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Name:

Hugh Carter
Age: 44
Profession:
Financial
Advisor,
Wells Fargo
Political
experience: Three years as
a Lawrence-Douglas County
planning commissioner
What does it mean for KU
students if you are elected?
Hopefully more options for
them to work in Lawrence
after they graduate.
Name:
Michael
Dever
Age: 48
Profession:
Environ-
mental
Consultant/
President for GuideWire Con-
sulting, LLC
Political experience: Four
years as Lawrence city com-
missioner
What does it mean for KU
students if you are elected?
It means having a commis-
sioner who will continue to
integrate the bus system,
build better relations with the
city and University, provide
local jobs to KU graduates and
students.
Name: Bob
Schumm
Age: 64
Profession:
Business owner
(Bufalo Bobs
Smokehouse and
Dynamite Saloon)
Political experience: Twice a mem-
ber of Lawrence City Commission
(1978-1984 and 1987-1993); served
two consecutive terms as mayor of
Lawrence (1989-1991); served on the
Lawrence Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors; held ofce as
president and board member of the
Downtown Lawrence Association.
What does it mean for KU students
if you are elected? KU students,
they have a need for representation
where they live in terms of the prob-
lems they may encounter with code
enforcement, with landlords, with
knowing the rules and regulations
of our city with regards to policing,
and basically the quality of life with
regards to their of-campus living.
Name: Sven
Erik Alstrom
Age: 59
Profession:
Architect,
Business own-
er (Ecological
Architecture)
Political experience: Former
board member of the Lawrence
Preservation Alliance; member
of City of Lawrence Historic
Resources Commission (2004-
2007).
What does it mean for KU
students if you are elected?
I think what it means for KU
students if Im elected is you
get better balance to the city
commission. Im one of the
best candidates for downtown
Lawrence, and Im against special
interests and additional tax
districts. Im the only candidate
that supports the preservation of
the Baker Wetlands and the SLT
being south of Wakarusa.
Name:
Mike Ma-
chell
Profession:
Human
resources
director for
Prescrip-
tion Solutions, a pharmacy
beneft management organi-
zation.
Political Experience: Chair-
man of the Lawrence Public
Library Board of Trustees; or-
ganizer for the 2010 Vote Yes
for the Library campaign.
What does it mean for KU
students if you get elected?
Im a board chair of the public
library, so the referendum that
was passed was a lot of what
I did. I think mainly what Im
supporting and trying to do is
make sure that our downtown
remains vibrant and has the
amenities to bring people in
and want to use it.
MONday, april 4, 2011 www.kaNsaN.cOM vOluMe 123 issue 124
D
AILY
K
ANSAN
T
HE
U
NIVERSITY
All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2011 The University Daily Kansan
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11A
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Cryptoquips . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12A
Sudoku. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
WEATHER
weather.com
INDEX
Partly Cloudy/Windy
53 31
today
Sunny/Windy
69 45
tuesday
Sunny
72 47
wednesday
Find out how-to cook for
less, throw a party, and get
around town without a car.
apartment
guide
bAsEbAll| 10A
The Jayhawks brought their four-game losing streak to an end,
winning two of three games against the Baylor Bears.
Jayhawks show signs
of maturity
Forecasts by University students. For a complete detailed forecast for the week, see page 2A.
Training Day
Chris NealKANsAN
Paul Bender, a junior fromLawrence, and Dan Stork, a freshman fromLeawood, sprint up the hill
fromthe river bank during the frst leg of the mystery course Saturday afternoon at the ROTC Best
Ranger Buddy event. The event was hosted at Outlet park near Clinton Lake.
Voices of dissent speak loudly
immigrATioN imPAcT
ADAM STRUNK
astrunk@kansan.com
Kansas Secretary of State Kris
Kobach is coming to campus, but
not without controversy.
Students, faculty and community
members said they plan to protest
Kobachs speech titled State and
Local Laws Discouraging Illegal
Immigration: Their Economic and
Security Impact, which will be
held at 7 p.m., April 12 at the Lied
Center.
Its to provide the lacking point
of view, Yajaira Padilla, KU pro-
fessor of Spanish, said. While the
speaker may present a particular
point of view, there is no one there
to offer the other side. I think you
cant make an open decision, you
cant educate people, with out hav-
ing the other side.
Kobach, who was elected
Secretary of State earlier this year,
has gained national attention as
an anti-immigration advocate.
Kobach helped write the controver-
sial Arizona immigration law
that allows
police officers to detain individuals
they suspect of being in the coun-
try illegally. The law also makes the
failure to carry immigration docu-
ments a crime. Kobach tried to
implement a similar law in Kansas
earlier this year but the Kansas
Judiciary committee has tabled the
bill indefinitely.
Kobach is coming to KU as a part
of the Vickers Lecture Series put on
by the KU School of Business.
Whether you disagree or agree
with this figure, he is very influ-
ential in politics today, said Toni
Dixon, KU School of Business
communications director. The
University is a market place of
ideas and its always good to have
different perspectives.
On Saturday, a group of about
25 students. faculty and commu-
nity members were working hard
to make sure their perspectives
were heard. The group, which calls
itself Lawrence Action Network
for Diversity (L.A.N.D.) gath-
ered at the Ecumenical Christian
Ministries building to create strate-
gies and signs for the Kobach pro-
test. Hands old, young, brown
and white painted phrases like
free state not police state and
educate dont discriminate onto
cardboard signs.
Many of the protesters hoped
their efforts would help educate
those going to the lecture.
A lot of people are in the middle
group, Zach Bealer, junior from
Great Bend, said. They are coming
to be more informed. The numbers
are skewed to make things look
much worse than they are. I want
people to have the correct informa-
tion and a different point of view.
For others, the protest effort was
much more personal.
I am from Bolivia, KU gradu-
ate Julao Castillo said. I got a lot of
friends who had to go back home
because their parents couldnt get a
visa and couldnt get a green card.
Its just sad when families have to
leave the place that they call
home. Its just sad.
Castillo attend-
ed KU on an academic scholar-
ship that allowed him to obtain a
student visa. He stressed, however,
that many people wishing to come
to America lack such options.
It is really hard to get a United
States visa, he said. Some say well
if they want to come to the U.S why
dont they do it legally? Its really
hard.
Castillo currently works
in Olathe and is on the path to
become a permanent U.S. citi-
zen. He says the pro-
cess will take him
six to seven years
to complete.
He said that
the difficulty
to obtain a
visa or to
b e c o me
a citizen
were both reasons for the current
amount of undocumented immi-
grants.
When youre here, the path
to be legal here should be easy,
he said. It shouldnt be so many
years. Some just dont have the
time or the money.
While Kobachs trip to the Lied
Ce nt e r
h a s
sparked protest efforts in Lawrence,
it has also created some ethics
issues in Topeka. On March 23,
the Kansas Governmental Ethics
Commission ruled that Kobach
could not receive the $10,000 hon-
orarium the KU School of Business
was planning on paying him. The
ethics commission cited a Kansas
statute that prohibits public offi-
cials from receiving gifts or pay-
ment for speaking engagements.
The speech will be free, and
open to the public. Dixon
expects a large turnout for
the event.
The Hispanic American
Leadership Organization
(H.A.L.O.) also plans to
participate in protest-
ing Kobachs speech.
Edited by Emily
Soetaert
Aaron Harris/KANsAN
Julao Castillo, a 2008 KU alum-
nus fromSucre, Bolivia, makes
a sign for a protest of Kansas
Secretary of State Kris Kobach.
Kobach is scheduled to speak at
the Lied Center on April 12.
Kris KobAch sPEEch
WhEN: Saturday, April 12 at 7 p.m.
WhErE: The Lied Center
cosT: Free, open to the public
On Tuesday, there will be a general election for
Lawrence city commissioners and the Lawrence
school board.
Elections are held every two years. This year,
three city commissioner positions are vacant. The
two candidates receiving the most votes are elected
to four-year terms, and the third place candidate is
elected to a two-year term.
The city commission election is an intergral part
of the mayoral election process. The newly-elected
commissioners will elect a mayor and vice mayor in
Aprils first city commission meeting this year.
Students with a Lawrence address are eligible to
vote in this election. To verify registration status and
voting location, visit wwww.douglascountyelections.
com. Voting is open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
BY CHRISTOPHER HONG
LauRa NIGHTENGaLE
ElEcTioN
Candidates for 2011 school and city boards
ROTC | 7A
The 17th annual ROTC Best Ranger Buddy Competition was hosted at
Outlet Park on Saturday. The University of Kansas had several cadets
competing against 240 other ROTC students.
RotC Best Ranger Buddy Competition
2A / NEWS / MONDAY, April 4, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM
QUOTE OF THE DAY
im rich. Freakin rich. its crazy.
Britney Spears
FACT OF THE DAY
Britney spears favorite ice cream is
orange sherbet.
usmagazine.com
MONDAY
April 4
THURSDAY
April 7
FRIDAY
April 8
WEDNESDAY
April 6
SATURDAY
April 9
Whats going on?
nlia southern will perform on the bas-
soon as a part of the school of Musics
student recital series. The event will take
place from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in swarthout
recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
nThe frst campus Mural project is giving stu-
dents the opportunity to decorate blank canvases
from noon to 2 p.m. from April 4 to April 8 in the
Traditions Area of the kansas Union.
n international student and scholar services will
host a World Foosball Tournament.The tourna-
ment will take place in the kansas Union plaza
from noon to 3 p.m.
TUESDAY
April 5
nThe kU Memorial Unions will host a book talk
for iraqi Fulbrighter,by Goran sabah Ghafour.
The talk will occur in Jayhawk ink in the kansas
Union from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
April 10
nThe flm and media studies department will
host a screening of peaceful Warriorat 7 p.m. in
room 100 of Oldfather studios. The event is free.
nThe department of visual art will host an open
drawing from a live nude model from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. in room 405 of the art and design building.
MONDAY:
cloudy skies in the morning, gradually becoming mostly sunny. High
near 51. Breezy, with a north wind between 20 and 25 mph, with gusts as
high as 35 mph.
MONDAY NIgHT:
Clear and cool. Low 30.
TUESDAY:
sunny, with a high near 68. Breezy, with a southwest wind between 10
and 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.
TUESDAY NIgHT: Clear. A low of 46. Southwest wind 15-20 mph.
WEDNESDAY:
Mostly sunny but increasing clouds late. High 71 and low 52.
Information fromforecasters Aaron White and John Carroll, KU atmospheric science students
Weather forecast
THURSDAY:
Cloudy and breezy with a chance of thunderstorms. High 73 and
low 54.
Call the KU
weather line
any time:
(785) 864-3300
ninternational student and scholar services will
host the isA World cup soccer Tournament from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at shenk Fields. The event is free.
STAYINg CONNECTED WITH
THE KANSAN
Get the latest news and give us
your feedback by following The
kansan on Twitter @Thekan-
san_News, or become a fan of
The University Daily kansan on Facebook.
CONTACT US
Tell us your news.
contact Nick Gerik, Michael Holtz, kelly
stroda, courtney Bullis, Janene Gier
or Aleese kopf at (785) 864-4810 or
editor@kansan.com. Follow The kansan
on Twitter at Thekansan_News.
kansan newsroom
2000 Dole Human Development
center
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kJHk is the student voice in
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MEDIA PARTNERS
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ET CETERA
The University Daily kansan is the student newspaper of the
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subscriptions can be purchased at the kansan business office,
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Dole Human Development center, 1000 sunnyside Dr.
On March 31, someone stole
cDs and an air freshener from a
car for a loss of $15 in the 1500
block of Engel road.
On March 31, in Oliver Hall a
person fghting with a resident
was asked to leave.
On April 2, an individual in Mc-
collum residence Hall used a fre
extinguisher in the eighth foor
lobby, triggering a fre alarm and
the evacuation of the building.
ON THE RECORD
Mass pillow fghts
cross borders
people in cities across the
globe have taken part in mass pil-
low fghts as part of international
pillow Fight Day.
in londons Trafalgar square,
people came dressed in pajamas,
dressing gowns and fancy dress
to take part in the good natured
pillowfght saturday afternoon.
Most people carried feather-flled
pillows that exploded as they
fought.
londons Metropolitan police
said sunday that the event had
been peaceful and they had no
reports of any trouble.
Organizers listed similar events
in more than 130 cities around
the world.
The fghts were organized by
The Urban playground Move-
ment which wants to encourage
people to make use of public
spaces.
2010 Census counts
forgotten residents
of Lost Springs, Wyo.
The Wyoming town of lost
springs can fnally count on the
census to get its population cor-
rect: four, not one.
The casper star-Tribune
reports that the census Bureau
somehow missed four other
residents of the town when it
counted only one person in 2000.
The cause of that mistake
wasnt clear. leda price, who lives
on the west side of the one-block
Main street, jokes that ofcials
must have counted only her side
of town.
The 2010 census, however, got
it right this time when it found
and counted all four of lost
springs residents. The newspa-
per reports that since the 2000
survey, two residents died but a
newcomer moved in.
April Fools prank
costs trickster $150
A 16-year-old illinois girl has
been given $150 in tickets after
the worried victims of her April
Fools Day prank called police.
Bloomington police say the
girl texted her friend and cousin
Friday morning and said shed
been robbed and shot in the
foot.
The pair called police, who
rushed to a home where they
found the 16-year-old safe. she
hadnt been robbed or shot.
The (Bloomington) panta-
graph reports the girl received
a $100 ticket for disorderly con-
duct and a $50 ticket for truancy
because she wasnt in school
Friday.
police say she could have been
criminally charged with fling a
false police report.
Associated Press
ODD NEWS
2401 W. 25th ST
Lawrence, KS 66047
785 842 1455
On KU Bus Route | Short Term Leases Available | Swimming Pool & Courtyard
On Site Laundry Facilities | Carports and Storage Units Available
BRINGTHIS AD INFOR ONE (1) REDUCED APPLICATIONFEE ($24)Oer Expires 4/30/11
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 4, 2011 / NEWS / 3A
BY KATIE PRIEBE
editor@kansan.com
Homelessness surrounds resi-
dents every day in Lawrence and
throughout the country. But few
actually take the chance to learn
more about this ongoing problem
and the people facing it.
The Homeless Sleep-Out, spon-
sored by Into the Streets Week, aims
to bring awareness and understand-
ing about this issue to students and
residents. Into the Streets Week is
an annual event involving various
community volunteer activities. The
Homeless Sleep-Out took place on
Saturday night in South Park in
downtown Lawrence. The attendants
spent the night in the park and par-
ticipated in discussions and presen-
tations. Loring Henderson, director
of the Lawrence Community Shelter,
held a group discussion during the
event.
Megan Watson, one of the co-
coordinators for Into the Streets
Week, said this project was impor-
tant to her and she wanted students
to become more aware of homeless-
ness in the community.
This event is neat because it has
more of an activism component
than a lot of the events we have had,
she said. Its not as hands-on and
down-in-the-trenches working, but
its more learning; and that knowl-
edge will stay with students forever.
Watson said homelessness is a
situation that few people take the
time to actually solve.
Its something, unfortunately,
we have become accustomed to,
Watson said. Our main goal is to
make students aware that homeless-
ness is an issue. Its a global issue
and making them aware and giving
them the tools to help change that is
important.
The biggest problem for home-
less people in Lawrence was finding
a place to sleep for the night, said
William Dale, one of the co-direc-
tors of the Center for Community
Outreach at the University of Kansas.
He said that being homeless is a stig-
ma in the Lawrence community.
When you think about home-
lessness, you think about the beggar
on Massachusetts Street, when that
is really not a good representation
of them at all, Dale said. They are
hardworking people who, through
other circumstances, ended up in
the place that they are. On a global
scale, you can see it in every city,
every country and every commu-
nity. Its something we need to work
to get rid of.
He said the first step to helping
the homeless is volunteering and
getting to know them.
The last Homeless Sleep-Out took
place in the spring of 2005, Watson
said. The event organizers were
pleased that a few people showed up
to learn more, raise awareness and
participate in a group discussion
about this issue. About 10 people
attended.

EditedbyCarolineBledowski
Volunteers are homeless in South Park for one night to raise awareness
LocAL
School names second
candidate for dean
The search for a new School of
Business dean continues.
According to a University press
release Neeli Bendapudi, an Ohio
State business professor and KU
alumnus, will meet with faculty,
staf and students in a public
forum from 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday at
3014 Wescoe Hall.
Bendapudi is the second can-
didate for the School of Business
dean position to participate in
a public forum. The frst was Ali
Malekzadeh, dean of the Williams
College of Business at Xavier
University.
Bendapudi has been pub-
lished in the Harvard Business
revue and the New york Times.
Bendapudis most recent research
articles include How to use
language that Employees Get
and Co-producing class partici-
pation,Talking about Teaching,
Volume 4, 42-46.
A 15-member search com-
mittee made up of students,
faculty and business profession-
als selected both Bendapudi and
Malekzadeh as candidates to
replace William l. Fuerst, former
School of Business dean of 11
years. Fuerst resigned from the
position in September 2010,
amidst allegations by business
students of the misallocations of
course fees.
The KU Ofce of the provost
has made an online evaluation
form of the public forum avail-
able on its Web page. Though
the School of Business has yet to
name a third candidate for the
position, the due dates on the
forum evaluation form suggest
the possibility of a third candi-
date speaking in public forum on
April 7 or 8.
The search process for the new
business school dean began in
November.
By AdamStrunk
Interim dean named
to permanent position
The School of law named Ste-
phen Mazza as dean Friday.
Mazza, who had been serving as
interim dean since July, replaced
Gail Agrawal, who
accepted a posi-
tion at the Univer-
sity of iowa.
Mazza has been
part of the KU law
faculty since 1998.
He was manag-
ing editor of the
Tax law review and received his
master of laws degree from New
york University. Mazza specializes
in taxation, and his work has been
cited by the U.S. Supreme Court.
He has helped reform the law
curriculum and is instrumental in
recruiting and alumni activities,
Chancellor Bernadette Gray-little
said in a statement. Stephens
leadership will be a key factor as
we embark on strategic planning
initiatives and a major fundraising
campaign.
ByJonathanShorman
Mazza
LAW bUSINESS
learn about specials. nd a place to live.
come join us on the stauffer-int lawn, next to watson.
10 AM - 3 PM.
apartment hunting is a pain. we can make it painless.
learn about more than fteen
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DOWNTOWN | 23rd & KASOLD | 6th & WAKARUSA
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RIGHT WAY
4A / NEWS / MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9
Demand the facts and youll get
them. They help you figure out
what to do next. You have the
message and can get it out. Its a
very lucky moment for love. Ask
for what your heart desires.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9
Youre more powerful than you
ever imagined. Try again at some-
thing you have failed at before.
Practice your five-minute elevator
speech and then deliver.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 7
Listening is the most powerful
part of communication. Observe
rather than spend. completion is
within your grasp. Its okay to hide
out. consider travel plans.
CANCER (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 9
Enjoy inspiring conversation with
friends for the next few days. They
understand and have a wider
view. Talk over your ambitions,
dreams and wild schemes.
LEo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9
Take inventory of assets and
liabilities for powerful decision-
making. New assignments come
in, so make a good impression
by your practical point of view. A
touch of mystery doesnt hurt.
VIRGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7
Let yourself explore. A dream
inspires. Romance may well
follow, since your brilliance is
enchanting. stop and paint a pic-
ture if you have the urge. Youll be
glad for the memory later.
LIbRA (Sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is a 7
Your imagination carries you to
new places. You may find new
meaning and inspiration now.
stash away your winnings.
consider a joint endeavor with a
talented friend.
SCoRpIo (oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8
Inject glamour into your work.
Its a good time to take a trip. It
doesnt have to cost money. You
can use your imagination or visit a
museum. Notice great style.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9
Your ideas blast you ahead in
your career. You may want to start
planning a new project now. Feed
your urge to be creative, whether
at work or play.
CApRICoRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 8
Its a fantastic day to let your
imagination go wild, especially
with a loved one. Participate in
creative projects together. Take
photos and write it all down.
AqUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
Friends help you solve great phil-
osophical problems. Dont fall for
every offer. Focus on your home
and family for the next couple of
days. sit with it.
pISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
Let an analytical person help.
Discuss what worked and what
didnt. soak it all in. Its a perfect
time for learning and growing.
Dont reveal your entire agenda
immediately.
HoRoSCopE
10 is the easiest day, 0 the
most challenging.
CRoSSWoRD
THE NExT pANEL
Nick Sambaluk
Prince Williams hairline receding quickly
bRITISH RoYALTY
AssociAted Press
LONDON Prince William
looks like someone who has it all:
royal status, a charming fancee,
good health, and an easy touch
with his future subjects. But there
is one thing he lacks: a full head
of hair.
Casual observers who have not
paid much attention to Britains
future king in the years before
his recent engagement to Kate
Middleton have been surprised
by the extent of the 28-year-olds
hair loss. William still cuts a tall,
imposing fgure, but his bald spot
has been spreading as his hairline
recedes.
Its even more apparent since
his 26-year-old brother Prince
Harry still sports a luxuriant sup-
ply of tousled red hair.
Te British tabloids have been
merciless in their coverage, con-
stantly punning the hair to the
throne theme, and comparing
his hair loss to that of his father,
Prince Charles, and the follically
challenged prime minister, David
Cameron.
William keeps his hair short, as
befts a Royal Air Force helicopter
rescue pilot, but the military look
only emphasizes the way his hair-
line has changed.
Is hair loss dampening Wil-
liams appeal? Jennifer Engelhart,
a 19-year-old student, doesnt
think he should worry.
Hes got the prince appeal and
I dont think ... the lack of hair can
ever take that away, she said.
Zoe Robinson, another student,
also doesnt see a problem with
the thinning hair: Its just kind of
a part of him, isnt it?
Williams receding hairline has
a genetic link. His father, Charles,
and his grandfather, Prince Philip,
also experienced it, although at a
slower pace.
Dr. Bessam Farjo, a British hair
restoration surgeon who has treat-
ed patients as young as 14, said
William should take steps now to
keep as much hair as possible.
Considering his young age and
the unpredictability of where his
hair loss is going to end, his main
priority should be to stabilize
his situation, Farjo said. Some
medications certainly have a track
record of stopping the hair loss so
long as the person continues to
use (them).
Farjo said it has become socially
acceptable over the last decade for
men to intervene to prevent hair
loss.
Tere is a simpler solution:
William could just follow in his
grandmothers footsteps and de-
velop a fondness for hats.
Artists show work in support
of sexual violence in Congo
SoUTH AFRICA
AssociAted Press
JOHANNESBURG A sculp-
tural bust made of discarded bul-
let cartridges has a protruding bel-
ly with a hole in it. Another bust
encased in a large glass case has
holes in its heart, belly and thigh.
Te hole represents life, Fred-
dy Tsimba, 43, said of the busts he
made using tens of thousands of
bullet cartridges he has collected
over more than 10 years of war in
his native Congo.
Tsimba and 10 other renowned
Congolese artists exhibited work
in South Africas commercial hub
on Tuesday for Art for Peace, a
show whose proceeds will support
victims of sexual violence in east-
ern Congo.
Trough the arts we hope to
contribute to the healing process,
said South African Minister of
Arts and Culture Paul Mashatile.
We reach out to the women and
children of eastern (Congo) who
have been scarred and whose scars
will last a lifetime.
Exhibitors said the money will
beneft a hospital in Bukavu, a
large city in eastern Congo. Panzi
Hospital specializes in the treat-
ment of reproductive trauma and
trauma from sexual violence.
Violence is reaching new levels
of savagery in this corner of Con-
go, where competition for control
of mineral resources has drawn in
several armed groups, including
the Congolese army.
Various groups of fghters there
have used rape as a strategy to in-
timidate the population.
Te United Nations says hun-
dreds of thousands of people have
been raped or sexually abused in
Congo. Te pervasiveness of rape
in the Congo is part of what makes
it so horrifying one-third of
Congos rapes involve children,
and 13 percent of victims are chil-
dren under the age of 10.
Te biggest U.N. peacekeeping
force in the world of 18,000 troops
has been unable to end violence in
Congo. At least 8,300 rapes were
reported in 2009, but aid workers
say the true toll is much higher.
Survivors of sexual assault in
eastern Congo face many chal-
lenges getting help because of dis-
placement, political insecurity and
a lack of facilities.
Asa Runstrom, a spokeswoman
for Panzi Hospital, said they give
free treatment to all victims of
sexual violence. She said contribu-
tions would help them continue
their work.
We are not here to cry but to
look at the strength of these wom-
en, said Willy Yav, who helped
curate the exhibit with Te Pygma
Group, an Africa-based consulting
group.
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When hordes of outraged Americans
began convening Tea Party rallies in
2009, liberal critics cried foul.
This initiative is funded by the high
end we call it Astroturf. Its not really
a grassroots movement. Its Astroturf
by some of the wealthiest people in
America to keep the focus on tax cuts
for the rich instead of for the great
middle class, then-House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi said in April 2009.
Other commentators observed Tea
Party protests and saw the heart and
soul of Middle America. The people
who attended Tea Party events, donned
in Revolutionary War-style regalia and
waving dont tread on me flags, looked
more like the 5 p.m. crowd at IHOP, not
striped-pants Wall Street tycoons.
When voters in Massachusetts
Massachusetts! elected pickup truck-
driving Scott Brown to the United
States Senate early last year, it became
undeniable that Tea Party sentiment
resonated in even the unlikeliest of
regions.
After Brown triumphed over
Massachusetts Attorney General
Martha Coakley to win the seat for-
merly held by liberal lion Edward
Kennedy, Sean Higgins of Investors
Business Daily opined that the out-
come illustrated the fact that this is a
real grassroots movement and not an
Astroturf one.
The Tea Party movement likely
reached its apex last August, when gold
huckster and television demagogue
Glenn Beck brought his histrion-
ics and hundreds of thousands of
acolytes to the National Mall for his
Restoring Honor rally.
At the time, Politics Daily quoted
Todd Burek of San Antonio, who felt
compelled to attend the rally because
he feared our country is headed in the
wrong direction, away from the values
our founders put in place.
Grassroots anger even if its
rooted in a poor understanding of the
health care law, financial rescue and
how Keynesian economics works is
real. But that doesnt mean the rank-
and-file of the Tea Party the Joe the
Plumbers of the world havent been
played for fools.
In an intrepid piece of investigative
reporting, New York Times journal-
ist Mike McIntire noted last week the
connection between leaders of the Tea
Party movement and lobbying organi-
zations working for Asia Pulp & Paper,
an Indonesian company that has run
afoul of environmental, labor and fair
trade standards.
McIntire couldnt help noticing a
paradox.
The Tea Party movement is as
deeply skeptical of big business as it is
of big government, McIntire wrote.
How else to explain Tea Partiers
resolute opposition to the rescue of
Wall Street firms and Detroit auto com-
panies?
But anyone willing to look beneath
the surface realized long ago that Tea
Party leaders, while they spout populist
bromides, are intimately linked with big
business.
Former House Majority Leader
Dick Armey (his real name) founded
Tea Party group FreedomWorks. Until
last year, he worked for law and lob-
bying powerhouse DLA Piper, which
describes itself on its website as a firm
representing multinational, Global
1000, and Fortune 500 enterprises.
Last December, The Washington
Post reported that many Tea Party-
backed members of Congress were hir-
ing lobbyists from the energy, manufac-
turing and financial services industries
to serve on their staffs.
So much for sticking it to the
Washington establishment.
The evidence continues to mount
that Tea Party leaders are just as devot-
ed to corporate interests as their estab-
lishment predecessors.
Will Joe the Plumber take note?
Brinker is a sophomore from
Topeka in history.

O
Letter GuideLines
Send letters to kansanopdesk@gmail.
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Length: 300 words
The submission should include the
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Find our full letter to the editor policy
online at kansan.com/letters.
how to submit A LEttER to thE EDitoR
nick Gerik, editor
864-4810 or ngerik@kansan.com
Michael Holtz, managing editor
864-4810 or mholtz@kansan.com
Kelly stroda, managing editor
864-4810 or kstroda@kansan.com
d.M. scott, opinion editor
864-4924 or dscott@kansan.com
Mandy Matney, associate opinion editor
864-4924 or mmatney@kansan.com
Carolyn Battle, business manager
864-4358 or cbattle@kansan.com
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864-4477 or jcassin@kansan.com
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864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com
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864-7666 or jschlitt@kansan.com
tHe editOriaL BOard
Members of The Kansan Editorial Board are Nick
Gerik, Michael Holtz, Kelly Stroda, D.M. Scott and
Mandy Matney.
contAct us
PaGe 5a
tHe uniVersitY daiLY Kansan
Freeall
for
Anyone that seriously says frat hard
should seriously think hard about
where his or her life is going.
I need a better Facebook profle
picture. Thats a legitimate worry at
this point in my life.
Huskies vs. Bulldogs. Might want to
distance yourself from this match up,
Michael Vick.
You laugh at me because I havent
had sex. I laugh at you because you
have herpes.
MCCOLLUM PARKING LOT DANCE
PARTY AT 4 IN THE MORNING!!!
YEEEEAAAHHHHH! Oh wait, it was
just a fre alarm.
Dear Safe Ride, sorry about the
poopage.
I think its about time for another
Taylor Swift on campus rumor.
Here come those eyes. There goes
my ability to breathe.
I have more important things to do
other than sleeping, such as watching
frat initiations from my window!
Why does everyone come to me for
relationship advice? Its not like Ive
ever had a successful relationship or
anything.
So you not texting me back was just
an April Fools joke, right? Right?
Dang it.
My girlfriend wants to go to a strip
club with me. Wheres the nearest
wedding ring store?
VCU is in the Final Four. April Fools!
Oh wait.
The fact that I absolutely despise
you 90 percent of the time turns me
on even more.
How the HELL did Tyrel not win the
Senior Class Award. I voted for him
like 30 times.
I am also at the library. I had one of
the best poops Ive had in a long
time. Do it.
Im at the library and I have to poop.
Go home? Yeah, except I rode my
bike here.
In the fve minutes it took to get a
parking permit, I got ticketed. Really,
KU Parking?
Its squirrel chasin time.
Facebook keeps telling me I need a
girlfriend. Any takers?
Its really hard to focus on my math
homework while my roommate and
his friends are talking about their
favorite sex positions.
I think Facebook is trying to tell me
something. It always puts your posts
at the top of the top news, and it
keeps showing me pictures of you
with your ex-girlfriend.
I just downloaded Adele and Britney
Spears in the same hour. I think Im
confused.
I hate being in debt from college. Its
like I owe part of my soul to the U.S.
government.
A K-State window sticker and a
Missouri license plate? No wonder
they didnt know how to drive.
opinion
apps.facebook.com/dailykansan
MOndaY, aPriL 4, 2011
Guest COLuMn
PaGe 5a
As freshmen, on a whim, a friend and
I decided we would start volunteering
with one of the Center for Community
Outreach programs called Mentors in the
Lives of Kids (MILK). This program con-
nects students with the local Boys and
Girls Club. Hanging out with kids a few
hours a week after school seemed like an
OK past time, something different from
my day-to-day schedule.
I thought of it as a filler activity until I
found something else that fit my college
goals better. Little did I know my deci-
sion to volunteer twice a week at the Boys
and Girls Club would actually lead me to
change my major and my career goals to
education advocacy and after school care
programming.
Getting involved in service opportuni-
ties at the University and in the Lawrence
community will serve you for the rest of
your college career, possibly for the rest
of your life. One of the most academically
beneficial service opportunities at the
University is the opportunity to take ser-
vice learning courses.
When students have the opportunity
to enroll in these courses, they have the
opportunity to explore the class mate-
rial outside of the classroom. They have a
chance to apply abstract concepts from a
textbook to situations in real life.
Ive learned so much about myself
through courses that offer service-learning
options. It truly teaches you the impor-
tance of not just learning to earn a good
grade but how to make an impact in the
world.
Another benefit of volunteering is the
opportunity of getting to know a new com-
munity. As I have worked with the Center
for Community Outreach throughout the
past three years, I have fostered friendships
and memories that will last far beyond
graduation. Service brings alive a com-
munity of people passionate about similar
causes. It founds deeply rooted friendships
that sink deep below surface-level acquain-
tances.
In a community of like-minded people,
students can share their passion, enrich
their lives and work together to make the
University and Lawrence a better place to
live, work and play.
This spring break I travelled with six
other KU students on an alternative break
to volunteer at an elementary school and
afterschool program in the projects of
Richmond, Virginia. We had the wonder-
ful opportunity to work with an entirely
different community, and as a result we all
came out better friends and better people. I
learned more during these five days, work-
ing with the teachers, kids and my peers
than I have learned in many of my classes.
And now that I am back in Lawrence, I
look forward to using my new knowledge
and excitement to serve in my own com-
munity and to make a sustained difference
in my life and the lives of those with whom
I will work.
As a freshman, turning in my Boys and
Girls Club volunteer application, I never
thought volunteering would have such a
profound impact on my life, my education,
my career and my friendships. But looking
back, I am so grateful I thought it might be
fun to play with kids.
Emily Lamb is the co-director at
CCO. She is a junior in American studies
from Lawrence.
Community service projects create
endless opportunities for students
POLitiCs
No grassroots here, more like an Astroturf movement for Tea Party
I probably care too much about
sports, but I am not the only one.
The first step to fixing a problem
is identifying its existence, so here it
goes: I dont watch anything on televi-
sion other than sports or people talking
about sports. I try to synchronize my
attempts at going to the gym with the
ESPN shows Around the Horn and
Pardon the Interruption, and I take
losses by the teams I follow way too
hard.
In 2002, I was a huge St. Louis Rams
fan, and that year they lost in the Super
Bowl to the New England Patriots.
After their game-winning field goal in
the closing seconds, the confetti fell
from the rafters, the Patriots owner
accepted the Lombardi Trophy, and I
just stared at the screen.
I couldnt believe that a team I cared
about so much could lose. My will
for them to win was so strong that I
thought it would be enough. I stared at
the screen until my eyes gave in, or I
decided I needed more Peanut M&Ms,
whichever came first.
Then I got sick and missed the next
couple days of school.
In March 2005 the Jayhawks had a
good mens basketball team with some
of my favorite Jayhawks seniors like
Aaron Miles, Keith Langford and my
absolute favorite, Wayne Simien. My
dad decided to surprise me with tickets
to KUs first game in that years NCAA
Tournament. It was obvious we were
going to win; I wanted it so badly.
There was no other possible outcome.
They were playing the Bucknell
Bisons, who could have just as well
been known as the Somewheres
Whoevers, and whose conference
had never won a game in the NCAA
Tournament. Before the opening tip
my dad went to get us some Cokes, and
came back with this story:
There was a guy in line with a
Bucknell shirt on, and somebody
asked him, So, where the heck is
Bucknell? He said it was in Lewisburg,
Pennsylvania and the first guy said
Huh, I didnt know that. Then the
Bucknell fan said, Everyone is going
to know a lot about them in a couple
hours.
After the loss, my dad and I watched
EdTV in our motel room. Neither
one of us were laughing. That really
had more to do with the movie than
the game, but nothing could have given
back my ability to speak that night.
I got sick the next day and missed
that entire following week of school.
After the VCU game, my two room-
mates and I sat in silence for a few
moments, parted ways to our separate
rooms and didnt talk to each other
until Tuesday.
From what Ive heard on campus
and read on the always-trustworthy
Internet, Im not the only one that takes
these losses hard. It seems that our
greatest attribute as fans, our passion,
is also one of our problems. With the
looming NBA and current NFL lock-
outs, this might be the best time to look
for new ways to waste time. Sometimes
things happen that you dont expect.
We can only hope that something good
will come from them, sometimes.
Jarod Kilgore is a Junior in film
and Media Studies from Lenexa.
COMMentarY
Te more passionate the fan, the more hurtful the letdown
CartOOn
nicholas sambaluk
do you think alcohol should
be served on campus?
oYes
ono
oOnly for special occasions
T
h
e
P
o
l
l

W
e
e
k
l
y
Vote now at Kansan.COM/POLLs
By Luke Brinker
lbrinker@kansan.com
By JArod kiLgore
jkilgore@kansan.com
6A / NEWS / MONDAY, April 4, 2011
Isaac GwIn
editor@kansan.com
The backdrop of the small caf
mirrored her personality: serene
and well-mannered, yet teeming
with life and busy thoughts. Her
soft eyes beamed with enthusi-
asm as the conversation took hold.
She was quick
to make a point
of showing the
scar. The multi-
colored scarf
parted to reveal
a light-pink
line running
the breadth of
her lower neck,
a lasting testa-
ment to a life met with adversity.
To Courtney Holmes, though, it
has come to mean so much more.
A freshman at the University
of Kansas, 19-year-old Courtney
Holmes is energetic and devoted
to living life to the fullest. This
is in no small part due to her
past struggles. Holmes is a cancer
survivor. The culmination of her
battle with the disease will come
on April 15 as she participates in
Relay for Life for the first time. To
truly grasp what this momentous
occasion will embody for Holmes,
one must know what has led her to
this point.
Holmes story begins in the
suburbs of Wichita. Always encour-
aged by her parents to try new
things, Courtney spent her child-
hood partaking in a variety of dif-
ferent sports and activities.
I was pretty much into every-
thing and anything, Holmes said.
I got to experience a lot of stuff.
My parents were always very sup-
portive and really put my future in
my own hands.
In fifth grade, Courtney noticed
a large growth on her lower neck.
Concerned, her family quickly took
her to a doctor.
A CT scan produced images of
Courtneys thyroid gland, swollen
to twice the normal size. It had
grown downward through her neck
into her chest cavity, and pushing
her esophagus to one side. The
doctor recommended immediate
surgery.
In April of that year, surgeons
removed half of Holmes benign
thyroid in hopes that the other side
would regulate itself. Holmes said
she never felt truly normal again,
but that did not keep her from
returning to her active lifestyle.
In her junior year of high school,
Holmes said she started to feel very
rundown and sluggish. A visit to
the doctor resulted in the discov-
ery of a cancerous papillary tumor
developing on the remnants of her
thyroid, which, if left untreated,
would eventually result in death.
Holmes was devastated.
Four weeks later she began her
treatment. Because of the radiation
therapy, Courtney was put into
isolation and forced to spend the
next 10 days alone in the basement
of her house.
I remember just feeling so
lonely and desperate, Holmes said
with a slight crack in her voice.
My friends sent me these huge
posters that said simple things on
them like we care. That meant a
lot. I looked at those posters every
day. Just knowing that they were
thinking of me meant the world.
Her friends concern for her
well-being taught Holmes that she
needed to be supportive for others
in their trying times as well. This,
she says, is why she will be march-
ing in the Relay for Life.
Its not all about me, Holmes
said in an urgent tone, her eyes set
firmly ahead. My situation could
have been a lot worse. The fact
that my cancer has a cure and that
so many others dont really upsets
me. I want all cancers to be cur-
able. Thats why Im doing Relay
for Life.
Edited by Becca Harsch
BY MIKE MOnTanO
mmontano@kansan.com
It was Friday night, the kickoff to
spring break, and the evening began
with a phone call of a disturbance in
north Lawrence near Woodys Gas
Express around 9:10 p.m.
Officer Tim Froese got out of the
car and walked to the two people
who reported the incident to brief-
ly hear their story. Soon, Froese
walked around behind the car wash
next to the gas station.
Shortly afterward, another police
car drove up and two officers get out
with their hands slightly on their
guns. One of the officers checks
in with the man and woman who
reported the incident in order to get
a grasp of what was happening.
The other officer walks around
the car wash as well. About 10 min-
utes later, Froese climbs back into
the car and says there was an intoxi-
cated man who was being loud and
creating a nuisance.
You never know if these calls are
going to be with someone mentally
unstable or not, he said.
As Froese pulls out on 2nd Street
going south, his CB radio goes off
and now hes headed to 7th and
Massachusetts streets to investigate
a disturbance near Teapouro Tea &
Espresso, 712 Mass. St.
He parks across the street and
walks around the area. Froese gets
out his flashlight and shines in the
dark establishment trying to see
something.
The calls are usually vague
so you just have to check things
out, he says as he walks around to
the back of the building. Theres a
small empty backlot directly behind
Teapouro, but there was nothing
but a lit apartment window and
complete silence.
After checking it out for a few
minutes, he finds nothing and he
heads back to the car. No more than
a few seconds later, a driver does a
U-turn to get into the only vacant
spot on the block on the opposite
side of the street.
Froese again parks his car and
gets out to greet the driver. He tells
the driver that he cant do a U-turn
in the middle of traffic. After giving
him a warning, Froese drives off.
Not long after that, he pulls up
into the precinct and ends his 3 to
11 p.m. shift, where other cop cars
are lined up and ready to go for the
third shift, 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., which
begins with riding along with offi-
cer Tracy Russell.
Before starting his shift, Russell
reaches for his laptop and checks
the taser gun.
While driving for a few moments
the CB announcer interrupts:
Weve got a gentleman outside a
Taco Johns ... Russell picks up
his end of the CB radio to find out
that there is already a cop on the
scene. But, he said that when there
was any kind of disturbance then
its recommended to drive by and
make sure everything was under
control. Upon pulling up, there is
a man wearing purple tights, nail
polish, a necklace and a dress sitting
on the curb.
Supposedly, he was seen mastur-
bating in public. One of the officers
was getting his story while a few of
the employees looked on through
the window.
The police officers decided to
let the man go because he was not
causing problems.
The night continues with the
arrest of a woman who has three
warrants and pulling over a man
for going through a red light and
checking out a call of a drunken
man having seizures and who might
need medical attention.
Citizens never call the cops to
get the cat out of the tree. They call
the fire department, Froese said.
They only call us when something
is wrong. We see only the bad it
seems like. Nothing shocks me.
Edited by Samantha Collins
RELAY FOR LIFE
Student battles cancer,
overcomes adversity
Lawrence police respond to city disturbances
LOcAL
Holmes
Jessica Janasz/KANSAN
We see only the bad it seems like. Nothing shocks me,ofcer TimFroese said. Kansan reporter Mike Montano rode along with Lawrence policemen March 18 to learn what they go through on a
day-to-day basis.
enroll@ku.edu
785-864-5823
online.ku.edu/udk
111052
Talk to Your Advisor
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 4, 2011 / NEWS / 7A
Annual skills contest draws more than 200 cadets
ROTC
Contributed/University of KAnsAs Army rotC
Paul Bender, a junior fromLawrence, crawls the mud trail duringthe Crucible,an event in Sat-
urdays Army ROTC 17th Annual Best Ranger Buddy Competition at Clinton Lake. This weekend,
KU Army ROTC hosted more than 200 cadets frommore than 20 schools across the U.S.
Chris neal/KAnsAn
Justin Patterson, a senior fromEvens Mills, N.Y., and Bellard Howard, a senior fromLawrence,
carry a manikin through the mystery course Saturday afternoon. The participants were briefed
on what the mystery course was only a day before the event.
Chris neal/KAnsAn
Tyler Beck, a sophomore fromAndover, andTravis Warren, a freshman fromPalmdale, Calif., work their way through the mystery course Saturday afternoon. The course was comprised of a steep
climb up a river bank, carrying a manikin through a maze, dragging it underneath wires that were three feet of the ground, and then taking the manikin over a wall to the fnish line.
The 17th annual ROTC Best
Ranger Buddy Competition
was hosted at Outlet Park on
Saturday. The University of
Kansas had several cadets
competing against 240 other
ROTC students from 21 other
colleges. Two-man teams went
through fve diferent events
ranging from knot tying to
grenade throwing. There was
also a 10K ruck march to start
the competition and a 10K run
to end it.
BY CHRIS NEAL
340 Fraser | 864-4121
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quick outs in the frst inning, but
struggled in the following innings.
She allowed fve runs of nine hits
and committed fve errors, includ-
ing three hit-by-pitches. Te third
hit-by-pitch loaded the bases for
the Cornhuskers in the sixth in-
ning. It helped Nebraska pull away
from the Jayhawks for the victory.
Te Jayhawk ofense has fallen
relatively stagnant compared to
the season start. Tis is due in part
to the calibur of pitchers that play
in the Big 12.
We are having a tough time
making adjustments, coach Me-
gan Smith said. We had been
really good at that. We had been
solid at that throughout the pre-
conference season, but we have
had a hard time getting our foot-
ing ofensively this weekend.
A big part of competing against
some of the top Big 12 pitchers in
the country is making ofensive
adjustments at the plate. To im-
prove, the batters need to be able
to recognize a rise ball and realize
when a ball is going to move above
the strike zone.
I think our eyes are getting a
little too big, junior outfelder Liz
Kocon said. We just need to go
back to the basics of hitting and
stay tight and not swing for the
fence all the time. We just have
to stay tight to the ball, stay quick
and we will get better.
As the frst batter in the second
inning, Kocon hit the sole Jayhawk
run on Sunday when she hit an
out-of-the park home run over the
right-feld fence. Kocon attacked
the ball early rather than letting
pitches go.
Coach says you always have
three types of pitches: the hitters
pitch, the pitchers pitch and the
umpires pitch, Kocon said. You
have to jump on your pitch and
that is what you have to do at ev-
ery at bat. If you are looking out-
side, jump on that pitch. If you are
looking inside, jump on that pitch.
I think we are struggling a little
with that but we will defnitely
come back.
Saturday, Nebraska scored all
its points of a pair of home runs
in the third inning. Back-to-back
singles put two runners on base
at the start of the inning. Ten
freshman pitcher Tatum Edwards
stepped up and cleared the bases
with a straight shot over the lef-
feld fence. In the ffh inning,
sophomore outfelder Brooke
Tomason hit a solo home run to
right feld.
Yesterday as soon as they hit
that three-run homerun you could
see our heads were kind of down,
but today we stayed positive, Ko-
con said. Our goal was that we
wanted to fght the whole game no
matter what the score was and that
was a win for us, so in our book
that is a win for us.
Te team will continue in con-
frence play when they host No.
14 Oklahoma Wednesday. Com-
ing out of the weekend the team
is looking to boost confdence and
work on the little details of the
game. Te Jayhawks are hoping to
return to the mentality and conf-
dence of their pre-conference sea-
son, as well as the continued will
to fght against opponents.
We are concerned about our-
selves, Smith said. We want to
be fghters. I am more concerned
if they are not fghting. Yesterday,
we didnt fght, we gave up. Today
we fought at least and we can build
on that for Wednesday.
Edited by Helen Mubarak
8A / SPORTS / MondAy, April 4, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnsAn.coM
SOFTBALL REWIND
kansas nebraska
0 4
Game to Remember
Liz Kocon, Junior outfelder
Sunday: Kansas 1, Nebraska 7
kocon hit her 10th home run of the season. The homer
tied the school record for most home runs in a single
season. she shares the record with senior catcher Brit-
tany Hile. kocon was the only Jayhawk to score during
the weekends doubleheader.
kocon
Game to Forget
Kansas ofense
The ofense could not get going against nebraska
junior pitcher Ashley Hagemann in either game of
the weekend. The Jayhawks made six hits on the
weekend for one run. saturdays sole hit was from
sophomore rosie Hull. sunday the Jayhawks fought
more, but the only run was a homerun hit by liz
kocon. Hagemann struck out 18 Jayhawks over the
weekend and is now 22-3 from the circle. The team plans to focus on
ofensive adjustments before Wednesdays game against oklahoma.
They are looking to regain the confdence that they held early in the
season.
Hagemann
Quote of the weekend
The good thing about softball is we can erase these
games from our minds and come out and get some
more wins. Today, even though the score didnt show
it we could all feel that we were out there fghting
and made progress even from yesterday and we just
have to take that and build on it and just keep fght-
ing and fghting.
Rosie Hull
Saturday
kansas nebraska
1 7
Sunday
Hull
SOFTBALL
(continued from 12A)
Aaron Harris/KANSAN
Freshman frst baseman Kendra Cullumlays down a bunt in Sundays game against Nebraska. The bunt was felded by Nebraska junior pitcher
Ashley Hagemann to get the out at frst base. The Jayhawks fell 7-1 to the Huskers and are now0-6 in conference play.
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 4, 2011 / SPORTS / 9A
BY GEOFFREY CALVERT
gcalvert@kansan.com

The Kansas men and wom-
ens track and field teams had
their most impressive meet of
the year at the Razorback Spring
Invitational on
Saturday in
Fayet t evi l l e,
Ark., which is
their second
meet of the
outdoor sea-
son. Both the
men and the
womens team
won six events each, 14 oth-
ers placed in the top three, and
26 Jayhawks set personal bests,
according to a press release from
the Kansas Athletics department.
The Jayhawks dominated the
womens 3,000 meters event,
claiming the top five spots. Junior
Rebeka Stowe won the event with
a personal best time of 9:46.34.
Seniors Kara Windisch and
Amanda Miller and freshmen
Kyra Kilwein and Tessa Turcotte
comprised the top five. The men
took second, third and fourth in
the same event.
Throughout the indoor track
season, sophomore Mason Finley
and the womens relay teams
have been the most consistent
performers. That held true on
Saturday, as Finley took first in
the discuss, setting a personal
best of 198 feet (60.36 meters),
the fourth-best throw in Jayhawk
history. The womens 4x100
meter relay team placed fourth,
but they ran the second best time
in Kansas history at 44.91 sec-
onds. The team comprised of
senior Kendra Bradley, freshman
Diamond Dixon, sophomore
Francine Simpson and sopho-
more Denesha Morris was
only .55 seconds away from the
winning time of 44.36 seconds.
Along with Finley, the men
and women throwers had an out-
standing meet, winning all but
one event. Senior Scott Penny
won the hammer throw, setting
a meet record throw of 188 feet,
seven inches. Freshman Jessica
Maroszek recorded the third
best throw in school history in
the discus, winning the event by
throwing 171 feet, nine inches.
Senior Brian Bishop set a
meet record throw of 53 feet,
9.25 inches in the shot put, while
Maroszek threw 48 feet, 6.75
inches in the womens shot put to
claim her second victory of the
meet. Another freshman, Johann
Swanepoel, won the mens javelin
with a meet record throw of 222
feet, six inches.
Three Jayhawks placed in the
top four of the mens pole vault,
with senior Jordan Scott, the
reigning NCAA champion in the
event, taking first with a mark of
17.75 feet.
The Jayhawks will be compet-
ing again this weekend at the 84th
Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays in
Austin, Texas.
Edited by Samantha Collins
BY BLAKE SCHUSTER
bschuster@kansan.com
With a 20-6 victory against
the Nebraska Cornhuskers,
the KU mens club lacrosse
team finished division play
undefeated and clinched divi-
sion 1AA in the Great Rivers
Lacrosse Conference.
The Jayhawks showed no
signs of rust from their three-
week break. They dominated
the pace of the game early
and amassed a 13-3 lead by
halftime.
Francis Enright, Kansas
leading scorer and a senior
from Winnetka, Ill., notched
another highlight-reel goal in
the first quarter. Streaking
down the right sideline with
the ball, Enright faked a cut
to his left toward the center
of the field, then turned back
and spun to his right, com-
pletely breaking away from
his defenders. The move
allowed him to streak to the
net and tuck the ball in the
bottom left corner.
My coaches were yelling
at me to do something sick,
so I had to deliver. Enright
said after the game.
In the second half the
Jayhawks came out with
more intensity. Kansas was
very aggressive on the ball
and attacked the body with
bone-crushing hits.
Nebraska is known for
being chippy and having
strong hitters, coach Dennis
Shults said, so we always like
to play up to that.
Brian Wright, a senior
from Deerfield, Ill., who
took over at goalie for the
Jayhawks to start the second
half, received a one-minute
unreleasable penalty for an
illegal body check to the
head. Starting goalie Ryan
Mattie, a senior from Kansas
City, Kan., quickly jumped
back into action and helped
the Jayhawks kill off the pen-
alty.
I was ready to play. Mattie
said, Youve always got to be
ready to play, and I knew our
defense was going to shut
them down, so I had nothing
to worry about.
During the kill, D-Pole
Charlie Jones, a senior
from Deerfield, Ill., caught
a break-out pass in the
Jayhawk zone and streaked
the length of the field to
score short handedly on the
Cornhuskers.
After the game the entire
team was in good spirits,
and Shults thought his team
played a complete game.
I thought we played
great. We dominated on
defense and offense. Shults
said. I dont know if their
goalie was asleep or not; we
got great shots.
In his first year on the
Jayhawks sideline, Shults
led the team to an unde-
feated division title and a
guaranteed spot in the play-
offs.
I have a great team in
front of me. Shults said.
They are the ones who
deserve the credit.
Edited by Helen Mubarak
Stowe
cLUb SPORTS
TRAcK & fIELD
Teammates win top spots in weekend events
Freshman
helps team
to a top
10 fnish
BY LAUREN DRUMMOND
ldrummond@kansan.com

The Jayhawk womens golf
team placed ninth in the Ole Miss
Rebel Challenge this weekend in
University, Miss. The team had
a 54-hole collective score of 920
strokes. This was the teams eighth
top 10 finish this season.
The team was led strongly by
f r e s h m a n
T h a n u t t r a
Boonraksasat,
who tied for
fourth indi-
vidually in the
t our nament .
She shot a 71 in
the final round
and recorded a
career best three-round score of
217 strokes. She was only four
strokes away from taking first
place. Her fourth-place finish
is also a career best. Four other
Jayhawks placed in the top 100 at
the tournament.
Junior Katy Nugent shot a 77
on Sunday and finished the tour-
nament at 39th with a total score
of 230. Senior Grace Thiry also
carded a final round score of 77
and finished in 64th place with
a total 235. Senior Meghna Bal
placed 77th with a final stroke
count of 240.
Freshman Meghan Potee added
a 242-stroke score for the Jayhawks
and finished the tournament tied
for 80th place.
The Jayhawks will finish up their
regular season April 11-12 when
they head to Waco, Texas, for the
Baylor Spring Invitational.
Edited by Sean Tokarz
wOmENS gOLf
Lacrosse team dominates Cornhuskers
Chris Bronson/KANSAN
Senior midfelder Nate Jones protects the ball against junior defense player Will Kellen during practice. The
lacrosse teamdominated Nebraska, 20-6, during the weekend and are undefeated in the Great Rivers Lacrosse
Conference.
Boonraksasat

10A / SPORTS / MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANsAN.cOM
BASEBALL REWIND
The second game. After opening the series with a win, the Jayhawks
went right back to work in game two. Both teams battled back and
forth until the Jayhawks broke through in the bottom of the ninth. The
Baylor pitchers broke down and walked in the game-winning run after
they loaded the bases. The 4-3 win clinched the series for kansas.
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Sophomore third baseman Jake Marasco tags out Chris Slater of Baylor Saturday. The Jayhawks defeated the Bears 4-3.
Key game
Game to remember
Game to forget
SwIPING TwO
Senior outfelder, Casey Lytle
casey Lytle in game two. Lytle continued to
stay hot in Big 12 play, going three for four in the
Jayhawks huge second-game win. Lytle had one
RBI, and was walked in the crucial 9th inning to
set up the Jayhawks victory.
Sophomore infelder, Jake Marasco
Jake Marasco in games one and two. The
slumping third basemen went 0 for 4 and left
three men on base in the Jayhawks open-
ing game against Baylor. Marasco had similar
struggles in the second game, this time going 0
for 5 and once again leaving three potential runs
on base.
kansas Baylor
4 3
Saturday
kansas Baylor
4 12
Sunday
Lytle
Marasco
Aaron Harris/KANSAN
Senior outfelder Casey Lytle connects with a pitch against Baylor Sunday afternoon at Hoglund Ballpark in Lawrence Kansas.
Baseball team makes progress
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Senior shortstop Brandon Macias throws the ball to frst base for an out Saturday. The Jayhawks
won the game with a walk of walk to Macias.
BY ALEC TILSON
atilson@kansan.com
It was a good weekend for the
Kansas baseball team. Sure it
could have been great, but cer-
tainly it was good.
The Jayhawks (12-15, 4-5) took
the first two games of the series
against No. 19 Baylor (17-12, 4-5)
and gave themselves a chance to
sweep a solid conference oppo-
nent with a victory on Sunday.
That opportunity doesnt arise
every day.
As it were the brooms wouldnt
be needed. The Baylor hitters
broke through and defeated
Kansas 12-3. A five-run lead in
the top of the third inning seemed
to take the air out of a still young
Kansas ball club and end the
hopes of a three-victory weekend.
It would have been outstand-
ing. It would have said a lot for
our team, junior catcher James
Stanfield said. I honestly cant
explain how we have two really
great games and then just one
where it just seems everything is
going wrong.
An admittedly-disappointed
coach Price offered his explana-
tion, saying bluntly, its a lack of
maturity. He again pointed to a
lack of experience and toughness.
Freshman right-hander Alex
Cox, coming off another impres-
sive start at Texas A&M, didnt
have his best stuff on Sunday. He
was chased in the fourth inning
after giving up five earned runs
and hitting two batters.
Despite Sundays letdown the
teams progress has been notice-
able.
The upperclassmen, namely
outfielders Jimmy Waters and
Casey Lytle and pitcher T.J. Walz,
have heard all year about what
they have to be for this team, how
they must carry the club. After
this weekend, that chatter might
die down a bit.
Kansas came out swinging.
Waters first-inning home run on
Friday night set the tone for the
Jayhawks.
That was awesome to see him
get that, Walz said. Hes been
struggling a little bit lately, hed be
the first one to tell you that. Its
cool to see a guy work that hard
and have it pay off.
It was big for Waters but maybe
bigger for the rest of the team,
which tacked on another five
runs. With Walz on the mound,
he allowed just one earned run
on three hits in 7 2/3 innings. He
struck out 11 hitters with a phe-
nomenal change-up working the
whole night. That marks seven
starts in a row with three earned
runs or fewer and Walz appears
stronger and more focused every
outing.
Lytle continues to raise his
average and could be moved back
in the lineup into more of an RBI
role. Where he hits wont affect
his mindset.
We have to come out here,
clear our minds, have some fun,
play hard and in the end the
scoreboard will show the results,
Lytle said.
It was, no doubt, a much-need-
ed weekend. A sweep could have
made it great but two out of three
and a series win is what good
baseball teams strive for.
We played really well last week
and its carried over to this week,
Price said. Were making prog-
ress now finally.
Edited by Becca Harsch
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Sophomore catcher Alex DeLeonthrows the ball to frst base for anout
Saturday. Kansas wonthe game 4-3.
I got some pretty tough calls called against
me early in the game, I guess they rewarded me
back. The game kind of works funny that way.
senior shortstop Brandon Macias on his bases-loaded, game-
ending walk in the ninth inning on Saturday.
Macias
Quote of the weekend
Stat of the weekend
The number of strikeouts on the season for senior T.J.
Walz. Good for third in the Big 12 conference and just
one behind the two leaders who are tied at 53. 52
Notes
senior outfelder casey Lytle snapped a 13-game hitting streak Friday
night. He wasnt too concerned: some people would be upset about
it, but you just got to let it go. Its a hit streak, start a new one today.
Baylors speedy centerfelder Brooks Pinckard added to his league-
leading stolen base total with two on sunday. His 26 steals is eight
more than anyone in the conference. He also throws a 95 mph fastball
and is the teams closer.
coach Price is not worried about freshman pitcher Alex cox after his
frst poor outing this year. Price praised his makeup and said cox is
the one freshman in the dugout hes not worried about.
kansas Baylor
6 2
Friday
Chris Bronson/KANSAN
Junior infelder Chris Manshipbattles at the plate duringthe sixthinningof Sunday afternoons game against Baylor. Manshipwent 1-3 inthe
Jayhawks12-4 loss to Baylor. The Jayhawks are now12-15 for the seasonand4-5 inBig12 play.
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, April 4, 2011 / SPORTS / 11A
TODAY
Mens Golf
Cowboy Classic
All day
Scottsdale, Ariz.
TUESDAY
Baseball
vs. Missouri State
6 p.m.
lawrence
Mens Golf
Cowboy Classic
All day
Scottsdale, Ariz.
WEDNESDAY
Baseball
vs. Missouri State
6 p.m.
Kansas City Mo.
Softball Doubleheader
vs. Oklahoma
4 and 6 p.m.
lawrence
THURSDAY
There are no events Thursday.
COMMENTARY
QUOTE OF THE DAY
The breakfast of champions
is not cereal, its the opposition.
Nick Seitz
FACT OF THE DAY
pittsburgh is the only U.S. city
with three sports teams that
wear the same colors.
dumbfacts.com
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: Who has appeared on the
cover of Sports illustrated a
record 49 times?
A: Michael Jordan, followed
by Muhammad Ali with 37 ap-
pearances.
allsportstrivia.com
THIS WEEK IN
KANSAS ATHlETiCS
Visit Hoglund Ballpark to relax
By Max RothMan
mrothman@kansan.com
H
oglund Ballpark: An on-campus
escape that you may have never vis-
ited.
You dont need to know how to fill out a
double-play in the scorecard or tell the differ-
ence between a curveball and a slider. Just give
the ballpark a try. A baseball game midday at
Hoglund Ballpark is an experience that exists
on and off the diamond field.
Students get in free by flashing a KU ID.
Then you take your seat in the bleachers and
it all begins.
The wind brushes your cheeks as you gaze
upon a neat field of green turf, russet dirt and
white boundary lines.
Spinning baseballs smack open mitts.
Aluminum bats spray baseballs to all crevices
of the expansive outfield. Coaches bark orders.
Umpires roar and pump fists as they ring up a
still strikeout victim.
Trees flutter behind the curved blue outfield
fence. Spectators chomp on hot dogs drizzled
with ketchup and mustard, and covered in
relish and sauerkraut. They dip stacked corn
chips into a pool of nacho cheese. A bespec-
tacled girl and her kid sister race around the
ballpark after every foul ball, no matter how
great the distance from their seats. Each ball
is the finest treasure a wide-eyed youngster
could ever have.
A young boy with eyes focused on the
field holds a mitt and listens closely as his
father teaches him the rules of the game.
Another boy shouts free magnets! as he
stows the souvenirs and returns to his family a
few rows back.
Sunflower seeds crackle and form black and
white mounds under the spitters feet. Bronzed
legs dangle over seats and move only for a
snack and drink in between innings. Backs
recline and sandals slip off as barefooted fans
bask in ballpark sunshine. A lone loyalist bel-
lows repetitive chants for numbers and names
- stopping only after the final pitch is thrown.
Students with sunglasses casually roll in and
out of the ballpark as they please.
Baseball is a slower game, but by no means
does it lack complexity. If you can appreciate
the strategies, the signals and the spit, you may
be better off than the clueless observer. But
with a game that goes pitch by pitch under the
radiant sun, no matter your knowledge of the
game, Hoglund Ballpark can function as an
easy way to escape the usual rush of the stu-
dent lifestyle.
Get a few friends together, grab a cap and
head out to the ballpark for a weekend day
game. Relax in the stands and experience a
game incomparable to any other.
Edited by Samantha Collins
MENS BASKETBALL
McLemore joins
Kansas next season
Kansas landed its frst Blue Chip
prospect of the class of 2011.
Five-star recruit Ben Mclem-
ore announced his commit-
ment to the
Jayhawks over
the Missouri
Tigers Sunday
afternoon.
Mclemore,
a 6-foot-5
shooting guard from St. louis,
is the No. 17 prospect in the
country, according to rivals.
com, and the fourth best at his
position.
it was a tough decision,
Mclemore said. But next year,
ill be at Kansas University. rock
chalk, Jayhawk.
Mclemore joins four-star
point guard Naadir Tharpe, the
91st-ranked prospect in the
class of 2011, in the Jayhawks
recruiting class for next season.
Both will likely get some min-
utes in the Jayhawks depleted
guard rotation, alongside
Tyshawn Taylor, Elijah Johnson,
Travis releford and Josh Selby,
if Selby chooses to return for his
sophomore season.
Mclemore will sign a Na-
tional letter of intent in the late
signing period, which starts
April 13.
TimDwyer
Mclemore
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SPRING OPENINGS! $13.00 base/appt.
part-time, sales/svc, no experience nec.
Conditions apply, (785) 371-1293
STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM
Paid Survey Takers Needed in
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libraries. Will also work home football
games. Apply Online and interview now
for Fall 2011. www.jobs.ku.edu Position
#00069456 EO/AA
1015-25 Mis.
Remodeled 1&2 BRs
Next to Memorial Stad.
MPM 841-4935
1, 2, 3 BR Apts in Houses. Close to KU.
$395-$835. Also 3-6 BR houses and a
Victorian home at 1217 Tenn. No appl.
fee. Wood foors, free W/D. Few have
free utilities. For June or August.
$795-$2250. 785-841-3633 anytime.
1125 Tenn
HUGE 3&4 BRs
W/D included
MPM 841-4935
1100 Louisiana St (Victorian House)
2 BR apt, water paid, $815. 3 BR apt, 3
car driveway, $1290, Aug 1. No pets,
no smokers. Call 785-766-0476
1712 Ohio
Large 3&4 BRs
Only $900 & 1080
MPM 841-4935
1326 Massachusetts 4BD, 1 BA hard-
wood foors, WD, DW, AC and off street
parking near dwntn. Avail. Aug 1 for
$1540/mo. 760-840-0487
2 and 3 bedrooms $550-$1050
4 bedroom Farm House $1200
Late Spring - August
785-832-8728/ 785-331-5360
www.lawrencepm.com
3 BR Townhome Special.
$780. W/D, DW, FP, Back patio.
www.lorimartownhomes.com 841-7849
3 and 4 BR Homes. Avail. August 1.
Great Location, Ample Parking, excellent
condition, W/D. 785-760-0144
3 & 4 BRs Houses near KU; remodeled;
upgraded CA/heat, elec, plumb; re-
fnnished wood foors; kitchen appli-
ances; W/D; large covered front porch;
off-street parking; no smoking/pets.
Avail 8/1. Tom @ 785-766-6667 tomhoff-
man@sunfower.com
3 BR 2 BA 2 Car garage Townhome in
very nice neighborhood. Close to KU
$975 Please call 393-3862 or 843-5159
4 BR 2 BA house for rent. Just north of
campus, w/ a great backyard & an
attached garage $1500/mo avail June
1st, call John at 816-589-2577
3BR 3BA, Right next to KU, 1322 Valley
Ln. 2BRs - $400/BR, 1BR - $375. W/D,
LR, FP, deck, porch, 913-269-4265
7 BR 2 1/2 BA, W/D, hardwood foors,
central air, 1208 Mississippi, August,
$2520 913-683-8198 after 4pm
4 BR 2 BA, W/D, hardwood foors, cen-
tral air, 1023 Illinois, August, $1700,
913-683-8198 after 4pm
4 BR/3.5 Bath Townhomes, 2 Car
Garage, W/D, FP, Back Patio, Large
Bedrooms, Walk-in Closets, 2000 sq. ft.
$1360 a month.
For August. 785-766-6302
Available August
3 BR, close to KU, appliances.
Call 785-841-3849
Avail Aug 1, 1 and 2 BR apts, at 1126
Ohio, between campus and downtown,
close to GSP-Corbin, no pets, call 785-
550-5012, home 913-301-3553
AVAIL Aug or June, 4 BR or 3 BR, 3
bath, near KU, great cond., W/D, D/W, all
appls. Call, must see 785-841-3849.
Avail immediately, 2 BR apt 4 1/2mo
Lease,1 year lease avail Aug 1, 2011.
1128 Ohio, between campus and down-
town, close to GSP-Corbin, No pets,
785-550-5012, home 913-301-3553
Houses and apartments, all sizes and
locations 785-749-6084
www.eresrental.com
Large 1-BR apt. in quiet house on Ken-
tucky, near KU. Stove, fridge, garbage
disposal, W/D. Upgraded elec/-
plumb/heat/cool; refnished wood foors;
covered front porch w/ swing; off-street
park; no smoking/pets. Avail 8/1. Tom
@ 785-766-6667 or tomhoffman@sun-
fower.com
Fall Semester Lease: Aug. - Dec.
4 BR, 3 BA, 2 Car Garage, near KU
Call (785) 841-3849
Available June 1, nice one bedroom apt
at 1126 Ohio, between campus and
downtown. Close to GSP-Corbin. $475.
Utilities paid. No pets. Call cell 785-550-
5012 Home 913-301-3553
Canyon Court Apartments 1, 2 & 3BR
Luxury Apartments half off August rent
special W/D, ftness center, pool,
free DVD rental, sm. pets welcome
785-832-8805, 700 Comet Lane
Now Leasing for Summer/Fall 1, 2, 3 & 4
BR Apts and Town homes. Quiet set-
ting, walk-in closets, Pool, patio/balcony,
KU bus route, small pets ok
Call 785-843-0011
Roommate Needed through August
2011. $360 per month plus utilities. Off
University Drive. Close to campus!
Call 817-690-7743
Parkway Commons: Townhomes,
houses and luxury apartments.
Garages, pool, w/d, gym. Leasing for
fall. 842-3280. 3601 Clinton Pkwy
Camp Raintree, Lawrence, Kan. is
looking for experienced, mature camp
counselors to work full-time in our sum-
mer day camp. Applicants must have
had comparable experience in a camp
environment working with children ages
6-12. Call 843-6800.
JOBS JOBS HOUSING HOUSING HOUSING HOUSING
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
785-864-4358 HAWKCHALK.COM CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM
housing
for sale
announcements
jobs
textbooks
SALE
Applecroft Apts.
1/2 OFF AUGUST RENT!
19t h & I owa
1 & 2 Bedr ooms
Gas, Wat er, & Tr ash Pai d
Wal k t o Campus &
On KU Bus Rout e
( 785) 843 - 8220
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SportS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The No. 17 prospect in the country, Ben McLemore, chose the Jayhawks instead of the Tigers.
Recruit headed to Kansas
MenS baSketball | 11a
monday, april 4, 2011 www.kansan.com paGE 12a
Softball
Nebraska
pitcher
shuts down
Jayhawks
Jayhawks losing streak ends
in it to win it
football
Kansas benefts from familiarity between coaches, players
BY KORY CARPENTER
kcarpenter@kansan.com
Kansas football opened up the
spring season with its first full
practice Friday afternoon. Coach
Turner Gill and staff will conduct
15 practices throughout the month
of April before concluding with the
annual Spring Game on April 30.
newS and noteS from
the opening practice
nTurner Gill changed the prac-
tice format this year, with two full
teams participating at once on
adjacent fields. The goal is to get
each player more reps throughout
the spring, leading to better pro-
duction and speed in the fall.
n Familiarity helps after a full
year in Lawrence. Coaches have
seen what the players can do in
game situations and can better
anticipate what the players can do
in off-season workouts.
n Its too early to tell which
players will step up as leaders. We
didnt have any pads on, Gill said
after practice. When we get pads
on and get one or two scrimmages
in, then you can kind of see how
guys will rise to the top with that
opportunity.
nFrom a leadership standpoint,
nobody really stood out on day
one. However, Gill said he could
see tight end Tim Biere being able
to step up as a leader.
n The quarterback position is
still in question. A decision on a
starter could be made by the end
of spring, but the coaches are more
than willing to wait until sum-
mer to decide on the opening-day
starter.
n Returning quarterbacks
Jordan Webb and Quinn Mecham
got much stronger in the off-sea-
son, something Gill credits to work
ethic and the Kansas strength staff.
n Mecham, who played in six
games in 2010, said he liked the
new practice format. It keeps
practice at a fast pace, he said.
Last spring we had nine quarter-
backs; now we have three, so its
just a lot more reps. More chances
to prove yourself.
n Freshman quarterback Brock
Berglund, who returned home to
Colorado last month after arriving
in Lawrence in January, will still
have an opportunity to compete for
the starting job when he returns in
the summer.
n The strength and condition-
ing program was altered this year.
Gill told his strength staff that
workouts should focus on making
players more explosive and men-
tally tougher. He said he thought
they did just that. Also, off-season
workouts included more running
and more weight training com-
pared to last year.
n All jobs are open. We dont
want anybody getting complacent,
Gill noted. We stated to them
that were going to have competi-
tion. Gill also said that, although
last years individual performances
will be taken into consideration,
nothing is set in stone heading into
camp.
nJames Sims, who led the team
in rushing during his freshmen
year, said the workouts were harder
than last years.
n The array of running-back
recruits the staff has brought in
only gives Sims motivation. It just
makes me work harder, he said.
Theyre bringing them in to help
us as a team. I respect that.
n Sims was also seen fielding
punts, something he said he hoped
to do this year.
n I hope to be the best run-
ning back in the Big 12, be an All-
American again and lead the team
to a Big 12 championship, Sims
said of his goals for this year.
nSenior wide receiver Daymond
Patterson said he thought the staff
really pushed the team in the weight
room this off-season, improving
the players mental toughness. We
were being tested mentally, he said.
Thats what we need, because I felt
thats where we fell short last year a
lot of times. Mental toughness.
n Quality, not quantity. With
only 14 seniors on the roster,
Patterson said this was the best
group of seniors he has been
around at Kansas.
n According to Patterson, the
biggest difference in year two is
the familiarity within the coaching
staff and players, which is huge in
football.
poSition changeS
nPrinz Kande has moved from
safety to linebacker.
nFormer wide receiver Keeston
Terry is now practicing at safety.
n Kevin Young and Keba
Agostinho have both switched
from defensive end to defensive
tackle. Turner Gill spoke after the
season of recruiting fast defensive
ends, bulking them up, then mov-
ing them inside to defensive tackle.
Agostinho and Young look to be
the first players making the switch.
Edited by Helen Mubarak
BY MIKE VERNON
mvernon@kansan.com
Te Kansas baseball team
brought its four-game losing
streak to a screeching halt, as the
Jayhawks won two of three games
over No. 19 Baylor at Hoglund
Ballpark this weekend.
Te Jayhawks showed signs that
their young roster is maturing
and improving during their three-
game hitting spree.
I think were growing up, coach
Ritch Price said. Now thats weve
played over 20 games, our younger
guys are starting to mature.
Tat maturation process began
to show in game one of the series
on Friday evening, when their
bats responded well afer getting
shut out at Missouri State in their
previous game. Te Jayhawks had
12 hits for six runs in their 6-2 vic-
tory over the top-ranked Bears.
Senior outfelder Jimmy Waters
made a statement that the Hawks
were coming to play in the frst
inning, hitting a line-drive home
run that sailed just over the right
feld fence.
I think it really helped out
to get that one run on the board
early, Waters said. It kind of puts
a message in the other dugout too;
now theyre battling uphill.
Senior pitcher T.J. Walz, had an
impressive performance on the
mound, holding the dangerous
Baylor ofense to only one earned
run of of three hits in 7.2 innings
pitched. Walz threw career-high
127 pitches and also struck out 11
batters in the day.
[T.J.] was special, Price said.
When his changeup is working
hes really tough to hit, and thats
as good a changeup as hes had all
season.
Walz, who had an underwhelm-
ing start to the season, made a
tweak in his windup to fx a body
tilt issue, and has been dominant
ever since.
Ive been able to locate the fast-
ball a lot better, and Im not getting
behind batters near as much so I
can attack with the slider, Walz
said. [Te change in mechanics]
has made all the diference.
Te Jayhawks came out strong
again in the second game of the
series on Saturday. Kansas struck
frst again when sophomore catch-
er Alex DeLeon hit his team-lead-
ing third home run of the season.
Te game was knotted up at
3-3 heading into the bottom of
the ninth, when Baylor pitcher
Jon Ringenberg walked in senior
shortstop Brandon Macias for the
game-winning run.
Everyone wants to end the
game on a hit, thats always fun,
and I wanted to do it, Macias said.
Its nice to end it on a walk still;
Ill take the win any day.
Afer taking the frst two, the
Jayhawks experienced some grow-
ing pains going for the sweep in
game three. Te Jayhawks whifed
on a huge opportunity Sunday to
build momentum against tough
competition.
We could have done something
really special today, and made a
huge statement going forward,
Price said.
Baylor sprung out to an early
5-0 lead afer only three innings
and the Bears never looked back.
Baylor scored 12 runs of of 13 hits
and three Jayhawks errors in their
12-4 victory over Kansas.
While the teams young roster
has begun to show signs of matu-
ration, Sundays loss showed that
theres still plenty of room for im-
provement as the Jayhawks season
goes on.
I feel good in how competitive
we were the frst two games of the
series. Im disappointed in the per-
formance today and rightfully so,
Price said. We dont have enough
experienced players in the dugout,
and quite frankly were not tough
enough yet.
Edited by Emily Soetaert
Mike Gunnoe/kanSan
Sophomore third baseman Jordan Dreiling and junior frst baseman Zac Elgie celebrated after defeating Baylor 6-2. With the victory Kansas is now3-4 in Big 12 play.
JefJacobsen/kanSaS atHletICS
Football coachTurner Gill oversees his teamduring the frst full practice of the spring season April
1. Gill said it was too early to determine which players would step up as leaders.
See softball on paGe 8a
BY HANNAH WIsE
hwise@kansan.com
Te sofball team fell to 0-6 in
conference play and 27-10 on the
season with a weekend defeat by
No. 16 Nebraska.
Te Jayhawks fell 4-0 Saturday
and 7-1 on Sunday. Strong pitching
and poor ofensive performance on
Saturday contributed to the loss.
Sunday the Jayhawks began the day
intensely with a home run hit by
junior outfelder Liz Kocon, but the
team did not hold its momentum
for the remainder of the contest.
Te good thing about sofball is
we can erase these games from our
minds and come out and get some
more wins, sophomore outfeld-
er Rosie Hull said. Today, even
though the score didnt show it, we
could all feel that we were out there
fghting and made progress even
from yesterday and we just have to
take that and build on it and just
keep fghting and fghting.
Saturday Nebraskas junior pitch-
er Ashley Hagemann shut down
the team. She held the Jayhawks
hitless until the sixth inning when
Hull hit a single down the lef-feld
line. Nebraska outed the next two
batters and then caught Hull when
she was stealing second to end the
inning.
Hagemann continued to domi-
nate during Sundays match up.
Total on the weekend she struck
out 18 Jayhawks and improved to
22-3 from the circle. Although she
held the team to a single hit on
Saturdays game the team rallied
and fought back to manage fve
hits Sunday. However, it was not
enough to combat Nebraskas 12
hits during Sundays game against
Jayhawk pitchers freshman Kristin
Martinez and senior Allie Clark.
Clark pitched the complete Sat-
urday game, allowing seven hits,
four runs and no strikeouts. Sun-
day, Martinez pitched six innings
and Clark closed the fnal inning.
Martinez started well with three

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