiTy daily Kansan 11a sporTs
Editors note: Kansas womens basket-
ball writer Ryan Schneider has ranked
the Top 5 and Bottom 5 moments of the
Kansas womens basketball season.
Top 5:
1. Kansas 59, Northern Iowa 49 (March 16)
Kansas scored its frst postseason victory
in seven years in the preliminary round of
the WNIT. The Jayhawks inside combina-
tion of forwards, senior Crystal Kemp and
freshman Marija Zinic, was too much for
the Panthers to match. Kemp led all scor-
ers with 18 points off 21 shots, while Zinic
scored 13 points, one shy of a career high.
After losses to Kansas State in back-to-
back games, the victory was a much-need-
ed boost for a team that struggled in the
Big 12 Conference.
2. Kansas 70, No. 23 Texas 61 (Jan. 3)
Kansas improved on its school-record 12-
0 start with its frst victory against a ranked
team in four years. In front of a season-high
5,634 fans in Allen Fieldhouse, Kansas con-
tinued the hot three-point shooting that
helped propel its fast start to the season.
The teams guards shot 40 percent from
behind the three-point line. The three Jay-
hawk seniors, Kemp and senior guards
Kaylee Brown and Erica Hallman, com-
bined for 50 of the teams 70 points. Kansas
notched its frst victory to start the confer-
ence season since the 1999-2000 season.
3. Kansas 81, Missouri 71 OT (Feb. 25)
This was Kansas lone victory against
a team that played in the NCAA tourna-
ment. Junior guard Sharita Smiths defense
on Missouri guard LaToya Bond was the
deciding factor in the game. In the ear-
lier meeting at Mizzou Arena, Bond lit up
Kansas for 31 points. Smith, however, held
Bond to just four points in 40 minutes in
this game. The Jayhawks 8-0 run to open
overtime sealed the victory and avoided a
season sweep at the hands of the Tigers.
4. Kansas 65, Iowa State 64 (Feb. 4) / Kansas 57,
Iowa State 56 OT (Feb. 18)
Kansas was only able to sweep one Big 12
North foe in fellow WNIT participant Iowa
State. The Jayhawks lone road victory of the
season came in overtime in Ames, Iowa.
Smith put together another solid de-
fensive performance on the road, holding
Iowa State guard Lyndsey Medders to sev-
en points off 2-of-12 shooting. Zinic tied
her career-high with 14 points. Hallman
hit game-winning shots in both games
free throws at the game in the feldhouse
and a layup in Hilton Coliseum.
5. Kansas 90, Wisconsin 87 2OT (Dec. 11)
Hallman began her season-long trend
of nailing big shots with her three-pointer
see WNIT oN page 8a
By Antonio MendozA
amendoza@kansan.com
kansan sportswriter
After losing four consecu-
tive matches, and fve out of the
past six, the Kansas tennis team
needed a boost. It got one dur-
ing spring break, winning four
matches in a row: three sweeps
and a 4-3 victory against No. 48
LSU.
Of the three sweeps, the frst
one came against Southern Uni-
versity in Baton Rouge, La.,
on March 19. The other two
sweeps took place in Lawrence
against UMKC and Saint Louis
last Saturday.
Its defnitely a motivator,
Kansas coach Amy Hall-Holt
said. The girls right now are
mentally excited about winning
and playing the competition and
living up to their level of play
right now.
see TeNNIs oN page 8a
www.kansan.com page 12a tuesday, march 28, 2006
sports
sports
Kansan fle photo
Jayhawks, from left to right, freshman forward Marija Zinic, freshman guard Ivana Catic and freshman guard Katie Smith, celebrate after their 59-49
victory against Northern Iowa in the frst round of the WNIT. The victory was one of Kansas top fve games this season.
Anthony Mattingly/KANSAN
Freshman Ksenia Bukina returns the ball to her Lady Raider opponent dur-
ing the match against Texas Tech on March 3. Bukina and her teammates
defeated UMKC and Saint Louis, 7-0 each, last weekend in Lawrence.
t tennis
Spring break sweeps
Four victories bring team to new level
t womens basketball
Whos to blame for the Bradley
disaster in the frst round of the
NCAA tournament? If youre point-
ing your fnger at Kansas coach Bill
Self, you shouldnt be. Here are fve
reasons why you cant blame Self
for Kansas frst-round loss.
1. Inexperienced players
Playing in the tournament for
the frst time is tough, especially
for freshmen. Even the sopho-
mores, minus guard Russell
Robinson, lacked poise, as their
only tournament experience
was last year watching from the
bench. They played a combined
10 minutes against Bucknell;
three for center Sasha Kaun and
seven for center CJ Giles.
Kansas couldnt prepare for
the feel of an NCAA tourna-
ment game. The teamwork
wasnt there. That showed in the
box score. Kansas had only 11
assists. The only three games it
had fewer than 11 assists were
against Arizona, Nevada and
Kansas State all losses.
2. Bad decisions at key moments
Kansas turned the ball over
18 times, leading to 22 points for
Bradley off those turnovers. Some
of those 18 turnovers were more
timely than others. Was it Selfs
fault that Kaun and Robinson
threw the ball to no one on two
important possessions late in the
game during Kansas comeback?
3. The referees
I am not saying the referees
were biased. They called a fair
game. However, the way they
called the game was not in Kan-
sas favor. All season long Kan-
sas relied on solid defensive bas-
ketball to force bad shots and
turnovers. In turn, that led to
a productive fast break offense.
Thats Bill Self basketball.
But against Bradley, Kan-
sas was called for 25 fouls, with
Giles and freshman guard Mario
Chalmers fouling out. Bradley
ended up shooting 32 free throws.
The refs consistently called the
Jayhawks for every touch foul
they committed, taking the team
away from what it does best: play-
ing tough defense.
4. Bradleys three-pointers
Kansas pulled within three
points late in the game, but never
could overcome the defcit. Hy-
pothetically, the game could have
been tied had Bradley not made a
desperate, deep three-point bank
shot to end the frst half.
As a team, Bradley averaged a
mediocre 33.6 percent from three-
point range. In three games in the
Missouri Valley Conference tour-
nament, Bradley went 4-of-21,
2-of-13 and 3-of-22 from three-
point range. Against Kansas, the
Braves went 11-of-21 from long
range, putting them just above 50
percent for the game.
5. A crazy tournament
This is March. It happens.
Bradleys trip to the Sweet Six-
teen didnt even make it the big-
gest Cinderella in the tournament.
That honor was taken by George
Mason, who made the Final Four.
So should Self be blamed? Def-
nitely not. Blame the format of a
one-and-done tournament. March
Madness is clichd for a reason.
n Robinett is an Austin, Texas,
junior in journalism. He is
Kansan correspondent editor.
t horn born, hawk bred
5 reasons
for KUs
round 1
demise
trAvis roBinett
trobinett@kansan.
Kansan fle photo
Senior forward Crystal Kemp wipes her eyes
during the senior night recognition after the
game against Kansas State on March 2 in Allen
Fieldhouse. The Jayhawks lost to the Wildcats
three times this season.
The good,
the bad
WNIT win,
sweep by
K-State are
highs, lows
t intramurals
Abuse,
fights
all part
of job
By Mike MostAffA
mmostaffa@kansan.com
kansan staff writer
Chris Eichhorn does not wear
glasses, yet every day at work
people angrily suggest he should.
Eichhorn, Baldwin senior, is
one of nearly 75 students who
works as an intramural basket-
ball offcial for KU Recreation
Services.
Ei c hhor n
has been an in-
tramural bas-
ketball offcial
for nearly two
years. He said
that intramural
basketball off-
cials were paid
more than any
other intra-
mural offcials
because of the
verbal abuse
they received
after every call they make.
Eichhorn could not help but
grin when he recalled an inci-
dent earlier this semester when
a player physically showed his
displeasure with his offciating.
He said during one game
he gave a player two technical
fouls, both for cursing at the of-
fcials, which caused the player
to be ejected.
After the game was over and
the teams had shaken hands, the
player he ejected walked behind
him and dumped a large bottle
of water on his head.
He just walked off without
even looking back, Eichhorn
said. I couldnt believe it.
During a game this semester
Eichhorn was forced to break
up another scuffle in a game
between two teams, one made
up of KU football players.
Tempers eventually cooled,
but Eichhorn said it was a fght
that he was not looking forward
to trying to break up.
Youre just playing for a shirt.
People shouldnt get that worked
up over it, Eichhorn said.
Zach Eicove, Olathe fresh-
man, was offciating on the court
next to Eichhorns when the wa-
ter bottle incident happened.
He said that in the highly
competitive games, players
tempers often fare out of con-
trol. One of the main reasons
players snap at the offcials and
other players is because most of-
fcials are the same age or even
younger then the players, unlike
offcials in the NCAA, who are
usually much older.
see ReFeRee oN page 8a
I
ts defnitely a motivator. The girls right
now are mentally excited about winning
and playing the competition and living up to
their level of play right now.
Amy Hall-Holt
Kansas coach
Y
oure
just
playing for a
shirt. People
shouldnt ge
that worked
up over it.
Chris Eichhorn
Baldwin senior

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