Committee Fails To Change Policy
Committee Fails To Change Policy
y
p
la
y
life. and how to have one.
November 19, 2009
Gypsy-punk band Gogol Bordello takes over Liberty Hall
its over. l8r.
The consequences of breaking up via TexT messaging
Facebook follies
your online image could affecT your job prospecTs
LOUD
*
live and
Watch a video of its dress rehearsal for a sneak peek of the fall concert. KANSAN.COM
The student voice since 1904
University Dance Company
All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2009 The University Daily Kansan
Mostly sunny
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3B
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
Horoscopes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7B
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1B
Sudoku. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
58 35
weather
weather.com
toDay
Partly cloudy
57 40
FRIDay
Partly cloudy
59 45
SatURDay
He allegedly forced his son to strip naked, marched him oustide and
shot him for having sexual contact with a 3-year-old. CRIME | 9A
Detroit man accused of
killing 15-year-old son
index
THURSDAY, novembeR 19, 2009 www.kAnSAn.com volUme 121 iSSUe 64
Multi-ethnic band Gogol Bordello takes over Liberty Hall. JayPLay | INSIDE
Live and loud: Gypsy-punk
community
Events to support
children in Brazil
gLoriouS
to view
h
o
w
lo
n
g
?
guarding the green
Prairie acre
Beginning: 1932
Location: intersection
of Sunfower Road and
Sunnyside Avenue
Signifcance:
According to the
Heritage Plan, Prairie
Acre was one of the frst intentional prairie restorations
on an American campus.
Fun Fact: Photographs of wagon ruts on the south side
of the plot are thought to have belonged to covered
wagons making their way West on the Oregon Trail.
threat: Invasive species
Source: Campus Heritage Plan
BY ALY VAN DYKE
[email protected]
On the northern slope of Mount
Oread, near the Campanile, sits more
than a hundred 40-foot tall, sturdy wal-
nut trees; their black trunks are a stark
contrast to the green grass that envelops
them during the summer.
Rushing to class, students often miss
this forest rooted in the heart of campus.
But Marvin Grove has stood timeless
amidst the rapid changes around it for
more than 100 years.
It has seen the turn of two centuries
and the veterans of both world wars.
It witnessed the civil rights rallies that
threatened to tear the University in two.
And on the sidelines of graduation hill,
the grove stood by as more than 1 mil-
lion students leave the University behind
in pursuit of their futures.
The roots of these trees go almost as
deep as the University itself, anchoring
the grove in the institutions past and its
present.
But weather, age and development are
endangering the existence of the grove
and other natural space on campus.
Despite the cost incurred from pre-
serving natural areas on campus, stu-
dents, staff and others say its something
worth saving.
Theres an ongoing tension between
the need for additional program space
on campus and trying to protect open
spaces, said Peg Livingood, project
manager for the Office of Design and
Construction Management. Every uni-
versity faces that.
Last year, Livingood and several oth-
ers affiliated with the University and
its history compiled The University
of Kansas Campus Heritage Plan
using a $130,000 grant from the Getty
Foundation. The plan provides a his-
tory of the Universitys development and
outlines plans of action looking forward
to both preserve the historic campus as
well as facilitate its expansion.
deveLoPment
Enrollment at the University has
increased nearly every year since its
inception, but never as rapidly as within
the last half century. Fifty years ago, the
student population was about 10,000.
Today, its more than 30,000. And some
expected to go up from there.
Jeff Weinberg, assistant to the chan-
cellor, has seen the campus change since
he arrived as an undergraduate in 1962.
He said the problem with development
and green space, or natural areas, is that,
decades ago, those who developed the
initial plans for campus had no way of
knowing how the University would need
the space today.
It would be nice to think that every
time you plant a tree, it stays forever or
until it dies naturally, but on a dynamic
campus, thats not possible, he said.
Although most of the 1,000 acres
on the main campus have been used
for development, several areas of green
space have been preserved, leaving room
for about 10,000 trees, according to 2007
University statistics.
The acquisition of West Campus
in 1970 has allowed for additional
University expansion. However, it hasnt
completely stopped development on the
main campus.
One of the most recent intrusions
marvin grove
Beginning: March 29,
1878 by former Chancel-
lor James Marvin
Location: north of Jay-
hawk Boulevard, south
of Memorial Stadium
Signifcance: According
to the Heritage Plan, this is the most historically signif-
cant landscape on the campus.
Fun Fact: This grove is one of the earliest planted hard-
wood groves on a Midwestern campus.
threat: age and storm damage
Potter Lake
Beginning: 1910
Location: southwest
of Memorial Stadium,
west of Marvin Grove
Signifcance: It was
constructed as a fre
suppressant and be-
came a signifcant social spot on campus.
Fun Fact: Jim Merrill said he remembered taking trays
from the cafeterias and using them as sleds down the
slope and onto the frozen lake.
threat: accumulation of sediments, water run-of and
age
Jayhawk
BouLevard
eLm canoPy
Beginning: early 1920s
Location: along Jay-
hawk Boulevard, stretch-
ing from Snow Hall to
the Memorial Union
Signifcance: It is one of the most important corridors on
campus and among one of the frst landscaping plans from
Hare and Hare.
Fun Fact: Ken Armitage said he could stay dry when walk-
ing the length of Jayhawk Boulevard in the rain without an
umbrella because of the elms.
threat: Most of the elms died from Dutch Elm Disease by
the late 1980s.
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Pedro Dos Santos, Rio de Janiro doctoral student, Scott Montana, Leawood junior,
and Clarrice Amorim, Racife, Brazil senior, fromleft share informationWednesday
onWescoe beach with Ann Putrah, Jackson, Wyo. junior, about upcoming events this Friday.
Friday is Brazils National Day of Racial Conciousness.
BY RAY SEGEBRECHT
[email protected]
Ann Putrah, Jackson, Wyo.
junior, isnt a stranger to the
dance floor. In her hometown,
she grew up on it, and from
her first salsa lesson, she made
Latin dancing a monthly ritual.
But since Putrah came to the
University, she said her danc-
ing days have disappeared. This
Friday, she hopes to revive her
rhythm by learning a new Latin
dance the Samba while
supporting underprivileged
children in Brazil through KU
Two Brothers Foundation.
The foundation is a stu-
dent organization that works
to strengthen culture at the
University and to raise funds
for students at Instituto dois
Irmos located in the slums of
Student eventS
what: A Talk with Matilde
Ribeiro, former minister of
the Brazilian Government
when: 3:30 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 20
where: Multicultural Re-
source Center Classroom,
1299 Oread Ave.
coSt: Free
what: Samba Night
when: 10:30 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 20 to 2 a.m. Saturday,
Nov. 21
where: Cielito Lindo,
8th and New Hampshire
streets
coSt: $5 (All proceeds will
beneft the Two Broth-
ers Foundation inner-city
school in Rio de Janeiro.)
Illustration by Nick Gerik/KANSAN
SEE campus ON PAGE 3A
b
u
t
f
o
r
Student Senate
Committee fails
to change policy
BY MEGAN HEACOCK
[email protected]
A proposed policy change
that would allow easier access to
rooms in student housing failed
to pass in the student rights
standing committee.
Te alcohol subcommittee of
the student rights standing com-
mittee, designated to discuss and
analyze current alcohol policy at
the University, submitted argu-
ments for this policy last night.
Te alcohol subcommittee was
charged to examine all policy re-
lated to alcohol, which inherently
included Student Housing code.
A proposed change to Student
Housing policy would have al-
lowed senior staf members in
Student Housing to have easier
access to private rooms if they
had suspected policy violation.
Members opposed to the policy
had concerns with its efectiveness
in combatting alcohol abuse.
One major concern was that this
policy would infringe upon a
students right to privacy. Devon
Cantwell, executive secretary
of Student Senate, said another
issue with the policy was its lack
of efectiveness in combating
alcohol abuse.
I dont think we, as responsi-
ble student senators, can endorse
this policy as something thats
going to lower drinking or lower
the toxic levels of drinking, she
said.
Leaders from student housing
attended the meeting to defend
the proposal. Mathew Shepard,
All Scholarship Hall Council
president and Norton junior, said
the proposed policy would ad-
dress alcohol abuse by ensuring
education on responsible drink-
ing and resources on campus for
students who violate the policy.
Its about community rights
where all of the residents have a
right to have a safe, productive
community where they can feel
at home, he said. And if theres
a party going on, the ability to
address whos in that room more
quickly and efciently betters
that community as a whole.
Kylie Luckett, president of
the Association of University
Residence Halls and Garden
SEE community ON PAGE 3A
SEE senate ON PAGE 3A
NEWS 2A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
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 reggae, sports
or special events, KJHK 90.7 is for
you.
For more
news, turn
to KUJH-TV
on Sunflower Broadband 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, Wednesday and
Friday. Also, check out KUJH online
at tv.ku.edu.
CONTACT US
Tell us your news.
Contact Brenna Hawley, Jessica
Sain-Baird, Jennifer Torline,
Brianne Pfannenstiel or Amanda
Thompson at (785) 864-4810
or [email protected].
Kansan newsroom
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
QUOTE OF THE DAY
Throw out an alarming alarm
clock. If the ring is loud and
strident, youre waking up to
instant stress. You shouldnt
be bullied out of bed, just
reminded that its time to start
your day.
Sharon Gold
FACT OF THE DAY
One-third of the U.S. popula-
tion makes New Years resolu-
tions to begin stress manage-
ment programs.
Prudential Healthcare Survey
MOST E-MAILED
Want to know what people
are talking about? Heres a
list of the fve most e-mailed
stories from Kansan.com:
1. Investigation not a surprise
to many Jayhawks
2. Sesame Street celebrates
40 years
3. Championship, recruits link
Kansas to Memphis
4. Athletes graduation rate at
63 percent
5. Wheeler: Kansas player
statistics overlooked
ET CETERA
The University Daily Kansan is
the student newspaper of the
University of Kansas. The first
copy is paid through the student
activity fee. Additional copies
of The Kansan are 25 cents.
Subscriptions can be purchased
at the Kansan business office, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk
Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045.
The University Daily Kansan
(ISSN 0746-4967) is published
daily during the school year
except Saturday, Sunday, fall
break, spring break and exams
and 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 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
MEDIA PARTNERS
DAILY KU INFO
ON THE RECORD
About 8 p.m. Saturday near
11th and Mississippi streets, a
University student reported an
assault.
About 1:30 a.m. Wednesday
near 6th St. and Lawrence Ave.,
a University student reported
criminal damage to his vehicle,
totaling $400.
ON CAMPUS
Animal Legal Defense
Presents: From Investigation
to Prosecution will begin at
12:30 p.m. in 107 Green Hall.
Tea Time will begin at 3 p.m. in
the lobby in the Kansas Union.
World at KU will begin at 4
p.m. in the Ballroom in the
Kansas Union.
The School of Music Student
Recital Series will begin at 7:30
p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall
in Murphy Hall.
The Glass Menagerie will
begin at 7:30 p.m. in Crafton-
Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The University Dance
Company Concert will begin
at 7:30 p.m. in the Lied Center.
NEWS NEAR & FAR
international
1.US calls for more efort
in fghting recent piracy
UNITED NATIONS The Unit-
ed States is calling for intensifed
eforts to combat piracy and
warning against paying ransom.
U.S. deputy ambassador
Rosemary DiCarlo expressed
concern that ransom payments
have contributed to the recent
increase in piracy.
She said the United States
was encouraging all countries
to adopt a policy of no conces-
sions when dealing with pirates.
DiCarlo spoke at an open
meeting of the U.N. Security
Council Wednesday on the fght
against piracy.
2. Sweden returns Maori
remains to burial grounds
STOCKHOLM Swedish
museum ofcials returned the
remains of fve indigenous
Maori people to New Zealand on
Wednesday as part of a broader
move in Europe to repatriate re-
mains taken from burial grounds.
Museum ofcials said they
handed over three skeleton parts,
a near complete skeleton and a
skull to visiting delegates from
the Museum of New Zealand, Te
Papa Tongarewa.
The ceremony was held at
the Natural History Museum in
southwestern Goteborg, and
included songs and prayers.
On Saturday, Sweden also
returned 22 skulls taken from a
native Hawaiian community.
3.Schwarzenegger says he
wont run for re-election
MILAN California Gov. Ar-
nold Schwarzenegger wont say
what his plans are when his term
expires next year, but it wont be
running for another ofce.
Schwarzenegger said he will
spend the next year trying to
solve problems including a pro-
jected multibillion dollar shortfall
in next years budget.
Schwarzenegger stopped
by Milan en route from visiting
troops in Iraq.
He also visited his native
Austria, where he saw the grave
of his parents and ate a typical
Austrian dinner that included
Wienerschnitzel.
national
4. Convicted former lawyer
ordered to serve sentence
NEW YORK A disbarred law-
yer convicted in a terrorism case
has been ordered to report to
prison after a New York appeals
court upheld her conviction.
Judge John Koeltl ordered
70-year-old Lynne Stewart on
Wednesday to report to prison
by 5 p.m. Thursday to serve her
sentence of two years and four
months.
She was convicted in 2005 of
charges that she let a Muslim ex-
tremist client communicate with
followers after he was convicted
in a plot to blow up New York
City landmarks.
A federal appeals court upheld
her conviction Tuesday, saying
she should begin serving her
sentence. Koeltl gave her another
day so she can ask the appeals
court to reconsider her immedi-
ate incarceration.
5.Two men sentenced in
Sears Tower, bombing plot
MIAMI Two Miami men cast
as role players in a plot to destroy
Chicagos Sears Tower and bomb
FBI ofces have been sentenced
to prison.
U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard
on Wednesday sentenced
24-year-old Burson Augustin
to six years. His older brother,
26-year-old Rotschild Augustine,
was sentenced to seven years
behind bars.
Prosecutors sought maximum
30-year sentences for both men,
but Lenard found they were not
major players in the plot.
Three other men will be sen-
tenced later this week.
6. Mail carrier found on
foor in strangers kitchen
MARION, Iowa Police in
Marion and postal authorities
are investigating the case of a
mail carrier who was allegedly
found drunk inside a residence
while on the job. Police said the
postal worker, 46, was charged
with public intoxication Nov. 3
after she was found sitting on
the kitchen foor of 95-year-old
womans house, eating leftover
noodles from her refrigerator.
Associated Press
Tomorrow is the second-to-last
Friday of classes for the rest of
the semester.
oDD neWS
Tortoise identifed as
male after 50 years
CLEVELAND A tortoises
zookeepers in Cleveland are
the ones feeling slow because
after more than 50 years,
theyve discovered Mary is
actually a male.
Ofcials at the Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo say it can be
tough to establish the sex of a
giant Aldabra tortoise because
the reproductive organs
normally arent visible. Marys
maleness was unexpectedly
revealed earlier this month.
Zoo Director Steve Taylor
is considering whether the
senior citizen deserves a new
name.
Associated Press
NATIONAL
Reid seeks support for
health care reform bill
aSSociateD PreSS
WASHINGTON The
political stakes enormous,
Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid briefed crucial moder-
ate Democrats before unveil-
ing long-awaited legislation
Wednesday to remake the
nations health care system.
Revealing the bills details
signals the beginning of an
intense struggle on the Senate
floor, where Republicans have
vowed to block the legislation
atop President Barack Obamas
domestic agenda.
Officials have said the leg-
islation would require most
Americans to carry health
insurance and mandate large
companies to provide coverage
to their workers, as well as ban
insurance company practices
such as denying coverage on
the basis of pre-existing medi-
cal conditions.
The bill would set up new
insurance marketplaces
called exchanges primarily
for those who now have a hard
time getting or keeping cover-
age. Subsidies would be avail-
able to help defray the cost of
coverage for people with lower
incomes.
Reid announced two weeks
ago it would also include an
option for consumers to
purchase government-sold
insurance, with states permitted
to drop out of the system.
Reid, D-Nev., summoned
members of the Democratic
rank and file to a late-afternoon
closed-door caucus to show the
bill he has spent weeks writing
and rewriting.
He met in advance with Sens.
Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Mary
Landrieu of Louisiana and
Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas,
Democratic moderates who
have expressed reservations
about the bill.
With the support of two
independents, Democrats have
60 seats, the number needed
to choke off any Republican
delaying tactics.
ASSoCiATed PReSS
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid gestures while speaking on
Capitol Hill inWashington. Reid has sought the support of moderate
Democrats and independents to pass the health care reformbill.
Golden Key
Questions? E-mail
[email protected]
International Honour Society
Scholarships - over $500,000 annually
Career Assistance - major corporate affliations
Leadership & Service opportunities
Conferences - in great locations!
Member discounts & Alumni benefts
www.joingoldenkey.org
Induction Ceremony
Nov. 22, 2-4pm
Big 12 Room
Kansas Union
news 3A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
on green space was the Anderson
Family Football Complex near
Memorial Stadium, which opened
August 2008. The construction of
the complex required the removal
of about 50 older trees, according
to Tom Waechter, assistant direc-
tor with Design and Construction
Management.
Neil Steiner, Tulsa senior, said he
worked for DCM when construc-
tion began on the complex. Steiner
said his boss sent him down to the
site to photograph the trees set for
demolition.
After I took pictures of over 50
trees, I stopped, Steiner said. It
was disheartening to say the least.
Weinberg said the construction
teams were as careful as possible to
minimize the trees removed, and
Waechter said that with the cedars
planted around the new football
practice field and other saplings
planted farther up the hill, more
trees were planted than were cut
down.
Steiner said his involvement
with the destruction of the trees
helped him become more involved
in sustainable engineering. As the
president of the KU chapter of
Emerging Green Builders, he is
trying to engage professors and
peers in a discussion about work-
ing with green space, rather than
against it.
Theres a misconception that
man is in competition with nature,
so were competing against green
space, he said. I think its a pride
thing.
Alumni, veteran staff and cur-
rent students warn against the fur-
ther destruction of historic green
space on campus because of its sig-
nificance to the campuss nation-
ally recognized beauty.
Jim Merrill, 1972 journalism
graduate now living in Leawood,
said he could remember looking
across Iowa Street from his fra-
ternity house on 19th Street and
seeing farmland instead of the
concrete Park and Ride lot.
Its hard to tell people not to
grow, but Im hoping the campus
doesnt get too much bigger, he
said.
Ken Armitage has been affiliated
with the University for 53 years. A
professor emeritus in ecology and
evolutionary biology, Armitage
said that although he didnt think
it was possible to keep all the green
space, it was important to try.
The green space is just as much
a part of campus as its buildings,
he said. If you maintain the cam-
pus heritage, you need to main-
tain these important open, green
spaces as much as the historical
buildings.
Natural causes
The effects of age, weather and
disease are almost as threatening
to remaining green space as devel-
opment is.
Livingood said the population
of historic trees has significantly
diminished in the past 10 years
as the trees reach their life expec-
tancy or fall to the power of Kansas
windstorms and harsh winters.
Armitage has seen first-hand
the role disease has played in the
disappearance of once cherished
landscape.
In 1956, when he first came to
teach at the University, dozens of
American Elm trees lined Jayhawk
Boulevard.
I remem-
ber, in a light
rain, you could
walk on the
sidewalk from
Snow Hall to
the Union, and
the rain only got
through when
you crossed the
street, he said.
Planted in the
early 1920s, the elm canopy was
one of the most significant land-
scape efforts to come out of Hare
and Hare, a landscape architecture
firm that played a major role in the
early development of campus.
During the next 50 years, the
elms grew upward of 30 feet tall.
Then, in the 1960s, Dutch Elm
Disease swept through the coun-
try, claiming the lives of nearly all
of the Jayhawk Boulevard elms by
the late 1980s.
Livingood said a plan was in
place to restore the tree canopy, but
the University lacked the funds to
make it possible.
But its not just restoration that
the University isnt able to afford,
she said. As the University budget
continues to diminish, so do the
funds available to care for existing
trees and landscaping on campus.
We all wish we had a far greater
budget to do that, but they do
a really good job with the bud-
get they have to work with, she
said of the work of Facilites and
Operations.
According to Steven Green,
assistant director with Facilities
Operations, the departments
spending budget was reduced
from $1.36 million in the 2007-
2008 academic year to $1.304 mil-
lion for the 2008 academic year.
Mike Lang, campus landscape
manager, said he had limited the
use of the water truck and stopped
mowing in some areas to compen-
sate for the budget cuts.
tHe Future
Livingood and other develop-
ers expect to consult the Campus
Heritage Plan in the future before
making any drastic changes to
campus.
Among many other things, the
plan identifies significant green
space on campus and proposes
treatment plans to
preserve and restore
the areas. Included in
the report are Marvin
Grove, Potter Lake,
Jayhawk Boulevard
and Prairie Acre all
areas that could poten-
tially be eligible for
the National Register
of Historic Places.
Livingood said she
hoped to get areas on the regis-
try because development on the
land would have to go through a
lengthy process before approval.
And several people agree
without the trees of Marvin Grove
or the tranquility of Potter Lake,
campus would seem like a differ-
ent place.
When youve got that kind
of institutional memory with all
of your alumni, thats something
youd like to preserve, something
youd like to keep, Livingood said.
Its very much a part of KU and a
very important part of KU.
Follow aly Van Dyke at
twitter.com/alyvandyke.
Editedby AnnaKathagnarath
campus (continued from 1A)
Rio de Janiero.
I dont get out much to do
this kind of stuff so it should be
fun, Putrah said. I really enjoy
everything this group stands for. I
want to help the
cause.
The foundation
is holding the
fundraiser Friday
from 10:30 p.m. to
2 a.m. , at Cielito
Lindo, 815 New
Hampshire St., for
Brazils National
Day of Racial
Consci ousness.
Earlier Friday at 3:30, former
Brazilian Minister of Racial
Equality, Matilde Ribeiro, will
visit the Universitys Multicultural
Resource Center. She will speak to
students about the issue of race in
Brazil, said Pedro dos Santos, doc-
toral candidate in the department
of political science.
Dos Santos said all profits from
Samba Night will go toward
the Two Brothers school that
University Portuguese Professor
Paul Sneed started when he found-
ed the Two Brothers Foundation.
Clarice Amorim, Racife, Brazil,
senior and president of the group,
said the school served to both edu-
cate and protect youths.
It keeps children out of the
streets, Amorim said. They live
in dangerous places. Who knows
what can happen to them or what
they may get involved with in the
streets.
Scott Montana,
Leawood junior and
member of Two
Brothers said the
group raised $1,200
with its most recent
fundraiser in March.
He said with the rate
of exchange between
the U.S. dollar and
Brazilian real, that
amount of money could fund all
the expenses at the school for two
entire months.
Thats a lot of money for kids in
Brazil, Montana said. Were hop-
ing to get at least that much, if not
more, this time around.
Amorim said Ribeiro, just like
many of the students at the Two
Brothers school, was from a poor
neighborhood of Brazil. Amorim
said she hoped the fundraiser
would help support students at
the Instituto dois Irmos and help
them escape the slums.
Dos Santos said the group had
tried to help Ribeiro visit for a
couple of years, but this trip would
be her first to Lawrence. He said he
thought the timing of her visit this
November seemed perfect.
Dos Santos, who met Ribeiro
personally while conducting
research in Brazil, said Ribeiro
established the National Day of
Racial Consciousness, or Zumbi
Day, while she was minister. She
picked Nov. 20 out of remem-
brance for a famous former slave
named Zumbi. Zumbi managed to
escaped slavery in the 17th century
and form a refuge for other fugi-
tive slaves before being captured
and killed Nov. 20, 1695.
Coming from a family that is
very racially conscious and very
aware and very proud to have the
Afro-descendant heritage, its a
very important day, Dos Santos
said.
After the talk with Ribeiro Dos
Santos said he is looking forward
to dancing at Cielito Lindo with
both experienced and new Samba
dancers.
Most of the music were play-
ing there is my music, Dos Santos
said, smiling. I gave it to the DJ.
Follow ray segebrecht at
twitter.com/rsegebrecht.
Edited by Alicia Banister
community (continued from 1A)
senate (continued from 1A)
City senior, said the policy never
wouldve allowed staf members to
barge in.
Were not trying to abuse any-
ones rights or take anyones rights
away, she said. Were not trying
to be big brother. Tose arent any-
ones intentions and thats not how
the policy would play out.
Te Student Housing Advi-
sory Board, which encompasses
all governances of Student Hous-
ing, passed this policy change last
spring. As part of the Student Code
of Rights and Responsibilities, it
needed to be approved in the stu-
dent rights committee before mov-
ing to full senate.
Proposing this policy change was
held of until this fall. Tis change
was presented to the alcohol sub-
committee Oct. 29, and the vote re-
sulted in a tie. Because of this, both
favorable and unfavorable sides of
the vote reasons members sup-
ported and opposed the change
were presented to the rights com-
mittee. Changing the Universitys
alcohol policy has been proposed
twice before, but has never passed
the student rights committee. Al-
though it didnt pass, chairwoman
of the alcohol subcommittee Emily
Williams said those from Student
Housing had given good argu-
ments.
I think there was substantial
debate and Im glad that we were
able to see it in this venue and that
we had representation, she said.
I think it was critical that student
housing had the option to come
and speak.
Te subcom-
mittee also gave
a separate report
with recommen-
dations for com-
bating alcohol
abuse. Tere were
11 favorable rec-
ommendations on
combating alcohol
abuse in the re-
port, which were
presented to the
rights committee.
Te rights com-
mittee voted to pass these recom-
mendations for investigation and
implementation by the Ofce of the
Vice Provost for Success.
Favorable recommendations
generally included increased fund-
ing and advertisement for counsel-
ing resources, more educational
outreach for responsible drinking,
and giving students an opt in
policy for parental notifcation,
similar to the opt in policy for pa-
rental access to grades. Tese rec-
ommendations were discussed by
the subcommittee and presented to
the rights committee as favorable
or unfavorable.
Williams said the majority of the
recommendations were education-
and awareness-based. She said the
committee never considered the
extremes of banning alcohol or
promoting a dry community. In-
stead, the group ex-
plored creative meth-
ods of encouraging
responsible, moder-
ate drinking, while
discouraging alcohol
abuse drinking to
the point of blackout.
While presenting
recommendati ons,
Williams emphasized
that state and federal
laws bound Student
Senate from propos-
ing or passing certain
legislation.
One of the things we have to
recognize is our limited authority.
For instance, we cant lower the
drinking age, Williams said.
Williams said she was very
pleased the recommendations for
combating alcohol abuse passed
the rights committee. Te recom-
mendations passed last night will
be discussed at the next full senate
meeting on Dec. 2.
Follow Megan Heacock at
twitter.com/meheacock.
Edited by Alicia Banister
crime
charges dismissed in
alleged robbery case
Charges have been dismissed
against the man accused in a
robbery on campus last week, ac-
cording to the district attorneys
ofce.
The University of Kansas
Ofce of Public Safety learned
through further investigation
that the alleged incident may
not have occurred in the manner
originally reported. Charles
Branson, Douglas County District
attorney, said in a news release
Wednesday.
Police said the 19-year-old who
reported the crime, who doesnt
attend the University, said he
was walking to his vehicle parked
in the southwest corner of the
parking lot near the tennis courts
when he was approached by two
unknown white males.
The man said one of his at-
tackers held him down while the
other punched him in the face.
He said the attackers took his wal-
let and told him not to call police
before leaving the area in a white
Cadillac. The man said his wallet
with a credit card and drivers
license were stolen.
KU Public Safety Ofce arrested
one of the suspects Friday, a
21-year-old Perry man. The man
was released Wednesday when
the charges against him were
dropped.
Brandon Sayers
The green space is
just as much a part of
campus as its build-
ings.
Ken ArmiTAge
Professor of ecology and
evolutionary biology
It keeps children out
of the streets. They
live in dangerous
places.
ClAriCe AmOrim
President of Two Brothers
Were not trying to
abuse anyones rights
or take anyones rights
away. Were not trying
to be big brother.
Kyle lUCKeTT
President of the
Association of University
resident Halls
national
2-year-old helps mother
give birth to baby boy
OliVe BrAnCH, miss. A
2-year-old in north mississippi
has done something few tod-
dlers can: He helped his mother
give birth to his brother. Bobbye
Favazza told The Commercial
Appeal she went into labor this
past Friday and gave birth on
the familys living room couch in
Olive Branch. She said her tod-
dler, Jeremiha Taylor, got her a
towel and caught the baby before
frefghters arrived to cut the
umbilical cord.
Favazza gave birth to a
7-pound, 4-ounce baby boy, Kam-
ron Taylor.
She had been scheduled for a
cesarian section on Dec. 6.
City emergency services super-
visor, greg mynatt, said the 911
call about Favazza was probably
the third this year about a woman
in labor, but usually the mother
makes it to the hospital before
delivery.
Associated Press
Theres something you can do.
Vi si t your campus
health center.
HPV Fact #11:
You dont
have to actual l y
have sex to get
HPVthe vi rus
that causes
cervical
cancer.
EU ATLANTIS
DUAL DEGREE PROGRAM
Bqqmjdbujpo!efbemjof!gps!gbmm!3121;
March 1, 2010
Jsfmboe
Hfsnboz
Chemistry Majors: Study in Europe
Dublin City University
University of Regensburg
Gps!qsphsbn!efubjmt!boe!bqqmjdbujpo!jogpsnbujpo-!wjtju;
www-oc.chemie.uni-regensburg.de/atlantis
www.studyabroad.ku.edu
NEWS 4A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
BY BETH BEAVERS
[email protected]
More than 150 people from across
the state met at the Dole Institute of
Politics to discuss how wind energy,
biofuels and smart grid technology
fit into Kansas economic future.
The experts advocated these alter-
native energy solutions, but Kansas
and the nation lacks the infra-
structure necessary to implement
them.
Jeremy Viscomi, program officer
for the KU Energy Council, said the
event, the second annual University
Energy Council, provided the
opportunity for federal and state
organizations that specialize in ener-
gy research to share information.
We want to grow energy research
on campus, commercialize it, and
get it to people around the state,
Viscomi said.
Viscomi said the different organi-
zations, which included the United
States Department of Agriculture,
the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory, Westar Energy, Inc.,
the Kansas City Area Development
Council, and Sunflower Electric
Power Corporation, were asked to
focus on three key areas: personal
perspective on energy landscape,
emerging technologies in energy
research, and how those emerging
technologies will affect Kansas.
Kyle Nelson, senior vice president
for Sunflower Electric, discussed
energy alternatives and problems
associated with them. Nelson said
that for these new technologies to
work a massive energy infrastruc-
ture must be put into place. He said
that a new infrastructure could take
up to 20 years to build, and cost $15
billion to $20 billion.
Nelson said the problem with
solar technologies is that once the
energy is generated, it is consumed
instantly and there is no signifi-
cant storage system. Nelson said that
Sunflower Electric was a not-for-
profit cooperative, so it is owned
by the customers that utilize its
services. Because of this business
model, Sunflower Electric cannot
risk significant capital on unproven
technology.
It is a tough problem that will
take decades to solve, Nelson said.
Kimberly Hernandez, Hutchinson
senior, said she was active with sev-
eral student environmental groups
on campus including KU Environs
and Chevron Energy Solutions. She
said that while she had been involved
with many environmentally themed
projects as a student, she attended
the event because she wanted to
learn more about what was happen-
ing at a professional level.
There are a lot of questions
about how to implement the tech-
nologies, Hernandez said. Its an
interesting conversation to have,
because how do you define sustain-
ability? There is no secure defini-
tion. Its great to have the conversa-
tion and define what it means in
terms of the University.
Marvin Duncan, senior agricul-
tural economic with the USDA,
spoke about biomass and biofuel.
Viscomi said biomass plant mat-
ter that can be turned into fuel
and biofuel were important because
Kansas is an agriculture-based state.
Corn, wheat and grass are some of
the kinds of biomass available in
Kansas.
Jim Ludwig, executive vice presi-
dent for Westar Energy Inc., spoke
about a $19 million grant Westar
received to use new smartgrid tech-
nology for Lawrence. The United
States Department of Energy said
on its Web site that the current grid
is limited in what and how much it
can do.
Tim Cowden, senior vice presi-
dent for the Kansas City Area
Development Council, said that the
the councils function was to bring
jobs to the area. Cowden said that
the Kansas City area was full of
alternative technologies, including
wind energy and biofuels.
We want to use talent from our
universities in our area, Cowden
said.
Scott Allegrucci, director of The
Great Plains Alliance for Clean
Energy, or GPACE, said the inclu-
sion of Sunflower Electric posed a
problem because Sunflower had no
research or relationship with the
University. He said he would have
liked to see more speakers discuss-
ing use of natural gas instead of coal,
which Sunflower uses, and see more
research representatives.
Why dont you invite those that
will own and use energy in the
state? Allegrucci said. I suggested
they add someone who can talk
about Kansas renewables and natu-
ral gas, which is a Kansas resource
that is cleaner than coal.
Allegrucci said he had partici-
pants willing to speak at the event,
but the agenda was set and there was
no room for more speakers.
Editedby SarahKelly
Ryan Waggoner/KANSAN
TimCowden, senior vice president of the Kansas City Area Development Council, presents at the second annual KU Energy Council confer-
ence at the Dole Institute of Politics onWednesday. The event featured speakers fromthe U.S. Department of Agriculture as well as local organiza-
tions such as Westar Energy and Sunfower Electric Power Corporation.
Sustainability
Kansans discuss economics of alternative energy
crime
15-year-old indicted on charges of killing 9-year old girl
ASSOCIATED PRESS
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.
Blessed with a Friday off school,
15-year-old Alyssa Bustamante
dug two holes in the ground to be
used as a grave, authorities said.
For the next week, she attended
classes, all the while plotting the
right time for a murder, they said.
Prosecutors said that time
arrived the evening of Oct. 21,
when Bustamante strangled
9-year-old neighbor Elizabeth
Olten without provocation, cut
the girls throat and stabbed her.
Why?
Ultimately, she stated she
wanted to know what it felt like,
Missouri State Highway Patrol Sgt.
David Rice testified Wednesday
during a court hearing over the
slaying.
Rice, who interviewed
Bustamante in the days after
Elizabeths disappearance, said
she confessed to investigators and
led them to the fourth graders
well-concealed body in a wooded
area near their neighborhood in
St. Martins, a small town west of
Jefferson City.
A Cole County judge ruled
Wednesday that Bustamante, who
has been held in Missouris juve-
nile justice system, should be tried
as an adult. Hours later, the teen
was indicted on adult charges of
first-degree murder and armed
criminal action for allegedly using
a knife to kill Elizabeth. A judge
later entered a not guilty plea on
Bustamantes behalf and referred
her to the public defenders office.
The court proceedings
marked the first time that the
suspect in Elizabeths death had
been publicly identified since a
two-day search for the girl by
hundreds of volunteers. When
they found Elizabeths body Oct.
23, authorities only said that a
15-year-old had led them to it and
was in custody for the slaying.
Bustamante remained largely
expressionless as she sat with her
hands shackled around her waist
in court Wednesday. She occa-
sionally looked down beneath the
brown bangs that covered her eyes
and swallowed hard as a judge
read the charges against her.
On one side of the courtroom
sat her mother and grandmother,
who has been Bustamantes legal
guardian for about half of her life.
On the other side sat Elizabeths
mother, relatives and friends,
several of whom wore pink
Elizabeths favorite color.
Bustamante was ordered held
without bond pending her trial. If
convicted of first-degree murder,
she would be sentenced to life in
prison without parole.
Witnesses at Bustamantes adult
certification hearing described a
girl who was bright yet depressed
and clever in a sometimes sneaky
sort of way. She ranked in rough-
ly the top third of her class at
Jefferson City High School, the
principal said, and had been in no
trouble at school or with the law.
Yet Bustamante had tried to
commit suicide at age 13 and had
been receiving mental health treat-
ment for depression and cutting
herself, said David Cook, the chief
juvenile officer in Cole County.
Once, she led her family to
believe she was attending a local
church event when she instead
sneaked off to a concert in St.
Louis, about two hours away,
Cook said. On one or two other
occasions, Bustamante spent the
night in the woods without permis-
sion, he said.
After her arrest, Bustamante tried
to cut herself with her own finger-
nails while being held in juvenile
custody, said her appointed juvenile
defense attorney Kurt Valentine.
He argued Bustamante should
remain in the juvenile system,
where she could potentially be
rehabilitated before being set free
by age 21.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A judge entered a not-guilty plea on behalf of the 15-year-old Alyssa Bustamante. She
confessed to investigators she murdered a 9-year-old girl.
Lack of infrastructure a hurdle in realizing new goals
$6 General Admission
7:30 PM November 21
2:30 PM November 22
Lawrence Arts Center
940 New Hampshire
W
h
a
t
R
e
a
l
l
y
H
a
p
p
e
n
e
d
a
n
e
w
p
la
y
b
y
K
U
s
tu
d
e
n
t B
e
n
ja
m
in
S
m
ith
Directed by Jeremy Riggs
Scenic and Lighting Design by Phillip Schroeder
Costumes by Elle Patton
Featuring Lizzie Hartman, Margaret Kramar, Christina Schafer Martin,
Byron Myrick, Samantha Raines, Phillip Schroeder
Participating Entry in the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival
_____________________________
ENGLISHALTERNATIVE THEATRE _____________________________
www.sunfloweroutdoorandbike.com
(785) 843-5000
Lawrence, KS 66044
804 Massachusetts St.
Sunflower Outdoor & Bike Shop
$165.00 DENALI JACKET
news 5A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
health
Students chalk campus for Great American Smokeout
BY ALY VAN DYKE
[email protected]
While Monica Saha wrote in
pink and yellow chalk by the steps
of Anschutz Library, onlookers
tilted their heads to read the text:
No Smoking
within 20 feet of
Entrance. It was
written inside a
green semi-circle
20 feet from the
entrance. An
ashtray sat right
inside the line.
Saha, Overland
Park sophomore,
is a peer health
educator with Student Health
Services. She and two other
peer health educators spent
Wednesday afternoon chalking
boundaries around buildings on
campus to illustrate the campus
policy posted on building doors
that warns smokers to stay 20 feet
away from entrances. The chalking
was in preparation for the Great
American Smokeout today.
As part of the nationwide event,
SHS will host informational tables
at Anschutz Library from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. to answer questions about
tobacco and provide resources to
help people quit smoking. Weather
permitting, another table will be at
Wescoe Beach at the same time.
Although the University has
participated in the Great American
Smokeout for several years, this is
the first year the students marked
the 20-foot boundary.
A lot of students dont know
about the KU policy, said Ken
Sarber, health
educator with SHS.
We hope to remind
students of the
campus policy.
Chelsea Brown,
Olathe junior, has
a cigarette after
her English class
in Wescoe Hall
every Tuesday and
Thursday. Now that
the weather has
turned, she seeks solace from the
biting cold under the buildings
overpass as she switches the
cigarette from her left hand to
her right to protect her exposed
fingers.
Brown said she tried to stay 20
feet from the entrance because
she didnt want to bother people,
but that she wasnt exactly sure
how far away she had to be. Also,
she said, the ashtrays are usually
closer to the doors.
I dont really know what 20 feet
means, she said. So I just jump
out to have a cigarette and hope
its OK.
The University policy
prohibiting Brown and others from
smoking within 20 feet of building
entrances passed in 1993.
But Sarber said even though
some students were aware of
the policy, the rule wasnt really
effective.
Having that policy doesnt
really change anyones behavior,
he said. Theyre still smoking
right next to the doors.
Part of the reason the policy
isnt effective, he said, could be
lack of enforcement.
The policy
instructs people
to call the
Department of
Human Resources
and Equal
Op p o r t u n i t y
with violations
as a means of
enforcement. Ola
Faucher, director
of the department,
said the department received one
or two calls per academic year.
She said most of the time, the
student violators arent identified.
If we cant identify who the
students are, its very difficult to
follow up, she said.
If it can identify a student, faculty
or staff member, Faucher said,
the department would work with
the chairperson of the program
the violator belongs to. After
repeat offenses, consequences
for students may range from a
formal or informal reprimand to
a student conduct code violation,
which could result in expulsion.
Faucher said the
department had
issued one reprimand
in the time she has
worked with the
department, but
would not disclose
to whom or when it
happened.
Saha said she hoped
the chalk lines would
help people identify
where they can smoke and protect
non-smokers from second hand
smoke.
I hope they realize they
shouldnt be smoking close to the
door and should respect others,
she said.
Follow aly Van Dyke at
twitter.com/alyvandyke.
Edited by TimBurgess
Go to kansan.com for a
graphic showing areas on
campus where smoking is
prohibited.
@
Marking building entrances part of campaign to help students quit smoking
Alex Bonham-Carter/KANSAN
Monica Saha, Overland Park sophmore, and Bridget Heine, St. Louis senior, Peer
Health Educators, chalk the sidewalk outside Malott Hall onWednesday for the Great American
Smoke Out, drawing awareness to anti-smoking policies on campus.
A lot of students
dont know about the
KU policy. We hope
to remind students of
the campus policy.
Ken sarber
Health educator
I hope they realize
they shouldnt be
smoking close to
the door and should
respect others.
monica saHa
overlandParksophomore
BusiNEss
New York bagel maker
owes state thousands
neW YorK Prosecutors
say the owner of a storied new
York city bagel business short-
changed the state out of a lot of
dough by cheating on taxes.
manhattan District attor-
ney robert morgenthau said
Wednesday that H&H bagels
owner Helmer Toro pocketed
more than $369,000 in income
and other taxes withheld from
employees paychecks and set
up shell companies to game the
unemployment insurance tax
system out of another $33,000.
Toro was released from custody
after pleading not guilty to
charges including grand larceny.
His lawyer didnt immediately
return a telephone call.
The business bills itself as the
worlds biggest bagel manufac-
turer. H&H has been featured
in TVs seinfeld and the 1998
movie Youve Got mail, not to
mention countless food guides
and best-of lists.
crimE
Former congressman out
on bond during appeal
aLeXanDria, Va. a former
Louisiana congressman who
was sentenced to 13 years in
prison on bribery charges will be
allowed to remain free on bond
while he appeals his conviction.
Wednesdays ruling makes it
likely that William Jeferson will
not serve any prison time for at
least a year or more.
Associated Press
national
Incest-related information
found in suspects residence
AssOciATED PrEss
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. The
wife of one of six men charged in a
child sex abuse case recently found
material depicting incest that was
hidden in the familys home,
according to a
search warrant.
The Jackson
County search
warrant issued
last week after
the arrest of
Burrell E.
Mohler Sr., 77, of
Independence,
said investigators seized several
items from Mohlers home,
including four computer towers,
several pornographic magazines
and books, several DVDs, and
cameras.
Col. Ben Kenney, of the Jackson
County Sheriff s Department, said
Wednesday that several booklets
found at the home were about
incest.
The thing that was unusual was
the title and the references, which
were about incest, he said. They
were very explicit. ... It was all on
sex with family members.
He said the computers that
were seized were sent to an FBI
lab in Kansas City for review, and
it was unclear when authorities
would know more about what they
contained.
Mohler, his four adult sons and
his brother, Darrel W. Mohler, 72,
of Silver Springs, Fla., have been
charged in neighboring Lafayette
County with raping and molesting
several young relatives over
roughly a decade beginning in the
mid-1980s. Accusations include
impregnating at least two young
girls and forcing one to have an
abortion when she was 11.
The Jackson County warrant was
issued Nov. 11, the day after Mohler
and his sons were arrested.
The warrant said detectives at
Mohlers home for the arrest saw
numerous magazines depicting
obviously young females (possibly
under the age of 17) and various
age males engaged in sex.
The articles and text of the
magazines described incestuous
sex, the warrant said.
Mohlers wife, Sandra, told
detectives she found some of the
material that made reference
to incest activity among family
members in a false ceiling of the
basement, the warrant said. She
locked the material in a file cabinet
about two months ago, according
to the warrant.
Sandra Mohler said when she
discovered the pornographic
material she made an arrangement
with her husband for him to
move to the basement area of the
residence, where he continued to
live and sleep separately, according
to the document.
Detectives also interviewed a
27-year-old woman living at the
home. The warrant said Sandra
Mohler and that woman were
cooperating in the investigation.
No one answered the door
Wednesday at the address identified
in the search warrant. Calls to the
home also were not answered.
mohler
Theres something you can do.
Vi si t your campus
health center.
HPV Fact #9:
HPV often
has no
si gns or
symptoms.
R
u
d
y
s
Pi zzeri a
Voted Best Pizza in Lawrence!
749-0055 704 Mass. rudyspizzeria.com
Almost the Weekend!
Thursday special:
16 Pizza
2 Toppings
2 Drinks
FREE DELIVERY!
O
N
L
Y
$
1
2
9
9 p
lu
s ta
x
NEWS 6A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
Arts
religion
English Alternative Teater to stage fnal performance
BY ALEX GARRISON
[email protected]
After 21 years of push-
ing the boundaries, the English
Alternative Theater is closing its
curtain for the last time.
The nationally recognized group
the only theater production
group run by an English depart-
ment in the U.S. is staging its
final performance this weekend
at the Lawrence Arts Center, 940
New Hampshire St. The perfor-
mance will be a full production
of What Really Happened, an
original play by Benjamin Smith,
Rosefield graduate student.
Paul Lim, professor of English,
founded EAT in 1989 as a forum
for his playwriting students origi-
nal work.
It has put on full performances
and staged readings of student
work ever since, giving students
the opportunity to see their work
come to fruition and helping them
develop their writing, he said.
Many students have gone on to
win regional and national awards
for their plays.
Smith said EAT became a great
part of the University because of
its willingness to produce edgy
work and its focus on develop-
ing up-and-coming playwright
voices.
Smith pointed to University
Theatres current production of
Tennessee Williams 1944 classic
The Glass Menagerie as a mon-
ey-making production that helped
students develop as theater actors
and producers, but not as writers.
Its been 60 years since The
Glass Menagerie. I love Tennessee
Williams, but cant someone else
come along? Smith said. EAT
helps find the new Tennessee
Williams.
In the beginning especially, EAT
also provided innovative art to the
community by producing works
written by minority authors.
We were the only ones doing
it, Lim said.
But EATs willingness to push
the envelop led to a constant
struggle to survive economically.
Lim is retiring later this year and
without him, EAT, which has been
funded by small grants and con-
tributions by Lim, will no longer
continue.
Because of budgetary concerns,
the department will not be hiring
another playwriting professor, at
least not in the immediate future,
said Marta Caminero-Santangelo,
chairwoman of the department.
Lim said it was difficult to give
up the extremely rewarding expe-
rience of working with students
and EAT, but said that he wanted
the opportunity to write plays
himself.
Before 1989, I wrote one play
per year, but Ive been a one-man
band with this, he said. Ive only
written two plays since. I want to
be able to write while I still can.
Caminero-Santangelo said EAT
was a huge part of the depart-
ments culture for both students
and faculty.
Its an educational opportunity,
but its so much more, she said.
When it becomes a real pro-
duction, its not just a classroom
activity anymore. Theres a sense
of teamwork to get the play shown
thats why these plays win so
many awards.
Byron Myrick, 1993 graduate
who performed in EAT produc-
tions while he was a student and
is now a cast member of What
Really Happened, said that the
loss of EAT would leave a huge
void in the Lawrence community,
but that he still held out hope it
could continue in some way.
Its so sad to see it go, he said.
I want to try to keep it alive.
Follow Alex garrison at
twitter.com/alex_garrison.
Edited by Alicia Banister
lAst production:
WHAt: What Really Hap-
pened A play by Benjamin
Smith, Rosefeld graduate
student
WHen: 7:30 p.m. Saturday
2:30 p.m. Sunday
WHere: Lawrence Arts Center,
940 New Hampshire St.
cost: $6 general admission
Billed as a psychological
drama about a man whose
child dies in a hit-and-run
accident
The man tracks down
someone who he thinks did
it and fnds his way into this
guys house
The play opens with the
man in prison and has a lot
of time shifts
Has a lot of mystery and
fashes through time
Uses flm-like conventions
to make it seem almost like
television
Director fnds camera
angles on stage
Sources: Benjamin Smith, Paul Lim, Byron
Myrick, 1993 graduate
Group closes curtains after 21 years of production
Acceptance of gay clergy prompts split in Lutheran Church
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW BRIGHTON, Minn.
The split over gay clergy within
the countrys largest Lutheran
denomination has prompted
a conservative faction to begin
forming a new Lutheran church
body separate from the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America.
Leaders of Lutheran CORE
said Wednesday that a working
group would immediately begin
drafting a constitution and taking
other steps to form the denomina-
tion, with hopes to have it off the
ground by next August.
There are many people within
the ELCA who are very unhappy
with what has happened, said
the Rev. Paull Spring, chairman
of Lutheran CORE and a retired
ELCA bishop from State College,
Pa.
At its annual convention in
Minneapolis in August, ELCA
delegates voted to lift a ban that
had prohibited sexually active
gay and lesbian pastors from
serving as clergy. The new policy,
expected to take effect in April,
will allow such individuals to lead
ELCA churches as long as they can
show that they are
in committed,
l i f e l o n g
relationships.
Op p o n e n t s ,
led by Lutheran
CORE, said that
decision is in
direct contradic-
tion to Scripture.
At a September
c o n v e n t i o n ,
Lutheran CORE members voted to
spend a year considering whether
to form a new Lutheran denomi-
nation. However, its leaders said
Wednesday that a heavy volume
of requests for an alternative from
disenfranchised congregations
and churchgoers prompted them
to hasten the process.
John Brooks, spokesman at the
ELCAs Chicago-based headquar-
ters, said Lutheran COREs move
was not unexpected. He expressed
hope that church members would
ultimately opt to stay
in the denomination
as it strives to be a
place for all people
despite any differ-
ences we might have
on any issues.
Neither Brooks
nor Lutheran CORE
leaders would guess
what kind of num-
bers a new denomi-
nation might attract. Lutheran
CORE leaders believe there is
deep opposition to the new policy
among rank-and-file churchgoers,
but said some may not be will-
ing to actually depart the ELCA
over it.
Brooks said the ELCA has not
seen significant departures yet,
but he cautioned its too soon
after the August decision to read
much into that.
So far, he said, five congrega-
tions nationwide have voted to
leave the ELCA. More have start-
ed the process, with 87 taking a
first vote to leave the denomina-
tion. Of those, 28 did not achieve
the two-thirds vote necessary to
leave the ELCA. In all, there are
10,300 ELCA churches in the
country with about 4.7 million
members.
If a congregation passes the
two-thirds bar on its first vote, it
must then wait 90 days before tak-
ing a second, final vote that also
requires a two-thirds majority.
Other Christian denominations
have seen factions split off over
the gay clergy debate. In 2003,
the 2 million-member Episcopal
Church consecrated its first openly
gay bishop, a move that alienated
American Episcopalians from its
worldwide parent, the Anglican
Communion. The divide has led
to the formation of the more
conservative Anglican Church
in North America, which claims
100,000 members.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ryan Schwarz, left, and Rev. Paull Spring, chairman of Lutheran Coalition of Renewal
(CORE), talk with reporters at WordAlone Network ofces in NewBrighton, Minn., onWednes-
day. CORE wants to forma newdemonination that is not accepting of openly gay clergy.
There are many
people within the
ELCA who are very
unhappy with what
has happened.
Rev. PAULL SPRiNg
CORe chairman
Adam Buhler/KANSAN
Lizzie Hartman, left, and Phillip Shroeder walk along the bars of a prison cell in a scene of What Really Happened. The full-length play in
one act will be the fnal performance for English Alternative Theatre at the Lawrence Arts Center with performances on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and
Sunday at 2:30 p.m. The play was written by Benjamin Smith and directed by Jeremy Riggs.
starting rate start r iinnggg rraa rrrr tee
(&5*/70-7&%
,BOTBT/FVSPMPHJDBM*OTUJUVUF
Saturday, hovember z1 - :oam
The Khl ln Topeka works to ensure that people wlth
lntellectual dlsabllltles can llve fulflled and lndlvldual
llves. Alternatlve 8reaks wlll help wlth thelr annual
hollday Luncheon.
uestlons!
www.ku.edu]-albreaks [email protected]
(VFTUMFDUVSFCZ.BUJMEF3JCFJSP
former 8razlllan kaclal Fquallty Mlnlster. She wlll be dls-
cusslng race relatlons ln 8razll, as well as the hlstory and
her role ln the government.
Frlday, hovember zo, zoo
:o-:oopm, MkC Classroom
Sabatlnl Multlcultural kesource Center
5PVS%F(SFFL
unlverslty women's Club ls offerlng
tours of 0reek homes ln Lawrence to
ralse money for thelr phllanthroples.
The unlverslty women's Club ls a
11o-year-old organlzatlon wlth rlch hls-
tory of servlce to many Ku women slnce
11, and are offerlng the frst oppor-
tunlty ln the hlstory of Ku to lnvlte the
publlc to gaze lnto these hlstorlc gems.
Saturday, hovember z1st, 1oam-pm
For lnfo, emall [email protected]
http:]]groups.ku.edu]-unlvwm
(PU#PPLT
unlverslty of Kansas 8ook 0rlve
All books wlll be donated to
Kansas Clty Teach For Amerlca Schools
th Floor of Kansas unlon
am - pm, hov. 1th & zoth
hosted by Center for Servlce Learnlng
and Students Tutorlng for Llteracy
news 7A THURSDAY, NovembeR 19, 2009
BY MICHELLE SPREHE
[email protected]
Watkins Memorial Health Center
will begin offering free H1N1 vac-
cines to students from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. Friday.
Todd Cohen, director of
University Relations, said the shot
would be available to students age
24 and younger who show their
KU ID. Students 25 and older can
receive the vaccine if they have
medical conditions such as diabetes
or asthma. The clinic is on first-
come, first-serve basis.
Obviously we wont be able to
get a vaccine for everybody, Cohen
said.
However, Cohen emphasized that
no one was turned away from the
last vaccination clinic, held on Nov.
6. Cohen said that about 600 people
received the vaccine on that date.
You dont need to camp out
its a KU tradition for basketball,
but we dont need to do that for the
flu, he said.
In the meantime, Cohen said the
University encouraged students to
take precautions to prevent the flu.
Cohen also said that the vaccina-
tion would take about six weeks to
kick in.
You cant just take a shot and
walk out and say, OK, Im pro-
tected, Cohen said.
Students can take other preventa-
tive steps. Jarad Gouge, Lawrence
sophomore and desk assistant at
Hashinger Residence Hall, said the
check-in desk on the main floor of
Hashinger offered free masks.
The main concern is the con-
finement issue, Gouge said. The
fact that we have 400-plus students
living in one place and its such a
contagious illness that if one person
gets it, it can spread.
Symptoms of H1N1 include a
fever of more than 100 degrees,
coughing, sore throat, body aches,
respiratory congestion and occasion-
ally vomiting and diarrhea, accord-
ing to the Kansas Department of
Health and Environment Web site.
Students with flu-like symptoms are
encouraged to stay home and isolate
themselves from roommates to pre-
vent spread of the disease.
Edited by Brenna M. T. Daldorph
Watkins to dispense free
H1N1 vaccines tomorrow
HealtH
Please, sir, I want some more
Adam Buhler/KANSAN
Hutchison senior Jason Hering and AndrewNussbaum, social studies teacher fromLawrence Free State High School, help
distribute rice to participants in the OxfamHunger Banquet held Monday night at the Kansas Union. Participants were were given food
options refecting the types and quantities of food availible for upper, middle and lowclasses.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES Financially
hobbled University of California
moved Wednesday to boost stu-
dent fees by $2,500 over two years
as students staged raucous dem-
onstrations across the state against
the higher costs.
Fourteen protesters were arrest-
ed at a University of California,
Los Angeles, meeting where a
Board of Regents committee
endorsed a plan that will boost
undergraduate fees, the equivalent
of tuition, by 32 percent in two
stages by 2010. The full board
is expected to approve the fee
increases Thursday.
At the University of California,
Berkeley, more than 1,000 demon-
strators condemned the fee boost
and high salaries for university
administrators. Protesters carried
mock gravestones to represent
programs that have suffered under
state budget cuts and waved signs
reading Save our university.
After a series of deep cuts, and
with state government facing a
nearly $21 billion budget gap over
the next year and a half, Board of
Regents members said there was
no option to higher fees in light
of withering government dollars.
University of California President
Mark Yudof has said the 10-cam-
pus system needs a $913 million
increase in state funding next year,
in addition to higher student fees.
More than two-thirds of the
request would restore previous
cuts. He did not rule out even
higher student fees if Sacramento
cant find the money.
When you have no choice, you
have no choice, Yudof told report-
ers after the committee vote. Im
sorry.
Board members pointed out
that lower-income families would
be shielded from the jump, and
financial aid would help others
defray the higher cost.
The Los Angeles meeting was
repeatedly interrupted by out-
bursts from students and union
members, who accused the board
of turning its back on the next
generation.
We are bailing out the banks,
we are bailing out Wall Street.
Where is the bailout for public
education? asked UCLA graduate
student Sonja Diaz.
NatIoNal
Students protest huge tuition
hike at University of California
University of
California,
Berkeley student
Matali Flores
holds a strike sign
in Sproul Plaza
during a large rally
on the University of
California, Berkeley
campus in Berke-
ley, Calif., Wednes-
day. Financially
hobbled University
of California moved
Wednesday to
boost student
fees by 32 percent
over two years as
students staged
raucous demon-
strations against
the higher costs.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. A
police officer in a small Arkansas
town used a stun gun on an
unruly 10-year-old girl after he
said her mother gave him per-
mission to do so. Now the towns
mayor is calling for an investiga-
tion into whether the Taser use
was appropriate.
According to a report by Officer
Dustin Bradshaw, obtained
Wednesday by The Associated
Press, police were called to the
Ozark home Nov. 11 because of
a domestic disturbance. When he
arrived, the girl was curled up on
the floor, screaming, the report
said.
Bradshaws report said the girl
screamed, kicked and resisted any
time her mother tried to get her
in the shower before bed.
Her mother told me to tase her
if I needed to, Bradshaw wrote.
The child was violently kick-
ing and verbally combative
when Bradshaw tried to take her
into custody, and she kicked him
in the groin. So he delivered a
very brief drive stun to her back,
the report said.
The names of the girl and her
mother were redacted in the
report.
Ozark Mayor Vernon McDaniel
said Wednesday that the girl
wasnt injured and is now at the
Western Arkansas Youth Shelter
in Cecil.
But McDaniel said he wants
Arkansas State Police and if
they decline, the FBI to investi-
gate the incident. The state police
declined his request Tuesday.
People here feel like that he
made a mistake in using a Taser,
and maybe he did, but we will not
know until we get an impartial
investigation, McDaniel said.
Police Chief Jim Noggle said
Tasers are a safe way to sub-
due someone whos a danger to
themself or others. No disci-
plinary action was taken against
Bradshaw, he said.
We didnt use the Taser to
punish the child just to bring
the child under control so she
wouldnt hurt herself or some-
body else, Noggle said.
If the officer tried to force-
fully put the girl in handcuffs, he
could have accidentally broken
her arm or leg, Noggle said.
He said a touch of the stun
gun less than a second
stopped the girl from being
unruly, and she was handcuffed,
he said.
She got up immediately and
they put her in the patrol car,
McDaniel said.
Noggle said the girl will face
disorderly conduct charges as a
juvenile in the incident.
NatIoNal
Policeman uses taser on ten-year-old
ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN STAUFFER-FLINT
OF ONE OF THE NATIONS BEST COLLEGE
NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING STAFFS
FOR SPRING 2010
O P E N P O S I T I O N S I N C L U D E ( M U S T A T T E N D O N E M E E T I N G )
I N F O S E S S I O N S
W I L L T A K E P L A C E
*
ACCT. EXECUTIVES
*
*
CREATIVES
*
WED.
N O V
R M 2 0 2
7 PM
THURS.
N O V
R M 1 0 0
5 PM
FRI.
N O V
R M 1 0 0
3 PM
Theres something you can do.
Vi si t your campus
health center.
HPV Fact #12:
Condoms
may
not ful l y
protect
agai nst
HPV.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY A list of
witnesses in an upcoming compe-
tency hearing for a man charged in
the abduction of Elizabeth Smart
does not include his estranged
wife, even though she has agreed
to cooperate with prosecutors.
Wanda Eileen Barzee pleaded
guilty Tuesday to kidnapping as
part of a plea deal that calls for her
to cooperate with authorities and
be willing to testify against Brian
David Mitchell, her estranged
husband.
Still, her name was not on a
list of 29 people that federal pros-
ecutors say could be called to tes-
tify during the Nov. 30 hearing
for Mitchell. The list was posted
Wednesday on a federal court
docket.
Barzees attorney Scott Williams
said her plea agreement did not
specify at what point she might be
called to provide testimony.
Im not privy to reasons why
the government, or the defense for
that matter, would or would not
call her, Williams said. If we got
a subpoena, shed be a witness.
Telephone messages seeking
comment from the U.S. attor-
neys office and Mitchells defense
attorneys were not immediately
returned.
Barzee and Mitchell were
indicted by a federal grand jury on
charges of kidnapping and unlaw-
ful transportation of a minor in
March 2008. Barzee pleaded guilty
to both counts and is expected to
receive a reduced sentence of 15
years under the plea deal.
Prosecutors contend that
Mitchell, a self-proclaimed reli-
gious prophet, is faking psychiat-
ric symptoms to avoid responsi-
bility for the kidnapping.
Court papers show prosecutors
could call as many as 25 non-
experts and four experts during
the hearing.
The non-experts include
Barzees mother, Dora Corbett,
and several staff members from
the Utah State Hospital, where
Mitchell has been incarcerated.
Among the experts are forensic
psychiatrist Dr. Michael Welner,
who concluded Mitchell is compe-
tent, and two experts in religion.
The testimony will focus on
establishing that Mitchells men-
tal health has not significantly
changed throughout his life, and
he is not preoccupied with reli-
gion, the documents state.
Robert Steele, Mitchells federal
public defender, has said he would
likely call Dr. Richart De Mier, a
psychologist at the U.S. Medical
Center for Federal Prisoners in
Springfield, Mo. as a defense
expert.
De Mier evaluated Mitchell for
federal prosecutors, and court
documents indicate he concluded
Mitchell was incompetent.
Smart was 14 in 2002 when she
was taken from the bedroom of
her Salt Lake City home at knife-
point.
Barzee and Mitchell were arrest-
ed in March 2003.
NEWS 8A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
national
Wife of man charged in Smart case not in list of witnesses
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Elizabeth Smart smiles as she leaves federal court after testifying at a competency hearing for Brian David Mitchell On Oct. 1. Wanda Eileen Barzee is not one of the 29 witnesses expected to testify
against her estranged husband.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
GROTON, Conn. Te crew
of a U.S. submarine made dozens
of errors before the vessel collided
with an American warship in the
Persian Gulf, an accident that ex-
posed lax leaders who tolerated
sleeping, slouching and a radio
room rigged with music speakers,
a Navy review found.
Navy investigators placed blame
for the March collision on the sub-
marines inefective and negligent
command leadership, including
what they called a lack of stan-
dards and failure to adequately
prepare for navigating the Strait of
Hormuz.
Te Navy Times newspaper
frst reported the fndings Sunday
afer obtaining a heavily redacted
copy of the Navys report through
a Freedom of Information Act re-
quest. A Connecticut newspaper,
Te Day of New London, made a
similar request and reported the
fndings Wednesday.
Te USS Hartford, a nuclear-
powered submarine based in Gro-
ton, Conn., collided with the USS
New Orleans, a San Diego-based
Navy amphibious ship, on March
20 in the narrow, heavily traveled
strait at the mouth of the Persian
Gulf.
Te New Orleans fuel tank was
ruptured and 15 sailors on the
Hartford sustained minor injuries.
Te collision caused $2.3 million
in damage to the New Orleans,
and the cost so far of repairs to
the Hartford is $102.6 million.Te
commanding ofcer was relieved
of his duties and the subs chief of
the boat, an adviser to the com-
manding ofcer, was reassigned.
Te report said the crew of the
New Orleans bears no fault, and
that crew members aboard the USS
Hartford made numerous errors in
the hour before the collision.
Correction of any one of nearly
30 tactical and watchstander
errors, or adherence to standard
procedures, could have prevented
this collision, Adm. John C. Harvey
Jr., commander of U.S. Fleet Forces
Command, wrote in endorsing the
investigations fndings.
Te submarine had fve known
sleepers, or sailors who would
routinely nod of on watch, but no
disciplinary action was taken, the
report states.
In a sea of blunders, submarine collides with warship
national
Barzee, who entered in a plea deal for
case, was not among 29 who could testify
!"#$%&'(&$)"$*+),$*-.&*+&(
Brinq your experience and ideas. Day one is waiLinq and so is your Leam.
AL LrnsL & Younq, you'll lind an open and diverse environmenL. You'll Lap inLo
your lile experiences. Cive lresh perspecLive Lo your clienLs and your colleaques.
And you'll learn lrom oLhers who share your qoals and aspiraLions.
Lxplore your career opLions in assurance, Lax, LransacLion or advisory services.
/+!*',$"&0*$1-($2-3($13*3(&4
5-$6&!("$7-(&8$9),)*$&2:;-7<3,<#!2-"&$!"#$1)"#$3,$-"$=!;&>--?:
@!2$-"&
2
0
0
9
L
r
n
s
L
&
Y
o
u
n
q
L
L
P
!
"
L
r
n
s
L
&
Y
o
u
n
q
r
e
l
e
r
s
L
o
L
h
e
q
lo
b
a
l o
r
q
a
n
iz
a
L
io
n
o
l
m
e
m
b
e
r
l
r
m
s
o
l
L
r
n
s
L
&
Y
o
u
n
q
C
lo
b
a
l L
im
iL
e
d
,
e
a
c
h
o
l
w
h
ic
h
is
a
s
e
p
a
r
a
L
e
le
q
a
l e
n
L
iL
y
. L
r
n
s
L
&
Y
o
u
n
q
L
L
P
is
a
c
lie
n
L
s
e
r
v
in
q
m
e
m
b
e
r
l
r
m
lo
c
a
L
e
d
in
L
h
e
U
S
.
news 9A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
Tanner Grubbs/KANSAN
KU Chamber Singers harmonize toMary Had a BabyTuesday night at Murphy Hall, conducted by Dr. Paul Tucker. Tuesday nights performance was part of the 2009 fall concert series organized
by KU Choral.
Mary melody
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PHILADELPHIA The
company that owns the Maersk
Alabama, a freighter targeted by
pirates twice in seven months,
did not heed a request to rename,
repaint or reroute the ship after
the first attack off the coast of
Africa in the spring, former crew
members say.
Ex-crewmen John Cronan and
Shane Murphy said in separate
interviews Wednesday that they
feared and anticipated another
attack after the ordeal in April
when their captain was taken
hostage but eventually freed by
U.S. Navy SEALs.
The American-flagged ship was
targeted again Wednesday, but
private security guards thwarted the
attempt by firing guns and blaring
a high-decibel noise device. The
ship is proceeding under American
surveillance to its destination on
the Kenyan coast.
Obviously shes a hot target, said
Cronan, of suburban Philadelphia.
The bad guys were laying in wait
for her.
Cronan and several other
crewmen have filed suit in Texas
against Maersk Line Ltd. and
Waterman Steamship Corp.,
alleging the companies were
negligent in sending the ship
into known pirate territory with
inadequate protection.
The men are seeking
compensation for physical and
psychological damage they say
they suffered during the spring
hijacking, and for loss of income.
The suit was filed in Houston
because it is the nations second-
biggest port and judges there have
a sophisticated understanding of
maritime law, said attorney Brian
Beckcom, who represents six crew
members.
Dennis McElwee, a lawyer for
Cronan, said crewmen shared
their safety concerns in meetings
with Maersk before the ship was
attacked in April, but the company
did not take sufficient security
measures.
Officials for Maersk Line Ltd.,
which has offices in Madison, N.J.,
Norfolk, Va., and Houston, did not
immediately return calls seeking
comment on the allegations.
Officials at Waterman Steamship,
a company based in Mobile, Ala.,
that supplies crew members to
Maersk, declined to comment.
Cronan and Murphy were on
the Maersk Alabama when pirates
hijacked it the first time and
took Capt. Richard Phillips, of
Underhill, Vt., hostage. Navy SEAL
sharpshooters freed Phillips while
killing three pirates in a daring
nighttime attack.
Maersk made a conscious
decision, despite going into pirate-
infested waters, not to provide
any meaningful security for its
workers, Beckcom said. Instead
theyd just rely on the taxpayers
and U.S. military to bail them out
after the fact.
Murphy, speaking Wednesday
at a news conference at the
Massachusetts Maritime Academy
in Bourne, said he told Maersk
officials that the Alabama should
be renamed, repainted or sent to
ply another route because pirates
would continue to target it.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mariner John Cronan was a crewman aboard the Maersk Alabama when pirates attacked in
April near Somalia. He is suing Maersk and alleges the it was negligent in sending the crewinto
pirate territory with inadequate protectionThe ship was attacked by pirates againWednesday.
Company wont rename ship
national
criMe
Man accused of killing 15-year-old son
legal
Marines ordered
out of military
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. A
37-year-old father irate over hear-
ing his 15-year-old son had sexual
contact with a 3-year-old girl made
the teen strip at gunpoint, marched
him to a vacant lot and shot him to
death despite pleas from the boy
and his mother, a relative said.
Michigan authorities filed a first-
degree murder charge Wednesday
against Jamar Pinkney Sr. in the
shooting death Monday of Jamar
Pinkney Jr. in the Detroit enclave
of Highland Park.
Defense attorney Corbett
OMeara said prosecutors should
consider evidence of the fathers
state of mind over the sex abuse
report.
If something were to happen
that would cause a reasonable
person to lose control of himself,
that is something the prosecution
would have to take into account,
OMeara said outside Highland
Park District Court.
Tensions were high in the court-
room Wednesday as the hand-
cuffed suspect was led into the
room for the arraignment.
Judge Brigette Officer entered a
not guilty plea for Pinkney, whos
also charged with assault, and
ordered him jailed without bond
until a preliminary examination
Dec. 1.
Caldwell said the sexual mis-
conduct allegation that led to the
confrontation wasnt part of the
police investigation.
The shooting hap-
pened Monday night in
a vacant lot in the once-
prosperous city of 16,000,
where decay, abandon-
ment, fires and demoli-
tion have eaten away at
many of the sprawling
homes. Highland Park
recently exited years of state finan-
cial oversight.
Visitors built an impromptu
memorial with candles and stuffed
animals at the shooting site.
The boys mother, Lazette Cherry,
told the Detroit Free Press that
her son told her he had improper
sexual contact with the girl.
I called and told his
father. This isnt some-
thing you sweep under
the rug, she said.
Cherry said the elder
Pinkney arrived at
the home with a gun,
ordered his son to strip
and marched him outside
despite her protests.
He got on his knees and begged,
No, Daddy, No, and he pulled the
trigger, Cherry said.
Cherry did not immediate-
ly respond to a phone message
Wednesday.
Pinkney
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN DIEGO Three Marines
and a Navy man convicted of aid-
ing the kidnapping and murder of
an Iraqi man have been ordered
removed from the military, the
Navy said Wednesday.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus
issued the ruling more than two
years after the accusations were
aired in a Camp Pendleton court-
room.
The men had been allowed to
stay on active duty after serv-
ing short jail terms for charges
linked to the death in the village
of Hamdania.
To allow these individuals to
remain on active duty after plan-
ning and participating in kidnap-
ping and murder sends absolutely
the wrong message as to how the
nation and Department of the
Navy view this incident, Mabus
said in a statement.
It degrades
the actions of
thousands of
Marines and
sailors who,
under the stress
of combat in
Iraq, performed
honorably, he
said.
Capt. Beci
Brenton, a
spokeswoman for Mabus, said he
was unavailable for further com-
ment.
The secretary found the killing
was deliberately planned and not
conceived in the heat of battle or
the stress of war, Brenton said.
Mabus also ordered the Marines
to explain why the lieutenant who
oversaw the Camp Pendleton
unit, 1st Lt. Nathan Phan, should
be allowed to remain in the ser-
vice. Phan was not charged in
the case.
The secretary denied clemency
for Pvt. Lawrence G. Hutchins III,
who is serving an 11-year pris-
on sentence for unpremeditated
murder and other offenses.
Seven Marines and a Navy
corpsman from the 3rd Battalion,
5th Marine Regiment were
charged in June 2006 with kid-
napping and murdering Hashim
Ibrahim Awad, 52, two months
earlier. They were accused of tak-
ing him from his home, marching
him to a ditch and shooting him
to death.
Hutchins, of Plymouth, Mass.,
was the only defendant convicted
of murder and the only one cur-
rently in prison.
Navy corpsman Petty Officer
3rd Class Melson J. Bacos of
Franklin, Wis., pleaded guilty to
kidnapping, conspiracy to kidnap
and making false official state-
ments. Marine Lance Cpl. John
J. Jodka III, of Encinitas, Calif.,
pleaded guilty to aggravated
assault and conspiracy to obstruct
justice.
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler A.
Jackson, of Tracy,
Calif., pleaded guilty
to aggravated assault
and conspiracy to
obstruct justice.
Marine Lance Cpl.
Jerry E. Shumate Jr.,
of Matlock, Wash.,
pleaded guilty to
aggravated assault
and conspiracy to
obstruct justice.
All will get either an honor-
able or general discharge, Brenton
said. They have no recourse to
appeal.
Three other defendants left the
military after their prison terms
ended.
Mabus launched his review
at the request of members of
Congress, including Rep. Bill
Delahunt, D-Mass., who were
seeking clemency for Hutchins.
Attorneys for two of the four
men ordered removed from the
military said the decision amount-
ed to second-guessing officials
who considered the case.
It degrades the
actions of thousands
of Marines and sailors
who ... performed
honorably.
Ray Mabus
Navy secretary
20904324(13)-09/09-GRD
Theres something you can do.
Vi si t your campus
health center.
Copyright 2009 Merck & Co., Inc.
All rights reserved. Printed in USA.
hpv.com
HPV Fact #1:
Your boyfri end
cant get
screened for HPV.
So theres no way
to know whether
he coul d expose
you to the virus.
NEWS 10A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
music
Education
KJHK hosts eight local bands at annual Farmers Ball tonight
BY LAUREN HENDRICK
[email protected]
When Richard Gintowt reflects
on his musical influences hes
quick to mention some of his
favorite bands such as Wilco and
The Shins. But he knows most of
his true musical influences are
ghosts of the past bands he
said he listened to growing up.
Green Day was a big influence
before they sucked, he said.
Gintowt, vocalist for the band
Hidden Pictures, will perform
tomorrow night at KJHKs annual
Farmers Ball at The Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St.
Tom Johnson, general manager
and program adviser for KJHK,
said Farmers Ball was a station
tradition dating back to the early
1990s.
Its a really good launch pad
for new bands, Johnson said.
Eight bands will perform at
the Bottleneck and four finalists
will advance to Saturdays show
at The Jackpot Music Hall, 943
Massachusetts St.
Logan Nickles, Stillwater,
Okla., senior and KJHK station
manager, said the station received
67 entries this year. The KJHK
staff picked the top eight entries
using a rating scale.
The winner will receive
recording time at Black Lodge
Recording, band merchandise
from Blue Collar Press and the
opening act spot at the KJHK
Stop Day Eve Party Dec. 10 at the
Jackpot.
Bands will advance to round
two by a critic vote and the
audience will select the winner
Saturday.
Though this will be a Farmers
Ball debut for Hidden Pictures,
Gintowt said he has been a regular
at Farmers Ball since he worked
as the music director for KJHK
when he attended the University
from 1999 to 2003.
Ive always thought there was
a really good music scene here
and I still feel that way, he said.
Gintowt graduated with a
degree in journalism and cur-
rently works as a writer and pho-
tographer for Lawrence.com.
The band decided to submit
music to reconnect with the
KJHK music scene, Gintowt said.
He and fellow musician Michelle
Sanders played in Lawrence orig-
inal The Ok Jones from 2000
to 2007 before creating Hidden
Pictures last year with band
members Alan Brandsted, Nate
Holt and Pat Tomek.
Aside from the publicity and
prizes offered to participants in
the Farmers Ball, Gintowt said he
was excited to see other bands in
the competition.
Katlyn Conroy, vocalist and
keyboard player, will be per-
forming with Wild and Wooly
on Friday night. Conroy said she
had wanted to play at Farmers
Ball since she started playing in
Lawrence bars at age fifteen.
The bands in the Farmers Ball
are always very talented and I feel
honored to perform, she said.
Ive been impressed with every-
one who has won in the past.
Edited by Jonathan Hermes
sEE Jayplay insidE
Read Jayplays feature
for more information on
tickets, the bands and the
ball.
Contributed photo
The band Hidden Pictures, fromleft to right, Nate Holt, Pat Tomek, Richard Gintowt, Michelle Sanders, and Alan Brandsted, will
play Farmers Ball tomorrownight at the Bottleneck. They will be performing alongside eight other Lawrence bands in hopes of taking top prize:
recording time.
Gonzaga University commences hate studies academic program
Jayplay
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE, Wash. Why did
the Nazis hate the Jews? Why did
the Hutus hate the Tutsis?
Hate is everywhere, but the fun-
damental question of why one per-
son can hate another has never
been adequately studied, contends
Jim Mohr of Gonzaga University,
who is developing a new academic
field of hate studies.
The goal is to explain a condi-
tion that has plagued humanity
since one caveman looked askance
at another.
What makes hate tick? Mohr,
director of Gonzagas Institute for
Action Against Hate, wondered.
How can we stop it?
Gonzaga founded the institute
a decade ago after some black law
students received threatening let-
ters. It has since started a Journal of
Hate Studies, hosted a conference
and offered its first class on hatred
last spring.
The hope is that other univer-
sities will follow suit, said Ken
Stern of the American Jewish
Committee in New York, who has
been involved in the effort. We
wanted to approach hate more
intelligently, he said.
Stern, who has spent 20 years
battling anti-Semitism, said the
need for hate studies became obvi-
ous when people started fighting
groups like the Aryan Nations,
which once flourished in this area.
Opponents galvanized against the
Aryans, but didnt really know how
best to fight them, Stern said.
We were flying by the seat of
our pants, he said. There was no
testable theory.
There is not even a good defini-
tion of hate, Stern contends.
Philosophers have offered
numerous definitions: Rene
Descartes said hate was the urge to
withdraw from something that is
thought bad. Aristotle saw hate as
the incurable desire to annihilate
an object.
In psychology, Sigmund Freud
defined hate as an ego state that
wishes to destroy the source of its
unhappiness.
Gonzaga, a Jesuit university
best known for its basketball team,
offered a class on the subject taught
by five professors from different
disciplines.
Student Kayla De Los Reyes was
in that class, and said the informa-
tion both horrified her and gave
her hope.
Hate is something that is part
of the human emotional makeup,
she said. Everyone feels it at one
point or another. You have to learn
to control it.
The goal is to create an aca-
demic home where a variety of
disciplines, including history, psy-
chology, religious studies, anthro-
pology and political science, can be
brought together to focus on hate.
Its the same sort of effort that led
to the creation of disciplines like
black studies or womens studies,
Mohr said.
Such academic efforts are not
without controversy. Some skep-
tics fear they are little more than
attacks on the dominant power
structure.
This stuff tends to be one
dimensional and presumes the guilt
of an archetypal white male, said
Glenn Ricketts, spokesman for the
National Association of Scholars.
Heather Veeder, a graduate assis-
tant for the institute, said the orga-
nization has an important mission.
Hate thrives in areas not illumi-
nated by education, she said.
But Stern said it is too easy to
blame ignorance for hate. People
can have plenty of knowledge about
something and still hate it, he said.
The problem is when one person
or group can separate another per-
son or group from their human-
ity, thinking of them as an other,
Stern said.
We dehumanize them and jus-
tify violence against them, Stern
said.
There is no simple answer to
why people hate, Mohr said. Hate
can be sparked by greed, or fear, or
a tribe bonding together in opposi-
tion to another. People looking to
belong will hate others to fit into a
group, he said.
We can change, Mohr said.
There has to be hope.
Final four will play at the Jackpot on Saturday
Minimize your risk. CoventryOne offers personal health insurance thats reliable, affordable and easy.
Call us today at 866-795-3995, x4902 or visit minimizerisk.com.
ATTENTION
We made
this type
large so
as not
to cause
eye strain.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
THURSDAY, novembeR 19, 2009 www.kAnSAn.com PAGe 1b
Go to promos.kansan.com/kickthekansan or send picks to [email protected].
Kick The Kansan in football
The team wins frst road game this season. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL | 3B
Kansas pulls ahead of Iowa
commentary
Mangino
could be
difcult to
replace
By Alex Beecher
[email protected]
F
or as long as hes been on cam-
pus, there have been whispers
that Mark Mangino may not
be the most agreeable character. But
they were subtle musings, the kind
of thing everyone seems to think
here, yet no one says. And even
now, we dont know much thats any
more concrete than that. The whis-
pers have gotten louder, certainly.
But I certainly dont know whether
theyre true or not.
What I do know is this: In light of
the football teams recent struggles,
it would not be altogether surprising
if this controversy, ultimately, results
in Mangino losing his job.
And I know that scares me,
because Kansas would have a very
difficult time finding a head coach
who could match Manginos success.
Of course, hiring a new head
coach is always something of a
crap shoot. Do you go with the hot
shot young coordinator, or do you
opt for the coach whos won big at
smaller schools? Perhaps you take
a gamble on a virtual unknown, or
maybe you throw money at a big
name candidate. Whatever route
you choose, there are multiple
examples of similar choices that
could fail.
Charlie Weis had never been
a head coach before Notre Dame
handed him the reigns to its storied
program. Another disappointing
season with first-ever lows, and
Weis looks to be on his way out.
Rich Rodriguez, only in his sec-
ond year at Michigan, had a bevy of
success coaching West Virginia. But
his winning ways have, thus far, not
followed him to Ann Arbor.
And these programs are two of
the most prevalent in the history of
college football. They have tradition
and more importantly, resources
that Kansas football could never
hope to match. Most importantly,
both have the ability to recruit the
entire nation.
Thats a luxury Kansas doesnt
share. Nor does Kansas have the
most bountiful of local recruiting
grounds. Instead, the Jayhawks are
forced to compete against schools
which are bigger, closer and more
football-centric for middle-tier
Texas preps.
All of this is not to say that
Kansas cannot be a quality football
program. What it does say is that
the program ought to be viewed
with perspective.
The stadium is too small. And
even with its small size, the fanbase
clearly doesnt value the football
program enough to fill it weekly.
The new facilities are great, and
necessary, add-ons. But theyre still
nothing compared to the palaces
that exist elsewhere in the Big 12.
And again, Kansas location dic-
tates that, almost certainly, it will
never attract blue chip recruits.
Thats the program that Lew
Perkins would have to sell a poten-
tial head coach on. And no matter
how gifted a pitch man Perkins is
reputed to be, the facts dictate that
Kansas would have to settle, some-
what, in its hypothetical search.
There would be no proven BCS-
conference winners, and no highly-
touted coordinators who have aspi-
rations of landing bigger jobs.
All of this talk is, admittedly, a
bit premature. I dont know what
Mangino did or didnt do and I
dont know what will happen once
the facts do become clear. But even
amidst the malaise, I remember
what Kansas football was before
Mangino arrived. And, whats worse,
I know how easily it could be that
again.
EditedbyAliciaBanister
iowa state unkind
Ronnie Miller/AMES TRIBUNE
Sophomore outside hitter Allison Mayfeld attempts to keep the ball in play duringWednesday's match against Iowa State at Hilton Coliseumin Ames, Iowa. The Jayhawks were swept by the Cyclones, losing all three matches.
Jayhawks can't beat Cyclones
By ZAch GeTZ
[email protected]
The Kansas volleyball team suf-
fered a setback Wednesday night
as No. 8 Iowa State swept Kansas
3-0 in Ames, Iowa. It was the sev-
enth time the Jayhawks have been
swept for the season and the fifth
time on the road.
Although Kansas played even-
ly with Iowa State at times, the
Jayhawks were never able to stay
with Iowa State for a full set,
sophomore outside hitter Allison
Mayfield said.
In all three games it was tied
at some point, but we just couldnt
push through the full 25 points,
Mayfield said.
Sophomore setter Nicole Tate
said she thought the team didnt
give it their all at times.
We just didnt follow through
with the game plan that the coach-
es gave us, and it just wasnt an
all-around effort from the whole
team, Tate said
Coach Ray Bechard said he
didnt fault Kansas effort, but said
he thought Kansas just ran into a
team that is playing exceptionally
well.
There is a great will on this
group to finish strong and try to
extend this season, Bechard said.
But there are times when execu-
tion wasnt quite where it needed
to beat a team in the top 10.
Iowa State was consistent-
ly good through the entire set,
which made it hard to overcome,
Bechard said.
Theyd get a two, three, four
point lead and they are very tough
to catch, Bechard said.
Kansas started out the first set
quickly, pulling out to a 6-2 lead
early, but Iowa State used an 11-1
run to take a 18-12 lead in the
middle of the set. Kansas could
never recover as it lost the set
17-25.
Mayfield and senior middle
blocker Paige Mazour tied for the
Kansas lead with 10 kills each.
No Jayhawk had double-digit digs,
By JAySON JeNKS
[email protected]
Coach Mark Mangino spoke
with the media after yesterday
evenings practice, and once again
answered a handful of questions
about the ongoing internal inves-
tigation launched by the Athletics
Department.
When questioned about
reports alleging he poked senior
l i n e b a c k e r
Arist Wright,
M a n g i n o
declined to
discuss the
situation.
I have done
nothing inap-
propriate and
I cannot speak
about the internal processes tak-
ing place.
During the exchange with
reporters, Mangino repeatedly
emphasized that his focus rests
on Texas Kansas next oppo-
nent. It was a point senior Kerry
Meier echoed.
To tell you the truth, as soon
as we step on the field its like
nothing has happened. I think
thats the right way we need to
approach it.
Mangino also routinely avoid-
ed details or specifics involving
the current investigation yester-
day.
This is an internal process and
I respect the process, Mangino
said. Even though someone
thought it was appropriate to leak
information, it is still an internal
football
men's basketball
Mangino: 'I have done nothing inappropriate'
Inexperienced guards must learn to
make plays when Collins is of court
Senior guard
Sherron
Collins raises
his hands
after the
game against
Memphis
Tuesday.
Collins was
plagued with
cramps during
the second half
but came back
to lead the
Jayhawks to a
57-55 victory.
Weston White/KANSAN
By cOrey ThIBODeAUx
[email protected]
The Jayhawks will have to
recover quickly from Tuesdays
drama when they play host to
Central Arkansas (1-1) tonight.
Kansas continues the Basketball
Hall of Fame Showcase against a
team the school has never faced in
its history. The Jayhawks will be
looking for more offense, as they
were held to just 57 points in the
victory over Memphis.
Scoring almost half of what they
scored against Hofstra, Kansas saw
a significant decrease in offensive
production with Sherron Collins
out, coach Bill Self said.
We dont really understand
yet how were going to score, Self
said. Its amazing to me how one
person taken out of your lineup
changes how the ball moves.
With Collins out of the game,
the team must rely on its young
guards to distribute the ball.
To this point in the season, the
younger guards have struggled
to keep passing the ball, Self said.
He added that it is an easy prob-
lem to fix.
One of the biggest benefi-
ciaries of strong play from the
day: Thursday
date: Nov. 19, 2009
location: Lawrence
time: 7 p.m.
tV: Jayhawk TV
kansas Vs.
central arkansas
SEE men's ON pAgE 4B
SEE football ON pAgE 4B
tharp excels
despite youth
Linebacker Huldon
Tharp has impressed
veteran teammates like
captain Darrell Stuckey.
see story on 10b.
Mangino
scores
kansas 17 20 20
iowa state 25 25 25
up next
No. 9 Nebraska at Kanas
when: 6:30 p.m. Nov. 21
where: Horejsi Family
Athletics Center
SEE volleyball ON pAgE 4B
No. 8 Iowa State
overpowers Kansas
in all three matches
The streak was supposed to
end last year.
Four straight conference cham-
pionships was enough.
Losing five players to the NBA
draft was supposed to be the
death knell on an incredible run.
But, somehow, Cole Aldrich
and Sherron Collins rallied a
group of greenhorns into form
just in time to claim an incredible
fifth straight title.
Then Aldrich and Collins
returned, along with those green-
horns that were suddenly playing
basketball at a very high level,
and the Jayhawks were named
No. 1 in the country.
Problem is, it just may be even
harder to win a conference cham-
pionship this year.
Theres this team that plays
their home games in Austin,
Texas, that also returned a pair of
potential NBA draft picks.
That also returns most of
the supporting cast. That also
brought in a ridiculously talent-
ed recruiting class, perhaps even
more so than Kansas.
That also has an impressive
transfer that becomes available at
the halfway point.
I had the chance to watch the
Longhorns dismantle UC-Irvine
the other day and, level of com-
petition taken into account, they
looked like the most impressive
team Ive seen all year.
There was no stopping a once-
more-slimmed-down Dexter
Pittman inside, he finished with
21 points and seven rebounds on
10-for-11 shooting, and the sup-
porting cast looked more than
capable of getting the job done.
Highly touted freshman Jordan
Hamilton was actually more
impressive than more highly
touted freshman Avery Bradley,
but neither was spellbinding, la
Xavier Henrys 27-point debut.
Hamilton dropped 12 to go
with three rebounds, and Bradley
chipped in 10 with two assists.
JCovan Brown, also a fresh-
man, started at the point and
was turnover prone early, but
seemed to settle in as the game
progressed and the Longhorns
rolled 89-42.
Point guard will likely be the
Horns biggest concern, but could
be remedied with the eligibility of
Jai Lucas at the semester long
before they have to worry about
hosting the Jayhawks.
Lucas was an All-Freshman
SEC guard at Florida, but
preferred a change of scenery and
wound up in burnt orange.
Hes a sniper from long range,
shooting over 43 percent from
the outside in his freshman year.
The reason I think Texas looks
like it may be the team to take
the conference is the dominating
presence of Damion James on
the wing.
James poured in 21 points
from all over the floor and added
15 rebounds for his third career
20-point, 15-board performance.
I suspect it wont be his last.
Heres the catch for Kansas
fans.
As good as Henry has looked
early, he hasnt harnessed his
NBA-frame into a top-flight
defensive stopper.
As good as Cole Aldrich was
last year, and as good as he will
be this year, he hasnt proved
that he has the body strength to
hold back a player as physical as
Pittman.
Henry and Aldrich will be try-
ing to deny James and Pittman
and Im not sure theyll be able
to.
In 22 minutes last year, Pittman
beat up the Aldrich-led Kansas
frontcourt for 16 points.
With a more svelte physique,
Pittman should be looking at well
upwards of 30 minutes a game,
and significantly more damage.
In 28 minutes last year, James
had 26 points and six boards.
Granted, Kansas didnt have a
wing in the mold of Henry to
put a body on James, but Brady
Morningstar was no defensive
slouch.
The Jayhawks travel to Austin
Feb. 8 for a game that will likely
decide the Big 12.
Barring injuries, it would be
wholly unsurprising to see both
teams undefeated in conference
and sitting at No. 1 and No. 2 in
the country.
Last year, Texas came into
Allen Fieldhouse with the con-
ference title on the line, but the
Jayhawks were able to hold them
off.
This year, the location will
flip.
Its yet to be seen whether the
roles will.
Edited by Jonathan Hermes
sports 2B
QUOTE OF THE DAY
People who work together
will win, whether it be against
complex football defenses,
or the problems of modern
society.
Vince Lombardi
Longhorns impress this season
mOrning brEw
By TIM DWyER
[email protected]
FACT OF THE DAY
Cole Aldrich has nine blocked
shots in Kansas frst two
games.
Source: Kansas Athletics
TriViA OF THE DAY
Q: How many blocks did
Alrdich have last season
A: 78, good to tie for 19th in
the country.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2009
TODAY
mens basketball
vs. Central
Arkansas,
7 p.m.
FriDAY
Swimming
Houston
Invitational,
all day
SATUrDAY
Volleyball
vs. Nebraska
6:30 p.m.
Football
at Texas, 7 p.m.
Swimming
Houston
Invitational,
all day
SUnDAY
womens
basketball
vs. Michigan,
2 p.m.
Swimming
Houston
Invitational,
all Day
THiS wEEk
in kAnSAS
ATHlETiCS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO, Calif. John
Salmons scored 23 points and the
Chicago Bulls beat the Sacramento
Kings 101-87 on Tuesday night.
It was the frst game with more
than 100 points for Chicago, which
was held under 90 in fve of its pre-
vious seven games and entered with
the NBAs third-worst shooting
percentage. Te Bulls shot 47 per-
cent and made seven of 12 3-point
shots.
Making only his ffh career start,
Donte Greene scored 24 points
for the Kings, who had won four
straight. Tyreke Evans scored 20
points and Beno Udrih had 13.
Luol Deng scored 16 for the
Bulls. Joakim Noah, the NBAs lead-
ing rebounder, had 15 points and 14
boards.
Jason Tompson scored with
4:25 lef to cut Chicagos lead to
92-83. But the hustling Noah had
a tip-in and Salmons followed
with a 3-pointer to give the Bulls a
14-point lead with 3:16 remaining.
It was the frst matchup between
Rose and Evans, who both played
point guard for one season at
Memphis State before moving on
to the NBA. While Rose was earn-
ing Rookie of the Year honors a
year ago with the Bulls, Evans took
over the starring role at Memphis
and later was the fourth overall
pick by the Kings.
Afer building a 17-point lead
with 4:49 lef in the third, the Bulls
suddenly went cold as the Kings
pulled within nine on two occa-
sions. But Salmons closed out the
quarter with nine points in the f-
nal 1:44 to help Chicago carry an
86-72 advantage into the fourth.
Chicago
Bulls
forward Taj
Gibson tries
to shoot over
Sacramento
Kings center
Spencer
Hawes in
Sacramento,
Calif., Tuesday.
The Bulls beat
the Kings
101-87, which
was the frst
game with
more than
100 points for
Chicago.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chicago breaks hundred point barrier in victory
Bulls beat Kings in Sacramento Tuesday,
pulling team out of its shooting slump
nbA
NBA
Birdman Anderson
still coping with knee
DENVER The Denver
Nuggets say Chris Birdman
Andersen is day-to-day with
moderate patellar tendonitis
in his right knee.
Anderson has been sore,
so he underwent an MRI on
Wednesday in Denver.
Dr. Steve Traina said the
test revealed no structural
damage.
Associated Press
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON Amare
Stoudemire scored 23 points,
Steve Nash had 16 assists and
the Phoenix Suns recovered
from a slow start to beat the
Houston Rockets 111-105 on
Tuesday night.
Jason Richardson scored 20
points for the Suns, who have
won eight of their last 11 games
against the Rockets in Houston.
Carl Landry scored a career-
high 27 points off the bench and
Aaron Brooks had a career-best
13 assists for the Rockets.
The Suns (10-2) rallied from
a double-digit deficit to win
for the fifth time this season.
Theyre the only team to reach
100 points in all of their games
so far.
Richardsons 3-pointer with
8:11 left in the third quarter gave
the Suns their first lead since the
opening minutes. Brooks hit a
shot from the baseline before
Nash made a pull-up jumper for
his first field goal of the game,
giving Phoenix a 63-62 lead.
The pace of the game picked
up and the lead changed hands
eight more times over the next
6 minutes. Landry dunked and
Luis Scola sank a baseline jump-
er in the last minute of the quar-
ter to give Houston an 82-78
advantage.
Nash returned from a short
rest with 9 minutes left in the
game and the Rockets leading
85-84. He immediately found
Leandro Barbosa cutting inside
for a layup, and the Suns moved
back in front.
The teams traded baskets
into the final minutes before
Nash delivered his 15th assist to
Richardson for a layup with 2:59
left that put the Suns up 100-98.
Brooks missed a short jump-
er and Channing Frye sank a
3-pointer from the top of the
key with 1:51 remaining that
made it 103-98. Landry split two
free throws and Jarron Collins
converted a three-point play to
put it out of reach.
The Rockets finished 9 for
26 from 3-point range, after
hitting five of their first seven
attempts to take a 21-9 lead.
Houston (6-5) also outrebound-
ed Phoenix 14-5 in the opening
quarter and led 34-22.
nbA
Phoenix recovers
from slow start
Nfl
AFC names Chiefs safety
defensive player of week
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Safety
Mike Brown of the Kansas City
Chiefs has been named defen-
sive player of the week in the
AFC.
Brown is the frst Chiefs safety
to win the honor since Jerome
Woods in 1997.
In a 16-10 victory on Sunday
at Oakland, Brown had a career-
high two interceptions and four
passes defensed.
His frst interception was
converted into Ryan Succops
31-yard feld goal and his second
came of a defected ball with
38 seconds left on the Chiefs
10-yard line.
Associated Press
During the holidays, please take time to give thanks for
our nations abundant food supply.
We are just one of the many U.S.
farmers and ranchers who are
proud to raise wholesome, healthy
food. The average American
farmer feeds about 144 people.
Along with our friends and neighbors in farming and
livestock industries, we work every day to ensure safe
food is available for our nation. . . Caring for our land and
livestock so that future generations will continue to have
the opportunity to provide this abundant supply of food.
Barrett Cattle Grantville, Kansas
Gene, Anna, Payden & Ella
Prairie Creek Bud Quinlan
Visit
www.ExploreBeef.org
...for the abundance of food brought to us by Americas farms and ranches
Present this coupon to the cashier at the time of
sale and receive a 20% discount off your total bill
(including entres, drinks, side items and desserts).
*Not valid with Seniors Menu, other specials or
discount programs.
Call or visit a Perkins
454
Rock n R
Wa
WacWeekda
16 XL
Lae 1-
Lae Poke
6 PeppeR
1 I1
3 I27
PeppeR
vWa
c
1 Lae 1-
1 Lae Poke
6 PeppeR
1W
$
vPoke
$7 each
14 Lae
OR
785-841-5000
1445 W 23rd St
Laundry Service
WASH DRY FOLD
+
75
cents
per pound
=
pick up & delivery
913-915-8670
Ofce Hours:
Mon- Sat 7:30 am-9pm