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Volume 125 Issue 63 kansan.

com Monday, January 28, 2013


All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2013 The University Daily Kansan
Classifieds 2b
Crossword 5a
Cryptoquip 5a
opinion 4a
sports 1b
sudoku 5a
20% chance of rain with
south winds at 18 mph,
partly cloudy
Its the last day to enroll or add a class online,
and the last day for a 90 percent refund on
dropped classes.
Index Dont
forget
Todays
Weather
HI: 73
LO: 53
emma legault
elegault@kansan.com
At 4 a.m. and 4 p.m. everyday,
Iwig Family Dairy milks its cows.
Within days, its natural, local,
healthy products are on the shelf.
Located outside Topeka, Iwig
Family Dairy is one of four family-
owned farms producing for the
northeast Kansas area. One of their
two retail stores is located at 1901
Massachusetts Street. Te location
ofers ice cream, butter, and other
products including milk that was
drawn from one of 65 Iwig cows
less than two days before being
stocked on the shelf for sale.
Teres no way you can get milk
as fresh as ours anywhere else in
Lawrence, said Tim Iwig, the com-
pany owner.
What makes Iwig unique, how-
ever, isnt just its freshness. While
all other dairy distributors in the
area use high temperature pasteuri-
zation, which damages the enzymes
in cow milk, Iwigs low temperature
process makes his milk more di-
gestible for more people.
Our milk is the healthiest milk
you can buy that has been pasteur-
ized, Iwig said.
Freshman Jordan Falley from
Tecumseh, has been drinking Iwig
milk with her family for years. More
than anything, she appreciates that
their products are environmen-
tally friendly. Iwig
milk comes in glass
bottles which, Iwig
says, is both cleaner
and healthier and
prevents the milk
from tasting like
plastic. When Fal-
ley purchases a
gallon, she brings
back her used glass
bottles to exchange
for a discount.
Teir chocolate milk is better
than any other milk Ive ever had,
Falley said.
While Iwigs dedicated custom-
ers are willing to pay for premium
milk, the company is experiencing
hard times. Kansas has been expe-
riencing drought weather for nearly
two years, which makes fnding ac-
ceptable hay to feed cows difcult
and expensive.
National dairy prices are cur-
rently determined by a highly com-
plicated formula with factors in-
cluding processing plants, storage
facilities and a fnancial exchange
of large dairy corporations based
in Chicago.
Milk prices are
largely based
on supply and
demand, not
calculating in
farmers cost
produc t i on,
Iwig says.
T h e r e
needs to be
some kind of
relief for dairy producers to get
through this kind of a drought situ-
ation in this part of the country,
Iwig said. We try to price so we
can stay on top but thats been dif-
fcult with hay prices the way they
are.
To temporarily avoid infating
milk prices projected by some to be
as much as $8 per gallon, Congress
approved a nine month extension
of the Farm Bill in December 2012.
Private farmers are hopeful that
Congress will pass legislature that
remodels and simplifes how milk
prices are calculated before the
Farm Bill extension expires.
Iwig is hoping sales at the Law-
rence location, which opened this
past summer, pick up and carry the
company through tough economic
times. Te Lawrence location isnt
doing as well as he had hoped for,
possibly due to its less popular
store location or its followers not
knowing about it. In November,
Iwig had to fle for bankruptcy.
Iwig, however, is confdent in
the quality and healthiness of his
product.
If more people knew why ours
is better, more people would buy it,
Iwig said. Not only do we do milk
but we have the probably the best
ice cream you can buy in Lawrence
or Topeka.
In the meantime, Iwig will be
looking to expand in Lawrence.
Edited by Elise Reuter
As her friends huddle together
in a circle on the floor, theyre
asked to describe her personality.
The phrases they use give insight
into her character: shes always
laughing at herself and smiling. A
hard worker. Values relationships
with her family and friends. And
although she isnt present, there is
a common thread that connects
each vignette:
Shes just got the biggest heart,
and she
b e f r i e nds
a n y b o d y
and every-
b o d y ,
said Tasha
Johnson, a
Hi g h l a nd
R a n c h ,
Colo. soph-
o m o r e .
Shes just
the type of
person whos beautiful in and out,
always.
Eleanor Cizek, a sophomore
from St. Paul, Minn., was seri-
ously injured in a skiing accident
in Colorado on Jan. 9. According
to posts by her family on her
CaringBridge website, she hit
a padded pole, became uncon-
scious and was airlifted to Denver
with bruising on the left side
of her brain. After remaining in
a medically induced coma, she
woke up one week after sustain-
ing her traumatic brain injury.
Although the road to recovery
wont be speedy, Cizeks friends
and members of her sorority have
vowed to stick by her through
her journey. Using social media
and the hashtag #CizekStrong,
together they have raised aware-
ness about Cizek and her condi-
tion and united their followers in
a sea of support.
We just wanted her to know
that were all sending love and
prayers and supporting, said
Jillian Pfaff, a sophomore from
Overland Park.
She would have done the same
thing for any of us, Johnson
added.
Josie Vignatelli, a sophomore
from Leawood, was with Cizek
at the time of her accident.
She expressed that the care she
received immediately follow-
ing the accident was life saving.
While she continues to receive
superior care, Johnson said the
collective support is helping to
improve her condition.
Every time I visit her in the
hospital they say how much they
think her progress is going along
because people are storming the
heavens with prayers and the love
and support shes getting is amaz-
ing, she said. We just want to
keep that going because it is such
a long process.
Posts from her CaringBridge
blog describe Cizeks recovery as
a marathon and not a sprint.
Her MRI results were indicative
of a significant second phase to
her healing that requires physi-
cal therapy and relearning cer-
tain skills. However, her doctors
think that with her youth, Cizeks
recovery looks promising.
In order to offer support for
Cizek and her family, members
of the campaign started selling
bracelets with the Cizek Strong
slogan. They are currently avail-
able for $5 and can be purchased
by emailing cizekstrong@gmail.
com. T-shirts are also being pre-
pared and will be available soon.
Proceeds will help offset the costs
of the Cizek familys weekly com-
mutes to Denver.
After seeing Cizek and her
family in Denver, Vignatelli feels
the campaign is representative of
the familys attitude in the face of
adversity.
Her family just embodies so
much strength and determina-
tion, yet theyre so positive and
upbeat about the entire situation,
she said. I feel like the bands are
kind of a symbol of that.
As her friends continue to
converse about Cizek, her family
and the desire to help, its clear
that Cizek Strong is sending a
message of united, unconditional
support.
I think its just important to
get out there that not only do
her close friends and people who
know her here at KU support
her, but the entire community
and the entire school, Vignatelli
said. No matter what, its going
to be a long road ahead, but well
continue to support her whether
its a month from now, six months
from now, and so will the entire
KU community.
For more information about
Cizek and her progress, visit
http://www.caringbridge.org/
visit/eleanorjoycizek. To purchase
a bracelet or t-shirt or donate to
Cizek and her family, email cize-
kstrong@gmail.com.
Edited by Brian Sisk
emily donovan
edonovan@kansan.com
Local dairy combats adverse conditions
rhiannon rosas/kansan
Iwig Dairy Store is known for its ice cream, milk selections and signature glass bottles. Milk prices are expected to increase to $8 per gallon if Congress does not to extend
a farm protection bill.
Cizek
RoAD To ReCoveRy
@
george mullinix/kansan
Members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority show their support for their fellow
sister, eleanor Cizek, a sophomore from St. Paul, Minn., after she was seriously
injured in a skiing accident in Colorado earlier this month. Cizek was put in
medically induced coma and woke up after a week.
Community rallies,
creates campaign
for injured student
LoCAL

There needs to be some


kind of relief for dairy
producers to get through
this kind of a drought...
TIM IwIG
owner of Iwig Family Dairy
CHeCk On eLeanOr CIzek and Her
prOgress at CarIngbrIdge.Org
http://bit.ly/Xot0Pi
read game
previews on
page 4b
-
follow the
writers from
press row
on twitter
@ udk_bball
What season is it again?
Support and stability go hand
in hand when talking about the
potential success of a program.
Recently, the University debate
team got a little help to ensure
both of those critical needs will
be met.
In partnership with KU
Endowment, David Pittaway, a
1972 University graduate and for-
mer member of the debate team,
gave a $500,000 gift to the debate
program.
KUs debate team has long
been important to David Pittaway.
He realized that the skills he
learned in debate helped further
his career, said KU Endowment
media relations manager Lisa
Scheller.
Scheller said the gift applies
toward KU Endowments Far
Above campaign, which she said
seeks support to educate future
leaders, advance medicine, accel-
erate discovery and drive econom-
ic growth to seize the opportuni-
ties of the future. The $500,000
will count toward the campaigns
$1.2 billion goal.
The focus of the endowed
fund created by Pittaways gift is
to provide support for the head
coach, including salary, travel and
recruitment expenses, as well as
any other related needs. According
to Scheller, a portion of the funds
interest could be available to the
program in March of this year.
Dale Seuferling, president of
KU Endowment, said Pittaways
gift will have an impact in many
aspects of the University as well as
the debate program.
[Pittaway] recognizes the
importance strong academic pro-
gram have on the Universitys
reputation, he said. The pro-
fessorship fund he has endowed
will provide essential resources
to sustain KUs legacy of stellar
debate coaches for many genera-
tions. Moreover, his gift will help
us reach one of the Far Above
campaigns main goals, to develop
future leaders.
Current debate coach Scott
Harris said there are three specific
needs that debate has targeted that
he hopes endowment fundraising
will alleviate: support for long-
term coaching stability, generating
additional scholarship revenue,
and the ongoing costs of travel to
competitions.
When debate programs have
come and gone at universities
around the country, its largely
been a product of lack of support
for a coaching position, Harris
said.
The ability to offer full scholar-
ships for debate is also something
that Harris believes is a setback for
debate at the University.
We compete with other schools,
many of them offer full scholar-
ships for debate, and we currently
do not have the ability to do that,
so it sometimes puts us in a non-
competitive position, he said.
This year, Harris said the team
is about twice the size of most
other years, traveling 30 students
to approximately 20 tournaments
all over the country, more students
than the program has traveled in
the past 25 years. The team is
currently fourth in the country in
the National Debate Tournament
Varsity rankings.
For Harris, the gift has a spe-
cial meaning to KU debate. Donn
Parson held the title of debate
coach for 25 years and was the
coach Pittaway debated for. At the
end of last fall, Parson retired after
49 years as a professor at KU.
I have called him the Phog
Allen of the debate program,
Harris said. The fact that one of
his former debaters was commit-
ted to the support for coaching
I think is a tribute to all that Dr.
Parson meant to the debate pro-
gram.
Edited by Elise Reuter
Page 2a monday, January 28, 2013
N
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
news
weather,
Jay?
Mostly cloudy, 20%
chance of rain.
Tuesday
Its not March, right?
HI: 52
LO: 30
Mostly sunny.
Wednesday
Ah, sun.
HI: 36
LO: 18
Flurries, 30%
chance of snow.
Thursday
What? Its still January?
HI: 30
LO: 12
WeatherUnderground.com
Whats the
calENdar
Thursday, January 31 Tuesday, January 29 Wednesday, January 30 Monday, January 28
WHaT: Dollar Bowling
WHere: Royal Crest Lanes
WHen: 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
aBouT: Take a break from the library
and enjoy a game of bowling for only
$1. Prepare your game by watching the
Disney Channel original movie, Alley
Cats Strike.
WHaT: Student Senate committee meet-
ings
WHere: Kansas Union
WHen: 6 to 8 p.m.
aBouT: The University Affairs, Students
Rights, Finance and Multicultural Affairs
committees convene for the frst time
this semester. Students are welcome
to sit in on meetings and voice their
opinions.
neWs managemenT
editor-in-chief
Hannah Wise
managing editors
Sarah McCabe
Nikki Wentling
adVerTIsIng managemenT
Business manager
Elise Farrington
sales manager
Jacob Snider
neWs secTIon edITors
news editor
Allison Kohn
associate news editor
Joanna Hlavacek
sports editor
Pat Strathman
associate sports editor
Trevor Graff
entertainment editor
Laken Rapier
copy chiefs
Megan Hinman
Taylor Lewis
Brian Sisk
design chiefs
Ryan Benedick
Katie Kutsko
designers
Trey Conrad
Sarah Jacobs
opinion editor
Dylan Lysen
Photo editor
Ashleigh Lee
special sections editor
Kayla Banzet
Web editor
Natalie Parker
adVIsers
general manager and news adviser
Malcolm Gibson
sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt
contact us
editor@kansan.com
www.kansan.com
Newsroom: (785)-766-1491
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Twitter: UDK_News
Facebook: facebook.com/thekansan
THE UNIVERSITY
DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan is the student
newspaper of the University of Kansas. The
first copy is paid through the student activity
fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50
cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the
Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human
Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue,
Lawrence, KS., 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967)
is published daily during the school year except
Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and
exams and weekly during the summer session
excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions by
mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes
to The University Daily Kansan, 2051A Dole
Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside
Avenue.
2000 dole Human developement center
1000 sunnyside avenue Lawrence, Kan.,
66045
Kansan medIa ParTners
Check out
KUJH-TV
on Knology
of Kansas
Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what
youve read in todays Kansan and other news.
Also see KUJHs website at tv.ku.edu.
KJHK is the student voice in
radio. Whether its rock n roll
or reggae, sports or special
events, KJHK 90.7 is for you.
Alum gifts $500,000 to debate team
CAMPUS
emma LegauLT
elegault@kansan.com
BrITTany THIesIng/Kansan
The debate team has its meetings to discuss its upcoming competitions, and the topics each team member will debate
about. The team is looking forward to using funds to offer scholarships, have long-term caoches and help with traveling
expenses.
LEGAL
Lawsuit reveals support from anti-abortion activists
assocIaTed Press
WICHITA, Kan. A lawsuit
against a Kansas woman who
publicly proclaimed her admi-
ration for the man who gunned
down one of the countrys few
late-term abortion providers is
revealing the unwavering sup-
port a small group of radical
anti-abortion activists has for the
imprisoned killer despite an on-
going federal investigation into
the 2009 slaying.
Tough no federal indictments
have been handed down by a
grand jury investigating whether
Dr. George Tillers death was con-
nected to a broader case involving
extreme anti-abortion activists,
the lawsuit against Angel Dillard
is one indication the Justice De-
partment is taking a more heavy
handed approach to perceived
threats to abortion providers. In
addition to alleging Dillard, of
Valley Center, sent a threatening
letter in 2011 to another Wichita
doctor who was training to ofer
abortions, the lawsuit also high-
lights Dillards relationship with
Scott Roeder, the man convicted
of fatally shooting Tiller at the
physicians church.
When Roeder opened fre on
Tiller, he propelled himself to
icon status among abortion op-
ponent extremists a status that
hasnt wavered since he was sen-
tenced to life in prison. A leader
in the Army of God, which sup-
ports violence against abortion
doctors, notes Roeder gets more
correspondence than other im-
prisoned anti-abortion activists.
Hailed by militant anti-abor-
tion forces as a prisoner of
Christ, Roeder has been spread-
ing his radical views from a Kan-
sas prison. Other extremists have
gravitated to Roeder, visiting him
in prison, sending him money
and ofering legal advice, court
documents show.
Abortion rights supporters
fear a disturbing pattern whereby
imprisoned abortion opponents
inspire others to commit further
acts of violence against abortion
providers and clinics. But radi-
cal anti-abortion activists con-
tend the government is trying to
suppress serious opposition to
abortion by targeting Dillard.
We are always concerned
when extremists are getting to-
gether and spreading hate and
encouraging others to engage in
criminal activity, said Vicki Sa-
porta, executive director of the
National Abortion Federation,
the professional association rep-
resenting abortion providers.
A federal grand jury began in-
vestigating in 2010 whether Til-
lers murder was connected to a
larger case involving radical anti-
abortion activists. Tough no
public charges have been fled, a
spokeswoman for the Justice De-
partments Civil Rights Division,
Dena Iverson, said the investiga-
tion is still open.
Te lawsuit against Dillard
was fled in April 2011 under a
federal law aimed at protecting
access to reproductive services.
It seeks a court order keeping her
from coming within 250 feet of
the doctor, along with damages
of $5,000 and a civil penalty of
$15,000. Te case is scheduled for
trial in October.
Dillard had been under gov-
ernment scrutiny even before she
mailed the letter to the Wichita
doctor, and the FBI had inter-
viewed her several times afer she
frst wrote Roeder in prison.
I think they just wanted to
check us out and make sure that
we werent nuts who were plan-
ning to pick up where they think
Roeder lef of, Dillard told Te
Associated Press in 2009, adding
that she and her husband had no
plans to do anything of violence
to anyone and wanted to minis-
ter to Roeder. Dillard also said she
admired Roeder and developed a
friendship with him.
Dillard is now claiming minis-
terial privilege in refusing to an-
swer the governments questions
about that relationship. Her attor-
ney, Donald McKinney, argued
his clients religious ministry is
protected by the First Amend-
ment. But defense flings in her
case made public jail records de-
tailing more than a dozen visits
and deposits totaling $373 she
made to Roeders inmate fund
between April 2010 and March
2012. Tose documents showed
contributions from others.
Te ongoing support for Roed-
er also is apparent in the appeal
of his murder conviction. Seven
abortion opponents who asked
in 2010 and 2011 to fle friend-
of-the-court briefs were spurned
without comment by the Kansas
Supreme Court. Other activists
are now writing legal briefs for
Roeder to fle himself, arguing
Tillers death was necessary to
defend the unborn. No oral ar-
guments are scheduled in his ap-
peal.
WHaT: Last day for 90 percent refund of
dropped classes
WHere: Strong Hall
WHen: All day
aBouT: Today is the last day to receive
90 percent refund for the classes you
dropped for the spring semester.
WHaT: Union Programs Poster Sale
WHere: Kansas Union
WHen: Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. - 5
p.m.
aBouT: In the mood to redecorate? Choose
from a wide variety of posters in this sale
hosted by Student Union Activities.
WHaT: Back to the Burge Open House
WHere: Burge Union
WHen: 10:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.
aBouT: KU Memorial Unions invites
students and staff to enjoy giveaways
and prizes at this free event. SUA will
provide cookie decorating, hot choco-
late and other activities, beginning at
2:30 p.m.
WHaT:Tuesday Nite Swing
WHere: Kansas Union
WHen: 8 p.m. - 11 p.m.
aBouT: The KU Swing Society offers free
dance lessons to the public. Improve
your East Coast, Lindy Hop, Hizzop
Lindy and Balboa dance skills. Dance
partner not required.
WHaT: Tea at Three
WHere: Kansas Union, 4th foor
WHen:3 p.m. - 4 p.m.
aBouT: Enjoy free tea and cookies,
compliments of SUA. Its bloody good.
WHaT: The Junkyard Jazz Band
WHERE: American Legion
WHEN: 7 p.m.
ABOUT: Listen to traditional jazz from
the 30s and 40s. Musicians welcome.
NEW YORK It sounds, at
first, like a bold, next-generation
solution: personalizing guns with
technology that keeps them from
firing if they ever get into the wrong
hands.
But when the White House
called for pushing ahead with such
new technology as part of President
Obamas plan to cut gun violence,
the administration did not mention
the concepts embattled past. As
with so much else in the nations
long-running divisions over gun
rights and regulation, what sounds
like a futuristic vision is, in fact, an
idea that has been kicked around
for years, sidelined by intense sus-
picion, doubts about feasibility and
pressure tactics.
Now proponents of so-called per-
sonalized or smart guns are hoping
the nations renewed attention on
firearms following the Newtown
school massacre will kick start the
research and sale of safer weapons.
But despite the Obama administra-
tions promise to encourage the
development of innovative gun
safety technology, advocates have
good reason to be wary.
In the fiery debate over guns,
personalized weapons have long
occupied particularly shaky ground
an idea criticized both by gun-
rights groups and some gun control
advocates.
To the gun groups, the idea of
using technology to control who
can fire a gun smacks of a limitation
on personal rights, particularly if it
might be mandated by government.
At the same time, some gun control
advocates worry that such technol-
ogy, by making guns appear falsely
safe, would encourage Americans
to stock up on even more weap-
ons than they already have in their
homes.
Without the politics, the notion
of using radio frequency technol-
ogy, biometric sensors or other
gadgetry in a gun capable of recog-
nizing its owner sounds like some-
thing straight out of James Bond.
In fact, it is. In the latest Bond flick,
Skyfall, Agent 007s quartermaster
passes him a 9 mm pistol coded to
his palm print.
Only you can fire it, the contact
tells the agent. Less of a random
killing machine. More of a personal
statement.
In real life, though, theres no
getting around the politics, and
the debate over personalized guns
long ago strayed well beyond ques-
tions of whether the technology
will work.
Colts Manufacturing Company
developed a gun equipped with a
microchip that would prevent it
from firing unless the user was
wearing an enabling device locat-
ed in a special wristband. But gun
rights activists were skeptical, partly
because the government was fund-
ing research of the concept and
because gun control advocates
embraced it.
Mike Bazinet, a spokesman
for the National Shooting Sports
Foundation, which represents gun
manufacturers, said questions
remain about whether the tech-
nology has been improved enough
to assure police officers and civil-
ians a personalized weapon would
fire when they need protection. But
there are also concerns about indi-
vidual consumers ability to choose
the firearm that they think is best
for them, Bazinet said.
The White House has promised
to issue a report on the technology
and award prizes to companies that
come up with innovative and cost-
effective personalized guns, and its
interest has rejuvenated hopes that
the gun of the future may actually
have one.
PAGE 3A thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN MoNDAY, JANUARY 28, 2013
From the mid-80s till the mid-90s,
camping for basketball games actu-
ally meant camping outside Allen
Fieldhouse overnight. Tents were
pitched between the Fieldhouse and
the parking garage. Brrr!!
Information based on the
Douglas County Sheriffs office
booking recap.
A 52-year-old male was arrest-
ed Saturday on the 1000 block of
New Jersey Street on suspicion of
urinating or defecating in public.
He was released on a $100 bond.
A 19-year-old male was ar-
rested Saturday on the 4700 block
of Briarwood Drive on suspicion of
unlawful use of a drivers license
and of possession, purchase or
consumption of alcohol by a minor.
He was released on a $200 bond.
A 24-year-old male was ar-
rested yesterday on the 600 block
of Michigan Street on suspicion of
escape from custody and unlawful
damage of property estimated at
$250. No bond was set.
A 26-year-old female was ar-
rested yesterday on the 1200
block 27th Street on suspicion of
no proof of liability insurance, re-
fusing testing and driving while
intoxicated. She was released on a
$1,250 bond.
A 25-year-old male was ar-
rested yesterday on the 6100 block
of Howe Drive on suspicion of re-
fusing testing and driving while
intoxicated. He was released on a
$750 bond.
Emily Donovan

police reporTS

cAMpuS
open house event to
recognize Frank Burge
The Burge union is celebrating the
legacy of former Ku Memorial unions
director Frank Burge with Back to the
Burge open House on Tuesday.
The open house starts at 10:30 a.m.
and is free and open for anyone to at-
tend.
There will be a drawing for prizes,
including an Hp Netbook and gift cards.
Ku information Technologys collab will
be featuring the new cisco Telepresence
system. The system provides an en-
hanced video conference experience.
Student union Activities will be of-
fering hot cocoa, cookie decorating and
other activities from 2:30 to 4:30 on
the third level. The main activities of
the open house end at 4:30, but at 7:30
p.m., there will be a free screening of the
flm The perks of Being a Wallfower in
the Gridiron room located on level one.
Frank Burge was the director of Ku
Memorial unions for 32 years. The Satel-
lite union (which opened in 1980) was
offcially named the Burge union in
1983.
Jenna Jakowatz
cAMpuS
human traffcking talk
to be held at University
The university will host a conference
about human traffcking on Thursday.
The offce of the chancellor, Gov. Sam
Brownback, the School of law, the offce
of Graduate Military programs and the
Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies
Department all host this event.
The conference will begin at 7:30
p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium with a
keynote speech by Kevin Bales. it will
continue on Friday and include group
discussions.
This has been going on for decades
but more so now because its now more
pervasive, said Hannah Britton, direc-
tor of the center for international politi-
cal Analysis. Theres been more focus
and attention from world leaders and
the state level.
Britton said human traffcking is one
of Brownbacks key issues. According to
a recent news release, Brownback an-
nounced that he will ask the legislature
to strengthen Kansas human traffcking
statutes.
Ku is in a very good position to deal
with this both domestically and interna-
tionally, Britton said. We have a rich
history as a free state and today Ku has
signifcant research in migration and
equality and social justice so because of
this, it lets us do international research
as well.
Elly Grimm
CoNtRIBUtED Photo
Gov. Sam Brownback will host a conference at the university about human traffck-
ing on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. Brownback announced that
the legislature will try to strengthen the states human traffcking statutes.
TecHNoloGy
Smart gun triggers debate
ASSoCIAtED PRESS
This photo provided by the New Jersey institute of Technology shows a 9 mm semi-automatic handgun confgured with
transducers to its handle that can detect the grasp of an authorized user.
ASSoCIAtED PRESS
PAGE 4A MondAy, JAnuAry 28, 2013
O
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PoliTicS
East Asia vital to Obamas new term
Simplicity the secret to completing resolutions
liFeSTyle
UDK
cHirps
bAck
c
A
m
p
u
s
How do you feel about the
Jeff Withey Block Party video
played in Allen Fieldhouse
yesterday?
Follow us on Twitter @UDK_opinion. Tweet us your opinions,
and we just might publish them.
@SethAmott
@udK_opinion it was amazing, i wish
it was online somewhere, impossible to
explain to people who werent there.
@VaughnMiller1
@udK_opinion oU probably had 0
feels left.
I
naugural festivities concluded
last week, but any opinionat-
ed observer can point out that
President Obamas real second-
term challenges are just begin-
ning. Instead of listing looming
battles or bemoaning our political
divisions, Id like to reflect on a
situation not too different from
todays polarized political sphere.
Before supporters began trek-
king to Pennsylvania Avenue,
the North Korean government
decided to spark some fireworks
of its own by launching a satellite
into space on Dec. 12. Although
the moves news coverage couldnt
match play-by-plays of the
inaugural parade route or First
Familys wardrobe, North Korea
achieved its objective of making
waves internationally without
actually sending the Unha-3 rock-
et splashing into the ocean.
Although politicians disagree
on nearly every political ques-
tion, at least the pundits can agree
politics lacks bipartisan coopera-
tion. In fact, the Huffington Post
reported the 112th Congress
passed fewer pieces of legislation
than any other Congress since
the 1940s. Partisan divides might
seem overwhelming, but theyre
not nearly as deep as disputes
between North and South Korea.
Compromise seems impos-
sible; each side portrays itself as
the legitimate government of a
future reunified peninsula. Just
weeks before the satellite launch,
Royal United Services Institute
researcher Andrea Berger met
with North Korean military
personnel to discuss the nuclear
program; the officials all blamed
hostile U.S. policies for the
build up. In turn, South Korea
and the United States blame
North Korean provocations for
tough military postures. Like in
Washington D.C., as long as each
side can deflect responsibility it
can avoid tackling shared chal-
lenges.
Countries and political parties
cant always act in a unified way;
individuals deviate from agreed-
upon strategies. In Congress it
might be a single representative
publicly disagreeing with the
party line; in the case of Korea
it happened to be self-appointed
diplomats. In early January,
former New Mexican Gov. Bill
Richardson and Google Executive
Chairman Eric Schmidt jet-
ted to the North Korean capital
Pyongyang to meet with national
leaders. Their visit wasnt directed
by the White House foreign pol-
icy team. The State Department
described the visits timing as not
helpful, while a less diplomatic
John McCain called the gentle-
men useful idiots on Twitter.
This kind of political stunt can
dominate media commentary
and prompt equally dramatic
responses, so skilled politicians
must ensure the broader dialogue
remains on track.
Thats easier said than done, as
journalists and politicians often
magnify the potential downside
of any particular event. Just
observe negotiations building to
a crescendo as a new deadline
looms. Some analysts predicted
the North Korean satellite launch
would immediately destabilize
East Asia while South Korea,
Japan, China and the United
States conducted power tran-
sitions. However, the Global
Security Newswire interviewed
experts who concluded that
North Korea did not yet repre-
sent a credible threat. One even
described the Unha technology
as a baby satellite launcher.
Viewing challenges realistically
can allow leaders to resist inflam-
matory rhetoric and frankly come
to agreement about what should
be done.
Of course, we assume our lead-
ers inform themselves to under-
stand the underlying structures
that endanger political projects
of motivate international actors.
Chinese support remains essential
to the success of Kim Jong-Un
and the North Korean state.
Chinese economic assistance and
trade props up the North Korean
economy, and Chinas global sta-
tus can shield North Korea from
international pressure. Absent
Chinese cooperation, leaders
cannot expect success engaging
or sanctioning the North Korean
regime. In the past this coopera-
tion between the United States
and China has been notably
absent.
If one understands that basic
reality, then the news that
emerged as the Obamas attended
their Inaugural Ball becomes
incredibly significant in the con-
text of the ongoing Korean con-
flict. China and the United States
managed to agree within the
United Nations to expand sanc-
tions against North Korea. For the
first time China signaled regret
for North Koreas progression
toward nuclear weapons capabil-
ity. The U.S. and China each gave
up portions of their initial pro-
posals, but by ignoring irrelevant
political posturing and seeking
out clear understandings two
rival powers are working together
toward a common goal. So before
throwing our hands up in the
air and declaring the incoming
Congress incompetent, grid-
locked, and ultimately doomed,
keep an eye on East Asia.
The lesson? Progress can hap-
pen, even among unlikely part-
ners.
Gress is a sophomore majoring in
political science and economics from
Overland Park.
T
he typical New Year reso-
lutions of be healthier,
be happier, or get better
grades tend not to work. They
sound nice, of course, but very
quickly into the year we find out
we couldnt actually carry on with
them, and we end up not chang-
ing much of our behavior.
When we realize we havent
changed anything it is easy to
blame our lack of willpower,
or our laziness. We usually tell
ourselves we didnt work hard
enough. Thats possible. But here
is the truth: the secret to New
Year resolutions that produce
results is not to work harder, but
to make smarter resolutions.
If your New Year resolutions
always work, no need to keep
reading. But if you think you can
use some extra help, I will show
you a way of fixing the problem.
All we need are two simple rules.
These two rules are based on
two principles thought out by a
modern-day American manage-
ment guru and an Italian sociolo-
gist and economist. The rules are
measurability and simplicity. And
if you apply them to your New
Year resolutions, I guarantee your
results will be better than they
have ever been.
The American guy is Peter
Drucker, and the principle behind
measurability is his famous
quote, what gets measured, gets
managed. So, rather than make
broad, hard-to-measure resolu-
tions, we use measurability to
make our goals clear and easy
to stick to. Here is an example:
my girlfriends resolution was to
have more energy. But, damn,
that is a broad goal. To make
it measurable, she focused on
what changes she could make to
have more energy. Those boiled
down to sleep, exercise and eating
healthy. Because she does most
of the healthy hippie stuff you are
supposed to do (daily yoga, eat-
ing vegetarian and whatnot), she
decided she would specify the res-
olution to sleep more. Definitely
a smarter resolution. But to make
it truly measurable, she changed
it to be in bed at 10 p.m. on
weekdays. Bingo! The resolution
is now specific and measurable.
She is already sleeping more, and
wakes up with more energy.
Measurability is a pretty good
rule. But when we are making
very specific goals, it is easy to
choose a lot of them, and make
it complex. For instance, my girl-
friend could have decided to go
to bed at 10 p.m., exercise twice
a day, eat healthier foods, and do
more yoga. The problem is: there
are a heck of lot of goals to keep
track of. And when we are over-
whelmed with a complex resolu-
tion, lack of simplicity quickly
becomes lack of action. So we use
another rule to power-up measur-
ability.
This second rule is simplicity.
To simplify our resolutions, we
use the help of the Italian econo-
mist Vilfredo Pareto. He is the
guy who came up with the Pareto
Law, which states that 80 percent
of results come from 20 percent
of the causes. This tends to hold
true in economics (80 percent of
the wealth is owned by roughly
20 percent of the individuals),
but also in our personal life (80
percent of the fun is packed in 20
percent of the days, or 80 percent
of the homework is given by 20
percent of the teachers). Using
the Pareto Law and the measur-
ability principle we can transform
our broad, difficult resolutions in
a handful of specific and simple
goals. Here is an example on how
you can do it.
I have been reading a lot of
Buddhist texts recently, and
decided I could use some extra
positivity in my life. My ini-
tial resolution was to be more
positive. I am sure you can see
the problem with it: too broad,
yet too complex at the same
time. Because I tend to be pretty
positive about myself (you know,
I buy into a lot of that I am awe-
some self-help stuff), I decided
to be more specific on the goal.
So I changed it to only say posi-
tive things about other people.
Cool: much more specific. I still
needed to simplify it, though. So
I decided to give away a dollar to
the person I am talking to every
time I say something negative
about anyone. Sweet: specific,
measurable and simple resolution.
After some time, you start see-
ing the beauty of the Pareto Law.
Just a few weeks after starting
the resolution I have lost some
money, of course, but I have also
held my tongue many times to
not talk smack on other people
(including basketball players
playing against us), and noticed
an overall increase in positiv-
ity. Changing this simple, single
behavior has made me a more
positive person overall on both
my words and thoughts.
We are about a month into the
New Year now, and most of us
have done very little towards the
resolutions we so excitedly made
not long ago. More importantly,
if we make the same kind of
resolutions we did last year, we
will invariably get the same bad
results.
Give these two rules a shot. It is
easy to try, and it just might make
your year (and maybe the years
after) a whole lot better.
Morelix is a junior majoring in busi-
ness and economics from
Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
I
read the article on which
animated sitcom is bet-
ter, Family Guy or The
Simpsons. I was shocked and
appalled. I understand everyone
has their own opinion, and I
respect that. However, you have
no idea what you are talking
about. Let me show you why that
is not an opinion, but a fact. Let
me assess what I gathered from
your article.
First, you note the similarities
between the families, which are
comprised of a good mother, an
alcoholic father, two older chil-
dren, and a baby. Let the record
show, the babys name is Maggie,
not Lisa. Lisa is one of the two
older children who are actually
in elementary school. Second,
you say Family Guy is more
clever and originalit catches
the attention of the sitcoms
target audience, which is clearly
adult humor. Primarily, adult
humor is not an audience, its a
style of humor directed towards
young adult males, such as your-
self. Secondly, if it werent for
The Simpsons, Family Guy
wouldnt exist. It was one of the
first ever prime-time animated
sitcoms, and it paved the way
for others. The Simpsons uses
humor based off cultural refer-
ences ranging from music, TV,
and movies to science, literature,
and history. It encompasses all
audiences.
Whether you are smart or
dumb, young or old, American
or not, The Simpsons is funny.
Thats what makes it a better
sitcom.
Third, you say that the creators
of Family Guy are more suc-
cessful. Seth MacFarlane has
three shows, and one film.
Matt Groening, whom your
article fails to mention, has
two shows, at least one movie,
and twelve Emmys, (ten from
The Simpsons and two from
Futurama) while MacFarlane
has two. The Simpsons has 27
and Family Guy has four.
You dont have to like the
show, but learn to respect it,
because its probably one of the
greatest shows ever.
Glenn Schongar is a sophomore
from Lenexa.
i wish the Hawk sold snacks...
its not who you want to spend Friday
night with, its who you want to spend all
day Saturday with.
its not even fair to make fun of the
lolakers anymore.
Be careful looking like a woolly mam-
moth ladies. A biology major might try to
capture, cage and study you to death
My teacher is talking about vitamin D
and keeps referring to it as getting the
D. i cant stop smirking.
Tell me again about how banning
assault weapons will work because
criminals hate to break the law...
its so great to meet someone who
isnt afraid to pee on themselves a little
bit these days.
For those of you that did not receive
one today: Good morning, i hope you
have an amazing day! Dont forget to
smile! :)
ladies of KU: it is 14 degrees outside.
PleASe WeAR ReAl PANTS.
My family has a boat. i can wear boat
shoes whenever i please.
Too bad the catch of the week isnt
actually single.
Dude, why would you not want a
coupon book?
As a paleontologist, i fnd woolly
mammoths sexy.
Have you ever hung up your backpack
on a hook in the restroom and it was so
heavy the hook broke? yeah, that just
happened.
last semester of senior year. Not
going to lie, im really going to miss you
editor! Editors Note: :(
can somebody please restart the
letters at the basketball games?
it is infnitely harder to hook up when
you dont drink...
Pop Up Video is good, but i also miss
This or That. Bring it back to AFH!
Sometimes i wonder who cleans up
all the newspaper in Allen, but then i
remember that Phogs ghost just blows
it away.
Who thinks having Morgan Freeman
announce a KU game would be an awe-
some idea!?!?!?
Why is it that the later i leave for
class the longer it takes me to get there?
Man, im starting to het a hang of this
college thing! Editors Note: Except the
spelling part.
The three guys still saying chiefs
during the national anthem... seriously?
Stop.
Freshman quote of the week: yeah the
hawk was awesome last night
The only thing worse than a frat pack
is a sor squad. Their like frat packs, but
catty and critical of the fashion sense of
those around them.
By Amanda Gress
agress@kansan.com
By Arnobio Morelix
amorelix@kansan.com
@pearsonaaronj
@udK_opinion A-mazing!! id
RSVP. Bill was great as always
too!.
LETTEr EdITor
To THe
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
elise farrington, business manager
efarrington@kansan.com
Jacob snider, sales manager
jsnider@kansan.com
malcolm Gibson, general manager and news
adviser
mgibson@kansan.com
Jon schlitt, sales and marketing adviser
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.
Monday, January 28, 2013 Page 5a
HOROSCOPES
Because the stars
know things we dont.
Crossword
sudoku
Television
CrypToquip
MusiC
Television
check out
the answers
http://bit.ly/14ogmum
E
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
entertainment
aries (March 21-april 19)
today is a 9
Back to work, big time, especially
for the next phase. Maintain
objectivity. And ignore fear, or at
least use it to your advantage.
There will be resistance, and
youll be stronger for it.
taurus (april 20-May 20)
today is a 9
Be cautious where others are
impetuous. your creativity helps
you solve the problem. youre
entering a cuddly phase. Things
fall together for you today and
tomorrow.
gemini (May 21-June 20)
today is an 8
The next few days are good for
domestic projects, but dont rush
into making choices. double-
check data and make sure a
partner agrees. Compassion goes
a long way.
cancer (June 21-July 22)
today is a 7
youre even smarter than usual.
you may have to decline an
invitation, but consider your de-
cision carefully first. Take future
appreciation into account.
Leo (July 23-aug. 22)
today is a 9
reconsider a risky move, espe-
cially around finances. resist the
urge to break things, no matter
how justified you feel, and end
up on top. Take deep breaths,
often.
Virgo (aug. 23-sept. 22)
today is a 6
Assertiveness works well now,
but be patient. it works here to
have low expectations. let your-
self be surprised. Make a travel
or educational plan that fits the
budget.
Libra (sept. 23-oct. 22)
today is an 8
Too many choices can overwhelm
and even paralyze. dont stress
about getting the decision right.
Trust your intuition, and give
yourself permission to change
your mind. Be careful traveling
now.
scorpio (oct. 23-nov. 21)
today is an 8
The task ahead seems challeng-
ing and maybe even impossible,
but you can handle it with a little
help from your friends. Consider
family opinions, too.
sagittarius (nov. 22-dec. 21)
today is an 8
open communication and risk-
taking produces better results. if
at first you fail, be patient. youll
get there soon enough. Tinkering
is required. Be nice to everyone
to avoid jealousies.
capricorn (dec. 22-Jan. 19)
today is a 6
As you travel the twisty road,
look into the distance to see
obstacles ahead. save out some
for unexpected expenses. A rebel-
lion flares and your direction may
change.
aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
today is an 8
dont buy trash; itd be a waste
of money. invest instead in ideas
that make the world a better
place. plant a seed through dia-
logue. youll figure out the costs.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
today is a 7
Family matters vie with work for
your attention. At the end, your
relationships count double. see
that your actions support your
environment in the long run. Add
love.
performers announced for
new orleans Jazz Festival
MccLatchy tribune
Television favorites
to revisit on Netfix
brett PhiLLiPPe
bphillippe@kansan.com
With the middle of the television
season upon us, I, like many of you,
have often wondered what would
be the best way to catch up on my
favorite series. If you are behind
on shows such as Breaking Bad,
How I Met Your Mother and
many other iconic shows that are
entering their final year, Netflix
provides the best way to catch up
on your shows. With Netflix, we
have hundreds of shows that we
could re-watch, get caught up on or
even watch for the first time. The
big question to ask then is, What
should we be watching? Luckily,
I have an answer for you. I spent
my hard-earned winter break nar-
rowing it down to three shows that
you should be watching on Netflix
to get up to date in time for the new
seasons, or at the very least give
you something very entertaining to
enjoy with some friends.
1. Arrested Development: This
short-lived show, which originally
aired on Fox from 2003 to 2006,
follows the infamous Bluth family,
specifically the son Michael, as he
attempts to keep the family busi-
ness afloat and deal with his dys-
functional family. Starring Jason
Bateman, Will Arnett, Michael
Cera, and more, it is a cult favor-
ite among many, although it only
lasted a few seasons. Not only is
it ridiculously funny and well-
written, but its being revived on
Netflix for one more season start-
ing in early May. This gives you
all the more reason to either watch
it for the first time, or re-watch it
for the second or third time, like
I have.
2. Freaks and Geeks: Another
cult favorite among many, Freaks
and Geeks follows a group of high
school students in the 1980s as
they deal with relationships, drugs
and trying to fit in. What makes
this show stick out more than any-
thing is the writing and the cast.
Written and created by the now
famous Judd Appatow, Freaks and
Geeks has a star-studded cast that
includes James Franco, Seth Rogen,
Jason Segel, and even Shiah Lebouf.
Although it only lasted for one sea-
son, it did launch the careers of
some of todays biggest stars and
remains a fan favorite.
3. Firefly: The final show that
deserves mention is Firefly, anoth-
er short-lived cult hit. As a show, it
stands out because of what it did
for the careers of those involved in
the project. Directed and created by
the ever-popular Joss Whedon, who
went on to direct The Avengers, it
follows the adventures of the crew
of the spaceship Serenity almost
500 years in the future. This show
was only on for 14 episodes and
starred Nathan Fillion, but spawned
a great film that goes right along
with it, aptly titled, Serenity.
So there you go. Three great tele-
vision shows on Netflix that deserve
a watch or a re-watch, especially
if you enjoy familial dysfunction,
teenage angst, and spaceships. It just
goes to show that there are great,
smart shows still out there to sink
your teeth into.
Edited by Brian Sisk
The New Orleans Jazz and
Heritage Festival announced
its lineup Thursday, and true to
its long-running standing as a
genre-spanning musical destina-
tion, its headliners should offer
something for music fans of just
about every stripe.
Stretched out across seven
days from April 26 through May
5, the festivals headliners can
read like an ADD-afflicted radio
programmers guide to hits of the
last three decades. John Mayer,
Gary Clark Jr., Dr. John, Dave
Matthews Band, Jill Scott, Billy
Joel and Calexico are among the
first weekends performers, and
the last four days are rounded out
by 2012 critical favorite Frank
Ocean along with Fleetwood
Mac, Patti Smith, Phoenix, the
Black Keys, Hall & Oates, Willie
Nelson and the Mavericks.
Naturally, jazz fans also have
a fair amount of music to antici-
pate as well with headliners that
include Joshua Redman, Roy
Ayers, Trombone Shorty and
Orleans Avenue, George Benson,
the Dirty Dozen Brass Band,
Galactic, Terence Blanchard,
Nicholas Payton and jazz legend
Wayne Shorter, who is releasing
a much-anticipated new album
next month.
The lineup also includes a
sprawling roster of acts steeped
in the citys signature mix of
zydeco, funk and R&B, along
with an array of musical options
sure to be on offer through the
night along Frenchmen Street
and in landmark venues such as
Tipitinas.
Tickets as well as the full lineup
are available at the festivals web-
site: http://www.nojazzfest.com/
dr. Phil to interview
hoaxer in teo ruse
new york dr. phil McGraw has
booked the frst on-camera interview
with the man who allegedly concocted
the girlfriend hoax that ensnared notre
dame football star Manti Teo.
A dr. phil show spokesperson
confrmed on Friday the interview with
ronaiah Tuiasosopo, the man accused
of creating an online persona of a non-
existent woman who Teo said he fell
for without ever meeting face-to-face.
The ruse was uncovered last week
by deadspin.com, which reported
that Tuiasosopo created the woman,
named lennay kekua, who then sup-
posedly died last september.
no further details of the dr. phil
interview, including its air date, were
announced.
This interview follows the frst on-
camera interview with Teo conducted
this week by katie Couric.
Associated Press
Monday, January 28, 2013 PaGE 6a thE unIVErSIty daILy KanSan
Sum 41 has been pushing
musical limitations since 1996.
Tonight, students have the chance
to witness this firsthand at The
Granada, where the punk rock
group will perform.
The tour is a celebration of the
albums 10th anniversary. The set
list will honor all of their biggest
hits and fan favorites.
Brianna Brown, a freshman
from Leawood, is a longtime fan
of the group.
Its pretty exciting that a band
from a while back is on tour
again and has found its way to
Lawrence, said Brown. Other
students share in the nostalgia
that the bands biggest hits such
as, In Too Deep, Fat Lip, and
With Me, bring to them.
The group hails from Ontario,
and consists of frontman Deryck
Whibley (vocals/guitar), Cone
McCaslin (bass), Steve Jocz
(drums) and Tom Thacker (gui-
tar). While these four have cer-
tainly experienced a lot together
over the years such as sell-
ing more than 12 million albums
and touring the globe numerous
times other career highlights
include collaborations with Iggy
Pop, Ludacris, Tommy Lee, Rob
Halford and Tenacious D.
Aside from these accomplish-
ments, Whibley spoke of the
importance of touring on the
bands official site bio saying, All
weve ever tried to do is play
better live. Its what makes us a
band. He went on to say after 12
years of touring, we have contin-
ued to improve.
Sum 41 is known for putting
on incredible live shows that draw
from their metal and punk rock
influences, but the band has also
acquired a reputation for having
high-energy and wild attitudes
off stage as well. The members
each support this reputation.
Were best friends, we love to
play music. And we also happen
to be idiots. This hasnt changed
since high school, Jocz said on
the bands website.
The show starts at 8 p.m and is
open to all ages. Tickets are $22.
Edited by Brian Sisk
Monday, January 28, 2013 PaGE 7a thE unIVErSIty daILy KanSan
A
fter four months of ram-
pant speculation and cor-
porate Jedi mind tricks,
Disneys search for the new Star
Wars filmmaker ended with a
choice that seemed both surpris-
ing and curiously inevitable. J.J.
Abrams, the MacGuffin-loving
creative force behind Super 8 and
the small-screen sci-fi hits Lost
and Fringe, has officially been
entrusted with returning audiences
to a galaxy far, far away by 2015.
In retrospect, the identity of
the Chosen One should have been
obvious. After all, Abrams, who
directed 2009s Star Trek and its
forthcoming sequel Star Trek: Into
Darkness for Paramount, has a
proven track record when it comes
to resuscitating dormant fran-
chises. Even hardcore Trekkies will
admit that the series had fallen on
hard times, having reached an all-
time creative nadir with the release
of the poorly received Star Trek:
Nemesis in 2002, the same year
Star Wars fans were being treated
to a teenaged Anakin Skywalkers
profound dissertation on the
coarseness of sand in Attack of
the Clones.
Abrams changed all that. His
Trek reboot, the most commer-
cially and critically lauded film in
the franchises history, re-fashioned
the originals utopian vision of a
future distinguished by exploration
and interstellar cooperation into a
rollicking, action-heavy space opera
whose plot owed more allegiance to
Joseph Campbell and George Lucas
than Gene Roddenberry. Honestly,
Abrams Star Trek often felt more
like Star Wars than any of Lucas
sterile, goofy prequels (with the
exception of Revenge of the Sith,
whose merits I will always happily
defend).
The similarities dont end with
story structure. In Abrams version,
Captain Kirk (Chris Pine) is rein-
troduced as a Luke Skywalker-Han
Solo hybrid, a cocksure scoundrel
pressured to join Starfleet as a way
of measuring up to the legend of
an absent father. Zachary Quintos
seething, guilt-ridden Spock, trau-
matized by the Alderaan-style
destruction of his homeworld
Vulcan, is light-years away from
Leonard Nimoys serene, man-
nered logician, who appears for an
Obi-Wan-esque extended cameo
thanks to a space-time continuity
fluke brought on by the vengeful
Romulan Nero (Eric Bana). Theres
also a greater emphasis on the pli-
able nature of fate: You are fully
capable of deciding your own des-
tiny, Spocks father tells him. The
question you face is: which path
will you choose? Sound familiar,
this does?
For Abrams, an avowed Star
Wars fanboy since childhood
(even his earliest films are littered
with TIE Fighter models and refer-
ences galore), the temptation to
blend mythologies was probably
too much to resist. Star Trek: Into
Darkness, scheduled for release
this May, looks to continue the
comparisons by channeling The
Empire Strikes Back and its legacy
of dark revelations, deeper charac-
terizations and higher emotional
stakes. Want proof? Look no fur-
ther than the newest trailer, where
Benedict Cumberbatchs mysteri-
ous villain John Harrison unleash-
es a Sith-worthy swathe of destruc-
tion on Starfleet Headquarters
before cryptically referring to the
Enterprise crew as his family.
So the question remains: what
can we expect from a Star Wars
directed by J.J. Abrams? Many fans
have expressed their fear that the
new film, still tentatively titled
Episode VII, will look and sound
too much like the recent Trek
movies, effectively blurring the
lines of demarcation between the
two most contentious camps in all
of pop culture.
As for me, I just hope the new
movie manages to produce a
sequence as intense and grandly
moving as the opening scene of
Abrams first Star Trek, where
Kirks father George (a pre-Thor
Chris Hemsworth) heroically
sacrifices himself in battle while
allowing his wife to give birth to
the future Captain. With acclaimed
screenwriter Michael Arndt (Little
Miss Sunshine, Toy Story 3) pen-
ning the Episode VII script, such
poignancy seems very likely. Could
a similar end be lying in wait for an
aging Han Solo?
For some, though, the choice to
identify as a Star Trek or Star
Wars fan is comparable to choos-
ing between the Beatles and the
Rolling Stones; your answer speaks
volumes about who you are as a per-
son. Taken from this perspective,
Abrams decision to leave Trek
for its rival franchise is exciting but
also inherently reckless; a develop-
ment guaranteed to court chaos
and rouse the slumbering ire of the
geek gods, Cabin in the Woods
style. Dont be surprised if we soon
hear tell of an Ewok born with the
pointed ears of a Vulcan.
Edited by Brian Sisk
Film
events
Why director J.J. Abrams
reached for the Star Wars
Photo by GEtty IMaGES
Disney has tapped flmmaker J.J. Abrams (star trek, super 8) to direct the frst installment of the new star Wars trilogy.
Photo by MCCLatChy trIbunE
sum 41 at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards at the staples Center in los Angeles, California, on Feb. 12, 2012.
By Landon McDonald
lmcdonald@kansan.com
A$AP Rocky rises to potential
with frst full-length album
Famed punk rockers sum 41
perform tonight at the Granada
Over the past year and a half
A$AP Rocky has become one
of the biggest name in rap. In
October of 2011 A$AP Rocky
released his stellar debut mix-
tape Live.Love.A$AP. The great
success of the mixtape led to his
eventual $3 million deal with
RCA. After several release date
push backs, A$AP Rocky finally
delivers his first piece of full
-length album material.
One of the biggest draws to
Live.Love.A$AP was the great
production throughout the
album. For the most part, Long.
Live.A$AP doesnt disappoint
when it comes to production.
A$AP Rocky has quite the ear
for beats, and it shows on this
album.
Rocky connects with longtime
collaborator Clams Casino on a
couple of tracks. He also hooks
up with new producers as well
as producing a few tracks him-
self. The only major flaw in pro-
duction is the track Wild for
the Night produced by Skrillex.
In the track, Skrillex brings his
signature dubstep sound while
Rocky sounds incredibly awk-
ward rhyming over the beat.
A$AP Rocky sticks with his
signature style of a mixture of
southern rap and traditional
New York rap, but he improves
on it in nearly every way. A$AP
Rocky isnt known as the most
impressive lyricist out there, but
he impresses on several tracks
on the album, such Phoenix,
Suddenly and the title track,
Long.Live.A$AP.
Long.Live.A$AP also con-
tains some pretty impressive fea-
tures. A$AP Rocky works with
a wide range of artists on the
album, including frequent collab-
orator Schoolboy Q. A$AP Rocky
and Schoolboy have great chem-
istry and it shows on PMW.
The album also has a fantastic
star-studded track which features
several artists including Kendrick
Lamar, Yelawolf and Danny
Brown.
Long.Live.A$AP is a great
album, with A$AP Rocky capital-
izing on the potential and promise
he showed in his first mixtape.

Edited by Brian Sisk


ryan WrIGht
rwright@kansan.com
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lhavens@kansan.com
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
Volume 125 Issue 63 kansan.com Monday, January 28, 2013
COMMENTARY
By Ryan McCarthy
rmccarthy@kansan.com
rebound regret
Physical game
looms tonight
Jayhawks struggle against high-powered Oklahoma State offense
Jayhawks make frst
trip to Morgantown
ryan MCCarthy
rmccarthy@kansan.com
kanSaS 52, OklahOma State 65
menS baSketball
PAGE 4B
Get ready for
game day
tyler roste/Kansan
Freshman guard ben mclemore fies through the air to make a layup. mclemore was a huge
part of the victory over Oklahoma on Saturday, keeping the Jayhawks winning streak alive.
Max goodwin
mgoodwin@kansan.com
PAGE 3B
Track team
dominates at
fnal indoor
meet
F
or a team that might be No.
1 in the country Monday,
the Kansas Jayhawks didnt
look the part after Saturdays win
against Oklahoma.
Senior center Jeff Withey pon-
dered his impressive performance
with his chin resting on his hand.
Freshman guard Ben
McLemore had the same look
he always has on his young face,
occasionally cracking his now sig-
nature smile.
Then there was senior guard
Elijah Johnson.
From the tone of his voice and
his body language, he seemed dis-
couraged after his four turnovers.
In the first half of the game,
both Johnson and sophomore
guard Naadir Tharpe seemed to
have difficulty bringing the ball up
the court.
Oklahomas pressure was
nothing new, but the guards still
couldnt handle it.
Kansas has obvious problems
that need taken care of offensively,
but the team still showed some
crucial tenants of defense that will
help keep them alive the rest of
the season.
Kansas held Oklahoma to its
lowest scoring half of the season
with 21 points.
The Jayhawks held the Sooners
to 35.6 percent shooting for the
game.
And the most important point
for the Kansas defense is that it
has Jeff Withey. Nobody else in
the country has Jeff Withey.
Hes a unique player in not
only our league, but (all of) college
basketball in terms of the fact that
you dont play against those types
of players that often, Oklahoma
coach Lon Kruger said. He erases
any mistakes on the perimeter,
plus he guards his own guy inside.
Heres that last line again: He
erases any mistakes on the perim-
eter, plus he guards his own guy
inside.
Thats not a quality many big
men in college basketball have in
their arsenal.
Witheys a distinctive, athletic
talent that will help guide Kansas
through its difficult lows.
So now this team is getting
used to the idea of being No. 1
while going into uncharted ter-
ritories.
The Jayhawks move on to their
next opponent in Morgantown,
W.Va.
Its a place the Kansas basket-
ball team has not yet played.
However, an adversary Coach
Self is familiar with in West
Virginia coach Bob Huggins.
The Huggy Bears squad will
come out playing fast and desper-
ately; it needs a win to even think
about the NIT.
The Mountaineers know one of
the ways they can do that is pull
off a big upset against one of the
top teams in the country.
Itll be a very physical game,
probably one of the more physical
games that well play this year,
Self said on Saturday.
But at the moment, theres a
consensus among the Kansas play-
ers and coach. They dont care
about being No. 1 in late January.
Self takes it a step further when
asked about being the No. 1 team.
No. Nor are we deserving.
You know somebodys got to be it
though.
Edited by Tara Bryant
Kansas has now played seven
games of its 18-game Big 12
regular season schedule. Every
game is just as important as the
last, or next, to the standings.
But the 65-52 loss that Kansas
suffered to No. 12 Oklahoma
State at Allen Fieldhouse on
Saturday night seemed to have
an extra sense of importance for
the Jayhawks going in. The two
teams entered the matchup tied
in the Big 12
standings.
For Bonnie
He nr i cks on,
the 14-point
loss that her
team suffered
on the road
to Oklahoma
State on Jan. 8
was the most
disappointing
of the season, she said the day
before her team dropped another
game to the Cowgirls, this time
by 13 in a loss that was perhaps
even more frustrating.
Kansas coaches had a plan on
how to stop the high-powered
OSU offense, and the players
executed for the most part. The
problem was the 12 offensive
rebounds the Jayhawks allowed
after OSU misses.
We knew their sets, senior
point guard Angel Goodrich
said. And we stopped their sets,
but it was just them getting the
second chance shots, the third
chance shots. They were getting
multiple possessions.
On offense, Kansas struggled
to get its post players shots
against the 2-3 zone defense of
Oklahoma State. Kansas had
fewer shot opportunities because
of its rebounding disadvantage,
but also wasted more posses-
sions with turnovers.
Basketball is a game of pos-
sessions, Henrickson said after
her team committed 18 turn-
overs against the zone defense.
Some of those were forced, but
most of them were unforced.
This sea-
son was sup-
posed to be a
special one for
the womens
b a s k e t b a l l
program at
Kansas. The
J a y h a w k s
returned all
but one player
from the team that reached the
Sweet 16 of the NCAA tourna-
ment last season, and Carolyn
Davis was returning from a torn
ACL.
Bonnie Henrickson finally
reached an NCAA tournament
last season. The Jayhawks began
the season with a mix of young
talent, senior leadership and
tournament experience.
With that in mind, this team
was just not supposed to go on
losing stretches of 1-4 in the Big
12 this season.
Kansas has played passively
and without toughness at times
in losing four of its last five
games. Now the Jayhawks risk
watching their chances at mak-
ing a repeat run in the NCAA
tournament fade away if they
cant get back on track against
Iowa State and Kansas State in
the next week.
After that, Kansas travels to
Baylor, where a victory is as close
to impossible as they get.
The disappointment was audi-
ble through the voice of Angel
Goodrich as she spoke to the
media after the loss to Oklahoma
State.
I just think we werent as
aggressive as they were, Angel
Goodrich said. We were pas-
sive.
Passive?
That is why this loss, in
January against a .500 Big 12
team, was so disappointing.
One loss over the course of
an 18-game Big 12 schedule is
not the disappointment; its that
a team with such high expecta-
tions and abilities could not play
aggressively in one of its biggest
games of the regular season.
Kansas drops its record to 12-6
on the season and 3-4 in the Big
12 in a game that unraveled a tie
in the standings, but has only left
more tangled questions about
the recent losing stride for the
Jayhawks.
Edited by Pat Strathman

I just think we werent as


aggressive as they were.
We were passive.
angel gOOdrIch
senior guard
tara bryant/Kansan
Sophomore forward chelsea gardner jumps forward to block an Oklahoma State players
shot. gardner had four blocks in Saturdays game.
Its Kansas frst ever game
against West Virginia at 8 p.m.
tonight in Morgantown consist-
ing of a team thats struggling a
new conference.
However, its still not a team
that the Jayhawks will take
lightly, despite the Mountaineers
record of 9-10 and 2-4 in Big 12
play.
We know that theyre a tough
team, senior guard Travis Rel-
eford said. We know that they
play hard and going up there is
always hard on the road. Itll be
a fun game we just go to came
ready to play.
Afer making fve straight
NCAA tournament appearances,
West Virginia head coach Bob
Huggins has struggled to fnd
ofensive consistency, but that
doesnt mean his team wont put
out a maximum efort.
Huggins is also 0-4 all-time
against Kansas in more than 30
years of coaching.
Itll be a very physical game,
probably one of the more physi-
cal games well play this year,
Kansas coach Bill Self said. Well
have to play a little bit tougher
than we did [Saturday].
Self also described West Vir-
ginia as a team that will play fast
and drive the ball to the basket.
He also said the Jayhawks need
to be able to move the ball in
transition.
For the Kansas players, they
know despite the difculties of
West Virginia, going into WVU
Coliseum will be a new oppor-
tunity.
We know that theyre a tough
team, Releford said. We know
that they play hard and going up
there is always hard on the road.
Itll be a fun game we just go to
came ready to play.
Releford has played many Big
Monday games, but hes never
traveled this far of a distance in
conference play.
I dont think it will feel like a
Big 12 game because its the frst
time weve been there, Releford
said. Of course its going to feel
a little diferent, but weve just
got to be ready no matter where
its at or how quick the turn-
around.
Most Jayhawks fans are con-
cerned with the team's struggling
ofense. Shooting 43.6 percent
against Oklahoma, including
some rough point guard play in
the frst half, the Jayhawks must
rely on being one of the best de-
fensive teams in the country.
Our team has got to be a great
defensive team to win games,
Releford said. It creates easy
baskets for us on the ofensive
end. We knew coming into this
season we were going to have
time where we struggled to score
and if we get the other team to
do the same thing. We rely a lot
on our defense.
One player who continues to
struggle is senior guard Elijah
Johnson, who is still searching
for his stroke this season. He did
hit two of his six three-pointers
against Oklahoma.
Were supporting him and
coach is keep telling him to keep
shooting, Releford said. He
hasnt done anything diferent or
changed anything.
With all these concerns about
ofense and the difculty of trav-
eling to a new road destination,
being ranked at the top of the
polls is farthest from the team's
mind going into tonight's game.
"Being No. 1 right now, this
early in the season, does not
matter, Releford said. We're
just focused onto the next game.
We're not really worried about
who's going to be No. 1 Monday.
We're just trying to get better as
a team."
Edited by Brian Sisk
!
?
Q: There have been 66 champion-
ships throughout the history of the
NBA. How many do the Lakers and
Celtics have combined?
A: 33.

ESPN.com
TriviA of The dAy

Im sick of hearing about all the


negative stuff. Its a big problem.
Negativity is just not good.
Dwight Howard, ESPN.com
The Lakers are 12-3 this season
when Kobe Bryant takes 19 or fewer
shots, but 6-22 when he takes 20
or more.
ESPN.com
fAcT of The dAy
The MorNiNG BreW
QuoTe of The dAy
This week in athletics
Tuesday Wednesday Saturday Friday Sunday Thursday Monday
Two classic franchises struggle to maintain success
O
ne of the hardest things to do in
life is to be successful. Whats
even more difficult is to main-
tain the success that everyone expects
you to have. As we near the halfway
mark of the NBA season, it seems like the
traditional superpowers of the league are
no longer powerful. The recent struggles
of the Boston Celtics and season-long
obstacles the Los Angeles Lakers are try-
ing to overcome put these two historically
successful franchises in a position that
many of us do not usually see.
Time is not on the Celtics side; the
roster is aging. The team must figure out
a way to get back to the winning tradi-
tion it is used to seeing before it is too
late. The NBA trade deadline is Feb. 21,
and that may be the only option for them.
However, they have no one on their ros-
ter they can trade.
Paul Pierce is likely going to retire as
a Celtic and Kevin Garnett is really the
only significant big man on the team, so
they cannot be traded. The only person
the Celtics could realistically trade is
Rajon Rondo, but he is one of the best
point guards in the league, provides the
youth this team needs and just tore his
ACL on Friday.
As far as the Lakers are concerned,
they are certainly not looking any better
than the Celtics. Looking at their roster
on paper, one would think they have the
best team in the league. Sadly though,
the game is played on the hardwood and
not on paper. Entering Sundays game
with a dismal record of 18-25, the Lakers
have played the entire season without
excitement. Its a team that looks like it
doesnt want to win.
To say the Lakers are having a disap-
pointing season would be an understate-
ment, as talks about trading Pau Gasol
are circulating again. The problem with
that is if Dwight Howard decides to leave
after this season, then they will be short
on big men. So, do you trade Howard
so he doesnt leave the team for free? But
how could you trade someone that could
potentially be handed the torch from
Kobe Bryant?
There are many questions surrounding
both franchises as the second half of the
season is approaching, but there arent
enough answers. The unfortunate thing
about the situation both teams face is
this: All dynasties come to an end.
Edited by Allison Hammond
By Ryan Levine
rlevine@kansan.com
vs. West Virgina
8 p.m.
Morgantown, W. Va.
Mens basketball
vs. Iowa State
7 p.m.
Lawrence
vs. Arkansas
10 a.m.
Lawrence
vs. Kansas State
2 p.m.
Manhattan, KS
vs. Oklahoma State
3 p.m.
Lawrence
vs. Saint Louis
12 p.m.
Lawrence
Denver
3 p.m.
Lawrence
Armory Collegiate
Invitational
All Day
New York, N.Y.
Armory Collegiate
Invitational
All Day
New York, N.Y.
Womens basketball Womens Swimming
Womens basketball
Mens basketball
Womens Tennis Womens Tennis
Track
Track
No Events Scheduled No Events Scheduled
NBA
Celtics overcome Rondo injury to beat Heat in overtime
AssociATed Press
BOSTON Paul Pierce hit a
go-ahead jumper with 31 seconds
lef and the Boston Celtics beat
the Miami Heat 100-98 in double
overtime Sunday afer learning
that All-Star point guard Rajon
Rondo will miss the rest of the
season with a knee injury.
Rondo will have surgery for a
torn anterior cruciate ligament in
his right knee. He was hurt late in
Bostons 123-111 loss, also in two
overtimes, to the Atlanta Hawks
on Friday night.
Tis game was the frst in Bos-
ton for Ray Allen since he lef
the Celtics afer fve seasons and
signed as a free agent with Miami.
He scored 21 points.
Kevin Garnett had 24 points
and 11 rebounds, and Pierce add-
ed 17 points, 13 rebounds and 10
assists for the Celtics, who ended
a six-game losing streak, their lon-
gest in six seasons. LeBron James
had 34 points for the Heat, whose
winning streak stopped at four.
Pierces basket gave the Celtics
a 99-98 lead. James had a chance
to put the Heat ahead but missed a
12-foot jumper with 6.8 seconds to
go from the lef with defender Jef
Green jumping out at him. Pierce
got the rebound and was fouled by
Shane Battier.
He sank the frst shot. Ten, as a
fan shouted Tis ones for Rondo,
he missed the second.
Miami had one last chance, but
Battier missed a long jumper at the
buzzer.
Te Heat also could have won
in the frst overtime, but Dwyane
Wade, who had 17 points, also
missed a long jumper as the buzzer
sounded. Tey had led 93-89 afer
consecutive baskets by James, but
Garnett hit a layup with 1:45 re-
maining and a shot from the right
baseline with 1:14 to go.
Boston could have avoided the
frst overtime when Pierce in-
bounded from behind his back-
board with two seconds lef to
Jason Terry. But Terrys shot from
the top of the key was short. Te
Heat had tied it on a 3-pointer
by James with seven seconds re-
maining in regulation afer Allen
missed a 3-pointer from the lef
corner with 15 seconds to go.
Boston coach Doc Rivers did
not mention Rondos injury in his
meeting with reporters about an
hour before the game, but Court-
ney Lee started in his place. Doc-
tors decided to keep Rondo out of
the game afer he went through his
normal pregame routine, the Celt-
ics said.
Allen was part of the Big Tree
with Pierce and Garnett starting in
2007-08. In their frst season to-
gether, Boston won its 17th NBA
championship. He played against
the Celtics once before this sea-
son, a 120-107 Heat win in Miami
in the opener.
Te crowd gave Allen a stand-
ing ovation when highlights of his
career with the Celtics were shown
on the video board above center
court during a timeout with 5:33
lef in the frst quarter. At the Mi-
ami bench, he raised his lef hand
in recognition.
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AND
MoNdAy, JANuAry 28, 2013 PAGe 2B The uNiversiTy dAiLy KANsAN
PAGE 3b thE UNIVERSItY DAILY KANSAN moNDAY, jANUARY 28, 2013
Te Kansas track and feld team
faced their toughest test of the
indoor season so far when more
than forty schools attended the
Jayhawk Classic at Anschutz Pavil-
ion on Friday. Te meet featured
a morning and an evening session
for the frst time this season.
Te women had success both on
the track and in the feld. Senior
Andrea Geubelle continued to im-
press, winning the triple jump with
a jump of 13.45 meters (44-01.5
feet), her best jump of the season.
Freshman Anastasia Muchkayev
threw the shot put 55-0.75 feet,
which is less than one inch away
from the school record.
In the pentathlon, the Jayhawks
one-two punch of sophomore
Lindsey Vollmer and senior Re-
becca Neville fnished frst and
second, respectively. Vollmers
time broke the record for the pen-
tathlon. Bothathletes fnished
in the top two of each of the fve
categories: 60 meter hurdles, high
jump, shot put, long jump and 800
meters.
In the womens pole vault, ju-
nior Demi Payne continued to
shine, winning with a vault of 4.25
meters (13-11.25 feet), also her
best outing of the season. Sopho-
more Colleen OBrien continued
her success at Anschutz Pavilion
with a personal best jump of 1.77
meters (5-09.75 feet).
In the long jump, a pair of Jay-
hawks placed frst and second.
Senior Francine Simpson won the
event with a jump of 6.12 meters
(20-01.0 feet) and freshman Syd-
ney Conley followed her with a
jump of 5.90 meters (19-04.25
feet).
On the track, senior Paris Dan-
iels edged out the rest of the com-
petition in the 60 meter dash with
a time of 7.34, just 0.02 away from
the building record that she owns.
Junior Diamond Dixon held of
the competition in the 400 meters
to win with a time of 55.66.
Te womens distance medley
team won the event, as well as the
4x400 team of Daniels, Dixon, se-
nior Denesha Morris and sopho-
more Alisha Keys. Tey fnished
with a time of 3:47.37.
On the mens side, junior Bren-
dan Soucie continued his success
in the 800 meter run, winning with
a time of 1:54.49. Sophomores Mi-
chael Stigler and Kenneth McCuin
fnished second and third in the
600 yard run with times of 1:11.13
and 1:12.35, respectively.
Te Jayhawks continue to domi-
nate in middle distance races, run-
ning one-two in the 1000 meters.
Junior Josh Munsch won with a
time of 2:27.83 and sophomore
Reid Buchanan fnished behind
him in second place with a time
of 2:28.47. Freshman Evan Lan-
des won the 3000 meter run with a
time of 8:28.26, his personal best.
Te Jayhawks felded two teams
in the distance medley race and
they fnished frst and second. In
the 4x400 meter relay, the team
of Stigler, McCuin, senior Kyle
Clemons and sophomore Michael
Hester won the event with a time
of 3:16.82.
Te Jayhawk Classic was the f-
nal home indoor meet of the sea-
son. Te next time the Jayhawks
perform at home will be in the
Kansas Relays in an outdoor meet
April 17-20. As for now, Kansas
will travel to New York next week-
end for the Armory Collegiate In-
vitational.
Edited by Julie Etzler
coLIN wRIGht
cwright@kansan.com
Jayhawks fnd success in
seasons fnal indoor meet
Track PGa
bRIttANY thIESING/KANSAN
Junior middle distance runner Maddy rich competes in the womens 1000 meter run
on Friday, at the Jayhawk classic at the anschutz Sports Pavillion. rich fnished in
second with a time of 3:03.53.
Photo bY ASSocIAtED PRESS
Tiger Woods follows the fight of his drive on the second hole of the South course at Torrey Pines during the third round of the
Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament on Sunday in San Diego.
Woods sharp at Torrey Pines
despite fog over weekend
SAN DIEGO Due to the
fog that wiped out an entire day
of golf, the Farmers Insurance
Open was never going to end on
Sunday.
Tiger Woods just made it look
as if it was over.
Hands thrust in the pockets of
his rain pants, Woods walked off
Torrey Pines in the chill of twilight
with a six-shot lead and only 11
more holes standing in the way
of winning on the public course
along the Pacific Ocean for the
eighth time in his pro career.
He drove the ball with superb
control in the third round on his
way to a 3-under 69 to build a
four-shot lead after three rounds.
He lost control with his driver in
the fourth round and still man-
aged three birdies in seven holes.
All we can do tomorrow is go
out and try to make him think
about it a little bit and see what
happens, said Nick Watney, one
of two former winners at Torrey
Pines who faced the tough task
of trying to make up six shots on
Woods.
The other was defending cham-
pion Brandt Snedeker.
Ive got a guy at the top of the
leaderboard that doesnt like giv-
ing up leads, Snedeker said. So I
have to go catch him.
Woods was at 17-under par for
the tournament and will resume
his round on the par-3 eighth hole.
CBS Sports wants to televise the
Monday finish no surprise with
Woods in the lead so play wont
start until 2 p.m. EST.
Snedeker played 13 holes of the
final round. Watney played eight
holes. Both were at 11-under par.
Woods played 25 holes. He
started with a two-shot lead and
tripled it before darkness suspend-
ed the final round.
It was a long day ... and I
played well today, Woods said.
Overall, Im very pleased that I
was able to build on my lead.
Thick fog washed out all of
Saturday, forcing players to go
from sunrise to sunset Sunday.
They finished the third round,
took about 30 minutes for lunch
and went right back onto the golf
course.
Woods finished 54 holes at
14-under 202 and was four shots
ahead of Canadian rookie Brad
Fritsch. It was the 16th time in
his PGA Tour career that Woods
had a 54-hole lead of at least four
shots.
Woods has a 49-4 record on the
PGA Tour when he has at least
a share of the 54-hole lead, and
its even more daunting when the
lead is his alone. The only two
players to come from behind to
beat him over the final 18 holes
were Ed Fiori in the Quad City
Classic in 1996 when Woods was a
20-year-old rookie, and Y.E. Yang
in the 2009 PGA Championship a
Hazeltine.
ASSocIAtED PRESS
SOFTball
Senior outfelder given
marlene mawson award
kansas senior outfelder Maggie Hull
was honored with the Marlene Mawson
award Saturday evening for her perfor-
mance on the feld and her leadership in
the classroom and community.
The Marlene Mawson award Exempla-
ry Student-athlete award, presented to
a senior female
student-athlete,
is awarded by
kansas athletics
to one student-
athlete per year.
Dr. Marlene
Mawson was
appointed to a
full-time physical education position
with the duties of starting an intercol-
legiate womens athletics program in
1968.
Hull maintained a 4.0 GPa as a dou-
ble major in Journalism and Spanish. On
the feld in 2012, Hull led the big 12 with
a .409 batting average.
The Jayhawks open the 2013 season
at the Florida International Invitational
Feb. 8-10.
Trevor Graff
Hull
Follow us aT
@ uDK_sPoRTs

Eron Harris, Guard


Harris remains
the leading scorer
for the Mountain-
eers and really
one of the only
true threats to
score consistent-
ly. Harris has led
the team in scor-
ing the last three
games. Harris also has eight games in
double fgures this year, shooting 46.3
percent. Hes also averaging just fewer
than 16 points in the past four match-
ups.
WEST VIRGINIA
(9-10, 2-4)
STARTERS
KEVIN NOREEN, FORWARD
The sophomore forward from Minneapolis,
Minn. remains a small contributor to the team,
but eventually could develop into a talent for the
Mountaineers down the road. He fnished the last
game playing only nine minutes with two points.
Aaric Murray appears to the man getting the most
minutes of all the front court players, but Noreen
still provides contributions to the team.

DENZI KILICLI, FORWARD


The senior from Turkey has turned into one of the
more consistent scorers for West Virigina through-
out his career. Kiliclis claim to fame is his iconic
beard that lives in folklore of Mountaineers his-
tory, along with their mascot. Hes a player with
a unique skill set that can cause some match-up
problems against certain opponents.

ERON HARRIS, GUARD


One of the more crucial players for any of West
Virginias success this season, Harris continues to
keep West Virginia competing in games. Harris led
all Mountaineer scorers in the game against Okla-
homa State when he amassed 17 points. He also
made fve of eight 3-pointers in West Virginias
loss in Stillwater over the weekend. Harris con-
tinues to be one of the more consistent players
with a team that is struggling on the offensive
end of the foor.

GARY BROWNE, GUARD


The sophomore from Puerto Rico played 23
minutes in the game against Oklahoma State and
scored six points. This season, Browne is averag-
ing 7.1 points per game and 3.3 rebounds per
game. Browne has also played with the Puerto
Rico national team in the past and has some
experience playing against some of the top point
guards in the Big East and Big 12.

JABARIE HINDS, GUARD


A sophomore who started all 33 games last
season, Hinds continues to be one of the more
dependable players for the Mountaineers in an
otherwise diffcult transition year to a new confer-
ence. Hinds continues to be the man taking control
of West Virginia. Many people around the program
hope he can get them moving in the right direc-
tion with an improbable upset.

KANSAS
(18-1, 6-0)
STARTERS
JEFF WItHEY, CENtER
After not recording a single block against Kan-
sas State, Withey came out and registered four on
the frst half against Oklahoma. Kansas coach Bill
Self said Witheys play on defense erases mistakes
made on offense. He continues to be one of the best
players in the nation.


KEVIN YOUNG, FORWARD
Young also bounced back from a lackluster out-
ing at K-State with three steals, fve rebounds and
six points against Oklahoma. Most importantly, he
got back to his energetic ways and helped keep the
Jayhawks alive on offense.

tRAVIS RELEFORD, GUARD


Releford is the best defender on a team that has
been living off its defense for the last six games.
Not only has he shut down the oppositions best
player every game, but he has done so without get-
ting into foul trouble.

ELIJAH JOHNSON, GUARD


Conference play has not brought out the best
in Johnson. Since the start of Big 12 play, Johnson
has not had a game with more than four made feld
goals. The Jayhawks offensive woes certainly begin
with him.

BEN mCLEmORE, GUARD


There is only one thing to gripe about from
McLemores performance against Oklahoma. He
should never take only four shots in a half. McLem-
ore is the most natural scorer the Jayhawks boast
and he needs to get aggressive and start shooting
like it. But give the kid credit, he still ended up
leading Kansas with 18 points.

WEST VIRGINIA
TIpoff
No. 3* KANSAS VS. WVU
8 p.m., WVU colISEUm, moRGANToWN, WEST VIRGINIA
**RANKING AS OF PUBLICATION
KANSAS
TIpoff
Withey
Jayhawks Travel to WVU
Kansas makes their West Virginia debut
coUNTDoWN To TIpoff
GAME
DAY
Blake Schuster and Ryan mcCarthy
pREDIcTIoN
Kansas 71, WVU 64
AT A GlANcE
QUESTIoN mARK
plAyER To WATch
harris
Kansas travels to Morgantown with a
four game lead over West Virginia in the
conference standings. At the moment,
the Mountaineers are in seventh place
in a very down Big 12. There have been
reports of frustration and some diffcult
practices around Bob Huggins program
in recent weeks as they attempt to save
the season. If West Virginia can pull off
this upset it will need great defense
from all parts of the foor and will have
to make outside shots. It looks grim for
West Virginia.

can West Virginia actually pull off
the upset?
The answer to this question is yes,
because Kansas has never played in
Morgantown before. You never know
how a team will respond to a new road
environment, but Bill Selfs teams enjoy
playing on the road. West Virginia beat
a Top 3 ranked team at WVU Coliseum
when they defeated UCLA on Feb. 10,
2007. It still will be a diffcult task with
two teams struggling on the offensive
end of the foor.
AT A GlANcE
plAyER To WATch
QUESTIoN mARK
How unusual is this stretch of poor
offense for Kansas? Its the lowest fve-
game scoring stretch since the 1981-82
season. Kansas coach Bill Self likes his
teams to be able to grind out wins, but
sooner or later the offense is going to
need to turn on.
Naadir Tharpe, Guard
As long as Elijah Johnson continues to
struggle, his backup, Naadir Tharpe, will
keep getting chances to prove himself.
Tharpe has provided a spark for the Jay-
hawks coming off the bench and is al-
ways a threat to pull up for a 3-pointer.
can the Jayhawks defense con-
tinue to dominate?
The Mountaineers are averaging near-
ly 70 points per game, yet Kansas hasnt
allowed a Big 12 opponent to score more
than 60 points, with the exception of the
overtime thriller against Iowa State.
young
Releford
Johnson
mclemore
Noreen
Kilicli
harris
Browne
hinds
By ThE NUmBERS
By ThE NUmBERS
1 This will be the frst time
Kansas and West Virginia meet in mens
college basketball.

6 Jeff Withey has registered
more blocks this season (82) than six
Big 12 teams.

48 Kansas leads the Big 12
in feld goal percentage at 48 percent.
719 Career wins for Bob Hug-
gins. Currently hes tied with legendary
University of Texas El Paso head coach
Don Haskins at 19th place.
37-1 The record of the
Mountaineers under Bob Huggins when
shooting 50 percent or higher.
80.7 The percentage of
time that West Virginia wins when an
opponent visits for the frst time.
BABY JAY WILL WEEp IF...
Somehow Kansas ofense gets
worse than it already has been over
the last fve games. As Mike Vernon
pointed out in his story on Satur-
day for the Topeka Capitol-Journal,
Te Jayhawks have averaged 62.2
points in their past fve outings, the
lowest-scoring fve-game stretch
since Bill Self has been at Kansas.
In fact, its the lowest fve-game
stretch since the 1981-82 season
when Ted Owens was Kansas
coach. If Kansas plays this game in
the 50s, it could be ugly.
BIG JAY WILL CHEER IF...
Kansas scores more than seventy
points. It hasnt happened since
the Iowa State game and it seems
the Jayhawks are struggling to get
to just 60 points. It could only take
one game for the ofense to click. Is
West Virginia that game?

AShlEIGh lEE/KANSAN
Senior center Jeff Withey high fves his teammate senior guard Elijah Johnson after Saturdays game against Oklahoma at
Allen Fieldhouse where the Jayhawks won 67-54.
moNDAy, JANUARy 28, 2013 pAGE 4B ThE UNIVERSITy DAIly KANSAN
monday, January 28, 2013 PaGE 5B thE unIVErSIty daILy KanSan
wIthEy rEBoundS aGaInSt SoonErS oSBy
Kansas 67, OKlahOma 54
Key stats
Kansas assists and turnovers. although the
numbers are nearly identical, its the frst time
since the conference opener against Iowa state
that Kansas fnished a game with more assists
than turnovers.
15/14
The Jayhawks shot a dismal one of six from beyond the arc
in the frst half, but shot six for 11 from the 3-point line
in the second half.
Kansas extended its winning streak to 17 games, the nations lon-
gest active streak.
54.5
17
JayhawK stat Leaders
Points rebounds assists
releford
5
mcLemore
18
withey
9
Jeff withey, senior Center
The senior center had a complete game on saturday, making
6 of his 11 shots, grabbing nine rebounds, blocking four shots
and even running the fast break a few times with his three
steals. Withey took advantage of a size discrepancy with dunks
and blocks throughout the game.
Game to remember
I can think of better options than him leading the break,
but the way we played today he may have been as good as our
guards out there leading the break.
Coach bill self on withey leading two fast breaks
67| 29 38
Kansas
54| 21 33
oklahoma
Game to forGet
Quote of the Game
Withey
elijah Johnson, senior Guard
The senior guard continues to struggle on both ends of the
foor. Johnson shot three of eight from the feld, but managed to
knock down two three pointers. Players and coaches alike have
talked about Johnsons struggles with shooting, but hes hoping
to break out of the funk soon.
Johnson
Self
opponent
Kansas
Player
amath mBaye
Romero Osby
steven Pledger
Buddy hield
Jelon hornbeak
sam Grooms
andrew Fitzgerald
Cameron Clark
totals
Pts
12
12
10
9
1
2
4
4
54
FG-FGa
4-11
4-16
4-8
4-11
0-1
1-2
2-4
2-3
21-59
rebs
7
6
1
2
4
1
8
2
31
a
0
2
0
2
2
1
1
0
10
tos
1
1
1
0
3
1
1
2
11
Player
Kevin Young
Jeff Withey
Elijah Johnson
Ben mclemore
Travis Releford
naadir Tharpe
Jamari Traylor
Perry Ellis
totals
Pts
6
13
8
18
10
8
2
2
67
FG-FGa
3-7
6-11
3-8
5-10
4-10
1-5
1-1
1-2
24-55
rebs
5
9
1
7
5
0
3
5
41
a
0
1
2
1
5
4
0
2
15
tos
2
1
4
2
3
2
0
0
14
For the second straight game,
Kansas defense goaded the oppo-
nents leading scorer into a poor
shooting performance, helping
the No. 3 Jayhawks defeat the
Oklahoma Sooners 67-54 Saturday
to extend its nation-leading win-
ning streak to 17 games.
Oklahoma senior forward
Romero Osby entered the contest
averaging a team-best 14.5 points
per game and shooting 53 percent
from the field. He scored a career-
high 29 points in the Sooners
last outing against Texas and led
Oklahoma in scoring in its previ-
ous five games.
But he hadnt played against Jeff
Withey yet this season.
He has good timing. You try
to get him off the floor with your
pump fakes and he just stays
down, Osby said. He always both-
ers people, but I think I kind of let
it get in my head a little bit that I
had missed a couple of shots.
Osby tied for Oklahomas scor-
ing lead with 12 points, but he shot
only four of 16 from the floor. He
made only his fourth 3-pointer of
the year against Kansas and tried
taking long jumpers to get Withey
away from the basket.
When those didnt work, Osby
resorted to taking the ball back
down low. But Withey refused to
bite on Osbys pump fakes, leaving
the Sooner with few options.
It is frustrating because thats
what our coaches teach us. Thats
what we work on every day in
practice is getting people in the
air with pump fakes, Osby said.
When you get down there and the
guy does it and he just stands his
ground, stands his ground and hes
standing on top of you its kind of
frustrating.
Withey finished with 13 points
and nine rebounds. More impor-
tantly, he was one of Kansas best
defenders, swatting four shots and
nabbing three steals to tie senior
forward Kevin Young for the team
lead in steals. It was Witheys high-
est block total since conference
play began.
All four of his blocks came in
the first half, and one of them was
against Osby. He said he noticed
Osby became more passive offen-
sively after his block.
I think he was a little hesitant
to shoot the ball, Withey said. I
might have blocked him in the first
half kind of early and might have
got to his head, but Im not sure.
In Kansas outing in Manhattan
last Tuesday, the Jayhawks held
Kansas States star guard Rodney
McGruder to 13 points four of 12
in shooting.
Although McGruder plays on
the perimeter while Osby plays
in the paint, Sooners coach Lon
Kruger said Witheys value comes
from his ability to affect the offense
of players he isnt even assigned to
guard.
He erases any mistakes on the
perimeter plus he guards his own
guy inside and not only blocks a lot
of shots but changes a lot of shots
and does that to a lot of people,
Kruger said.
And in a game that featured
another drowsy performance from
Kansas in its halfcourt offense,
Witheys defensive effort helped
Kansas create a transition offense.
The Jayhawks scored five points
from Witheys blocks and seven
points from his steals.
The mistakes we made in the
first half, he erased a lot of them,
which led to points, Kansas coach
Bill Self said. We didnt really do
much offensively at all but we got
easy baskets off of his defense when
we did get out and run.
edited by brian sisk
GEoFFrEy CaLVErt
gcalvert@kansan.com
tyLEr roStE/KanSan
Guards Travis Releford and Ben mclemore fght for a loose ball in the second half of
the Jayhawks game against the sooners.
aShLEIGh LEE/KanSan
sophomore guard naadir Tharpe jumps to get over his opponents during saturdays
game against Oklahoma at allen Fieldhouse, where the Jayhawks won 67-54.
Tharpe had eight points and was 1-5 in feld goal attempts.
tyLEr roStE/KanSan
senior guard Elijah Johnson laying up the ball through a few sooner defenders.
Johnson had a total of 12 points in saturdays win over Oklahoma.
aShLEIGh LEE/KanSan
senior guard Travis Releford pushes away his opponent as he makes his way down
the court during the game against Oklahoma. Releford had one personal foul.
aShLEIGh LEE/KanSan
Freshman forward Jamari Traylor attempts to block his opponents shot. Traylor had
one block during the game.
aShLEIGh LEE/KanSan
senior center Jeff Withey high fves his teammate senior guard Elijah Johnson after
saturday, Jan. 26s game against Oklahoma at allen Fieldhouse where the Jayhawks
won 67-54.
first haLf
(sCore after pLay)
16:37- Ben mclemore spins into the paint and goes up for two off the backboard.
(6-5, KU)
7:22- a Kevin Young steal and slam dunk on a fast break brings allen Fieldhouse to
life. (20-12, KU)
1:20- Withey blocks an OU shot and leads to Travis Releford fast break and dunk.
(29-18, KU)
seCond haLf
16:34- a Withey steal leads to another Releford layup on the fast break. (33-23,
KU)
8:38- mclemores 3-pointer leads to an Oklahoma timeout as the Jayhawks start to
pull away. (49-35, KU)
6:54- Withey glides through the paint for a one-handed slam after a Releford block
and rebound. (52-37, KU)
prime pLays
Monday, January 28, 2013 PaGE 6B thE unIVErSIty daILy KanSan
WoMEnS BaSKEtBaLL rEWInd
Kansas 52, OKlahOma state 65
It was a game of two opposite
halves for the Kansas Jayhawks,
especially of grabbing rebounds on
the defensive end.
The Jayhawks aggressive play on
the boards fell to the wayside in
the second half. In the first half, the
Jayhawks held the Oklahoma State
Cowgirls to just three rebounds, but
in the second half, the Cowgirls
grabbed 12 offensive rebounds in
the 65-52 Jayhawk loss.
Kansas coach Bonnie Henrickson
said the Cowgirls wanted the ball
more and the Jayhawks were flat-
footed on multiple possessions,
allowing the Cowgirls to grab mul-
tiple offensive rebounds and secure
extra possessions for Oklahoma
State.
Its an intentional effort to go
back to hit someone and win a battle
with your guy, Henrickson said.
Were a team right now that pivots
and watches and walks. And they
just flew from the three-point line
and got a great read on the rebound,
and we didnt go make contact. You
have to go and hit somebody. We
talk about win the battle with your
guy, and we didnt do that. They ran
right by us to rebound.
Cowgirl head coach Jim Littell
said he challenged the team to make
a conscious effort to attack the glass
after a miss at halftime. It was a chal-
lenge that the visiting team accepted
and ended up being the difference in
the Cowgirls victory.
We were getting blocked out in
the first half, and we were staying
blocked out, Littell said. We chal-
lenged our players at halftime to be
more relentless, have a better effort
doing it and if you got blocked out
initially, swim off of that and give
a second effort going to the boards.
We challenged some people saying
this is going to be the difference in
getting a road win or not. And our
team responded. We took it as a
priority at halftime and that was the
difference in halftime.
Oklahoma State senior forward
Toni Young entered the game aver-
aging 9.5 rebounds per game and 4.1
offensive rebounds within that total.
She didnt disappoint on the glass,
grabbing six offensive rebounds out
of her total of 15 rebounds.
With Young leading the charge,
the Cowgirls out-rebounded the
Jayhawks 15 to eight on the offen-
sive glass and 39-32 all together on
the boards.
Kansas senior point guard Angel
Goodrich said the team wasnt as
aggressive in the second half, and it
allowed Young and company to take
over the game.
We werent as aggressive as they
were. We were passive. Our defense
wasnt bad the first shot, but the sec-
ond, the second shot got offensive
rebounds and put it back, Goodrich
said.
The Cowgirls got nine points from
the offensive glass in the second half
after getting just two points in the
same situation in the first half.
Kansas sophomore forward
Chelsea Gardner, who grabbed nine
rebounds, said the team was slacking
after the first shot of possessions.
I think we were slacking on the
defensive end on their offensive
boards, and we didnt box out like
we should, Gardner said.
Despite the Jayhawks having a
better shooting percentage, 42.3 per-
cent to 40.3 percent, the difference
in the game came on the second
chance opportunity. The opportuni-
ties for the Cowgirls allowed them to
grab the victory.
We have to win the battle with
our guy. If we cant get it, they dont
get it. We didnt do that too well in
the game, Goodrich said.
Edited by Trevor Graff
nathan FordyCE
nfordyce@kansan.com
tara Bryant/KanSan
(above) Coach Bonnie henrickson
shows junior guard CeCe harper how to
keep her hands off an Oklahoma state
player to avoid fouling her.
tara Bryant/KanSan
(Left) senior forward Carolyn Davis at-
tempts to grab an offensive rebound for
Kansas during saturdays game against
Oklahoma state.
tara Bryant/KanSan
sophomore forward Chelsea Gardner jumps forward to block an Oklahoma state
players shot. Gardner had four blocks in saturdays game.
Despite better shooting percentage, lack of aggressive defensive play in the second half leads to Jayhawk loss
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Common symptoms of Generalized Anxiety
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Excessive worry ResIlessness
Anxious IhoughIs InabiliIy Io relax
The Cotton-ONeil Clinical Research Center at
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Monday, January 28, 2013 the unIVerSIty daILy KanSan PaGe 7B the unIVerSIty daILy KanSan
Jayhawk Stat LeaderS
Points rebounds assists
Goodrich
6
Gardner
14
Gardner
9
27| 25 52
kansas
30| 35 65
Oklahoma State
OppOnent
kanSaS
Player
Liz Donohoe
Toni Young
Lindsey Keller
Tiffany Bias
Brittney Martin
Morgan Toben
Kendra Suttles
totals
Pts
4
15
14
12
8
0
12
65
FG-FGa
2-7
6-20
5-8
4-12
4-8
0-1
4-6
25-62
rebs
2
15
3
2
6
2
4
39
a
3
1
1
5
0
0
0
10
tos
5
1
0
2
2
1
0
12
Player
Chelsea Gardner
Carolyn Davis
Angel Goodrich
Monica Engelman
Natalie Knight
Asia Boyd
Bunny Williams
CeCe Harper
totals
Pts
14
12
10
2
12
0
2
0
52
FG-FGa
6-9
5-6
4-15
1-3
5-14
0-0
1-1
0-4
22-52
rebs
9
5
6
2
4
0
2
0
32
a
1
1
6
4
3
0
0
0
15
tos
2
3
3
2
1
2
2
2
18
tara Bryant/KanSan
(above) Sophomore guard Natalie
Knight rushes past an Oklahoma State
defender to get to the basket in the frst
half of Saturdays game.
tara Bryant/KanSan
Junior guard CeCe Harper intention-
ally fouls an Oklahoma State player in
the fnal minute of Saturdays game in
order to give Kansas more possession
time. The Jayhawks could not catch up
to the Cowgirls, and lost 65-52.
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www.psych.ku.edu/
psychological_clinic/
Counseling Services for
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Monday, January 28, 2013 PaGE 8B thE unIVErSIty daILy KanSan


YOUR LEGACY AT KU
STARTS TODAY.
JOIN STUDENT SENATE AND LEAD THE CHANGE
THAT YOU WANT TO SEE ON CAMPUS.
THE KU STUDENT SENATE is the leading forum for institu-
tional change on KU's campus. As a collective body within
the campus administration, students can mobilize their ideas
for improvements into tangible accomplishments across the
university. Whatever your vision for University of Kansas may
be, come add your voice to the conversation and become a
member of the Student Senate.
Student Senate is now accepting applications for Spring Re-
placement Senators from the following academic bodies:
Every student at KU is also guaranteed a seat in one of the
four Legislative Committees of the Student Senate.
If you are interested in either joining a committee or running
to be a Spring Replacement Senator, please contact Alek
Joyce, Senate Outreach Director, at senateoutreach@ku.edu
or visit studentsenate.ku.edu.
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
THE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Student Senate Spring Kickoff Meeting
Wednesday, January 30 at 6:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Our Campus. Our Voices. Our Choices. STUDENT SENATE.
NEXT
MEETING
DETAILS:
WWW.STUDENTSENATE.KU.EDU
/KUstudentsenate @KUsenate & @KUpresident

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