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Volume 125 Issue 112 kansan.

com Monday, April 29, 2013


All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Classifieds 2B
Crossword 5a
Cryptoquips 5a
opinion 4a
sports 1B
sudoku 5a
Partly cloudy. Winds from
south at 5 to 15 mph.
Its been two years since Prince William and Kate
Middleton got hitched. Celebrate their anniver-
sary with regal style.
Index Dont
forget
Todays
Weather
Go get some Vitamin D.
HI: 82
LO: 63
lgbTqA
fooD for ThoUghT
GeorGe mullinix/kansan
The Jubilee Cafe is run by student volunteers who prepare and serve breakfast to the community on Tuesday and friday morn-
ings. Students who are looking to get involved in lawrence should visit the Center for Community outreachs website.
emily donovan
edonovan@kansan.com
UDK
the student voice since 1904
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
reaChinG out, GivinG BaCk
assoCiated press
Halfway through Fridays
Brown Bag Drag, a 6-foot-tall
femme mimic in a Disneys Snow
White dress raised an expertly-
painted eyebrow to draw a laugh
from the line Hes gotta be larger
than life as she sang Footlooses I
Need a Hero.
Te fact that we can have a
drag show on your campus and
not give two shits what anybody
thinks I love it, said Daisy
Buckt, the emcee of Fridays bur-
lesque performance.
Te event flled Woodruf Au-
ditoriums 300 seats to capacity
and lef it at standing room only.
Lipsyncing and renditions of
songs from Hairspray, Beyonc,
Cyndi Lauper and John Lennon
marked the last day of Gaypril, a
month-long celebration of LGBT,
sexual and gender diversity.
Troughout four weeks of April,
Queers and Allies coordinated
panels about intersexuality and
religion, showed plays and flms,
brought in guest speakers and co-
ordinated social events including
Pride Night at Wildes Chateau 24
in outreach and activism eforts.
Teres way too much gay pride
at KU to only fll up a week, said
Michael Detmer, the graduate stu-
dent advisor for Queers and Allies
and the LGBT Resource Center
coordinator.
Te popularity of a drag show
more commonly seen in clubs and
bars performed in the heart of
a campus in Kansas at noon on a
Friday was no surprise to Detmer
or Queers and Allies president
Ailee Cassel. Cassel, a junior from
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, thinks the
increasingly pro-gay political cli-
mate has helped encourage more
people to speak out in support of
gay rights.
We had a really decent turnout
at all of our events, Cassel said.
Tats something weve struggled
with in the past. We could always
draw people to Brown Bag Drag,
but we couldnt always draw peo-
ple to a trans talk event.
As head of the Gender Neutral
Restroom Task Force, Detmer has
already seen success in bringing
greater awareness of LGBT is-
sues to campus. By purchasing
unisex restroom signs with both
male and female fgures, the stu-
dent coalition of more than 40
members has already changed the
designation of two single-person
bathrooms in Wescoe this past fall
and hopes to designate two more
by the fall semester.
Te frst and foremost thing
that people need to think about
when being an ally is being vis-
ible, Detmer said.
Queers and Allies meets Turs-
day nights at 7 p.m. in the Sabatini
Multicultural Resource Center
classroom. Detmer urges LGBT
allies to speak up if they overhear
an ofensive comment at the gro-
cery store, to hang the Human
Rights Campaign sticker up in
their ofces or on the bumper of
their cars and to attend events to
learn more about LGBT issues.
Daisy Buckt fnished the drag
show with Gloria Gaynors I Am
What I Am, tearing of her curly
blonde wig and bowing to a stand-
ing ovation.
Edited by Allison Hammond
In the early hours of a recent
Tuesday, Bailey Fee, a freshman
from Kansas City, Kan., arrived at
the Jubilee Caf at the First United
Methodist Church with a smile
and a willing spirit to spend sev-
eral hours serving breakfast to the
homeless.
For Fee, working with the home-
less hits close
to home. In
October 2011,
her father
Larry died
from a heart
attack while
working at the
Wy a n d o t t e
County Water
Department.
My dad was my best friend and
someone I could talk to about any-
thing, Fee said.
While Fee was close to her father,
she could not say the same of her
mother, who Fee said suffers from
alcoholism and a gambling addic-
tion.
My mother and Is relationship
was never healthy, Fee said. We
would yell at each other. I felt like
if I lived with her full time, things
would be bad for everyone. It was
never an option to move in with
her.
She said she did not feel a con-
nection to her step-mother either
and described her as mentally and
emotionally abusive.
Less than a week after her fathers
death, Fees stepmother told her she
knew Fee wasnt going to live with
her anymore. Fee said her step-
mother blamed her for her fathers
death.
I got in a car accident two weeks
before his death and almost died,
Fee said. She said the stress of my
accident was too much for my dad
to handle. He was working a lot,
and in her mind, he was working
too much to save up for my college,
so that was my fault.
Then the funeral came, and
the question everybody had was,
Whats going to happen to Bailey?
Fee said. I didnt know what I was
going to do.
With no other place to stay, Fee
lived at friends houses for the fol-
lowing week.
A couple days later, Fee returned
to her stepmothers house to pick
up her clothes. To Fees surprise,
she discovered that her stepmother
had changed the houses locks to
keep her out. She had no place to
go.
I just dont exist in her life any-
more, Fee said.
But, Fee still had another option.
She had always been close to her
cheerleading coach at Turner High
School, Sybil Niccum. After her
fathers funeral, Niccum took Fee
out to lunch and told her that
she would always be welcome at
Niccums home.
Fees father would have approved.
She said that before her fathers
death he had asked Niccum to
accompany Fee on a school trip
to Paris.
So, after recovering the clothes
that her step-mother left on the
curb for trash day, Fee moved in
with Niccum. Soon after, Niccum
became her legal guardian with
assistance from a friend who is a
lawyer.
I was lucky I didnt actually have
to live on the streets and I have peo-
ple to take care of me, Fee said.
Fee lived with Niccum for the
rest of high school, but Niccum
insisted that Fee live on campus to
experience college life. Now, Fee is
a member of the Alpha Chi Omega
sorority and lives in the dorms.
It was at sorority recruitment
that she heard about Jubilee Caf as
a community service opportunity.
The caf was founded in 1994 by
Joe Alford, the cafes former direc-
tor who continues volunteering
today, Jubilee Cafe was intended
to give college students face-to-face
time with homeless people.
This gave students a way to sit
down and talk to homeless people,
Alford said. They find that they
are just like them. Everyone is one
or two paychecks away from the
street.
On Tuesday and Friday morn-
ings from 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. 25
to 50 students arrive to serve food
and wash dishes at the caf while
they get to know members of the
homeless community on a more
personal level than seeing them on
the street.
In the past year, the caf has seen
fewer patrons. Jessica Sheahon, a
graduate student from Salina, is the
volunteer coordinator for the caf.
She attributes the decline to the relo-
cation of the Lawrence Community
Shelter. Last December, the shelter
moved from its location at 10th and
Vermont Streets to its new location
east of Kansas Highway 10.
The shelters move was pushed
by Lawrence business leaders
feeling threatened by the home-
less population, said Stephanie
Higinbotham, current coordinator
for Jubilee Cafe and next years
coordinator for Concerned, Active
& Aware Students, a student group
dedicated to volunteering at the
homeless shelter.
The business owners wanted to
remove the homeless element from
the downtown area, Higinbotham
said. They dont view them as
people.
While the new location accom-
modates more families and serves
more meals daily, the shelter is still
struggling, Higinbotham said.
They dont have enough food,
money or people, Higinbotham
said.
The Jubilee Caf acts as a supple-
ment to the shelter, but Sheahon
said that a lack of transportation
for the homeless population has
caused the number of patrons drop
from around 100 to close to 50.
For Fee, it is important to keep
things in perspective while volun-
teering.
A minor event can turn your life
upside down, Fee said. Whenever
I look at these people, I think, this
could have been me, Fee said.
Through volunteering, Fee has
become friends with the people
who eat at Jubilee Cafe , know-
ing several by name. When she
missed volunteering for a couple
months, one of the people she usu-
ally serves, Ed, greeted her as if
shed never missed a day when she
returned.
Whenever I see someone on the
street, I sympathize with them, Fee
said. Homelessness is a societal
problem, and we need to handle it
together.
Edited by Hannah Wise
marshall sChmidt
mschmidt@kansan.com
kansan file photo
Three performers sing and dance on stage at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas
Union as a part of last years brown bag Drag performance event.
PAGE 5A
Review:
Pain and
Gain
Fee
Brown Bag Drag concludes Gaypril festivities
University students volunteer at Jubilee Caf, get face-to-face time with lawrence homeless community
Visit tHE link for morE info
http://Goo.Gl/h4wqj
Page 2a Monday, aPril 29, 2013
N
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
news
weather,
Jay?
Clear in the morn-
ing, then partly
cloudy. Southern
winds at 15 to 20
mph.
Tuesday
Hit the pool!
HI: 86
LO: 63
Partly cloudy with an
80 percent chance
of rain. East south-
east winds at 5 to
25 mph.
Wednesday
I think we skipped spring...
HI: 86
LO: 37
Overcast, north-
ern winds at 15
to 20 mph.
Thursday
Its cold again?
HI: 46
LO: 30
Wunderground.com
Whats the
calENdar
Thursday, May 2 Tuesday, April 30 Wednesday, May 1 Monday, April 29
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DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967)
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newS ManageMent
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wHat: SUA Grocery Bingo
wHere: Hashinger Hall, Theater
wHen: 7 to 8 p.m.
aBoUt: Play bingo and other games
for a chance to win food. Bring a KU
ID.
wHat: Film Screening: William S.
Burroughs: A Man Within
wHere: Wescoe Hall, Room 3139
wHen: 7 to 9 p.m.
aBoUt: Catch this 2010 documentary
about the late, famed author and
Lawrence resident and then stick
around for a Q&A session with director
Yony Leyser.
wHat: Visual Art Scholarship Show &
Open Studios
wHere: Art and Design Building
wHen: 2 to 4 p.m.
aBoUt: Check out student artwork
with the Scholarship Exhibition on
the third and forth foors and open
studios throughout the building.
wHat: Corey Smith
WHere: Granada Theater, 1020 Mas-
sachusetts St.
wHen: 7 p.m.
aBoUt: Tickets are $15 to $20 for this
live country music show.
wHat: UC Forum: Homelessness in
Lawrence
wHere: Ecumenical Campus Minis-
tries
wHen: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
aBoUt: Presenter Brad Cook will dis-
cuss the history of homeless services
in Lawrence, causes of homelessness,
barriers to getting out of homeless-
ness and changes due to the moving
of the shelter out of downtown.
wHat: Cosby Sweater
wHere: Bottleneck, 737 New Hamp-
shire St.
wHen: 8 p.m.
aBoUt: Catch electronica act Cosby
Sweater at this all-ages show.
wHat: Desert of Forbidden Art
wHere: Spencer Museum of Art
auditorium
wHen: 5 p.m.
aBoUt: This documentary tells the
story of a treasure trove of banned
Soviet art worth millions of dol-
lars stashed in a far-off desert in
Uzbekistan. Admittance is free to this
screening.
wHat: 2013 Dole Lecture: IKEs Legacy
wHere: Dole Institute of Politics
wHen: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
aBoUt: Brigadier General Carl Reddel,
executive director of the Eisenhower
Memorial Commission, will discuss
the 34th presidents continuing
legacy.
CAMPUS
Basketball tournament aids health initiative
Jenna JaKowatz
jjakowatz@kansan.com
The University recently took
part in RecycleMania, a nation-
wide competition where schools
collect data on the amounts they
recycle. RecycleMania ranks
schools in eight categories: bottles
and cans, corrugated cardboard,
food service organics, paper, goril-
la, per capita classic and waste
minimization.
In the Universitys first year
of competition, it has room for
improvement.
In a few categories the University
did well. The University won the
Targeted Materials category and
took second place in the gorilla
prize category for Kansas.
The Gorilla Prize takes the
total amount of materials recy-
cled compared to other partici-
pating schools in the state. The
University had 17,490 pounds
and Kansas State University had
228,777 pounds.
In the category of the Grand
Champion, which takes the total
number of recycled materials
divided by the total amount of
trash, KU was at 17 percent, while
K-State was at 26 percent.
In the category of food waste,
the University took 57th place
out of 156 competitors with 4,698
pounds. The University was first
in the Big 12. In the category
of bottles and cans, however, the
University did not do very well.
This was our first year par-
ticipating, and we can always go
upwards, Center for Sustainability
staff member Manny Abarta said.
Recycling here is very low at
17 percent and the national is 34
percent. I made a promise to the
student government to improve
that.
Currently the recycling bin to
trash can ratio is low, with one
recycling bin for every five trash
cans.
It is important not to be dis-
couraged, Abarta said. We knew
that we wouldnt do well and that
gives us more tools when we are
focusing on new programs.
This summer, there are plans
for a waste audit to come look
through the Universitys trash to
see what can be recycled that stu-
dents are throwing away.
We have a great opportunity
here, Abarta said. I wanted to
get us going and know where we
stand. This is the first step.
Abarta is currently working on
a project to see how recycling is
done at the University.
We need student participa-
tion, Abarta said. We dont have
enough people engaged who know
how to make a difference and want
to. Once recycling becomes fun,
it will be natural for students.
We need to develop habits and
trends.
Edited by Brian Sisk
University receives feedback from recycling competition
Megan lUCaS
mlucas@kansan.com
CAMPUS
resuLTs
First place among Kansas schools in the targeted
materials category, which is calculated to recognize
schools recycling the largest amount of the targeted
material on a per capita basis.
Second place among Kansas schools with 17,490
pounds in the Gorilla Prize category, which recognizes
schools that recycle the highest gross tonnage of com-
bined paper, cardboard and bottle and cans, regard-
less of campus population. Kansas State had 228,777
pounds.
First place among Big 12 schools in the food waste cat-
egory, which tracks food waste and any organic materials
handled alongside it.
1
1
2
More than 100 people played
basketball for a good cause on Sat-
urday.
Jayhawk Health Initiative, a pre-
health program for students, put
on the tournament where teams
of three competed to win a $300
grand prize.
Shawnee Wallace, a freshman
from El Dorado, is the vice presi-
dent of Jayhawk Health Initiative,
and said that the turnout is just
what the program needed to raise
funds for the
groups upcom-
ing summer trip
to Panama.
We raised
enough funds to
make a signif-
cant diference
for our trip,
Wallace said.
Te more than
$1,000 that was
raised through
the tournament and a silent auc-
tion will be put towards supplies
and personnel that will be going to
Panama.
Well be in Panama for a week.
Pre-health students will be joining
up with a medical brigade where
we will have doctors provide
health care for those in need, Wal-
lace said. Te money we raised
through the tournament will go
towards medicine, hiring doctors,
and other supplies.
Wallace says the group is hoping
to raise as much money as they can
before the trip to Panama because
the more money they raise, the
more help they can provide.
Te silent auction featured a
signed basketball from the mens
team and a signed football from
the football team. Te lucky buyer
paid $170 for the basketball.
It was great to see all of our
volunteers who put in hard work
get a huge payof from the event,
Wallace said. Tis is really going
to help us.
Te winning team, the Flint
Tropics, came out on top over the
29 other competing teams to win
the $300 grand prize.
Wallace said the success of the
event will guarantee that Jayhawk
Health Ini-
tiative will
be able to
take future
trips to other
countries to
provide free
medical care
to those who
need it.
Te stu-
dents going
to Panama
will be teaming up with doctors to
provide medical and dental checks,
medication, and education. Stu-
dents will teach patients about
correctly brushing their teeth and
obtaining clean water.
Although the highlight of the
tournament was supposed to be an
appearance by some of the mens
basketball players, Wallace said
they had conficting schedules.
It was still fun to see competi-
tive basketball while raising money
for our trip at the same time, Wal-
lace said.
Edited by Brian Sisk

The money we raised


through the tournament will
go towards medicine, hiring
doctors and othersupplies.
SHAWNEE WALLACE
Vice president of Jayhawk Health Initiative
traViS yoUng/KanSan
Ben Liu, a sophomore from Overland Park, laughs during the Hoops for Health event Saturday morning at the Ambler Student
Recreational Center. Hoops for Health was a three-on-three basketball fundraising event to purchase medications and hire
Panamanian doctors for a medical mission to Panama later this May.
Follow
@UDK_News
on Twitter
ST. PAUL, Minn. A national
group of prominent GOP donors
that supports gay marriage is
pouring new money into lob-
bying efforts to get Republican
lawmakers to vote to make it le-
gal.
American Unity PAC was
formed last year to lend finan-
cial support to Republicans who
bucked the partys longstand-
ing opposition to gay marriage.
Its founders
are launching
a new lobbying
or gani zat i on,
American Uni-
ty Fund, and
already have
spent more
than $250,000
in Minnesota,
where the Leg-
islature could vote on the issue
as early as next week.
The group has spent $500,000
on lobbying since last month, in-
cluding efforts in Rhode Island,
Delaware, Indiana, West Virgin-
ia and Utah.
Billionaire hedge fund man-
ager and Republican donor Paul
Singer launched American Unity
PAC. The lobbying effort is the
next phase as the push for gay
marriage spreads to more states,
spokesman Jeff Cook-McCormac
told The Associated Press.
What you have is this net-
work of influential Republicans
who really want to see the party
embrace the freedom to marry,
and believe its not only the right
thing for the country but also
good politics, Cook-McCormac
said.
In Minnesota, the money has
gone to state groups that are lob-
bying Republican lawmakers and
for polling on gay marriage in a
handful of suburban districts
held by Republicans. So far, only
one Minnesota Republican law-
maker has committed to voting
to legalize gay
marriage: Sen.
Branden Peters-
en, of Andover.
I think there
will be some
more. There are
legislators out
there that are
struggling with
this, said Carl
Kuhl, a former political aide to
former GOP Sen. Norm Coleman
and Republican gubernatorial
candidate Tom Emmer. Kuhls
public affairs firm is contracted
by Minnesotans United, the lead
lobby group for gay marriage in
Minnesota and main recipient
of American Unitys Minnesota
spending.
Gay marriages fate in Min-
nesota may rest with the House,
where support is seen as shakier
than in the Senate. A handful of
votes from Republicans could
put it over the top. Nearly two
dozen House Republicans rep-
resent more socially moderate
suburbs and might be candidates
to vote yes.
House Speaker Paul Thissen,
DFL-Minneapolis, said he has
encouraged advocates of the
marriage bill to round up Re-
publican votes, if nothing else
than to send a message to Min-
nesota residents that its not a
partisan proposition. But that
will be politically risky; the main
opposition group to same-sex
marriage, Minnesota for Mar-
riage, has said it will seek con-
sequences for Republicans who
stray on gay marriage.
Part of American Unity PACs
original mission was to spend
money on behalf of Republican
gay marriage supporters. Many
GOP lawmakers have faced pri-
mary challenges funded in part
by anti-gay marriage groups
such as the National Organiza-
tion for Marriage, which argue
that the lawmakers had betrayed
the partys core principles.
Since forming the lobby group
last month, American Unity also
spent money to win over Repub-
lican lawmakers in Rhode Island,
where last week all five Republi-
cans in the state Senate jumped
on the gay marriage bandwagon.
Rhode Island is on track to legal-
ize gay marriage by next week,
which would make it the 11th
U.S. state where gay marriage is
legal.
There are also plans to lobby
federal lawmakers on gay rights
issues.
Associated Press
A 28-year-old male was ar-
rested yesterday on the 1800 block
of North 1500 Road on suspicion
of aggressive battery. A $10,000
bond was paid.
A 27-year-old male was arrested
yesterday on the 1100 block of 6th
Street on suspicion of intoxicated
pedestrian in the roadway and
possession of marijuana or THC. A
$200 bond was paid.
A 27-year-old male was arrested
yesterday on the 1600 block of Ca-
det Avenue on suspicion of domes-
tic battery and criminal damage to
property. No bond was posted.
A 29-year-old male was arrest-
ed yesterday on the intersection
of 17th and Kentucky Streets on
suspicion of criminal possession
of a firearm, possession of stolen
property, possession of controlled
substance, possession of drug
paraphernalia, driving with a sus-
pended license, third offense, and
unlawful receipt of controlled sub-
stance proceeds. An $8,000 bond
was paid.
Emily Donovan
PAGE 3A thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
There are more than 30 different lost
and found offces on campus, one in
almost every major building. KU Public
Safety manages them.

PoliCe RePoRTS
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton tells hundreds who turned out to rally at the Capitol in St. Paul, Minn. in support of a bill to
legalize gay marriage that he hoped legislators will pass this year.
Republicans begin to endorse gay marriage
ASSocIAtED PRESS
NATioNAl
leGiSlATioN

There are legislators out


there that are struggling
with this.
CARl KUHl
Former political aide
higher education awaits
decision on funding
ToPeKA Kansas higher educa-
tion officials are depending upon
Republican Gov. Sam Brownbacks
political mojo working on fellow
GoP conservatives on tax issues to
preserve existing state funding for
public universities and colleges.
Brownback began touring univer-
sity and community college campuses
last week in what his administration
described as an effort to highlight
the importance of higher education
to the state and its economy. The
tour came after university presidents
warned the Kansas Board of Regents
that budget cuts being considered by
legislators could endanger crucial
initiatives.
legislators are taking their annual
spring break and plan to reconvene
May 8 to finish their business for
the year. Tax issues are linked to the
campaign to prevent cuts in higher
education spending.
The governor and other Repub-
licans want to position Kansas to
phase out individual income taxes,
but the state must stabilize its bud-
get over the next few years. Brown-
back proposes to cancel a decrease
in the sales tax scheduled by law for
July, and if lawmakers dont agree to
that plan, theyll find it difficult
and perhaps impossible to follow
his recommendation to preserve ex-
isting higher education spending.
The Republican-dominated legis-
lature appears headed toward cut-
ting higher education, with some
GoP lawmakers suggesting the re-
gents and university officials havent
been held accountable enough to the
public. But much depends on how
legislators resolve tax issues.
Until we pass the tax package,
i have absolutely no idea what kind
of funding were going to get to work
with, said Sen. Tom Arpke, a conser-
vative Salina Republican and chair-
man of the Senate Ways and Means
subcommittee on education.
Associated Press
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PAGE 4A MondAy, APril 29, 2013
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Humor
Spam email leads to incredible e-book
university exam structure hinders
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Sleeping is key to
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CampuS TeCHnology
Hannah wise, editor-in-chief
editor@kansan.com
sarah mccabe, managing editor
smccabe@kansan.com
nikki wentling, managing editor
nwentling@kansan.com
dylan Lysen, opinion editor
dlysen@kansan.com
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efarrington@kansan.com
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malcolm Gibson, general manager and news
adviser
mgibson@kansan.com
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jschlitt@kansan.com
tHe editOriAL bOArd
members of The Kansan editorial Board are Hannah Wise,
Sarah mcCabe, nikki Wentling, Dylan lysen, elise Farrington
and Jacob Snider.
Im ready to be done with classes,
but not ready to leave lawrence for the
summer.
That Turn in drugs here thing would
probably work a lot better at mizzou.
College: making me fat one test at
a time.
you Johnson County people can suck it
up. no one gets hate like Topeka kids.
The number of people complaining
about professors and students bringing
their kids to class is Too Damn HIgH.
Its not a walk of shame, its a walk
of life.
Students, stop whining for extra
credit, just study for fnals. love, your
professors.
What a beautiful day to be a Jayhawk.
For future bell tower comments: The
instrument is the carillon, it is housed
in the campanile, and the player of said
carillon is a carillonneur.
Can someone please enforce the no
skateboarding on campus rule?
excuse me, but anti-gay groups never
had a legitimate argument to begin with.
#equalityftw
underclassmen: Quit walking in and
out of the classroom in the middle of
a lecture like you own the place. youre
annoying.
Four people at Wal-mart compliment-
ed me on my fake moustache. I dont
know if thats good or bad.
Throwing cigarette butts into a dump-
ster is extremely dangerous. I would
prefer litter over fre.
If I see one more hashtag in the
FFa I will fnd the editor and hit him in
the mouth. If its a her Ill ask her to
stop. angrily of course. Editors note:
#StopWhining
Both guys and girls complaining
about being forever alone. you know if
we all meet up somewhere we can solve
this.
I wonder how bell tower kids jam out.
For some reason I can imagine them
looking like keyboard cat.
I wonder how much of my new student
fee went to pay for my future safe ride
adventures.
It was national bring your kid to work
day. Chill out.
almost got run over by one of those
tiny maintenance trucks. lamest near-
death experience ever.
Brain surgery on the Jayhawk is
completed!!!
Today I jaywalked in front of a cop car.
I too like to live life dangerously.
To the girl that lives at naismith
Hall. I hope the ghost of James naismith
haunts you for wearing those mizzou
sweats on this holy ground.
What do you mean the Big Bang
Theory isnt an actual portrayal of
engineers?
A
bout every two or three
days, I check my spam
folder. Mostly, this is just
to make sure no useful emails
have gotten lodged back there
by mistake. But occasionally, in
the swamp of form letters from
Chinese merchants addressing
me as supplier and looking
to create good business rela-
tionship with my company, I
find a hidden comedy gem that
just comes out of left field. I
unearthed such a diamond in
fecal matter, and it was too weird
not to share.
The subject line reads, An
Appeal to the Media, and its
sender, who lives in Maryland, is
asking me to send him some con-
structive criticism on his crypti-
cally vague book project, which
he refers to as a novel idea and
has apparently thrown at every
media outlet in the country at
least once to see if it will stick.
As a professional journalist
of the Daily Kansan, your expert
opinion on [my project] would
be greatly appreciated, he writes,
apparently ignorant of the facts
that they dont pay me to do
this job and that, as the humor
columnist, Im probably the least
professional person on the staff.
Still, he says it will only take me
ONE MINUTE to peruse his
site and give him feedback, so I
hop on over. What have I got to
lose?
What little sanity Im still hold-
ing onto, apparently. The site
contains an e-book that my mys-
terious correspondent is trying to
get publicity for, which (as far as
I can tell) details an encounter he
had with an extraterrestrial. But
it doesnt limit itself to just kooky
UFO conspiracy theories; the
author claims in the Frequently
Asked Questions section of the
site that [My project] is about
everything under the sun and
over the rainbow. Also, to keep
the people at PETA happy, the
bottom of the homepage contains
a disclaimer: No trees, animals,
earthlings or aliens were harmed,
poked or prodded in production.
Later on, the actual book reiter-
ates: In my story no animals are
hurt. No man bites a dog. No
canines are thrown off the set of
a show in the way Family Guys
dog Brian was abusively and
dishonorably kicked off the set
of Bill Mahers HBO show when
all the dog wanted to do was
promote his book. Its clear he
was worried about some kind of
complaints, but I think this tract
is too crazy for even PETA to sit
through.
The book itself, upon closer
inspection, details a day in which
the author, sitting on his couch, is
overcome by a blinding light and
forced to engage in a friendly
conversation with a luminary
from the planet Zatox, who is
bristling with tentacles, changes
his skin color constantly and hap-
pens to speak perfect English in a
cultured British accent. After the
alien promises to keep [their]
encounter in the real of a dream,
the two have a lengthy discussion
of the merits of socialism. Some
of the highlights:
In the books third chapter, the
author asks himself if the alien
could be some sort of a socialist
solicitor after it tries (and fails)
to make a point about human
society through an analogy about
the way a trees vascular systems
work. From what I can gather
from the text, the authors accusa-
tion is based almost entirely on
the aliens red skin tone.
After the alien makes a slip
of the tongue, the author says,
It made me wish Dr. Freud
would have been entered this
dream in order to interpret it, if
it indeed was a beamI mean
dream. Because the one thing
this already painfully weird story
needs is a shrink talking about
how the aliens many tentacles
are an extension of the authors
sexual fetishes.
Upon learning that the author
is unemployed, the alien asks if it
is possible to make a career out
of unemployment. Judging by the
outlandishness of his ideas and
his general kookiness, Id agree
that this guy is probably the best
person to ask.
Midway through a chapter, the
author takes a break from talking
about the alien to muse about the
possibility of birds taking over
the planet in retribution for the
extinctions that humans have
caused. This rant tries to link this
theory to the popularity of the
video game Angry Birds and
contains the wonderfully inept
sentence Were we just porcine
featherweights in an upcoming
struggle between the Aves and
the have-nots?
The author describes some
vaguely unsettling rhymes he
used to sing to himself on the
subway on his way to work: My
favorite began with Im and then
continued repeatedly a lunatic
from Georgia Tech, a rambling
wreck, oh what the heck, I picked
a peck and took my pick, held up
a stick and gave a kick, a lunatic
from Georgia Tech
As you can see, its not the
most coherent piece of prose in
the world. But despite its flaws, I
think this guys got a fair shot at
getting his book published some-
where if he wants to. All he has
to do is change his mouthpiece in
the book to a woman and include
a scene of hot, steamy alien
lovemaking, and this thing will
be the next 50 Shades of Grey
(perhaps the alien could even
change its skin color to a gradi-
ent of grays as an homage!). And,
in retrospect, if were going that
route, it couldnt hurt to throw
Freud back in there.
May is a sophomore majoring in
German and journalism from Derby
By Sylas May
smay@kansan.com
F
inal exams are outdated
and need reconsideration.
The traditional class struc-
ture of paltry homework assign-
ments and hefty final exams is
hindering the Universitys goals.
Tests are universal. Some
courses are project or essay
focused, but graduating without
taking any kind of test is an
impossible feat. How else can
an educator cast a wide net to
measure learning? Final exams
provide closure to a learning
phase, a final touch to a semes-
ter of progress. They certainly
expose the substantial number
of students that truly dont have
a clue whats going on. They are
supposedly fair. But, each final
exam has become a single per-
formance.
The situation is analogous to
basketball. No one will remem-
ber how players wake up at 5
a.m. and shoot thousands of
shots before practice. Its not
about how great a shooter you
are or how great a defender you
are. At the end of the day, its
about winning games and win-
ning championships.
Final exams have turned
into tremendous performances,
minus the fanfare of winning a
championship. Instead of gaug-
ing understanding or preventing
slackers from reaching more
complex courses, exams have
turned into whether or not you
can stick a landing. A petroleum
engineering course I took a year
ago had only one exam, the final
exam, worth 100 percent of the
grade. One false step and the
exact same course was in my
near future, regardless of what I
learned. One performance could
define whether or not a semester
was worthwhile.
It isnt just final exams.
Regular exams worth 30 percent
are downright deadly too. This
traditional class structure, where
homework and quizzes are worth
a penny or two but exams are
worth an arm and a leg, hinders
the Universitys objective to pre-
pare students for lifelong learn-
ing, leadership and success. It
kills learning diversity.
I dont think its a surprise to
anyone that each student learns
differently. Some students learn
visually. Some are auditory learn-
ers. Many require analogy. Some
students excel with repetition.
Some need their homework
graded so they can see their
mistakes. Some students need a
pencil in hand because comput-
er-based assignments are fickle.
Many need a computer to type
notes because their handwriting
is atrocious.
As a competitive person who
learns well from repetition and
textbooks, Ive been in position
to take advantage of in-class
tests. The traditional class struc-
ture gives me systemic advantag-
es. However, it crushes students
that learn differently. It decimates
diligent students who prepare
their physics solutions daily,
but on test day become anxious
and miss three of eight multiple
choice questions. It suffocates
practical students who know 98
percent of organic chemistry
nomenclature but misname the
exception to ring structures. The
class may have encouraged dif-
ferent kinds of learning styles,
but theres hardly variation in
multiple choice and free response
exams.
The University goes out of
its way to encourage diversity,
but stops short when it comes
to promoting diverse learning
styles because exams, by sheer
weight, are too narrow in scope.
Conform to the structure and
do well. Learning the way you
learn best might test your luck,
not your knowledge. Diverse
students come into a class, but
cookie-cutter thinkers come out.
Who can blame the students for
wanting to do well?
Instead of addressing the
structural needs of the flailing
students, those pummeled by a
class format, some professors
commit the sin of curving exam
grades. Students that should fail
are not failing, students that need
their different learning styles
acknowledged remain unad-
dressed, and achieving students
decide they dont need to work
hard to do well.
Sadly, no one measures
achievement by how hard you
tried. Its the cruelest irony that
afflicts students with great work
ethics. No one measures the
number of hours we dont sleep.
We are measured by the value
that we create, the material we
know, and the skills we can apply.
But a final exam systematically
discriminates, like a broken scale.
If the University wants to build
life-long learners who achieve,
why not rebel against the tradi-
tional class structure? Why not
add a class shopping period with
a sample test, so students arent
duped on final exam day when
its already too late? Instead of
four tests worth the entire grade,
why not have a midterm, a term
paper, a presentation, and a
group project?
Even the awful test taker
knows that Im just a bad test
taker is a terrible excuse for
doing poorly in a class. But if
the University is going to make
progress towards any of its goals,
dont courses need to change? I
dont detest exams. Im mildly
proud to say that Ive made my
living off of them, in a way. But
the University will get nowhere
fast unless courses are structured
differently.
Ouyang is a junior majoring in pe-
troleum engineering and economics
from Overland Park
L
ots of terrible things
went down during the
past couple weeks, and
theyve been sitting heavy on my
mind way too often. I seriously
needed a break from the weight
of the real world, so I forced
myself to think about other stuff.
The result? Another round of
Monday musings:
FinalS
With finals coming up, Id like
to point out a rule Ive followed
for a while that was recently cor-
roborated by hard science: trying
to pull an all-nighter or staying
up very late to study for a test
will make you do worse than
your peers whove had a good
nights sleep.
According to a study from the
University of Texas that tracked
students academics and sleep
habits, those that had the least
sleep had more academic prob-
lems and worse performance.
This is because sleep is all pow-
erful. Sleep consolidates memo-
ries (as in it makes you remem-
ber all of those formulas and
essay topics better). It makes you
focused the next day. Shocker: It
just gives you energy. So while
you might think that studying
an extra hour or two until 3 a.m.
will help you, it actually just
makes sure your brain has less
time to absorb everything youre
cramming for.
SlEEP
While Im at it, Ill talk about
some extra sleep tips. Last year,
Esquire asked some experts, and
taking a 30 minute nap an hour
before your test will help wipe
your mind of most issues, so
when you wake up you can focus
only on your test.
Another shocker: Ingesting
caffeine after and taking naps
after 5 p.m. has been proven to
disrupt your sleep schedule and
keep you up into the wee hours
of the next day. So dont do it,
because youll be tired and wont
be able to focus.
ViDEO GaMES
Bioshock Infinite is the
best all-around media Ive been
exposed to in a while. Theres
enough action and bloodshed to
make 300 look like My Little
Pony, enough symbolism and
social and moral commentary
to bring tears to the eyes of an
English major, and plays out so
much like an artistic film that I
would make even Wes Anderson
enthusiasts put down their ciga-
rette (or chai tea) long enough to
say It was almost as good as Life
Aquatic.
But seriously, its a stupefying-
ly good game as in I could
think of nothing else for 48
hours. Its fun to see a video
game break so many boundaries
at once. If the Oscars suddenly
changed their rules, this game
would stand a fair chance at win-
ning best picture.
ChEMiStry
Im kind of tired of hearing
people say stuff like Oh Ill
never need to use that in real
life. You probably could and
should, if you wanted to. Todays
example: chemistry.
If youve taken a chemistry
course, you have no excuse to
be bad at cooking. Almost all
dishes include some sort of acid-
base reaction, like adding wine
to a dish or marinating meat.
They both help break down the
proteins and carbohydrates in
the food, and both add volatile
compounds that contribute to
aroma, and stable molecules
that contribute to flavor. Those
stable molecules wont do any-
thing by themselves, they have
to caramelized, which is a form
of pyrolysis, a reaction that takes
one molecule and changes it to
another, depending on the level
of heat added. Somehow, we got
lucky enough that most edible
things have molecules that can
be caramelized at low tempera-
tures (less than 500 degrees) into
really tasty things. Basically any-
thing good youve had that was
baked, grilled, or toasted is due
to caramelization.
Oh yeah, youve also had basic
thermodynamics in chemistry,
so you arent allowed to be sur-
prised or upset when you burns
things when you leave them in a
really hot oven, pan, or whatever.
Simpson is a freshman majoring in
chemical engineering from Fairway
By Chris Ouyang
couyang@kansan.com
By Andrew Simpson
asimpson@kansan.com
inTErESTEd in WorKinG For THE KAnSAn?
Apply to work as a reporter, designer or
Photographer for the Summer and Fall staffs of the
University daily Kansan at employment.ku.edu.
E
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
entertainment
Monday, april 29, 2013 page 5a
HOROSCOPES
Because the stars
know things we dont.
Crossword
sudoku Cryptoquip
check out
the answers
http://kansan.com/news/2013/04/29/puzzle-
answers-429/
aries (March 21-april 19)
today is an 8
share information openly with your
friends. Make time to look at your
current financial situation, and
then discuss with family. Creative
thinking can take you farther. Let
friends inspire you to new heights.
taurus (april 20-May 20)
today is an 8
start the week with a new per-
spective. there are so many new
adventures to begin. dont forget
to do something you promised. dis-
cover new spiritual or philosophical
concepts, and get lost in study.
gemini (May 21-June 20)
today is a 9
youve earned a good rest, but the
work isnt done yet. take a power
nap and go at it again. But dont
push yourself too hard. Let your
partner take over sometimes.
cancer (June 21-July 22)
today is a 9
open communication with partners
brings new rewards and increased
profits. Let them discover your true
value. Be on your best behavior. one
good friend connects to another.
leo (July 23-aug. 22)
today is an 8
youre surprisingly productive
today. tie up loose ends, and start
planning a new project. keep track
of what works so you can repeat the
process. youre exceptionally lucky
now. run with it.
Virgo (aug. 23-sept. 22)
today is a 7
romance, art and beauty capture
your heart. Get out of your normal
routine and into unexplored realms.
your imagination provides a work
answer. its a good time to ask for
money.
libra (sept. 23-oct. 22)
today is an 8
study your roots, and stimulate
intellect at home. Friends helps you
solve great philosophical conun-
drums. An old dream get validated
and reaffirmed. use what youre
learning. take a moment to commit
to love.
scorpio (oct. 23-nov. 21)
today is a 9
set long-range goals, and prepare
for action. Check out an offers
details. Get into studies for an
amazing discovery. invest in your
home and family.
sagittarius (nov. 22-dec. 21)
today is an 8
New profits become available. keep
a practical focus on continuing the
cash flow. travel in moderate style.
Associates deliver good news. oth-
ers ask your advice. keep the faith.
capricorn (dec. 22-Jan. 19)
today is a 7
youre empowered and self-
confident, with the Moon in your
sign. Accept a new assignment. use
something youve been saving. up-
date communications. do you need
everything top of the line? Confer
with family.
aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
today is an 8
An uncomfortable situation at
home leads to more study. wrap up
details. imagine the finished result.
revise your budget. Clarify your
direction with friends. keep your
wits about you.
pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
today is an 8
Associates need support now. Ask
probing questions, so you can get
to the bottom of it. Accept expert
tutoring. Committees are especially
effective. share your vision of the
problem solved.
Question: What happens when
Michael Bay foregoes almost
everything that makes him the
eyeball-straining, intellect-drain-
ing king of summer blockbusters:
his nine-figure budgets, his pen-
chant for non-stop explosions,
his borderline incomprehensible
editing style and his inexplicable
affinity for Shia Labeouf and leg-
humping robots? Answer: He
turns around and makes his best
movie since 1996s The Rock.
Like the unholy spawn of
Scarface and Magic Mike, Bays
new comedy Pain and Gain is a
visceral sleazoid delight, a story
defined by madcap absurdities
that seem all the more potent
given their purported basis in fact
(Christopher Markus and Stephen
McFeelys screenplay was adapt-
ed from a series of Miami New
Times articles). The year is 1994
and the American Dream seems
to have turned its star-spangled
backside on Daniel Lugo (Mark
Wahlberg), a bodybuilder whos
been reduced to working as a
personal trainer at Miamis Sun
Gym. Lugos least favorite client is
the half-Jewish, half-Colombian
Victor Kershaw (Tony Shalhoub);
a vulgar local businessman who
spends their workout sessions
bragging about his offshore hold-
ings while insisting that salad was
invented by poor people.
Desperate for a taste of the
good life and brainwashed by an
aphorism-spewing self-help guru
(Ken Jeong), Lugo recruits fel-
low gym rat Adrian (Anthony
Mackie) and hulking ex-con Paul
(Dwayne The Rock Johnson)
for a harebrained scheme to
kidnap Kershaw and divvy up
his massive, possibly ill-gotten
fortune. Of course, their plans
quickly devolve into a succession
of progressively violent blunders
that earn them the attention of
Detective Ed DuBois (Ed Harris,
reliable as always), and eventually
the entire state of Florida.
Although the real-life saga
of the so-called Sun Gym Gang
culminated in the murder and
dismemberment of two innocent
people, Pain and Gain plays
the whole bloody affair strictly
for laughs. The story unfolds
like a low-rent version of a Coen
Brothers crime caper as directed
by the late Tony Scott, minus the
acerbic wit of the former and the
show-stopping visual panache of
the latter. This is still a Michael
Bay joint after all, replete with
enough casual racism, blatant
homophobia and gratuitous
slow motion to fill three more
Transformers sequels (dont
worry, theres more of those on
the way).
The reason Pain and Gain
outclasses most of Bays recent
output has a great deal to do with
the nerve and verve of its central
performances. Wahlberg is in full-
tilt Boogie Nights mode here,
playing a character whose drive
to succeed in life has mutated
into a raging steroidal version of
Manifest Destiny. Johnson, who
tempered his weapons-grade cha-
risma with newfound dramatic
range earlier this year in Snitch,
practically walks away with the
movie as Paul, a born-again lunk-
head with a titanically unresolved
coke habit.
As is often the case with
Bay, the supporting cast here
is ridiculously over-qualified.
Rebel Wilson, fresh off last years
box office hit Pitch Perfect,
brings some much-needed girl
power to the underwritten role
of Adrians nurse-turned-wife,
while Shalhoub calls on every
nasty epithet he can muster to
make Kershaw the worlds least
sympathetic extortion victim.
Harris, a Bay veteran since The
Rock, is obviously meant to
serve as this movies answer to
Marge Gunderson, the Frances
McDormand character from
Fargo, the honest cop who sur-
veys the carnage and laments its
futility.
As the bodies pile up and
the authorities close in on our
increasingly antagonistic protago-
nists, the film struggles to decide
whether its a wry send-up of con-
sumer culture or an endorsement
of the American Dream as the
ultimate performance enhancer.
It never quite manages to make
up its mind, ending with a jarring
tonal shift that feels somewhat
disingenuous in light of all the
consequence-free Bay-hem thats
preceded it. Yet for most of its
runtime, Pain and Gain excels
at showing us exactly what its
director is capable of when hes
free from the constraints of mak-
ing $200 million toy commer-
cials.
Edited by Brian Sisk

Bays Pain and Gain
shows unexpected fair
landon Mcdonald
lmcdonald@kansan.com
Follow
@udk_entertain
on Twitter
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PAGE 6A thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
AMSTERDAM Hes evolved
from a beer-loving student dubbed
Prince Pils to an International
Olympic Committee member and
respected U.N. water expert. Now
comes the ultimate transformation
for Dutch Crown Prince Willem-
Alexander: Hes about to become
king.
Queen Beatrixs handover to her
son afer a 33-year reign has trig-
gered a frenzy of orange-tinted
patriotism across the Netherlands,
while also reigniting a debate about
the monarchys role in this egali-
tarian society. Willem-Alexander,
who tured 46
on Saturday, has
been groomed
for the monarchy
all his life, but he
has also carved
out a busy career,
parts of which he
will now have to
give up in favor
of his largely cer-
emonial job as
head of state.
In an interview that aired earlier
this month, Willem-Alexander, a
father of three daughters, seemed
to have no regrets about leaving
behind his old life and insisted
with a touch of good humor that
being king is a job with substance.
Because even what is sometimes
sarcastically called ribbon-cutting
can be meaningful, he said.
Te Netherlands small republi-
can movement says it will protest
on Tuesday in Amsterdam and is
hoping Willem-Alexanders inves-
titure will be the countrys last.
We will have to await politi-
cal developments there is draf
legislation to get him out of the
government then there is not
much lef apart from cutting rib-
bons and the question is whether
his daughter will want to do that in
20 years, said Anjo Clement of the
New Republican Society. We dont
think so. We think he will be the
last Dutch king.
While the Dutch monarch for-
mally is part of the countrys gov-
ernment, his or her powers are lim-
ited. Until the last elections, Queen
Beatrix helped
in forming new
governments af-
ter the vote by
appointing an
adviser to steer
coalition-build-
ing negotiations.
Lawmakers have
now taken away
that power.
It looks like
the political role the monarchy
plays is more likely to decrease
than to increase, said Henk de
Velde, a professor of Dutch history
at Leiden University.
Willem-Alexander will become
king the moment his mother signs
abdication papers Tuesday morn-
ing in Moses Hall of the Royal Pal-
ace on the Dam, the central square
in downtown Amsterdam.
Tat will be followed by an in-
vestiture ceremony at the 15th-cen-
tury New Church next door to the
palace. Tere, Willem-Alexander
will swear allegiance to the Dutch
constitution and people in a cer-
emony attended by both houses of
Dutch Parliament, as well as guests
including royalty from around the
world and commoners from across
the Netherlands.
Tousands of orange-clad sub-
jects the Dutch royal dynasty
is the House of Orange-Nassau
will cram into the square in front of
the palace to cheer their departing
queen and the new king as part of
a day-long celebration across this
country of nearly 17 million.
One notable absence will be
among the family of Willem-Al-
exanders popular Argentine-born
wife, Princess Maxima who will
soon be queen. Her father, Jorge
Zorreguieta, was an agriculture
minister in the military junta that
ruled Argentina with an iron fst in
the late 1970s and early 1980s.
His past in the brutal regime
meant that he also was not invited
to Willem-Alexander and Maximas
2002 wedding.
It was clear that if my father
could not come for the wedding
then it was very clear: Tis is a con-
stitutional celebration so my father
doesnt belong there, Maxima said
in a recent interview.
Around a million people will
be on the streets of Amsterdam,
sparking a huge crowd control op-
eration involving some 10,000 po-
lice and other security services. Te
air space over the city will be closed
on the day.
Te last time the Netherlands
got a new monarch, when Beatrix
ascended the throne in 1980, dem-
onstrators protesting chronic hous-
ing shortages fought pitched battles
with riot police through the citys
historic center.
Willem-Alexanders investiture
also comes four years to the day
afer an unemployed recluse, Karst
Tates, tried to slam his car into an
open-topped bus carrying mem-
bers of the royal family during the
Queens Day national holiday.
Tates killed himself and seven
bystanders and lef members of the
House of Orange gasping in hor-
ror as they watched the attack, be-
fore being whisked away from the
scene.
Amsterdam mayor Eberhard van
der Laan himself a republican
said security will be tight, but
should not intrude too much on
festivities on the streets and canals
of the Dutch capital.
You have to accept certain
risks, he said in an interview with
Te Associated Press. Because
otherwise people will think of this
city: Whats going on here? Tis
isnt my city anymore. Tis is a city
for dignitaries only.
Organizers have promised to
keep a lid on the costs, given the
troubled economic climate in the
Netherlands. Unemployment has
been climbing rapidly in recent
months as the trading nation con-
tinues to be bufeted by the Euro-
pean economic crisis.
Willem-Alexander will be the
frst Dutch king since Willem III
died in 1890. He follows on from
three queens, Beatrix, Juliana and
Wilhelmina, whose reigns spanned
the entire 20th century.
Late actor reportedly
served in Nazi SS unit
BERLIN Reports that the late Ger-
man actor Horst Tappert, best known for
his longtime role as dapper TV sleuth
Stefan Derrick, served in a feared Nazi
SS unit prompted at least one European
broadcaster to announce Saturday that
it would drop the Derricks reruns from
its schedule.
Dutch TV station MAX pulled reruns
of the show, which was produced from
1974 to 1998, after daily Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung published docu-
ments Friday showing the actor had
been in the SS during World War II.
Derrick was one of the most widely
syndicated German TV shows, broadcast
in over 100 countries including China,
Australia, France and Norway.
We are not going to honor an actor
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Dutch Crown Prince Willem Alexander and Dutch Queen Beatrix wave to well wishers from the balcony of Royal Palace in The Hague, Netherlands. It is revealed April 15
that Netherlands Crown Prince Willem-Alexander will become king when his mother Queen Beatrix abdicates at the end of April 2013, and will earn a kings salary of
825,000 euro (1.1 million US dollars) which is more than twice the salary of the president of the United States.

It looks like the political


role the monarchy plays
is more likely to decrease
than to increase.
HENk DE VELDE
Leiden University professor
Dutch queen to abdicate this week
WoRLD MoVIES
WoRLD
like this who has lied about his past,
Dutch public broadcaster NoS quoted
MAX chairman Jan Slagter as saying.
Tappert had spoken of his wartime
service as a medic in an interview 10
years before his death in 2008. But he
didnt mention that his unit was part of
the elite SS Armored Infantry Regiment
1, nicknamed the Skulls after the em-
blem they wore.
The SS is known to have commit-
ted atrocities during World War II but it
was unclear from the newly discovered
documents whether Tappert was directly
involved.
Peter Grune, a spokesman for German
public broadcaster ZDF that co-produced
the shows 281 episodes, said nobody at
the station had known of Tapperts SS
past.
Stories like these come up now and
again, he said. For us its not an ur-
gent matter because hes dead.
The hidden history of prominent Ger-
mans involvement in the war has be-
come a subject of public debate again in
recent years, after being largely ignored
for decades.
In 2006, German Nobel literature lau-
reate Guenter Grass admitted in an au-
tobiography that he had been a member
of the SS in the fnal months of the war.
The revelation hurt Grass image as one
of the moral consciences in post-war
Germany.
Earlier this year ZDF broadcast a
three-part drama about the war, ac-
companied by a publicity campaign that
urged Germans to seek out survivors of
the Nazi period and ask them about the
role they played at the time.
Associated Press
ASSocIAtED PRESS
LOS ANGELES Iron Man
3 was the heavy-lifter at the-
aters with a colossal overseas
debut that overshadowed a gang
of mercenary bodybuilders in a
sleepy pre-summer weekend at
the domestic box office.
The Marvel Studios superhero
sequel starring Robert Downey
Jr. got a head-start on its domes-
tic launch next Friday with a
$195.3 million opening in 42
overseas markets, distributor
Disney reported Sunday.
That topped the $185.1 mil-
lion start for Marvels The
Avengers, which opened in 39
markets over the same weekend
last year a week ahead of its
record-breaking domestic debut
of $207.4 million.
You dont know that you could
ever repeat the kind of experience
we had a year ago, and here the
Marvel team brought together
another incredible movie, said
Dave Hollis, head of distribution
for Disney. Weve had this as a
pattern for Marvel films to kind
of let momentum internation-
ally help signal to the domestic
audience that the film is coming,
something big is coming.
Director Michael Bays Pain
& Gain, a true-crime tale of
bodybuilders on the make, mus-
cled into first-place domestically
with a $20 million debut.
The Paramount release star-
ring Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne
Johnson and Anthony Mackie
knocked off Tom Cruises sci-fi
adventure Oblivion after a week
in the No. 1 spot. Universals
Oblivion slipped to second-
place with $17.4 million, rais-
ing its domestic total to $64.7
million.
Lionsgates all-star nuptial
comedy The Big Wedding
tanked at No. 4 with just $7.5
million. The ensemble cast
includes Robert De Niro, Diane
Keaton, Robin Williams, Susan
Sarandon and Katherine Heigl,
but the movie was almost uni-
versally trashed by critics and
held little interest for audiences.
Paramount, which distributed
the earlier Iron Man movies
and still has a financial stake
in the comic-book flicks after
Disney bought Marvel, had a
small-scale success with Pain
& Gain.
A passion project for Bay, who
has made Paramount a fortune
with his Transformers fran-
chise, Pain & Gain was shot
for a modest $26 million, spare
change compared to the direc-
tors usual budgets.
The movie has the director
taking a breather from his usual
sci-fi action spectacles for a story
based on a kidnapping-extortion
caper carried out by bodybuild-
ers in the 1990s. Yet Pain &
Gain still has Bays usual visual
flair, and the reviews generally
were better than what hes used
to.
With that kind of budget,
to open to $20 million the
first weekend is a very strong
opening, said Don Harris,
Paramounts head of distribution.
You see what a director really in
his prime, at the top of his game,
can do with a small budget, what
he can make a movie look like.
Oblivion was down a fairly
steep 53 percent from the mov-
ies $37.1 million domestic debut
the previous weekend.
Overseas, Oblivion took in
$12.8 million to lift its interna-
tional haul to $134.1 million and
worldwide total to just under
$200 million.
Hollywoods domestic down-
turn continued, with revenues
totaling $90 million, off 18.5 per-
cent from the same weekend last
year, when Think Like a Man
led with $17.6 million, according
to box-office tracker Hollywood.
com.
Receipts have trailed 2012s
for most of the year, with 2013
domestic ticket sales running at
$2.9 billion, nearly 12 percent
behind last years.
That pattern could continue
as Hollywood opens its summer
season domestically this com-
ing weekend. Despite a huge
haul expected for Iron Man
3, the film will be competing
against that gigantic start over
the same weekend last year for
The Avengers, the only movie
to open with more than $200
million domestically.
Iron Man 2 debuted with
$128.1 million over the first week-
end in May 2010. Hollywood.
com analyst Paul Dergarabedian
has been pegging the Iron Man
3 potential at $125 million-plus,
though the mammoth interna-
tional start could fire up domes-
tic prospects even higher.
This ups the ante in a big way
for Iron Man 3, Dergarabedian
said. It just raises the profile of
the film. It raises expectations.
But to expect something in the
realm of $207.4 million? Well,
the fact that were even talking
about it is really amazing.
Said Disneys Hollis: I
wouldnt even want to get ahead
of ourselves on something like
that. But to say were encouraged
by the results this weekend would
be a gross understatement.
Estimated ticket sales for
Friday through Sunday at U.S.
and Canadian theaters, accord-
ing to Hollywood.com. Where
available, latest international
numbers are also included. Final
domestic figures will be released
Monday.
1. Pain & Gain, $20 million.
2. Oblivion, $17.4 million
($12.8 million international).
3. 42, $10.7 million.
4. The Big Wedding, $7.5
million.
5. The Croods, $6.6 million
($13.1 million international).
6. G.I. Joe: Retaliation, $3.6
million ($10.2 million interna-
tional).
7. Scary Movie 5, $3.5 mil-
lion ($6.7 million international).
8. Olympus Has Fallen, $2.8
million ($4.2 million interna-
tional).
9. The Place Beyond the
Pines, $2.7 million ($1.1 million
international).
10. Jurassic Park in 3-D, $2.3
million ($410,000 international).
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Robert Downey Jr, and Susan Downey arrive at the world premiere of Marvels
Iron Man 3 at the El Capitan Theatre last Wednesday, in Los Angeles.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Pain and Gain
tops weekend US
box offce sales
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PAGE 7A thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN moNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
ZUBOVA POLYANA, Russia
A Russian court on Friday rejected
a plea for early release from prison
by a member of the feminist punk
band Pussy Riot, whose provoca-
tive songs and prosecution have
made them a symbol of the coun-
trys opposition movement.
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, who
has been in custody since her arrest
last March, is serving a two-year
sentence handed down afer the
band staged an irreverent protest
against President Vladimir Putin in
Moscows main cathedral.
Judge Lidiya Yakovleva said evi-
dence showed that Tolokonnikova
did not deserve early release be-
cause she had not always followed
the rules of behavior while in cus-
tody.
Tolokonnikovas attorney Irina
Khrunova was quoted by the In-
terfax news agency as saying she
would appeal on the grounds that
the judge did not allow fnal state-
ments by the defense team.
Tolokonnikova and two other
band members were sentenced to
prison terms on charges of hooli-
ganism motivated by religious ha-
tred. She sought early release afer
serving half her sentence, a provi-
sion allowed by law.
Another of the convicted band
members, Yekaterina Samutsevich,
had her sentence suspended on ap-
peal last year.
Tolokonnikova, dressed in a So-
viet-style dark prison uniform with
a white scarf around her neck, told
the court that the prison colony
where she is serving her sentence
did not support her plea of early
release because she didnt repent.
Russian law does not make repen-
tance a condition for an early re-
lease.
LONDON Helen Mirren
was crowned queen of the Lon-
don stage at the Olivier Awards
Sunday, while compelling, ca-
nine-titled teen drama The Cu-
rious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-Time emerged as best in
show with seven trophies.
Mirren, 67, was a popular and
expected best actress choice for
her regal yet vulnerable Queen
Elizabeth II in The Audience,
Peter Morgans behind-palace-
doors drama about the relation-
ship between Britains queen and
its prime ministers.
The actress, who won an
Academy Award in 2007 for
playing Britains monarch in
The Queen, quipped that it was
8 7 - y e a r - o l d
Elizabeth who
deserved an
award, for the
most consis-
tent and com-
mitted perfor-
mance of the
20th century,
and probably
the 21st cen-
tury.
Backstage, it turned out she
wasnt kidding. Mirren, who has
been Olivier-nominated three
times before, said that finally
winning doesnt mean that I
was the best actor. There were so
many incredible performances
out there.
I was making a joke about the
queen winning, but I think actu-
ally it is a reflection of the kind
of respect the queen is held in,
she said.
Her Audience co-star, Rich-
ard McCabe, who won the sup-
porting actor trophy for playing
1960s and 70s Prime Minister
Harold Wilson, said Mirren was
a joy to work with.
Its important as an actor to
be absolutely fearless, and she is,
he said.
While the queen herself hasnt
been to see the Stephen Daldry-
directed show rumored to be
Broadway-bound McCabe
said a lot of people in the royal
household have been coming in
and watching incognito, and they
must be reporting back.
The surprise of the awards cer-
emony at Londons Royal Opera
House was Curious Incident,
an adaptation of Mark Haddons
best-selling young-adult novel
about a teenage math prodigy
with Aspergers Syndrome who
sets out to find the killer of his
neighbors dog, with destabiliz-
ing results.
The show, which premiered
at the state-subsidized National
Theatre last year before trans-
ferring to a commercial West
End playhouse, has won praise
for its creative use of movement
and technology
to make the leap
from page to
stage.
The Simon
Stephens-script-
ed drama was
named best
new play, and
2 8 - y e a r - o l d
Luke Treadaway
was crowned
best actor, beating a strong list
of contenders including Rupert
Everett, Mark Rylance and James
McAvoy.
Treadaway said the Curious
company knew they had created
something really special with
the show about a teenager who
sees the world differently to a lot
of people.
I think people could kind of
see themselves in him, Tread-
away said.
This is not even necessary, he
said, holding his trophy, a bust of
the late actor Laurence Olivier. I
enjoy doing it so much anyway.
The play also won prizes for
director Marianne Elliott and
supporting actress Nicola Walk-
er, as well as for set, lighting and
sound.
Walker said the play had,
through some magic, succeed-
ed in creating an onstage world
as seen through the eyes of a
teenage hero with autism.
You start out thinking (it)
is completely different to our
world, and you end up thinking
No, there are parts of this world
I understand.
The Olivier awards honor
achievements in London plays,
musicals, dance and opera. Win-
ners in most categories are cho-
sen by a panel of stage profes-
sionals and theatergoers.
Founded in 1976, the Oliviers
have been laying on the glitz in
recent years, with glossy cer-
emonies modeled on Broadways
Tony Awards.
Downton Abbey actor Hugh
Bonneville and West End star
Sheridan Smith an Olivier
winner in 2011 and 2012
hosted a sparky ceremony that
included performances by Glee
star Matthew Morrison, Tony-
winning Wicked diva Idina
Menzel and 60s songstress Petula
Clark.
The best new musical category
had a retro feel, with the trophy
going to Top Hat a tap-
dancing, tail-coated homage to
Hollywoods Golden Age based
on the 1935 Fred Astaire-Ginger
Rogers movie. It also won awards
for costume design and choreog-
raphy.
Blood-soaked musical
Sweeney Todd took the prize
for best musical revival, with its
stars Imelda Staunton and Mi-
chael Ball named best actress and
actor in a musical.
Im not sure I deserve this,
Ball said. But Ive also got sci-
atica, and I dont deserve that
either.
Royal Ballet principal dancer
Marianela Nunez took the prize
for outstanding achievement in
dance, while the same companys
Aeternum was named best new
dance production.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a member of the feminist punk band Pussy Riot, right, reads papers at a district court in Zubova Polyana, 270 miles southeast of Moscow in Russias province of Mordovia on Friday. A Rus-
sian court is to consider whether one of the jailed Pussy Riot members is eligible for early release. Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, in custody since her arrest in March 2012, is serving a two-year sentence for the bands
irreverent protest against President Vladimir Putin in Moscows main cathedral.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Pussy Riot band member denied early prison release
CRiMe
ASSocIAtED PRESS/KANSAN
Helen Mirren winner of Best Actress Award for The Audience and Daniel Radcliffe in the press room at the Olivier Awards 2013
at the Royal opera House in London yesterday.
Olivier Awards recognize London stars and entertainers
BRiTAiN
ASSocIAtED PRESS

im not sure i deserve


this. But ive also got sci-
atica, and i dont deserve
that either.
MiCAHeL BALL
Actor
Follow
@UDK_Entertain
on Twitter
PAGE 8A thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
KONJIC, Bosnia-Herzegovina A
once-secret bunker built to shelter
Yugoslavias communist leadership
from nuclear war has temporarily
reopened as an art gallery, with
some exhibits pondering what
would have happened if more
mushroom clouds had hit the
worlds skies.
Te 280-meter- (920-foot) deep,
U-shaped complex is dug into a
mountain and took 26 years and
billions of dollars to build; for
years, only the late Yugoslav leader
Josip Broz Tito and his closest con-
fdantes knew the subterranean
fortress existed.
Te secret was revealed when
Bosnia broke away from Yugosla-
via in 1992. Te new army took
over and still owns the labyrinth
just outside Konjic 25 miles south
of Sarajevo. Te space had never re-
ally been put to use until, in recent
years, artists turned to authorities
with an idea to put this sleepy town
on the cultural map.
In 2011, the bunker was opened
up for three months as an art gal-
lery. Tis years run, which began
Friday, also is for three months,
and artists from 19 countries have
worked hard on performances and
projects on display in almost 100
rooms of the facility, project direc-
tor Edo Hozic said.
For now, the bunkers artistic
transformation is being done on
a biennial basis. But the goal is to
gradually turn it into an art gallery
permanently.
It is a crazily incredible project,
said Basak Senova, a Turkish artist
who acts as one of the curators.
Te entrance to the bunker,
which is supposed to hold 300
people, lies behind a nondescript
garage door of a remote house at
the end of a lonely road east of
Konjic.
Te frst installation is startling:
A loud noise simulates the detona-
tion of a 25-kiloton nuclear bomb
in the vicinity of the bunker
making visitors feel as if they are
the last to escape an apocalypse
just before the giant bunker door
closes.
Right aferward, visitors walk
along a tunnel with foors lined
with mirrors that crack under peo-
ples steps.
Doors along the long tunnel lead
to more than 100 small bedrooms,
ofces and conference rooms that
are usually decorated with simple
wooden furniture and the obliga-
tory portrait of Tito with his usual
visionary gaze.
Te rooms have been turned
into small individual galleries dis-
playing the works of the various
artists.
Some of the exhibits try to re-
construct the isolated life of the
people who would have used the
bunker had it been necessary. Oth-
ers focus on tragedies that did oc-
cur.
Japanese artist Saeri Kiritani
plays a video of a phantom touch-
ing rice and chanting for the de-
parted souls of the Hiroshima and
Nagasaki nuclear bombings. Hun-
garian artist Janos Sugar uses pic-
tures of people in todays confict
zones waving their simple weapons
to show how the gun became the
typewriter of the illiterate.
Art exhibit re-opened in
past Yugoslavian bunker
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Visitors take a tour of contemporary art by artist Edo Murtic from Croatia, displayed at the war bunker about 50 miles south
of Sarajevo, Bosnia, on Friday, April 26. The once-secret bunker, built to shelter Yugoslavias Marshal Josip Broz Tito and the
communist leadership from a nuclear war turns for three months into one of the worlds quirkiest contemporary art
galleries.
ArT poliTiCS
ASSocIAtED PRESS
WASHINGTON President
Barack Obama joked Saturday
that the years are catching up to
him and hes not the strapping
young Muslim socialist he used
to be.
Obama poked fun at himself as
well as some of his political ad-
versaries during the annual White
House Correspondents Asso-
ciation dinner attended by politi-
cians, members of the media and
Hollywood celebrities.
Entering to the rap track All I
Do Is Win by DJ Khaled, Obama
joked about how re-election
would allow him to unleash a rad-
ical agenda. But then he showed
a picture of himself golfng on a
mock magazine cover of Senior
Leisure.
Im not the strapping young
Muslim Socialist that I used to be,
the president remarked, and then
recounted his recent 2-for-22 bas-
ketball shooting performance at
the White House Easter egg hunt.
But Obamas most dramatic shif
for the next four years appeared to
be aesthetic. He presented a mon-
tage of shots featuring him with
bangs similar to those sometimes
sported by his wife.
So we borrowed one of Mi-
chelles tricks, Obama said. I
thought this looked pretty good,
but no bounce.
Obama closed by noting the
nations recent tragedies in Mas-
sachusetts and Texas, praising
Americans of all stripes from frst
responders to local journalists for
serving the public good.
Saturday nights banquet not far
from the White House attracted
the usual assortment of stars from
Hollywood and beyond. Actors
Kevin Spacey, Julia Louis-Dreyfus
and Claire Danes, who play gov-
ernment characters on various TV
series, were among the attendees,
as was Korean entertainer Psy.
Several Cabinet members, gover-
nors and members of Congress
were present.
Despite coming at a somber
time, nearly two weeks afer the
deadly Boston Marathon bomb-
ing and 10 days afer a devastating
fertilizer plant explosion in West
Texas, the president and politi-
cal allies and rivals alike took the
opportunity to
enjoy some hu-
mor. Late-night
talk-show host
Conan OBrien
headlined the
event.
Some of
Obamas jokes
came at his
Republican ri-
vals expense.
He asked that the GOPs minor-
ity outreach begin with him as a
trial run and said hed take his
recent charm ofensive with Re-
publicans on the road, including
events with conservatives such
as Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Rand Paul
and Rep. Michele Bachmann.
In fact, Im taking my charm
ofensive on the road a Texas
barbeque with Ted Cruz, a Ken-
tucky bluegrass concert with
Rand Paul and a book-burning
with Michele Bachmann, Obama
joked.
Casino magnate Sheldon Adel-
son would have had better success
getting Obama out of ofce if he
simply ofered the president $100
million to drop out of last years
race, Obama quipped.
And on the 2016 election, the
president noted in self-referential
irony that poten-
tial Republican
candidate Sen.
Marco Rubio
wasnt qualifed
because he hasnt
even served a
full term in the
Senate. Obama
served less than
four years of his
six-year Senate
term before he was elected presi-
dent in 2008.
I mean, the guy has not even
fnished a single term in the Sen-
ate and he thinks hes ready to be
President, Obama joked.
Te gala also was an opportu-
nity for six journalists, including
Associated Press White House
Correspondent Julie Pace, to be
honored for their coverage of the
presidency and national issues.
obama brings humor to
annual White House dinner
ASSocIAtED PRESS
president Barack obama speaks at the White House Correspondents Association
Dinner at the Washington Hilton Hotel on Saturday in Washington.

im not the strapping


young Muslim Socialist
that i used to be.
BArACk oBAMA
president of the United States
ASSocIAtED PRESS
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Te Kansas sofball team
dropped two of three games to
the No. 14 Baylor Lady Bears this
weekend to lose the series. Te
Jayhawks fell to the Lady Bears
in the frst game and won game
two in thrilling walk-of fashion.
Te Jayhawks fell short in the fnal
game of the series 5-4.
In the frst game of the series,
the Jayhawks lost 6-1. A solo hom-
er from freshman shortstop Cha-
ley Brickey in the bottom of the
seventh was a small rally for Kan-
sas but it was not enough to over
come Baylor. Junior Alex Jones
led the team
with two hits
and freshman
Alex Hugo tied
the freshman
hits record (59)
with a triple
in the bottom
of the third.
Baylor senior
center felder
Kathy Shelton
collected three hits leading all bat-
ters. Baylor, known for its overall
team speed, collected four stolen
bases and brought its total to 90
on the season.
Te Jayhawks won a thriller
in the second game of the series.
Hugo got the Jayhawks on the
board with a solo home run in the
bottom of the third inning, then
junior second baseman Ashley
Newman added to the Jayhawk
lead by hitting a three-run triple.
Baylor answered with one run
in the ffh, but Kansas answered
quickly with a solo home run
from Brickey. Trailing 5-2 in the
top of the seventh, the Lady Bears
freshman lef felder Linsey Hays
belted a three-run home run to tie
the game at 5. Hugo had the an-
swer to the four-run Baylor rally
just two pitches into the bottom
of the seventh; she blasted her
second home run of the day and
hit the walk of game-winning
home run.
We had con-
fdence that our
team was going
to pull it out,
number one, but
when she steps
up, I always have
confdence that
shes going to
do something
special, Kansas
coach Megan
Smith said of Hugo. My good-
ness, that was unbelievable.
Te walk-of victory gave the
Jayhawk sofball team three con-
secutive 30-win seasons in the
Smith era. With Hugos two home
runs, she broke the freshman re-
cord for hits and home runs for a
season.
Te Jayhawks lost in the series
fnale 5-4. Down to the last three
at-bats of the game, the Jayhawks
faced a 5-1 defcit. Following a
leadof walk of senior Maggie Hull
and a throwing error that allowed
Hugo to reach base, Brickey hit a
single to load the bases. A felding
error on the Baylor catcher al-
lowed two runs to score narrow-
ing the gap to 5-3. Kansas senior
infelder Mariah Montgomery
then stepped to the plate and hit
an RBI single that scored Brickey
and moved the game tying run to
third base. Baylor junior pitcher
Whitney Canion collected herself
and struck out the next batter to
end the game. Fluky plays and bad
defense were the story of the se-
ries fnale; of the nine runs scored
in the game, only four of them
were earned runs.
Defensively, we have to be
stronger than that, Smith said.
We have been all year. Tis week-
end, we lost our minds defensive-
ly and just didnt play the game we
normally do. Tats the frustrating
part.
Te Jayhawks leave the series
against Baylor with a 30-15 re-
cord and a 5-7 record in confer-
ence play. Te Jayhawks will host
Wichita State on Wednesday for
just one game.
Edited by Tara Bryant
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
Volume 125 Issue 112 kansan.com Monday, April 29, 2013
COMMENTARY
By Pat Strathman
pstrathman@kansan.com
a defensive dud
Hawkinson makes
Kansas fans proud
Kansas struggles defensively in two losses to No. 14 Lady Bears
gettiNg mauLed
PAGE 6B
A closer look
at the fnal
games of the
season
Kansas baseball sufered what
might be the worst weekend of
its season when the Mountain-
eers recorded a series sweep of
the Jayhawks in Beckley, W.Va.
Te Jayhawks learned frst-
hand the volatility of the Big 12
baseball standings. Afer losing
all three games in the weekend
series by a single run, Kansas
slipped from second place in the
conference to a tie for ffh place
with the Oklahoma State Cow-
boys.
Its as frustrating a weekend
as Ive ever had on a baseball
feld, Kansas
coach Ritch
Price said.
It was a tre-
me ndous l y
wel l -pl ayed
series. We
pitched great
all three
games. We
played well defensively outside
of maybe two miscues, and un-
fortunately those miscues cost
us the ball games.
Te Kansas lineup faced a hot
hand in sophomore lef-handed
pitcher Harrison Musgrave on
Friday night. Te Mountaineers
ace threw a complete game shut-
out giving up four hits and strik-
ing out fve Jayhawk hitters.
He pitched really well, Price
said. He was as good as adver-
tised. We had a couple of oppor-
tunities to score and Musgrave
punched us out. Tey managed
to score the run and Musgrave
was the story of the game.
Te Mountaineers winning
run came on an RBI-triple from
senior right felder Brady Wilson
that scored sophomore shortstop
Taylor Munden.
Te Jayhawks played a dou-
ble-header to fnish the series
Saturday. In game one, Kansas
once again lost by a single run at
the hands of the Mountaineers
senior right-handed pitcher Dan
Dierdorf. Kansas sophomore
lef-handed pitcher Wes Ben-
jamin pitched a complete game
loss giving up
four runs, one
of which was
earned, with
three strike-
outs in 106
pitches.
Te Jay-
hawks lost 4-3
in game two,
before facing sophomore lef-
handed pitcher John Means in
a 3-2 loss to seal the weekend
sweep for the Mountaineers.
Kansas junior right-handed
Frank Duncan made his return
to the rotation in game three.
Te junior was sent to the rota-
tion afer struggling in the mid-
dle of the season. Against the
Mountaineers, Duncan pitched
seven innings with three strike-
outs giving up a lone earned run
in 72 pitches.
Duncan knows better than
most of the Kansas roster what it
means to bounce back from the
tribulations of Big 12 conference
play.
Te biggest thing was being
a team player and just trying
to help the team win no matter
what it took, Duncan said. Te
move kind of sent a message to
me from the coaches that I need-
ed to get my act together and fg-
ure it out. I think that lesson has
been learned and I hope to pitch
well for the rest of the season.
Te Jayhawks wont have much
time to spend in recuperation
from this weekends sweep. Te
Wichita State Shockers travel to
Lawrence for a Tuesday night
midweek matchup against the
Jayhawks. Te Shockers are tied
for second with a 10-4 record in
the Missouri Valley Conference.
For Kansas, regrouping is key.
Anytime you get swept,
especially in the Big 12, it re-
ally puts some pressure on you,
Duncan said. It stings a little
bit, but you have to fush it and
get ready for the next team. I
think well be playing with a
chip on our shoulder. Teyre
an instate rival. Were going to
be fred up for it, trying to get
that bitter taste out of mouth
from last weekend.
As much as coach Price has
instilled the never-look-back
mindset in this Jayhawk squad,
fushing the series may not be
as easy as the players make it
sound.
Tats our frst devastating
weekend in conference afer
winning three series in a row,
coach Price said. We have to be
mature and we have to be profes-
sional. In all honesty, its not that
easy. Its going to take the best
efort of our coaching staf. Its
going to take the best efort of
our upperclassmen to fush last
weekend.
Kansas frst pitch against the
Shockers is set for 6 p.m. Tues-
day at Hoglund Ballpark.
Edited by Tara Bryant
Price
Benjamin
emily Wittler/Kansan
Sophomore infedler Justin Protacio catches a air-ball during a game against texas
on april 12 at Hoglund Park. the game was the frst of three against texas and the
Jayhawks won 7-6.
Kelsey Weaver/Kansan
ashley Newman, a junior from Salina, sprints for frst base in Sundays game
against the Baylor Lady Bears. Newman has a .267 batting average in her
softball career.
trevor Graff
tgraff@kansan.com
Mountaineers sweep Jayhawks in weekend series
BaSeBaLL
joseph dauGherty
jdaugherty@kansan.com
T
he NFL draft is special.
Select players nervously
check their phones for a
once-in-a-lifetime phone call.
Once the phone rings, celebration
follows and reality sinks in that
the player is officially heading to
the pros.
On the flip side, many athletes
arent lucky enough to receive that
call. Instead, all the hard work
throughout high school and col-
lege wont be enough, and their
dream comes to a screeching halt.
The dream of playing in the
NFL isnt over for players who
go undrafted; they can still have
some success in the pros. The road
is much longer and tougher, but
making a solid career isnt impos-
sible.
Senior offensive lineman
Tanner Hawkinson doesnt have to
worry about that, though.
The Cincinnati Bengals drafted
the McPherson, Kan., native in the
fifth round on Saturday.
Sure, maybe that doesnt sound
like a huge accomplishment com-
pared to being drafted in the first
round, but I can assure you, its far
from that.
As many know, Kansas hasnt
exactly had a great football pro-
gram these past few years.
Of course, that is directly relat-
ed to the lack of drafted Kansas
players.
Hawkinson is the first Jayhawk
player taken in the draft since
2010. Yes, three long years.
In the 2010 draft, safety Darrell
Stuckey and wide receivers
Dezmon Briscoe and Kerry Meier
were selected. Those same players
still compete in the NFL, though
no one has made a huge contribu-
tion.
Hawkinson didnt have the same
path as members in the 2010 draft.
When Hawkinson committed to
Kansas, he didnt start right away.
Originally a tight end, he switched
to defensive end and then changed
to offensive tackle during his red-
shirt year. Changing positions is
never a fun process, as each posi-
tion requires a certain skill set.
If switching roles on a football
team is difficult, imagine going
through three different coaches
during his time as a Jayhawk.
The inconsistency led to only 11
victories for Hawkinson while at
Kansas.
But thats exactly why
Hawkinson getting drafted is such
an incredible moment. Through
the pain and struggle, he never
quit and continued to give his all
during a rough patch in Kansas
football history.
After his redshirt year,
Hawkinson earned a number of
Freshman All-American and All-
Big 12 honors, and was named the
teams most improved offensive
player. He started all 12 games at
left tackle.
From then on, Hawkinson
continued to be the anchor of
the offensive line. He finished his
career a school-record 48 consecu-
tive starts and 48 career starts.
Hawkinson also earned All-Big 12
Second Team honors after his final
season.
After a one-victory season,
its great to see a shining spot on
the football team. Hawkinson
will bring tremendous character,
leadership and consistency to the
Bengals. Hell have to get stronger
and comfortable with the pace in
the NFL.
Everyone has a dream and a
small-town Kansas kid gets a
chance of a lifetime to live out that
very dream.
Good luck, Tanner. Jayhawk
nation is pulling for you.
Edited by Tara Bryant
this weekend, we lost our
minds defensively and just
didnt play the game we
normally do.
megaN SmitH
Kansas coach
T
his isnt the year of the quarter-
back in the NFL draft. Nor is it
the year of the running back or
the wide receiver. This time around, the
big guys dominated the first round of the
draft. Tackles, linebacks and guards were
the dominant players in the first round.
This years draft was nothing spectacular
compared to the past few years.
Every year, as fans and critics, we
evaluate how our favorite teams did in
the draft. Some teams do better than oth-
ers in selections, but no matter what, we
stand by our teams. With that in mind,
here is my view of the winners and losers
of this years draft.
Winners:
San Francisco 49ers: In the first round,
they selected Eric Reid, a safety from
LSU, adding on to the multitalented team
they currently field. In the second round,
they selected defensive end Cornellius
Carradine, also known as Tank. His
nickname is self-explanatory. But the
most interesting story to come from the
49ers draft was probably their decision
to draft Marcus Lattimore from South
Carolina. Lattimore suffered a gruesome
knee injury in a game last season, thus
ending his college career. He was con-
sidered one of the top picks for the draft
before the injury. If he fully recovers, he
will be filled with emotion and motiva-
tion to play that much better. I would
give them an A-.
Buffalo Bills: I like the Bills draft
choices. I think E.J. Manuel from Florida
State is a much wiser pick than Geno
Smith at the quarterback position. I can
see him being much more successful in
his football career. In the third round, the
Bills drafted Marquise Goodwin out of
Texas. Goodwin is a speedy receiver, as
he is also a track athlete. I watched him
win state titles in high school track, and
at Texas, he was one of the better receiv-
ers on the football team. This guy is
quick, and if he can prove himself, hell
make sure opponents see how danger-
ous he is. The Bills get a B+.
Losers:
Kansas City Chiefs: Yes, you read
that correctly. The hometown Chiefs
are one of the losers of this years draft.
Instead of going with the popular choice
in Luke Joeckel for the first pick in the
whole draft, they chose Eric Fisher from
Central Michigan. Wait, from where?
Exactly. Fisher is a decent outside tackle,
but to go No. 1 overall and to come from
a conference that doesnt have top foot-
ball programs, there is something wrong
here. Then they traded up their second
round pick only to pick a tight end from
Cincinnati in the third round. The Chiefs
deserve a grade of C- only because they
got the first pick.
Dallas Cowboys: What was Jerry
Jones thinking? I guarantee Cowboys
fans around the country were not happy
with the teams choices in the first two
rounds. They picked positions that did
not need to be replaced. They somewhat
made up for it by getting a wide receiver
and a safety in the third round. They get
a C.
The draft was filled with surprises
and lots of unknown players. Now that
the draft is over, lets see how teams can
adjust with their new acquisitions.
edited by elise reuter
PAGE 2B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
!
?
Q: Where is Eric Fisher, the number
one pick in the draft, from?
A: Central Michigan University

esPn.com
tRIVIA of thE DAY

Fisher was right up at the top even


before the combine.
Andy reid discussing
their frst-round pick.
Arrowheadpride.com
Through the frst 99 picks in the
draft, 1/3 of them were from the
Southeastern Conference (SEC)
esPn.com
fAct of thE DAY
thE MoRNING BREW
QUotE of thE DAY
49ers, Bills on top of draft; Chiefs, Cowboys fall short
This week in athletics
Sunday Wednesday Tuesday Thursday Monday Friday
Baseball
Baker
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Softball
Wichita State
6 p.m.
Lawrence
No events scheduled
Baseball
Wichita State
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Saturday
Softball
Oklahoma
2 p.m.
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
6 p.m.
Lawrence
track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
Softball
Oklahoma
Noon
Lawrence
Baseball
Baylor
2 p.m.
Lawrence
track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
No events scheduled
Baseball
Baylor
1 p.m.
Lawrence
track
Big 12 Outdoor
Championships
All Day
Waco, Texas
By Michael Portman
mportman@kansan.com
WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS
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PAGE 3B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
Te Kansas tennis team ad-
vanced past the frst round of the
Big 12 Tournament for the frst
time in fve years this weekend. Te
Jayhawks beat Iowa State for the
second time in a week when the
teams met in Norman, Okla. Kan-
sas season ended with
Two weeks ago, Kansas was 0-7
in the Big 12 with only two games
lef in the regular season. Te team
won both games and kept the mo-
mentum going long enough to do
something that no player on this
team had been a part of: ISU.
Doubles play had been the ba-
rometer for the Jayhawks success
as the team
entered the
Big 12 Tourna-
ment. Nothing
changed Turs-
day as Kansas
won two of the
three doubles
matches. Te
Kansas duo of
senior Victoria
Khane vs kaya
and freshman
Anastasija Tru-
bica was able
to get a win on
senior night
against ISU,
as well as on
Tursday, to help Khanevskaya ex-
tend her season.
In singles play, junior Paulina
Los and freshman Maria Jose Car-
dona were both on two-match win-
ning streaks heading into the Big
12 Tournament, but Los was unable
to extend her streak on Tursday.
Cardona, however, was able to get
the win to add to her already pro-
ductive freshman season.
Te win on Tursday propelled
the Jayhawks into a match with No.
1 seed Baylor. Unfortunately for
Kansas, no streaks were extended
or started on Friday. Baylor won
4-0 to end the spring season for
Kansas.
Fridays match started on an odd
note when singles play began frst
because of inclement weather in the
forecast for later in the day. Kansas
usually uses doubles play to get the
momentum going early in matches,
so having to jump right into singles
play might have been a contribut-
ing factor in the loss.
Te Jayhawks ended on a posi-
tive note by earning a win on senior
night and advancing to the quar-
terfnals of the Big 12 Tournament.
Finishing the spring season with a
record of 11-10 overall and 2-7 in
conference play is a little discour-
aging afer being nationally ranked
for part of the season, but with the
freshmen on the team playing at a
high level, next years expectations
are mounting.
Edited by Kaitlyn Klein
tYLER coNoVER
tconover@kansan.com
Season ends at Big 12 tournament
tennis nBA plAyoffs
ERIN BREMER/KANSAN
Junior paulina los competes against iowa state at the Jayhawk tennis Center
sunday afternoon. KU defeated iowa state with a fnal score of 4-3.
BOSTON Jason Terrys nose
still hurt; he wasnt about to let his
pride sufer as well.
Two days afer being smacked
by J.R. Smiths elbow, the guard
the Boston Celtics count on for
his shooting scored their last nine
points and kept their season going.
Te Celtics beat the Knicks 97-
90 in overtime Sunday to avoid a
frst-round sweep and force a ffh
game in New York on Wednesday.
Avoiding elimination provided all
the motivation Terry needed.
It wasnt really the elbow, he
said. It was more (like) this is it.
I mean, the seasons over. You can
leave it all out here tonight and go
home for a long summer, or you
can live to play another day.
Te NBA suspended Smith for
the game; the Knicks could have
used his shooting. Carmelo Antho-
ny scored 36 points, and Raymond
Felton picked up the slack with 27,
but New York made just 28.9 per-
cent of its shots in the frst half as
Boston took a 54-35 lead.
J.R. is a big piece of what we do,
but he wasnt here, Knicks coach
Mike Woodson said. Im not us-
ing that as an excuse.
New York had tied the game 84-
84 afer trailing by 20 points early
in the third quarter. It was 88-all
before the Celtics regained control
and took the lead for good on a
3-pointer by Terry. Anthony hit a
short jumper, but Terry connected
on a 15-footer with 50 seconds re-
maining for a 93-90 lead.
Afer Anthony, who shot 10 for
35 for the game, missed a 3-pointer
with 21 seconds to go, Terry was
fouled by Steve Novak and made
both free throws. He added a layup
to close out the game.
But the Celtics still have a huge
defcit in trying to become the
frst team to win afer trailing a
series 3-0 in the NBA playofs. Te
Knicks are trying to win their frst
playof series in 13 years.
We have to be confdent going
back home, Anthony said. We
were confdent here today.
Paul Pierce led the Celtics with
29 points, Jef Green added 26 and
Terry fnished with 18.
Tis is the frst time that we re-
ally came out with fre in our eyes,
Terry said. Every game from here
on out is Game 7 for us.
Celtics avoid a
sweep, force ffth
game in new york
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Boston Celtics center Kevin Garnett, pulls down an offensive rebound against
three new york Knicks players during the frst half in game four of a frst-round
nBA playoff series in Boston on sunday.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Pirates defeat cardinals,
take lead in NL central
st. loUis Rookie Jeff locke pitched
seven innings of three-hit ball and Rus-
sell Martin had two of pittsburghs four
home runs in a 9-0 victory over the st.
louis Cardinals on sunday that gave the
pirates a series win and the nl Central
lead.
Jones had three hits and John McDon-
ald added an RBi double for pittsburgh,
which ended rookie shelby Millers streak
of 14 scoreless innings at home to start
the season. the pirates have won nine
of 12 overall, leapfrogging st. louis for
frst place.
locke (3-1) has worked 13 scoreless
innings while allowing fve hits his last
two starts. the Cardinals got just three
singles and advanced two runners into
scoring position against the 25-year-old
left-hander, who earned the ffth spot in
the rotation with a strong spring.
Justin Wilson allowed a walk the last
two innings to wrap up the pirates ffth
shutout, tied for the league lead with
st. louis and san francisco. All of them
have been collaborations.
Miller (3-2) struggled to put away
hitters and was taken out after 113
pitches and giving up two homers in 5
2-3 innings. He struck out seven, one off
his season best, and was charged with
three runs after John McDonald greeted
fernando salas with a bloop RBi double.
left felder Matt Holliday took a cir-
cuitous route and just missed a diving
catch with the ball defecting off his left
wrist, and Brandon inge scored from
frst on a close play at the plate for a
3-0 lead.
Martin hit his fourth homer with a
412-foot drive to straightaway center in
the second. He doubled off the right-feld
fence in the fourth for his fourth straight
extra-base hit, two of them homers, then
added a two-run shot to cap a fve-run
ninth.
Associated Press
MlB
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THE RESERVE INVITES YOU TO A
WEEK FULL OF FUN AND SAVINGS!
Well be watching movies on the lawn
so dont forget your blanket!
Grab some breakfast before starting your day!
PAGE 4B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
IRVING, Texas Inbee Park
shot a bogey-free 4-under 67 on
Sunday to win the inaugural North
Texas LPGA Shootout by a stroke
over Carlota Ciganda, whose
chance for a frst LPGA victory was
wiped out in a two-hole stretch.
Park, the worlds No. 1 womens
player, fnished at 13-under 271
for her third victory this season
and ffh in her last 18 starts. Te
24-year-old South Korean sank a
4-foot birdie putt on the par-5 18th
afer Ciganda also birdied the hole
even afer a drive into the right
rough.
Afer starting the day two strokes
behind Ciganda, Park went ahead
to stay with pars on Nos. 14 and 15,
where her playing partner ran into
trouble. Ciganda had bogey and
double bogey on those holes, part
of her 70.
Fifh-ranked Suzann Pettersen
from Norway, the winner in Hawaii
last week, had a closing 66 to get
to 10 under and fnish third. Hee
Young Park (64) and So Yeon Ryu
(68) tied for fourth at 275.
Ciganda matched the worlds top
player shot for shot early on.
Tey both had birdies at the 403-
yard 8th hole, where Park knocked
hers in before Ciganda, who re-
sponded with a slight fst pump
when her ball dropped into the
cup. Tey both had pars at No. 9,
where Park was closer to the hole
even though she was missed the
green to the lef, and they traded
birdies again at the par-5 10th.
Everything turned in a two-hole
stretch.
Cigandas drive at the 416-yard
14th hole settled in the right rough
with a tree between her and the
green, and her shot from about 130
yards clipped a branch and came
up short. She had a chance to save
par, but her 6-foot putt was short.
Te approach by Park was on
line, and the second bounce on the
green was near the hole before roll-
ing away. Park saved par with two
putts, staying at 12 under and get-
ting within a stroke of the lead that
was hers for good afer the next
hole.
Afer stepping away from her
approach at No. 15, to a green sur-
rounded by water on three sides,
Ciganda then hit a shot that went to
the right and then rolled down into
the water. Ciganda had to go back
to a drop zone, where the 22-year-
old Spaniard had a decent pitch
before her frst putt rolled over the
lef edge of the green for a double
bogey.
Another two-putt par by Park
put her in the lead to stay.
With the $195,000 check for frst
place, Park exceeded $6 million in
career earnings and will be No. 1
for the third week in a row.
Caroline Masson had a 75 and
fnished eight shots back. Te
LPGA Tour rookie from Germany
led afer each of the frst two rounds
and started the fnal round tied for
second with Park.
Hee Young Parks 64 was the best
round of the day on the 6,439-yard
course with plenty of sloping fair-
ways and raised greens. When Park
fnished her round, the South Ko-
rean was 9 under and alone in third
behind Ciganda and Inbee Park.
Stacy Lewis, the Texas native
and No. 2 player in the world, had a
closing 66 when all six birdies and
her only bogey came between Nos.
7-17. She tied for seventh for her
sixth top-10 fnish this season.
At the end of her round, Lewis
signed the back brace of a 6-year-
old Dallas girl who was diagnosed
with scoliosis at 18 months old.
Lewis wore a similar brace 18 hours
a day for seven years afer being
diagnosed with scoliosis at age 11
and missed her frst collegiate sea-
son afer a spinal fusion.
Tird-ranked Na Yeon Choi,
among the four players tied for
seventh, had 44 consecutive bogey-
free holes and was 9 under before
consecutive bogeys at Nos. 10-12.
She went on to fnish a round of
72.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Carlota Ciganda of Spain watches her tee shot on the 10th hole during the fnal round of the North Texas LPGA Shootout golf tournament Sunday at Los Colinas Country
Club in Irving, Texas.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Womens tournament ends with shocking fnale in Texas
LPGA
MLB
Royals take Indians by
surprise in doubleheader
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Jeremy Guthrie
kept the Indians off-balance, Alcides
Escobar and Alex Gordon homered and
the Kansas City Royals routed Cleveland
9-0 on Sunday to open the frst day-night
doubleheader in the history of Kauffman
Stadium.
The doubleheader was caused by a
rainout Friday night.
Guthrie (3-0) allowed six hits over
six 2-3 innings for his 16th consecutive
start without a loss, tying the Royals re-
cord set by Paul Splittorff from Aug. 13,
1977 to April 22, 1978.
Escobars solo shot came in the ffth
inning and Gordons two-run homer
came in the eighth, capping a big day
for the Kansas City offense. Jarrod Dyson
also drove in a pair of runs, and Mike
Moustakas had a single and three walks
one with the bases loaded.
Justin Masterson (4-2) allowed seven
runs in six 1-3 innings for the Indians.
The right-hander, who entered the game
with a 1.85 ERA, was trying to join Bob
Lemon, Greg Swindell and Cliff Lee as
the only pitchers in franchise history
with fve wins in April.
Instead, Masterson got roughed up
by the bottom of the Royals lineup. He
walked Moustakas, who was hitting just
.152, on four pitches with two outs in the
second. Jeff Francoeur and Dyson fol-
lowed with back-to-back doubles to give
Kansas City a 2-0 lead.
Masterson threw four more balls to
the struggling Moustakas in the fourth
eight straight pitches without a
strike. This time, Francoeur and Dyson
added singles for a 3-0 lead.
Escobar homered on the frst pitch he
saw in the ffth inning. The solo shot just
skirted the foul pole in left feld, land-
ing in the seats for a memorable 500th
career hit.
The Royals blew the game open in the
seventh when Chris Getz singled leading
off the inning, and Gordon added a base
hit. Escobars grounder made it 5-0, and
a walk by Billy Butler and Eric Hosmers
RBI single fnally knocked Masterson
from the game.
Moustakas bases-loaded walk made
it 7-0, and Gordons two-run shot off
Scott Barnes in the eighth punctuated
the scoring for the light-hitting Royals.
The closest Guthrie came to allowing
a run came in the second inning.
Carlos Santana sent a drive to center
that hit off the green padding atop the
wall. The ball bounced back into play
and was ruled a double, and the call
was upheld when the umpires checked
the replay. Santana was left stranded
when Guthrie retired Ryan Raburn and
Lonnie Chisenhall.
Associated Press

PAGE 5B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013


Tanner Hawkinson DrafTeD
By Bengals
Former Kansas left tackle Tan-
ner Hawkinson was drafted in the
fifth round, 156th overall, in the
2013 NFL draft Saturday after-
noon by the Cincinnati Bengals.
I was expecting to have my
name called sometime today, but
I was surprised it came that early,
Hawkinson said. It was a really
good phone call to get. It is a big
relief to get this part of the pro-
cess over with and know where I
will be playing. I am very excited
to get to Cincinnati and get to
work.
Scouts said Hawkinson can
bring versatility and has experi-
ence playing right and left offen-
sive tackle spots.
Hawkinson is the first Kan-
sas player to be drafted since the
2010 NFL draft. Former Kansas
wide receiver Dezmon Briscoe
was drafted the sixth round, coin-
cidentally by the Bengals in 2010.
Hawkinson joins former Jay-
hawk Anthony Collins in Cin-
cinnati, who was drafted in the
fourth round by the Bengals in
the 2008 NFL draft.
During his time as a Jayhawk,
Hawkinson started 48 straight
games, the most consecutive starts
by a player in Kansas history.
He earned All-Big 12 Second
Team honors from the confer-
ences coaches, the Associated
Press, Phil Steele Magazine and
the San Antonio Express News in
2012.
BraDley McDougalD signs
wiTH cHiefs
Former Kansas safety Brad-
ley McDougald went undrafted
in this weekends NFL draft,
but signed with the Kansas City
Chiefs after the draft concluded.
The news first broke on Twitter
when McDougald announced he
joined the Chiefs.
Just agreed to a free agent deal
with the KC Chiefs, McDougald
said on Twitter. Thank you for
all the love and support, time to
go to work!
McDougald joins a brand-new
Chiefs staff, which includes head
coach Andy Reid and defensive
coordinator Bob Sutton. He will
have an opportunity to play be-
hind safeties Kendrick Lewis and
two-time Pro Bowler Eric Berry.
The Columbus, Ohio native
collected three interceptions for
63 yards as a senior and finished
his collegiate career with seven
interceptions for 189 yards.
McDougald earned Second
Team All-Big 12 honors by the
leagues coaches, Third Team All-
Big 12 by Phil Steele Magazine
and All-Big 12 Honorable Men-
tion by the Associated Press.
greg Brown signeD By
cHargers

Former Kansas cornerback
Greg Brown signed with the San
Diego Chargers after going un-
drafted in this weekends NFL
draft.
Brown will be coached by head
coach Mike McCoy and will be
under John Paganos defense in
the spring and summer. Brown
has a chance to compete in train-
ing camp to play for a spot on the
53-man roster.
Brown will also be joining cor-
nerback Steve Williams, who was
drafted from California in the
fifth round of the draft. Another
notable draftee Brown joins on
the Chargers defense is lineback-
er Manti Teo, who was drafted in
the second round out of Notre
Dame.
Dayne crisT anD ToBen
opuruM receive inviTaTions

After McDougald became the
first Jayhawk to sign with the
Chiefs, two more former Jay-
hawks followed his footsteps to
Kansas City.
Kansas quarterback Dayne
Crist and defensive end Toben
Opurum, both captains for Kan-
sas in 2012, received an invite to
Kansas Citys mini-camp.
Crist will be behind quarter-
backs Alex Smith, Chase Daniel,
Ricky Stanzi and Alex Tanney.
The Chiefs acquired Smith in a
trade with the 49ers and signed
Daniel this offseason. Stanzi and
Tanney are backups and have yet
to take a snap in a regular season
game.
Crist transferred from Notre
Dame after the 2011 season and
earned another year of eligibility,
allowing him to play one more
season. In his only season with
Kansas, Crist threw for 1,313
yards, four touchdowns and one
interception.
Despite struggling in 2012,
Crist impressed scouts in the
NFLPA Collegiate Bowl. Crist
completed seven of 10 passes,
including one for a touchdown,
and also ran for a touchdown.
His performance earned him the
MVP of the game.
Opurum will likely partici-
pate as an outside linebacker un-
der Kansas Citys 3-4 defensive
scheme. Hell work behind Tamba
Hali and Justin Houston, both of
whom played in the Pro Bowl this
past year.

edited by elise reuter
Jayhawks fnd nfl draft success in a hopeless season
AShLEIGh LEE/KANSAN
Senior defensive end Toben Opurum, senior offensive lineman Tanner Hawkinson
and senior quarterback Dayne Crist make their way onto the feld for the coin
toss before the Oct. 27, 2012 game against the Texas Longhorns. Hawkinson was
drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the ffth round of this weekends draft.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Senior defender Bradley McDougald tackles Kansas State freshman DB Morgan
Burns during the second half of the game against the Wildcats on Oct. 6, 2012 at
Bill Snyder Family Stadium. After going undrafted this weekend, McDougald signed
with the Kansas City Chiefs.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Junior cornerback Greg Brown and senior cornerback Anthony Davis tackle Iowa State sophomore running back James White during the second quarter of the game on
Nov. 17, 2012. Brown went undrafted in this weekends NFL draft, but signed with the San Diego Chargers.
fARzIN VoUSoUGhIAN
fvousoughian@kansan.com
FOOTBALL
Follow
@UDK_sports
on Twitter
The Student Legislative Advisory Board is bringing state
legislators from across Kansas for a forum with KU students.
Take this chance to speak with these elected officials about
higher education's future in the state of Kansas.
The forum will be from 7-8pm this Tuesday in the Woodruff
Auditorium of the Union. For more information, contact SLAB
at senategovrel@ku.edu.
This ad was paid for by the KU Student
Senate. If you would like to run an ad,
contact us at senateoutreach@ku.edu
CAPITOL ON YOUR CAMPUS
LEGISLATIVE FORUM
GET TO KNOW YOUR STATE REPS THIS TUESDAY!
Not a business undergrad?
An MBA is for you.
Meet Michael,
Current KU MBA Student
Degree: Master of Architecture,
KU May 2012
I want to work in an environment where
I can interact with people everyday. In
the architecture profession, that means
being a project manager or partner.
Getting an MBA will put me on a
trajectory to do this much earlier in
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Learn how to launch your career with a KU MBA on Tuesday, May 7
on Summereld Hall South Lawn from 11:30 - 1 p.m.
*Free(birds) lunch provided
PAGE 6B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Junior forward Ali Kimura falls trying to recover possession during the second half of the match against the Arkansas Razor-
backs Saturday afternoon. Kansas lost to Arkansas 1-0.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Junior forward Ali Kimura goes for the tackle during the frst half of the match against the Arkansas Razorbacks Saturday
afternoon. Kansas lost to Arkansas 1-0 closing the spring play for the Jayhawks.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Senior midfelder Sarah Robbins tries to keep track of possession during the second half of the match against the Arkansas
Razorbacks Saturday afternoon. The Jayhawks lost to the Razorbacks 1-0.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Junior forward Caroline Kastor shoots the ball during the frst half of the match against the Arkansas Razorbacks Saturday
afternoon. The Jayhawks lost to the Razorbacks 1-0.
tRAVIS YoUNG/KANSAN
Freshman forward Ashley Williams crosses the ball during the frst half of the match against the Arkansas Razorbacks
Saturday afternoon. Kansas lost to Arkansas 1-0, closing the spring play for the Jayhawks.
Kansas comes out even in Saturday doubleheader
SoCCeR
Jayhawks end spring season with win over Kangaroos and loss to Razorbacks, finish with 7-3-2 record
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PAGE 7b thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
mlb
mlb
Price argues with umpire in victory over White Sox
ASSocIAtED PRESS
CHICAGO David Price had
more problems with the home plate
umpire than he had with the Chicago
White Sox.
The 2012 American League Cy
Young Award winner accused Tom
Hallion of using an expletive after
Price threw his last pitch of his first
win of the season, the Tampa Bay
Rays 8-3 victory over the Chicago
White Sox on Sunday.
Hallion called Price a liar.
Facing his last batter of the game
in the seventh inning, Price took
a step toward the dugout after he
thought he threw strike three to
Dewayne Wise. After Price retired
Wise on a comebacker, Price and
Hallion exchanged words as Price
walked to the dugout.
Hallion, the crew chief, walked
toward Price as the two appeared
to be yelling at each other. It was a
perfect pitch. It is. I really dont know
why he (Wise) swung at the next
one, because it was in the exact same
spot, Price said. Im walking off
the mound Im just mad at myself.
I didnt say a single word or look at
him. He (Hallion) yells at me.
My own dad doesnt speak to me
that way, Price added.
Hallion vehemently denied Prices
claim.
Ill come right out bluntly and
say hes a liar, Hallion told a pool
reporter. I said, Just throw the ball.
Thats all I said to him.
Price disagreed and teammate
Jeremy Hellickson, standing along
the dugout railing, did as well.
Hellickson was tossed after shouting
at Hallion from the dugout.
He was told to knock it off, him
and Morse (Matt Moore) were at
the dugout rail and I told them to
knock it off, Hallion said, and he
thought it was OK for him to have
his final comment, at which time he
was ejected.
Rays manager Joe Maddon was
surprised that the mild-mannered
Hellickson was thrown out even
though Maddon didnt hear the
exchange.
Hes one of the most vocifer-
ous players on our team. He finally
had an umpire get him, Maddon
joked. It definitely led to the vic-
tory. Everybody was pumped up at
that point.
Price took to Twitter afterward to
continue to press his point.
1. I am not a liar 2. I would
not make that stuff up 3. My own
dad doesnt speak to me that way 4.
Again I am not a liar (hash)account-
ability, he tweeted.
The postgame spat overshad-
owed a fine performance for Price.
He allowed three runs and six hits,
striking out nine in seven innings.
The Rays lost all five of Prices five
previous starts this year and were
the second team to lose in the first
five starts by a reigning Cy Young
winner. The Minnesota Twins lost
in Frank Violas first seven games
in 1989.
Price (1-2) walked two and threw
119 pitches but finally he got support
from his offense.
After Hellickson was ejected,
the Rays rallied in the eighth. Ben
Zobrist hit a go-ahead RBI single in
a three-run inning spurred by Alex
Rios error.
Jose Lobaton and Matt Joyce each
homered for Tampa Bay, which
improved to 4-9 on the road. Paul
Konerko hit a two-run home run
for Chicago, who are 1-5 against left-
handed starters.
Sean Rodriguez led off the eighth
with a single off White Sox reliever
Nate Jones (0-2) and advanced to
second on a wild pitch. One out later,
he scored on Zobrists single to break
a 3-all tie. With two outs and bases
loaded, Ryan Roberts hit a shallow
fly to right, Rios came charging in,
but he had the ball pop out of his
glove, allowing two runs to score and
giving the Rays a 6-3 lead.
Its one of those things that are
going to happen occasionally, but if
were going to get on an extended
run of playing well you got to make
those plays, said White Sox manager
Robin Ventura.
White Sox starter Dylan Axelrod
allowed three runs and four hits in
six innings. He struck out three and
walked one, but he was doomed by
the home runs from Lobaton and
Joyce. ASSocIAtED PRESS
Tampa bay Rays starting pitcher David Price yells in the dugout after exchanging words with home plate umpire Tom Hallion during the seventh inning of a baseball game
against the Chicago White Sox in Chicago on Sunday. Tampa bay won 8-3.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
Kershaw and Crawford carry
Dodgers to win against brewers
LOS ANGELES Clayton Ker-
shaw retired 18 consecutive batters
and struck out 12 in eight dominant
innings, Carl Crawford homered
twice against Kyle Lohse and the Los
Angeles Dodgers beat the Milwau-
kee Brewers 2-0 on Sunday.
Kershaw (3-2) scattered four hits
and didnt walk a batter while low-
ering his ERA to 1.73. Te 2011 Cy
Young Award winner, who led the
NL in ERA in each of the previous
two seasons, hasnt allowed more
than three earned runs in any of his
last 18 starts the longest active
streak in the majors. Te last time he
did was July 24, 2012, when he gave
up eight at St. Louis.
Kershaw stranded runners in
scoring position in each of the frst
two innings, retiring Jonathan Lu-
croy on a double-play grounder
in the frst and striking out Mar-
tin Maldonado to end the second.
He gave up a leadof double in the
eighth to Carlos Gomez, who tried
to advance on a broken-bat come-
backer to Kershaw and was tagged
out by third baseman Juan Uribe in
a rundown.
Kershaws string of consecutive
outs began afer Rickie Weeks bloop
double leading of the second.
Milwaukees only other hits were
one-out singles in the frst by Jean
Segura and Ryan Braun.
Kershaw began the season with
4-0 and 1-0 wins over San Francisco
and Pittsburgh, allowing no runs
over 16 innings.
Brandon League pitched a perfect
ninth inning for his eighth save in
nine chances.
Crawford drove Lohses frst pitch
of the game over the center feld
fence. It was the fourth time that the
right-hander gave up a home run to
his frst batter in 336 career starts
and the frst one that came on his
very frst pitch. Crawfords second
homer came on an 0-2 count and
landed in the right feld pavilion.
It was his sixth multihomer game
in the majors and frst since July
8, 2010, for the Tampa Bay Rays
against Clevelands Jake Westbrook.
Lohse (1-2) gave up fve hits and
no walks while striking out four. Te
13-year veteran had allowed only
one home run in 25 innings over
his frst four starts for the Brewers,
who signed him to a three-year, $33
million contract as a free agent on
March 25.
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PAGE 8B thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, APRIL 29, 2013
OAKLAND, Calif. Tird
baseman Manny Machado made
a throwing error on a bunt in the
10th inning and the Oakland Ath-
letics completed their comeback,
beating the Baltimore Orioles 9-8
Sunday.
Down 5-0 in the sixth, the As
tied it at 8 on Yoenis Cespedes
two-run homer with one out in the
ninth. He was activated from the
disabled list before the game afer
being out with a strained muscle in
his lef hand.
Te Athletics ended a four-game
losing streak and prevented Balti-
more from a four-game sweep.
Eric Sogard hit a leadof single
in the 10th and moved to second
when reliever Pedro Strop (0-1)
made a wide throw to second on
Adam Rosales bunt. Coco Crisp
followed with a sacrifce bunt and
Machado threw wildly past to
shortstop J.J. Hardy covering third,
allowing Sogard to score with a
headfrst dive.
Chris Davis hit his team-leading
ninth home run, a solo shot in the
eighth that put Baltimore ahead
7-6. Machado added an RBI double
in the ninth.
Nate McLouth, who scored four
times, and Machado each had four
hits for the Orioles.
Seth Smith also homered for
Oakland. Crisp had two hits and
scored twice and Josh Donaldson
drove in two runs.
Baltimore was trying for its frst
four-game sweep at the Coliseum
since 1987. Te Orioles lost for just
the fourth time in 13 games.
Orioles closer Jim Johnson had
pitched four times in the previous
fve games and was unavailable.
Strop had also struggled in recent
outings, which is why manager
Buck Showalter stayed with the
lef-handed Brian Matusz against
Cespedes in the ninth.
Jerry Blevins (1-0) pitched one
inning for the win.
Davis had a two-run double of
Oakland starter Bartolo Colon in
the fourth and later homered of
Sean Doolittle.
Te As scored four runs in the
sixth. Smith hit a tying two-run
homer in the seventh.
Baltimore starter Miguel Gonza-
lez, who allowed only two baserun-
ners through the frst fve innings,
gave up four in the sixth.
Athletics best Orioles in comeback
mlb nba
ASSocIAtED PRESS
baltimore Orioles left felder nate mclouth makes a sliding attempt at a pop fy from Oakland athletics brandon moss during the second inning of Sundays game in
Oakland, Calif. moss got a single on the play.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
MILWAUKEE LeBron
James can cross another item of
his to-do list.
James scored 30 points, Ray
Allen had another big game
against his old team and the
Miami Heat got their frst play-
of sweep in the Big Tree era,
advancing to the Eastern Con-
ference semifnals with an 88-
77 victory over the Milwaukee
Bucks on Sunday.
It was our next big step as far
as our growth, James said. Its
so hard to win on the road in
the playofs, in someones build-
ing especially when someone
is playing for their last life. Its a
big step for us.
And now the Heat have some
much-needed time to rest.
Dwyane Wade sat out Sundays
game, only the second post-
season game hes missed in his
career, because of his aching
right knee. But with Miami not
playing until next Saturday, at
the earliest, hell have plenty
of time to treat the three bone
bruises that caused him to miss
six games near the end of the
regular season.
Miami plays the winner of
the Brooklyn-Chicago series.
Te Bulls lead that series 3-1,
with Game 5 on Monday night
in New York.
Its big, Wade said of the
time of. Obviously, were one
of the oldest teams in the league,
maybe the oldest team in terms
of rotation players. Guys have
some bumps and bruises com-
ing out of this series, so its go-
ing to be great to get some rest.
But also we have to take this
time to continue to stay sharp,
to continue to stay in shape as
well.
Judging by the clinical way
in which the Heat dissected the
Bucks in this series, that isnt
likely to be a problem.
Te defending NBA champi-
ons won each game by double
digits, getting contributions
from their stars and subs alike.
Allen fnished with 16 points,
the third time in the series he
scored in double fgures, and
was 4 of 7 from 3-point range.
Udonis Haslem added 13
points and fve rebounds, and
Mario Chalmers kicked in eight
rebounds and six assists for Mi-
ami, which never trailed Sun-
day.
Tey had the whole pack-
age, Bucks coach Jim Boylan
said. When you can aford to sit
guy like Dwyane Wade and per-
form at the level they performed
at, thats a championship-caliber
team.
Monta Ellis led the Bucks
with 21 points, and Larry Sand-
ers had 11 rebounds to go with
seven points.
But Milwaukee got almost
nothing again from Brandon
Jennings, who didnt even play
in the fourth quarter. Jen-
nings, who had guaranteed the
Bucks would win the series in
six games, fnished with three
points on 1-of-7 shooting.
Afer scoring 26 points in
game one, Jennings had 27 total
in the fnal three.
Frustrated, a little down be-
cause I came into this season
with so much confdence, he
said. I thought we had a chance
to steal a game in game one,
game 2. We let that slip away
from us. Game three, we came
back home. Had a 10-point lead,
lost that. I mean its frustration
all around.
Heat achieve frst
sweep in big 3 era,
beat bucks 88-77
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