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2007-03-15
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LAWRENCE
Mens basketball
Focus could create needed momentum
By Michael PhilliPs
If you call Russell Robinsons
cell phone this week, dont expect a
lengthy chat with him.
People call out of the goodness
of their hearts to wish you good
luck, the junior guard said. You
cant respond to everybody.
Hes had his phone set to vibrate
all week If I hear it, I hear it
and is advising the younger play-
ers to do the same. All aspects of the
players routines become critical as
each round of the NCAA tourna-
ment brings more national attention.
Kansas begins that journey Friday
night in Chicago when it faces
Niagara at 6:10. After losing in the
first round each of the past two sea-
sons, coach Bill Self is trying to keep
a sense of normalcy as the Jayhawks
travel around the country.
We basically tell them that the
way we have prepared and focused
has worked, and that we cant get out
of that routine, he said.
Success for the Jayhawks would
mean a trip to California for the
Sweet Sixteen.
The teams last visit to the Golden
State was a good one: In 2003,
Kansas defeated Duke and Arizona
in Anaheim to advance to the Final
Four, ultimately losing the national
championship game to Syracuse.
But thats not what anybody on
this years team wants to talk about.
Its like pulling teeth to get them to
admit that the second round even
exists.
We have a chip on our shoulder,
Robinson said. Weve got to prove
that we can win, and win big.
Its an often-repeated fact that a
No. 1 seed has never lost to a No. 16
seed, but there are also other factors
working in the Jayhawks favor. The
early-evening game is the ideal time,
Self said, because it allows the players
to avoid an early wake-up call, but
also doesnt create a lot of anxiety.
Last year, sophomore guard Julian
Wright said that the team sat around
watching basketball all day, which
may have distracted them from their
own game that night. The players are
all basketball fans themselves, and
watch games during their free time.
Thats something theyll cut back on
in Chicago.
Well try to watch a little bit, but
not too much, Wright said. Those
games arent for us. Theyre for every-
one else.
During the Big 12 Championship,
the players watched games from
around the country during the day,
and even caught Niagaras victory
in the Metro Atlantic championship
game.
Were basketball players and bas-
ketball fans, but we dont let it con-
sume our lives, Robinson said.
Maintaining a team identity
becomes even harder during March
Madness, when last-second shots
and great performances make their
way across the country in a matter
of seconds.
For the Jayhawks, no one play-
er has stepped up to command the
attention this season. There are eight
that have all taken their turn carry-
ing the team at one time or another,
and Self wants to make sure the focus
is on the team and not individual
accomplishment.
Guys have to play for Kansas.
There will be agents and runners
that will tell them to do this or that
and tell them this is their moment to
shine, he said. I dont buy into that
stuff, and our players dont either.
Its not easy for a player on the
team to get national attention.
Sophomore guard Brandon Rush has
to share the attention with freshman
guard Sherron Collins and sopho-
more guard Mario Chalmers, but
that hasnt bothered him so far.
Its the coachs job to keep the
players level-headed, and Self rarely
praises their efforts, instead focusing
on the areas of their game that need
to be improved.
But as Tuesdays press conference
was winding down, he allowed him-
self to deviate from the script for just
a few seconds.
I love this team, he said. I really
like how it doesnt matter who it
is that has the big game. I like that
Sherron can go scoreless last week
and get 20 points on the big stage. I
like that Brandon can miss shots but
then come back and make one, and I
like that Mario can score nine points
one game and still want the shot to
force the game into overtime.
That chemistry is a rare sight in
college basketball, which is increas-
ingly being dominated by big-time
players ready to jump to the NBA.
If the Jayhawks can stay together,
theyll be the favorites to spend some
time in California next weekend. Of
course, nobody is willing to say that.
Were just ready to get that first
game out of the way, Robinson said.
Kansan senior sportswriter Mi-
chael Phillips can be contacted at
[email protected].
Edited by Mark Vierthaler
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Junior guard Russell Robinson is one of the key eight players coach Bill Self will look to for energy during the NCAA tournament. The Jayhawks are looking to break their two-year, frst-round loss streak.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NCAA TOURNAMENT SPECIAL SECTION THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 2007 5B
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most ncaa tournament titles
West Region West Region West Region West Region West Region East Region East Region OUT OUT OUT OUT South Region OUT
6B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NCAA TOURNAMENT SPECIAL SECTION THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 2007
1. Memphis Memphis
has won an incredible 22
games in a row, but only
one of those wins, a 78-77
squeaker against Gonzaga,
came against a tourney team.
Sophomore Chris Doug-
las-Roberts and the Tigers
shouldnt have too much
trouble with North Texas,
but a second round match-
up with either big man
Nick Fazekas and Nevada or
silky shooter Nate Funk and
Creighton could spell doom.
2. Pittsburgh The Pan-
thers are a one-man show,
and their star, also known as
Aaron Gray, has been known
to disappear when the pres-
sure is turned up. Pitt looked
great early on with a 10-0
record, but stumbled late,
and will enter the tourna-
ment with losses in four of
their last eight games. The
Panthers guards have to get
better defensively to stop
Wright State guard DeShaun
Wood, and with Duke likely
in the second round, its
never easy going up against
a Mike Krzyzewski-coached
team in March.
3. Virginia The Cavaliers
were a surprise this year, fn-
ishing the regular season in a
tie for frst with North Caro-
lina in the ACC. Virginias lus-
ter wore of at the end of the
season, with bad losses to
Miami Fla., Wake Forest and
North Carolina State. Junior
point guard Sean Singletary
will have to be on top of his
game to get past talented
guards in Albanys Jamar Wil-
son, and possibly Tennessees
Chris Lofton.
4. Washington State
Few expected the Cou-
gars to be in the tournament
back in November, but junior
guards Derrick Low and Kyle
Weaver spearheaded Wash-
ington State to its best sea-
son in over a decade. That
means that they are very
inexperienced and will have
to deal with three time Mid-
Continent Conference Player
of the Year Caleb Green and
Oral Roberts, who took down
Kansas in Lawrence earlier
this season.
5. Wisconsin Big 10
Player of the Year Alando
Tucker is a great player, but
the Badgers had few tests
outside of a weak Big 10 con-
ference season, and lost two
of their three games against
Ohio State. Tucker alone is
good enough to get Wiscon-
sin to the second round, but
once there they will have to
deal with either a streaking
UNLV team or Javaris Crit-
tenton, a 6-foot-5 freshman
guard for Georgia Tech.
Taylor Bern
So, youve got the pedigree. Now, can you win?
Sometimes, big names are first out.
These teams are ripe for an early exit
NCAA bids
Coaches consider increasing number of teams in tournament
ASSociAted PreSS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Syracuse
coach Jim Boeheim has plenty of
support from Big 12 coaches for
expanding the NCAA tournament.
Boeheim, a longtime proponent
of including more teams in the field,
was flabbergasted Sunday when the
Orange were snubbed by the selec-
tion committee. That brought anoth-
er round of calls from coaches on
Monday to expand the tournament
to at least 68 teams, if not more.
If the field is designed to get the
best 64 teams in if that was the
design then from that standpoint
youd think it needs to be modified,
said Kansas coach Bill Self, figuring
a handful of automatic bids go each
year to teams that otherwise would
not make the cut.
Expanding the tournament has
become a hot-button conversa-
tion piece that regularly bridges
the gap between selection Sunday
and the start of the NCAA tourna-
ment Thursday. Its the rallying cry
of every coach whose job security
is measured by postseason appear-
ances.
The last major tournament expan-
sion came in 1985, which increased
the field from 53 to 64 teams. The
NCAA added a play-in game in
2001, when the number of automatic
bids increased from 30 to 31.
I dont know the perfect num-
ber, but I definitely think we should
expand, said Texas A&M coach
Billy Gillispie, whose team sat on the
bubble and sweated out an at-large
bid last season.
Texas coach Rick Barnes believes
that concept is worth revisiting.
From the time we started that
play-in game, I never quite under-
stood why we wouldnt have four of
them, one for each site, he said.
The Contenders
Texas A&M The Aggies
appeared lost at times against
Oklahoma State
in the Big 12
Tour nament .
Acie Law IV
only had 10
points and
didnt touch
the ball in the
games final
minute. That shouldnt matter. Texas
A&M has one of the nations best
defenses and that is always a pre-
mium in the NCAA Tournament.
And having Law, college basketballs
Mr. Clutch, is definitely a bonus. If
A&M gets past a possible second-
round game against Louisville in
Lexington, Ky., it could make the
Final Four.
Ohio State Fans in Columbus
already have good news: Greg Oden
isnt so sure he wants to leave for
the NBA this season. But it could be
better if Oden and fellow freshman
Mike Conley Jr. led the Buckeyes
to the national title. Ohio State has
been the No. 1 team in the country
for the past three weeks, but the
Buckeyes lost earlier this year to
North Carolina
and Florida. A
possible Elite
Eight match-up
against Texas
A&M could be
tough because
the game is in San
Antonio.
Memphis Its hard to say a
22-game winning streak doesnt
count, but the Tigers streak isnt
genuine. The last 19 games of it have
been against
Co n f e r e nc e
USA competi-
tion, a confer-
ence that isnt
much bet-
ter than the
Atlantic Sun.
Whomever Memphis plays in the
second round, Nevada or Creighton,
could spring an upset. If the Tigers
and Aggies both win their first two
games, it will be a great match-up of
conflicting styles. Memphis loves to
run, and the Aggies love to grind.
The Players
Brook Lopez, Stanford Lopez
and his brother
Robin are two of the
best post players in
the West. Brooke is
slightly better and
could be the dif-
ference in the first
round going against
Louisvilles David
Padgett.
Nate Funk, Creighton Funk
got injured toward the end of last
season, and the
Bluejays missed
the tournament.
Earlier this year,
he hadnt recov-
ered yet and
Creighton strug-
gled. Now Funk is healthy and the
Bluejays are playing their best bas-
ketball of the season.
Sean Singletary, Virginia
One of the
least heralded
point guards
in the coun-
try. Singletary
can score like a
shooting guard
and pass well. Look for him to find
his favorite target, backcourt mate
J.R. Reynolds, for open jump shots.
The Rest
Connecticut State Dont even
think about it.
BYU
Cougars are
mature; six
players have
gone on
Mormon mis-
sions.
Xavier Beat K-State when it
had Bill Walker this year.
Tennessee Chris Lofton
shoots and shoots and shoots
and usually makes it, too.
Long Beach State Lost to
UCLA and USC earlier but can
catch fire from three point range.
Virginia No business being a
four seed but should beat Albany.
Albany As a 16-seed last year,
led Connecticut for most of the
game before losing.
L o u i s v i l l e
Hottest team
from the Big
East not named
Georgetown.
Stanford
Struggled down
the stretch, but
frontline could trouble other teams.
Penn The Quakers have
danced three years in a row but have
yet to win.
Nevada
Guard Kyle Shiloh
is out after slipping
on an on-court
advertisement.
Creighton
Dana Altman is the best coach at a
mid-major.
N o r t h
Texas The
Mean Green
are athletic but
not Memphis
athletic.
Dent is an Overland Park sopho-
more in journalism.
Edited by Sharla Shivers
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NCAA TOURNAMENT SPECIAL SECTION THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 2007 7B
By Harlan GOODe
Editors Note: The Hoya is the
student newspaper at Georgetown
University. Hoya assistant sports
editor Harlan Goode examines the
East region. The Hoyas are the No.
2 seed in the region.
I
f one were to write a term
paper on the theme of the
2007 NCAA basketball sea-
son, the East bracket would serve
as an eloquent thesis statement.
In a season flooded by a fountain
of talented youth, the East will
run deep with so-good-so-soon
freshmen.
In lightning-quick point guard
Ty Lawson, silky-smooth shooter
Wayne Ellington and deceptive-
ly-fast forward Brendan Wright,
top-seeded North Carolina boasts
three starters who were noth-
ing but fresh faces on rivals100.
com a year ago. The talented trio
joins super sophomore Tyler
Hansbourough to form what
maybe the most gifted lineup Roy
Williams has enjoyed since arriv-
ing in Chapel Hill.
Texas Kevin Durant possesses
the phenomenal first-year tal-
ent Carmelo Anthony displayed
in leading Syracuse to the 2003
NCAA title and could well carry
the Longhorns to Atlanta on his
string-bean frame.
Although second-seeded
Georgetown relies on the steady vet-
eran leadership of juniors Jeff Green,
Roy Hibbert and Jonathan Wallace,
they also call on steely freshman for-
ward DaJuan Summers for a youthful
jolt in the clutch.
Washington State, Southern Cal,
and Arkansas are all weaker than
their seeding suggests, but look out
for Marquette, arguably the toughest
eighth-seed in the entire tournament
field.
The Golden Eagles could make a
run on the wings of freshman point
guard Dominic James, a 5-11 ball of
fast-twitch fiber who is quicker off
the dribble than anyone in the land.
With Eastern Kentucky, Belmont,
and New Mexico State, the East will
not provide the backdrop for a story-
book lower-seed Cinderella upset, but
the tale of 14-seeded Oral Roberts
forward Yemi Ogunoye, who comes
from Nigerian royalty, should keep
the talking heads on CBS occupied.
Although there wont be any
Bucknell-over-Kansas style upsets
in this bracket, sharp-shooting
Vanderbilt and streaky Texas Tech
could have some of the brackets wun-
derkinds preparing for the NBA draft
early, should they decide to show up
in the coming weeks. If not, the fairy
tale for Roy Williams and his band of
baby-faced boys in baby blue should
continue until the clock strikes mid-
night on April 2.
COMMentARY
South breaks down from good to bad
Guest COMMentARY
East region deep
with talented youth
By mark Dent
kansan sports columnist
[email protected]
By JOnatHan Garten
kansas state COlleGian
MANHATTAN The depressing
news of K-States NCAA Tournament
snub still lingers around Manhattan
and the state of Kansas.
For the first time in more than a
decade, Wildcat fans had a reason to
tune in for Selection Sunday. They
were by no means a lock, but after
Bob Huggins drilled his formula
20 wins overall plus 10 conference
wins equals an NCAA Tournament
selection into their heads, K-State
fans were more than a little hopeful
they would be awarded a spot in the
Big Dance.
Wildcat nation held its breath in
anticipation as CBS revealed region
after region filled with teams not
named K-State. Finally, CBS affirmed
the Wildcats would not be dancing
this year, naming Stanford the last
team in the field of 65.
But all the disappointment of
being snubbed has brought up an
interesting point. Its nice to be part
of March Madness conversation.
When K-State was coached by a
jacket-tossing, neck-brace wearing,
thumb-waving nice guy, the Wildcats
postseason hopes usually vanished
long before the Big 12 Conference
Tournament. But not this year. As
long as Huggins is on the sidelines,
ranting and raving until he turns a
shade of purple, the Wildcats always
will have a shot at the tournament.
The turnaround has been so sudden
that its easy to forget all those embar-
rassing moments of the last 20 years.
Here are just a few.
1997: K-State forward Manny
Dies pleaded guilty to damaging
property of a Collegian columnist
who was critical of his play. The stu-
dent journalist called Dies the worst
college basketball player ever.
2003: The name Pervis Pasco
unfortunately will live in K-State lore
forever. During the first round of
a Big 12 Tournament game against
Colorado, Pasco stole an inbound
pass with only seconds remaining,
seeming to seal a 76-74 win for the
Wildcats. All he had to do was stop
or dribble. But Pasco, thinking the
game was over, took off running with
his index finger waving above his
head. The officials whistled Pasco for
traveling, and Colorado banked in a
3-pointer at the buzzer to win.
2005: The stage was set for K-
State to end a five-game losing streak
with the Wildcats leading Oklahoma,
68-67. All they had to do was hold on
for four more seconds. But K-State
had no answer for Drew Lavender,
who had scored 27 points up to that
point. The guard drove the length
of the court to sink an improbable
layup. While the loss was hard to
swallow, it was Jim Wooldridges
postgame rant about Big 12 offici-
ating that really made it a moment
Wildcat fans would want to forget.
As you can see, although getting
the cold shoulder is infuriating, its
good to know the selection commit-
tee knows K-State exists.
sports 8B thursday, march 15, 2007
WE SUPPORTED KU WHEN...
They became
National
Champions. They beat K-State
in the 1st game at
Allen Fieldhouse.
They won the
Big 8 Conference
Championship,
the rst ever.
1959-1960
1951-1952
March 1st, 1955
They became
National
Champions.
Again.
April 4th, 1988
They won the
Big 12 Conference
Championship,
the rst ever.
1996-1997
They beat Texas for
the 50th Conference
Championship
March 4th, 2007
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athletics calendar
FRIDAY
n Mens basketball vs. Ni-
agara, 6:10 p.m., chicago
n Softball vs. cal Poly, Noon,
sacramento, calif.
n Softball vs. Idaho state, 5
p.m., sacramento, calif.
n Baseball vs. texas a&m,
6:30 p.m., college station,
texas
n Womens golf, all day,
austin, texas
SATURDAY
n Baseball vs. texas a&m, 2
p.m., college station, texas
n Softball vs. Georgia south-
ern, 2:30 p.m., sacramento,
calif.
n Softball vs Pittsburgh, 5
p.m., sacramento, calif.
n Womens golf, all day,
austin, texas
SUNDAY
n Baseball vs. texas a&m, 1
p.m., college station, texas
n Softball vs. colorado state,
1 p.m., sacramento, calif.
n Womens golf, all day,
austin, texas
We are about to enter the best
weeks of the year.
Theres no other time when you
can turn on a TV or computer and
watch 48 college basketball games,
as many as four at the same time.
Local television will have at least
four games on every day from now
to Sunday.
If you have cable and the sports
tier, or subscribe to certain satel-
lite providers, youll likely have the
choice of an additional out-of-market
game as well. On cable in Lawrence,
the extra game is on Channel 181.
But thats not all, sports fans. The
NCAA and CBS are making every
out-of-market game available for free
from March Madness On Demand at
www.NCAAsports.com/MMOD. This
is the second year the live streaming
video has been free, and this year
CBS is adding streaming audio for
those who dont have a powerful
enough computer or enough avail-
able bandwidth. On top of that, CBS
has introduced a 50 percent increase
in the resolu-
tion level of the
games it streams.
For anyone
without major
plans for spring
break, I suggest
curling up with
a picture-in-pic-
ture equipped
TV, a remote,
digital cable, a
laptop and your
beer of choice.
Aside from spending time on the
beach or in the large American city
of your choice, I cant think of a
better way to pass the time during
spring vacation no matter how
far Kansas advances in this years
tournament.
With that in mind, then, heres
some reasons why (and how) you
should watch the following games
from the first round.
Thursday:
Game #1: Boston College vs. Texas
Tech, 11:25 a.m.
This game features two teams
Kansas played, the Red Raiders, who
beat the Jayhawks, and the Eagles,
who came into Allen Fieldhouse and
lost.
This games available on CBS in
this area, so youve go no excuse to
miss it.
Game #2: Texas A&M vs. Penn.
, 2 p.m.
Its hard to find a more talented
player than A&Ms Acie Law. He can
hit clutch shots and hes his teams all
around scoring leader. The Aggies are
a Final Four team and you shouldnt
pass up a chance to see them rough
up a weak opponent.
This game is also available on
CBS.
Game #3: Marquette vs. Michigan
State, 6:20 p.m.
Jerel McNeal, the Eagles leading
scorer, wont make the first round of
the NCAA tournament. And with
that, coach Tom Izzos Spartans just
earned a shot at the second round.
This game is available either on
Channel 181, or via NCAASports.
com/MMOD.
Game #4: Indiana vs. Gonzaga,
8:45 p.m.
Gonzaga is a the original Cinderella
team but it has struggled more than
its accustomed to this season. With
former Jayhawk Micah Downs play-
ing for the Bulldogs, theres every
reason to watch this game.
Get this game on CBS.
Friday:
Game #1: Virginia vs. Albany,
12:15 p.m.
Virginia has had quite the up and
down season this year. The Cavaliers
had wins against Duke and Virginia
Tech, both in the NCAA tourna-
ment, but they also lost to ACC bot-
tom-feeder Miami. Albany could be
primed for an upset.
Catch this game on Channel 181
or NCAASports/MMOD.
Game #2: Notre Dame vs.
Winthrop, 1:35 p.m.
Winthrop has the potential to be
this years George Mason, and Notre
Dame is having
one of its best
seasons in a long
time. This game
has every poten-
tial to be a true
thiller.
Flip your TV
to CBS for this
game.
Game #3:
Kansas vs.
Niagara, 6:10
p.m.
Turn off your computer, turn off
picture-in-picture. This should be
the only thing occupying your atten-
tion.
This game is available on CBS and
is the only game of the day that CBS
is committed to keeping on uninter-
rupted.
Game #4: Kentucky vs. Villanova,
8:30 p.m.
This game should determine who
Kansas plays in the second round.
Assuming they make it that far.
Kentucky has had a down year, lead-
ing for calls for coach Tubby Smiths
job. Villanova isnt as good as it has
been recently.
Catch this game on CBS.
No matter where you are, theres
a way to catch March Madness. And
if you find yourself out of town and
looking for fellow Jayhawks to enjoy
the game with, visit www.kualumni.
org, where the Alumni Association
maintains a list of official Alumni
bars, where Jayhawk fans are likely
to gather.
Kealing is a Chesterfeld, Mo., se-
nior in journalism and political sci-
ence.
Edited by Mark Vierthaler
60 SecondS to Graduation
March Madness
easier to catch
BY joNAThAN KeAlINg
kaNsaN sPorts columNIst
[email protected]
Technology means no missed action
mlb
Afer silence, Angels Matthews denies steroid use
I suggest curling up with a
picture-in-picture equipped TV,
a remote, digital cable, a laptop
and your beer of choice.
Jonathan kealing
kansan Columnist
ASSoCIATeD PReSS
TEMPE, Ariz. Gary Matthews
Jr. ended more than two weeks of
silence on Wednesday after being
linked to a steroids investigation,
denying for the first time that he
took human growth hormone.
Matthews allegedly was sent
HGH in 2004 from a pharmacy thats
part of a widespread steroid inves-
tigation. Los Angeles Angels owner
Arte Moreno and commissioner Bud
Selig had been pushing Matthews to
address the issue, and he finally did
16 days after the first stories came
out.
I have never taken HGH dur-
ing the 2004 season or any other
time, Matthews said in a statement.
Nobody has accused me of doing
so, and no law enforcement author-
ity has said I am a target of any
investigation for doing so.
Angels general manager Bill
Stoneman said he was glad Matthews
finally addressed the issue and that
he denied using HGH.
Were finding out at the same
time you are, Stoneman said. Were
happy to find out that hes saying
that he never used HGH. Were an
organization that feels there isnt a
place in our game for any of these
illegal substances. Hes denying he
ever used something he was linked
to.
Manager Mike Scioscia said he
senses that Matthews was relieved
after issuing the statement
through the team Wednesday
morning. Matthews then went
out and homered in the Angels
4-3 exhibition victory over the
San Francisco Giants.
Scioscia said he hopes the
statement will help the team
focus on baseball.
Theres been a little anxiety in
our organization just waiting for
this thing to move forward and
hopefully move forward toward
being resolved, Scioscia said.
This is a huge step there. Thats
encouraging.
HGH was not banned by base-
ball for players with major league
contracts until 2005. This investi-
gation appears to be targeting the
suppliers of the substances, not
those who might have received
anything from the suppliers.
Stoneman said the team had
no plans to discipline Matthews.
He said it was up to the com-
missioners office to determine
whether Matthews violated base-
balls drug policy.
My feeling is that as long as
this stuff is accurate in what it
is and nothing else pops out at
some point, were fine, Stoneman
said. But again, the way it works
in baseball is there is a policy
between the owners and players
that governs these things.
Matthews explained the delay
in his denial by saying he and his
representatives needed to deter-
mine how he got linked to the
story.
BASEBALL
9B thursday, march 15, 2007
8" SUB SANDWICHES
#1 PEPE
Medium rare choice roast beef, topped with
yummy mayo, lettuce, and tomato.
#3 SORRY CHUCKIE
The original Italian sub with genoa salami, provolone,
capicola, onion, lettuce, tomato, & a real tasty Italian
vinaigrette. (Hot peppers by request)
#6 VEGETARIAN
Layers of provolone cheese separated by real
avocado spread, alfalfa sprouts, sliced cucumber,
lettuce, tomato, and mayo. (Truly a gourmet sub not
for vegetarians only . . . . . . . . . . . peace dude!)
J.J.B.L.T.
Bacon, lettuce, tomato, & mayo.
(The only better BLT is mama's BLT)
#7 GOURMET SMOKED HAM CLUB
A full 1/4 pound of real applewood smoked ham,
provolone cheese, lettuce, tomato, & real mayo!
#8 BILLY CLUB
Choice roast beef, smoked ham, provolone cheese,
Dijon mustard, lettuce, tomato, & mayo.
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A full 1/4 pound of fresh sliced medium rare
roast beef, provolone, lettuce, tomato, & mayo.
#11 COUNTRY CLUB
Fresh sliced turkey breast, applewood smoked ham,
provolone, and tons of lettuce, tomato, and mayo!
(A very traditional, yet always exceptional classic!)
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Fresh baked turkey breast, provolone cheese, avocado
spread, sliced cucumber, sprouts, lettuce, tomato, and
mayo! (It's the real deal, and it ain't even California.)
#13 GOURMET VEGGIE CLUB
Double provolone, real avocado spread, sliced
cucumber, alfalfa sprouts, lettuce, tomato, & mayo.
(Try it on my 7-grain whole wheat bread. This veggie
sandwich is world class!)
#14 BOOTLEGGER CLUB
Roast beef, turkey breast, lettuce, tomato, & mayo.
An American classic, certainly not invented by J.J. but
definitely tweaked and fine-tuned to perfection!
#15 CLUB TUNA
$7.7
5
Established in Charleston, IL
in 1983 to add to students GPA
and general dating ability.
ok, so my subs really aren't gourmet and
we're not french either. my subs just taste
a little better, that's all! I wanted to
call it jimmy john's tasty sandwiches, but
my mom told me to stick with gourmet.
She thinks whatever I do is gourmet, but
i don't think either of us knows what it
means. so let's stick with tasty!
BOX LUNCHES, PLATTERS, PARTIES!
JJ UNWICH
$3
.2
5
Any Sub minus the veggies and sauce
slim 1 Ham & cheese
slim 2 Roast Beef
slim 3 Tuna salad
slim 4 Turkey breast
slim 5 Salami, capicola, cheese
slim 6 Double provolone
DELIVERY ORDERS will include a delivery
charge of 45 per item (+/10).
JIMMYJOHNS.COM
YOUR CATERING
SOLUTION!!!
Soda Pop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.19/$1.39
Giant chocolate chip or oatmeal raisin cookie . . . $1.50
Real potato chips or jumbo kosher dill pickle . . . . $0.99
Extra load of meat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.25
Extra cheese or extra avocado spread . . . . . . . . . . $0.75
Hot Peppers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $0.25
side items
freebies (subs & clubs only)
Onion, lettuce, alfalfa sprouts, tomato, mayo, sliced
cucumber, Dijon mustard, oil & vinegar, and oregano.
Corporate Headquarters Champaign, IL
"YOUR MOM WANTS YOU TO EAT AT JIMMY JOHN'S!"
strawberry
banana smoothie
Sylas & Maddys Ice Cream
1014 Massachusetts St.
$4 16 oz.
Unlike their crave-worthy ice cream,
the favors in this smoothie are muted and
transparently artifcial. Save your taste buds:
select a smoothie elsewhere.
strawberry
GinGer smoothie
Local Burger
714 Vermont St.
$4 12 oz., $5 16 oz.
The price isnt worth the unpleasant
zing of this dairy-free strawberry smoothie.
Somewhere between the strawberry and
the excessive ginger, the smoothie ends up
tasting like butter.
BEST:
strawberry
Fruit smoothie
Aimees Coffee House
1025 Massachusetts St.
$2.95 16 oz., $3.25 20 oz.
Quality ingredients must
be the secret behind this
simple smoothie blend. Ice, milk
and strawberry syrup add up to a
sweet treat.
Jaime Netzer
Please send your
questions and
concerns to
[email protected]
moan
BITCH
+
with Niloofar Shahmohammadi
12
JAYPLAY 02.01.2007
Elizabeth, you need to pull over,
cause youre doing 80 in a 25. Youve
known the guy for two measly weeks
and youre already spending every
day with him? Put on the brakes.
Instead of agreeing to see him
every time he calls you, force him to
set dates with you. That way youre
not waiting by the phone wondering
if you have plans tonight or not. Train
him to book you in advance. Hell
place a greater value on you and
youll also rest easier. And also, if you
have set plans, hell have to call you
when he needs to break them, as
opposed to just leaving you hanging
because your plans were tentative
anyway.
OK, so now that youve slowed
down, the next thing you need to do
is stick your butt in a bucket of ice
water, because youre right, you are
freaking out. Theres no need you
only had trouble getting together
with him for two days. Thats another
reason why hanging out too much
too soon is a bad idea. It really screws
up your perception of timing. Who
knows what could have been going
on for him this weekend?
Relax. Hell call.
But if by Monday or Tuesday you
havent heard from him, then you can
start to let go of the loser. If he does
call, which he probably will, say Oh,
dont worry about this weekend. Its
no big deal. Hell probably want to
hang out that same night; thats when
you say,Sorry, I actually have a ton
of homework tonight and I have a
really busy week, but either Tuesday
or Thursday would be good. Then he
picks a day. Then you pick a time. And
then you have a date.
Keep it nice and slow from now on
and youll have more time to fgure
out if you want to be dating this guy
at all. Good luck.
I met thIs guy two weeks ago and we hung out every day for a
week. thIs week, we only hung out three tImes, but Im certaIn
Its because he had a lot of homework. we talked about doIng
somethIng thIs past weekend, but he never called. I called hIm and
he apologIzed and then we made tentatIve plans but then he
broke those plans. whats goIng on? Im freakIng out. he told me
he lIkes me, so why Is he actIng thIs way?
elIzabeth, sophomore
03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 09
Im really hot for my bIology professor, and hes Into me too. he
hasnt done anythIng about It, but Im havIng trouble concentratIng
In class. I daydream about hIm all the tIme. Ive been thInkIng about
goIng to offIce hours and askIng hIm out. I know Its a lIttle taboo,
but were both legal adults so Its not a bIg deal, rIght?
lIsa, freshman
Yeah, youre both adults, so use
your adult brain and think about the
consequences. KU has clearly laid
out the policy on relationships of
unequal power, which you can fnd
online at www.hreo.ku.edu/policies_
procedures/other/ConsentRelation.pdf.
Basically, dont start anything, and
if you do, the University community
wont support you. You could also
be screwing your grades (no pun
intended) and doing a lot more
damage to a lot more people than
you realize. If this is true love, it can
wait until the end of the semester.
Megan Brozanic and Megan Dudley of Dolly Surprise DJ at The Eighth Street Tap Room, 801 NewHampshire St.
Photo/ Jaime Netzer
(above) Kate Furst of Dolly
Surprise DJs at The Eighth
Street Tap Room, 801 New
Hampshire St., Saturday
night. Furst is in the all-
female group with Megan
Brozanic and Megan Dudley.
(right) Katlyn Conroy per-
forms with Another Holiday
March 1 at the Bottleneck,
737 NewHampshire St.
Rock is about Rebellion,
machismo and sex. its
anything but feminine.
susan shaw, co-authoR
of Girls rock!
She
10 JAYPLAY 03.15.2007 03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 11
Katlyn Conroy, an 18-year-old
high school senior from Kansas
City, mo., steps up onto the slightly
elevated wooden stage. its bitterly
cold outside, but Conroy is dressed
in a thin lacey white top and a short
denim skirt. an asymmetrical slip
peeps out from underneath the
frayed denim, and Conroys bare
legs meet white leather boots that
fold at her ankles.
When i frst saw Conroy walk
into PJs restaurant and Pub, 1129
Laramie St. in manhattan, i assumed
she was dating someone in the
band. i watched the doorman place
pungent black Xs on her hands and
wondered why she was at the club
long before the show would start.
though ive been the only girl in a
fve-piece band for the past three
years, i still made the assumption
that this girl wouldnt be sharing
the bill with me that night.
Conroy plays with another
holiday, an indie-pop band based
in Lawrence. as they took the stage
and she settled herself behind her
keyboard and pushed her unkempt
hair out of her face, i wondered
about her. Was she the lead singer?
Did she do any of the writing? Did
she always dress up for shows?
Conroyis part of arelativelysmall
population of female musicians in
the Lawrence area. though www.
lawrence.com lists 317 local bands,
only a handful of those bands have
an active female presence.
rock and roll has traditionally
been a boys club, and women who
have pursued careers in rock have
faced struggles since the 1950s.
however, the expanding presence
of an alternative and independent
music scene has helped to carve a
niche for women whose voices may
have otherwise gone unheard.
Elvis stole my music
most people place the birth of
rock n roll around 1954, with the
arrival of Bill haley and the Comets.
Womens presence in popular
music actually pre-dated mens,
says Susan Shaw, co-author of Girls
Rock! 50 years of Women Making
Music. For many years, both female
and african-american music was
essentially co-opted by white men,
she says. Big mama thornton
recorded hound Dog long before
elvis got a hold of it,Shawsays.
Because these womenwere kept
out of the public eye, young girls
had very few role models to look
to, Shaw says. Without examples
of women succeeding in rock,
young girls had no proof that it was
possible.
aaron Couch, overland Park
junior and guitarist for another
holiday, remembers when he
was in middle school and frst
started playing guitar. When he
was younger he listened to classic
rock musicians like Jimi hendrix
whose songs, he says, were pretty
misogynistic. the song Foxy Lady
is a pretty politically incorrect song,
Couch says. these old rock n roll
guys were all about the conquest
of women, not necessarily seeing
themas viable artistic people.
Parents usually arent much help
either. Julie Lane, keyboardist and
vocalist for the Lawrence-based
band ad astra per aspera, says
most young girls parents dont
encourage them to buy electric
guitars or amplifers. Lane, who
took piano lessons throughout her
childhood, says that most young
girls took lessons for some other
by Jaime Netzer
for years, women were excluded
from the boys-only rock n roll club.
today, a growing number of female
artists are bridging the gender gap
in the local music scene.
instrument instead.
alot of boys sawavideoonmtV
when they were 12 and thought, i
want to be the front man of a rock
n roll band, Lane says. most girls
dont have that kind of egotistical
drive, she says.
Women like Britney Spears,
Christina aguilera and even
Pat Benatar are not rock n roll
musicians, Lane says. they are pop
stars. She also says the women who
are in rock are often perceived as
scary or trashy. You just dont see
the badass i write my own music
and play in a good rockn roll band
woman,Lane says.
Not that there arent female
musicians out there who are
successful and infuential. Conroy
can list several female-fronted
bands she listens to regularly (rilo
Kiley, tilly & the Wall and matson
Jones, for example), but she says
that she looks more often to male
musicians for inspiration and
infuence. Conroy writes the lyrics
and melodies for another holiday
and tries to incorporate techniques
used by singer-songwriters such
as Bob Dylan and Conor oberst of
Bright eyes. Conroy likes the idea
of writing in a way that someone
wouldnt necessarily expect from a
female.
Women and rock have had a
tenuous relationship. the concepts
of rock n roll and femininity just
dont go hand in hand, Shaw, the
author, says.rock is about rebellion,
machismo and sex, she says. its
anything but feminine.
Shaweven points to the physical
designof instruments liketheguitar
as another subtle reminder that
womenareout of placeinrocknroll.
Shaw says the guitar was originally
a womens parlor instrument.
then it just kept increasing in size
until today. Women tell me that it
smashes their boobs!she says.
C o n r o y
doesnt have
to deal with a
guitar, though.
She spends her
time on stage
sitting upright
on a stool with
a mic positioned
in front of her
mouth and
pianokeys just belowher fngertips.
Couch says he doesnt feel like
Conroy is out of place in his band. in
fact, when his band was looking for
a new vocalist, the fiers specifed
that they preferred a female lead,
thoughtheywouldhaveconsidered
males as well. the appeal of the
female lead vocal can be elusive to
pin down. theres just something
charming about female vocals,
Couch says. he says that when a
band wins him over because of a
voice, the singer is usually female.
Female leads are usually used to
addsensitivitytomusic.Conroylikes
to hear a female voice that is harder
or loud, but its not that common,
she says. Girls cant necessarily be
badasses on stage, she says. or if
they do, somehowits not honest.
One of the guysina skirt
Conroy peers over her right
shoulder to catch the eye of Couch
as they begin to play. She smiles
at him and he returns the gesture
while bobbing his body to the
gentle and precise beat coming
fromtheir drummer.
another holidays music is not
up-tempo, and i suspect this is
a conscious
choice to show
off Conroys
talent. She has
the kind of voice
that makes you
slow down. it
rests confdently
in the back of
her throat and is
pure and strong
until shefips intofalsetto.thenit
becomes light and slightly breathy.
Conroy turns back around and
begins totapher feet onthe foor in
time with the music.
having Conroy join the band
didnt change their dynamic that
much, Couch says. as far as telling
crude jokes, he says the guys in
the band just dont hold back. he
remembers wondering if one band
member with an especially small
bladder would refrain from using
the restroom located smack dab
in the middle of their rehearsal
space as often once Conroy joined
the band. Nothing changed; the
frequent bathroomtrips lived on.
Standing on stage, illuminated
by spotlights and exposed to
however many people may be
watching on a particular night, its
only natural for any girl in a band to
be aware of the way she looks to an
audience. Conroy wants to be taken
seriously as a musician. She never
wants to be seen as an accessory or
as thevisual pleasure or hot-ness
factorinanother holiday. however,
she does put time and thought
into dressing up for shows. i have
a unique, crazy sense of style and
it does add a visual effect, Conroy
says.i can pull off a lot of things the
guys in my band couldnt.
Skirts, make-up and strategically
exposed skin can change the
audiences perception of a show.
appearance can even be a way
to draw in fans, but most female
musicians are uncomfortable with
this. megan Dudley, a DJ for the
all-female group Dolly Surprise,
also based in Lawrence, relays
some mixed experiences about
appearance and music.
my friends tell me that people
will come up to them and say, oh,
Dolly Surprise, youshouldsee them,
theyre hot, Dudley says.We dont
promote ourselves as these sexy
girls we like to emphasize the
fact that were women, but there
are no naked pictures of ourselves
on fiers.
Where my girls at?
Dudley says shes surprised by
the lack of a strongfemale presence
in the local music scene. She says
that because she views Lawrence
as a progressive city, she would
expect to see lots of different kinds
of people in bands.
however, Lane, who has been
touring with ad astra per aspera
CONTINUED ON PAGE 12
Megan Dudley ofDolly Surprise:
Be different. try not to focus
too much about making a huge
statement, but have somethingto
say. People respond to something
honest going on.
Julie Lane of Ad Astera per
Aspera: Put it out there that you
are competent and you know
how to play music. if you know
the way notes and chords work,
you know just as much as some
guy with a bass. You also have to
have a thick skin.
Susan Shaw, co-author of Girls
Rock!: Dont listen to people
who discourage you. really work
on the music, know your theory
and take your craft seriously.
Dont turn yourself into an object
in order to succeed in rock, and
dont let it beabout what you look
like. Let it be about the music.
Katlyn Conroy of Another
Holiday: Dont sell yourself
short. Dress like you want. Dont
restrict yourself. You want to talk
about subject matter out of the
norm? Do it. remember, youre a
musician. Boy or girl, if you have
talent, and more importantly the
drive, dont let miniscule details
like your gender keep you down.
how to staRt youR caReeR as a female in music
Women in
Rock
PhotoS/ aNNa FaLtermeier
Photo/ aNNa FaLtermeier
s
u
p
r
e
m
e
s
c
o
o
k
ie
s
r
o
n
e
t
t
e
s
r o n e t t e s
t
h
e
s
h
ir
e
lle
s
j a
n
i s
j o
p
l i n
1936
electric guitars debut
1955
the Chordettes and the
Chantels emerge as the frst
girl groups.
1956
Wanda Jackson, the
female elvis, is
called the queen of
rockabilly.
1962
the Supremes release their
frst record
Women dominate the
Grammy awards. Winners
include Carole King and
Carly Simon
1971
1974
Patti Smith releases hey
Joe, considered to be the
frst punk rock single
1996
an $80 million record
deal with Virgin
records makes Janet
Jackson the highest-
paid entertainer of
all time
1997
the Lilith Fair tour
spotlights female headliners
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11
for fve years, says that she sees
more women in bands now than
she used to. There have been
three or four nights on this tour
where every other band weve
played with had a woman in it,
Lane says.
Its almost becoming cool to
have a girl in a band, Lane says. This
is great in many ways, she says, but
its also nice to have competent
musicians in a band instead of
having a girl just for the sake of
having a girl. There still arent that
many girls shredding on lead guitar,
but when you see it its really cool,
Lane says.
While Dudley works at Rudys,
701 Massachusetts St., she mentions
upcoming shows to people and
says they are often surprised to
learn she is a DJ. They give me this
look, like, Are you serious? Youre
a girl. Dudley says people have a
certain idea in their heads of what a
DJ or musician looks like, which she
doesnt always ft.
There was a band in the
Northwest known as Swamp
Mama Johnson who had a regional
following, Dudley says. They were
about to sign with a major label, but
when an executive told them that
they needed new hairdos, sexier
clothes and to lose weight, they
refused to sign.
Women want to be themselves
and express the sexiness of rock n
roll in a way thats empowering,
Shaw says, not in a way that
conforms to pressures and
expectations about how they
should look.
Slowly but surely
Women are often ignored or
misunderstood when they go into
music stores to buy equipment,
Shaw says. Women often report
male employees assuming theyre
purchasing equipment for their
boyfriends, or simply being rude if a
girl is trying to purchase an electric
guitar, bass or drum kit.
Doormen, bartenders and
other men who also sometimes
prejudge women. Lane recently
had a negative experience on tour
at a bar in Missouri. After loading
in her equipment, she approached
the bartender and ordered a PBR,
explaining that it was free because
of a drink special for the band.
The bartender responded that
the special was for the band, not
girlfriends of band members.
Im sure my face got really red
because I was mad, Lane says.
I wanted to say, Why would you
assume that just because Im a girl
I would never be in a band?
Instead, Lane corrected the
bartender, who she says was
especially nice to her the rest of the
night. Lane says she has often been
called sweetheart or had people
assume that she was setting up her
boyfriends drums.
Women are also routinely
mistreated in the record industry,
Shaw says. She credits improved
technology as a step toward
gender equality in rock n roll.
Women no longer have to rely on
a record company to give them a
contract, because they are able to
make a living by making CDs and
selling them independently. It
might not make as much money as
having a record deal, Shaw says,
but a lot of alternative rockers
arent interested in making the big
bucks. They just want to be able to
make a living playing their music.
And what about those women
role models? The more girls who
show up in bands today, the more
younger girls may decide to pursue
careers in rock n roll. One of the
best parts about being a woman in
a band is being at the merchandise
table and talking with younger
female fans after the show, Lane
says.
The younger girls are really
excited to see her and her bandmate
Brooke Hunt playing, she says.They
realize, Oh, I can use all of those
piano lessons I took for years and
years, Lane says. She says she feels
good because the girls are a lot less
frightened to approach her or Hunt
than to talk with the guys in her
band.
Curtain call
The music fades out and Conroy
hunches up her shoulders, tilts
her head and demurely thanks
the audience again, as though
no one has ever liked her bands
music before. Her face spreads
into one last shy smile as the
between-set music gets louder and
conversation resumes. She unplugs
the black cords from the back of her
keyboard and smiles as she walks
into the shrieks and admiration of
her friends. I stop her to tell her
she is fantastic, and she thanks
me. As she turns to leave, I cannot
help but feel both embarrassed
for doubting that Conroy was a
musician and pleased that she has
proved me wrong.
12 JAYPLAY 03.15.2007
PHOTO/ ANNA FALTERMEIER
Andrew Stangl sits silently
at the front of the room,
listening intently to the 25
people who have gathered
for the bi-weekly meeting of
the Society of Open-Minded
Atheists and Agnostics (SOMA).
Stangl, Wichita senior, is the
president of the club. Besides a
brief introduction and a review
of upcoming events, Stangl
rarely speaks. His reserved
temperament matches his
simple, conservative clothes
and haircut. But dont be
fooled.
Hes a radical in choir boys
clothing, says Paul Scott,
assistant professor of French and
director of the 2005 study abroad
program in France that Stangl
participated in. Scott describes
Stangl as a lighthearted yet
serious person who is never
afraid to voice his opinion. Scott
says he and Stangl disagree on
such issues as abortion but that
Stangl is extremely respectful
of other peoples opinions while
standing frmly behind his own.
His chief weapon is defnitely
his tongue, Scott says.
Stangl joined the group his
freshman year, when SOMA
held its meetings in a small
alcove in the Kansas Union. The
group outgrew the area and
now meets in the International
Room in the Union, and at most
meetings every seat is taken. The
mood tonight is light and the
laughs plentiful. The topic is the
Ten Commandments, or, as one
member calls them, the Cliffs
Notes of the Bible.
Besides planning events and
scheduling lecturers for SOMA,
Stangl must make time for
school. This time can be hard
to come by, considering his
three majors: political science,
international studies and French;
and one minor, history.
Its really just my way of
saying I dont know what to do
with my life, Stangl says.
Although he comes from a
religious background, Stangl
began to lean toward secular
beliefs before he arrived at
the University. He attended an
Episcopalian church until he was
6 years old and began to think
critically about his beliefs in high
school. His study of Christianity
led to an eventual rejection of
it and Stangl says he became an
atheist during his senior year of
high school.
I got through about 450
pages of the Bible that I had and
stopped, he says. I discovered
what I was doing was basically
creating a religion based upon
what I wanted to believe.
SOMAs name alone intrigued
Stangl at frst and the group
soon provided him with a circle
of friends that he remains close
with today. He even met his
fance through the group. He
says these close bonds help he
and the group remain steadfast
in their mission to serve the
community of secular students
on campus.
According to the Universitys
Student Organizations Web site,
there are 44 registered religious
groups on campus. SOMA,
however, is the only secular
group.
Stangl says his group not
only serves as a network for
secular students but also as an
outreach program that benefts
the community.
SOMAs major fundraiser,Soul
Auction, benefts the Douglas
County AIDS Project. After an
audience bids on the souls of
participants, the participants
must perform pre-determined
activities for the highest bidders.
These activities include anything
from manual labor to going out
on a date. Half of the profts go to
the AIDS Project while the other
half goes to SOMA.
Another event, Ask an
Atheist, is scheduled for early
May. A panel of three atheistic
students will answer questions
from the audience in an attempt
to educate people about atheism
and agnosticism.
Stangl also worked to bring
Michael Newdow, a lawyer who
challenged the use of Under
God in the Pledge of Allegiance
in court, to campus. Newdow
spoke at the University on March
13.
Efforts such as this show
Stangls devotion to the
group, says Laney Albritten,
Cunningham senior and SOMA
secretary.
Hes overall just a really
encouraging, motivational,
organized leader,she says.Since
hes been president, SOMA has
only gotten stronger.
Stangl will step down as
president when SOMA holds its
offcer elections in April. He will
return to the University for a ffth
year and says he plans to stay
involved with the group.
The separation of
church and student
by Sam Carlson
03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 13
QuieT DiSSenT
PeOPLe
1. Think for yourself
2. Dont bind yourself to
one ideology.
3. Do not invoke a gods
name in war.
4. Relax.
5. Honor your community
and the Earth.
6. Do no harm. People are
not possessions.
7. Find your own sexuality.
Do not be afraid to love.
8. Dont abuse the notion
of personal property to
rationalize other peoples
poverty. Give.
9. Tell the truth to be
trusted.
10. Recognize the shades
of gray.
Atheistic
Amendments:
somAs ten
commAndments
Andrew Stangl, right, SOMA
president, with fellow group
members.
PHOTO/ jON GOERING
Former republican Speaker
oF the houSe newt GinGrich
admitS he waS havinG an
aFFair while criticizinG Former
preSident clinton For hiS
marital inFidelitieS.
A new University of PittsbUrgh
stUdy Asserts thAt genetics mAy be
the reAson thAt some women Are
more ill-temPered thAn others.
Brad delp, lead singer
of the rock Band
Boston, is found dead
in his home.
hAwK toPics
RAINE REVIEWS
NEWS YOU CAN USE
14
JAYPLAY 03.15.2007
Chris Raine
comic Book icon
captain america is killed
in a recent issue By a
snipers Bullet.
Fortunately for tacky,
tasteless wine drinkers,
Steve Franzia is still alive
and healthy.
Winemaker
ernest gallo
dies at age 97.
Although the cause
of death is currently
unknown, doctors
have speculated that
it was more than a
head cold.
The study is the subject of chapter four in the book,
My Girlfriend is Fing Crazy: 101 Reasons That Women
Act All Psycho and Stuff.
As soon as he was able
to stop crying, President
Bush used the superheros
death as justifcation for an
invasion of Iran.
Chrysler Motors reCalls
nearly half a Million
DoDge Durango anD Jeep
liberty suVs.
So basically, if youre a poorly endowed d-
bag, your vehicle is being recalled. If youre
a really, really huge d-bag with a really, really
small penis, dont worry, your Hummer is
running just fne.
presiDent bush seeks 8,200 More
troops for the wars in afghanistan
anD iraq on top of the 21,500 he
requesteD in January.
What do the War in Iraq and Greys Anatomy have
in common? Really dumb people think both are
great and get better with each episode.
a number oF the new GeorGe
waShinGton dollar coinS are miStakenly
Struck without the edGe inScriptionS,
includinG in God we truSt.
Surprisingly, America hasnt suffered even
a single biblical plague yet
Gingrich unfortunately
bought into the
convenient but false
belief that what happens
in Congressional Break
stays in Congressional
Break.
Laguna Beach Star JaSon wahler
iS Sentenced to two monthS in
Jail For drunkenly punchinG a city
worker and tow truck driver while
ScreaminG racial SlurS.
And he
seemed like
such a cool
guy on the
show.
thinK yoU hAve A better joKe? e-mAil me At [email protected].
ku menS baSketball deFeatS k-State For
the third time thiS SeaSon and For the
35th time in the laSt 36 meetinGS.
Looks like Huggins has adapted
to Manhattan and their quaint
custom of losing every game to
KU rather nicely.
For three years, Lindsey
Yankey, Leon sophomore, had
wanted Run Lola Run red hair.
Yankey, an illustration major,
created self-portraits of herself
with fre engine-red hair and
even made Photoshop creations
to see what she would look like.
Her curiosity eventually got the
best of her, and the week before
spring semester started she
became a redhead.
Americans spent $10.4
billion to change their hair
color in 2005, according to
data compiled by the company
Packaged Facts. Alternative
hairstyles are a way for people
to experiment and assert their
personal identities.
Yankey says shes happy with
her new hair color and gets lots
of compliments from strangers.
She likes that the color is loud
and outrageous because she
wanted it to be obvious that she
dyed it. She doesnt feel like she
has to put a lot of thought into
her outfts, she says, because
having red hair makes it look like
she has already put effort into
her appearance. It also gives her
something to talk about.
I feel a camaraderie with
people who also have crazy hair,
Yankey says.Its like a club.
Yankey works at the Hilltop
Child Development Center and
says she has had no problem
with her employers. The children
she works with are intrigued by
her hair and always ask her why
she dyed it.
My latest reply is, Because it
keeps my head warm. The kids
think thats funny,Yankey says.
Yankey has not had any
problems with her unusual
hair color affecting her work
situation, but some workplaces
have strict guidelines about what
is an acceptable or unacceptable
hairstyle.
Hair must be natural, clean,
well-groomed and simply
arranged. Faddish, extreme
hairstyles, including (but not
limited to) multi-color or
unnatural colors, sculptured hair,
tails, partially shaved heads and
dreadlocks are not permitted.
Grooming guidelines such as
these, taken from an amusement
parks employee handbook, are
common in todays job world.
Sean ODwyer, Mission senior,
recently cut off his dyed black
and blue hair for a job interview
because he wanted to look more
professional, he says. After the
interview, however, he plans to
color it again.
ODwyer has been bleaching
and dyeing his hair different
colors on and off since his
freshman year. He dyes his hair
because its fun and he and his
friends often make it into a social
activity, he says.
Its kind of weird, but my
friends and I will be hanging out
drinking and dye our hair, he
says.
ODwyer describes himself as
impulsive. If hes tired of a style
he says its easy to change. Hes
not too concerned with how his
experiments turn out. After he
discovered his head didnt look
bad shaved, it wasnt a big deal
to cut all his hair off and start
over.
Im young. At this point in my
life I can get away with this kind
of stuff, ODwyer says.
Though unusual hair colors
and styles have become more
common, stereotypes still
surround those whose hair
deviates from the norm.
Courtney Gray, Lawrence
resident, has had dreadlocks for
six years, and says that people
sometimes have misconceptions
about what kind of person she is.
People think Im a dirty
slacker and that I do drugs, she
says. Im a normal person. I just
have different hair.
Gray wanted dreadlocks
for fve years before she got
them, she says. She likes the
style and respects the Egyptian
and Rastafarian cultures they
came from. Dreadlocks separate
her from society, but not in a
negative way, she says.
Im a free person. Dreadlocks
are a lifestyle change, but theyre
ftting for me, Gray says. I want
to represent these beautiful
cultures well.
Jim Grimes, owner of
Headmasters, 809 Vermont St.,
says that he has seen people
change their hair for many
reasons in his 22 years as the
salons owner. One of his clients
was a chemotherapy patient and
when her hair started growing
back she wanted to try purple
hair. He says she got so much
positive reinforcement because
of her new hair that having
purple accents in her black hair
has become her trademark.
There are times in our lives
when we want recognition or
to make a splash, Grimes says.
Some people buy shoes, but
thats not as permanent as
changing your hair.
Many people make extreme
changes when they want an
emotional response, Grimes says.
Hair is something that you can
control today. For that reason, he
says its important to step away
from the mirror and ask yourself,
Is it really the hair?
He recommends that when
people want to dye their hair
they approach a stylist with
a picture and reasonable
expectations. Salons want you to
be happy with the end result, so
a picture helps clarify what your
idea of fre red is compared to
the stylists.
Even though hair is a personal
expression and alternative hair
may express things a little louder
than highlights, Grimes says
its important to keep things in
perspective.
Its just hair, he says. It
doesnt really matter in the
grand scheme of things.
A NEW DO
Alternative hair colors and
styles attract and repel
03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 15
NOtIcE
by Katrina Mohr
crEAtE DrEADlOcKs
NAturAlly
Wash hair a couple of
times a day without
conditioning
The hair will get very dry
and stick together over
time
Twist sections to get
them to stay together
This way takes time, but
is much better for your hair
in the long run, Gray says
For a one day method check
out www.dreadlocks.com
Courtesy of Courtney Gray,
who has had dreadlocks for
six years
Lindsey
Yankey, Leon
sophomore,
drew
portraits of
herself with
bright red
hair before
dying her hair
this winter.
PHOTO ILLuSTRATOn/ AnnA FALTERMEIER
16
JAYPLAY 03.15.2007
Booger Basics
that's disgusting
rowing
sport specs
For young children, blobs of
slimy snot appear to be self-
made snacks only a pick and
a scratch away. But for those
over the age of 5, boogers are
more hanging hazards than
they are tasty treats. Everyone
has them, and nearly everyone
has some degree of hands-on
experience with the clinging
clumps, but far fewer people
know what boogers are made
of and how they end up in
your nose.
Each day your nose produces
nearly a cupful of mucus
that slimy stuff better known
as snot that seeps out each
time you sneeze. This snot acts
like a fy trap, catching the
dust, pollen, germs, sand and
smoke that enters your nose
each time you breath, before
the particles reach and begin
to infect your lungs. Tiny nasal
hairs move the snot and its
contents away from the lungs
and toward the front of your
nose. As the mucus, dirt, germs
and sand move, they dry and
mold together to produce a
bounty of boogers.
So next time you go digging
for gold in your nose or snack
on a piece of solidifed snot,
think about the dirt, pollen and
smoke behind that booger.
Source: www.kidshealth.org
Elyse Weidner
The sport: Rowing is the oldest
intercollegiate sport in the United
States. The frst Harvard-Yale
regatta, or rowing race, was almost
160 years ago, before football was
even invented.
The objective:The frst racing shell
to cross the fnish line wins. Rowers
race 2,000 meters in designated
lanes. Racers cant jump the gun,
and they have to stay in their lane
and cross the fnish line with at
least the coxswain, the on-board
navigator and motivator, in the
boat.Rowing is the only team sport
where theres no substitutions and
no timeouts, says Rob Catloth,
womens rowing coach.
The positions: The pair of rowers
closest to the bow is called the
bow pair and is smaller and
quicker than the rest of the team.
The middle four rowers are called
the engine room, and they are the
most powerful rowers.The last two
are known as the stern pair and
they set the pace for the rest of the
rowers. The coxswain is the closest
to the stern and is the only crew
member who faces forward.
The workout: Rowing is a great
total body workout. Its low-
impact and works the legs, back
and arms. Kara Boston, Chicago
junior and rower, wears a heart
monitor during practice and says
she burns anywhere from 800
to 1,000 calories during an hour-
and-a-half workout. During the
offseason, rowers practice inside
on ergometer rowing machines.
Check it out: Watch the womens
rowing team during their home
races this spring at Burcham Park,
Second and Indiana Streets. The
team faces Texas and Southern
Methodist University on March
24, Tulsa and Drake on March 31,
and in-state rival Kansas State on
April 7.
Get involved: You dont need to
know how to row to walk on the
womens team.A week after school
starts in August, the womens
rowing team holds tryouts where
they teach candidates how to row
and see if they like the sport.If you
have a reasonable athletic ability
and youre willing to try, theyll
take you, says Whitney Fasbender,
Cheney senior.Theres also a novice
team for frst-year rowers. For more
information, visit the womens
rowing Web site at kuathletics.com.
There is also a co-ed club team on
campus called KU Crew. For more
information on that group, check
out http://groups.ku.edu/~kucrew/.
Lindsey St. Clair
Katie Rash isnt sure what to
expect as music from Grease
blares from the stereo. She waits
as the toned, blonde instructor
jogs to the front of the class and
begins simple steps forward,
forward, back, back and
begins imitating the moves as
the workout begins.
Next, Rash, Leawood senior,
fnds herself shimmying and
shaking the way she does to her
favorite songs in the privacy of
her bedroom. But this time, shes
with a group of about 40 men and
women of all ages. Surrounded
by full-length mirrors, Rash
continues to move to the
upbeat music. The next song on
the playlist is La Mayonesa, a
popular Latin tune.
The music threw me off at
frst, but it was a fun, new way to
work out,she says.
Rash is at Zumba class, a
new dance workout session at
Lawrence Athletic Club, 3201
Mesa Way.Though Zumba started
gaining popularity around the
nation in 2002, this is the frst
class offered in Lawrence. Zumba
instructor Katy Parker took her
frst class in Parsons and loved
it so much that she decided to
become certifed to teach it. With
this, she brought the trend to
Lawrence in January.
Zumba combines dance
moves from cumbia, meringue,
rumba, mambo and salsa with
time-tested dance moves such as
air guitar, hip pops, booty shakes
and shoulder shimmies. Parker
says she likes throwing in her
own ideas for routines because
Zumba is all about having
fun. Signature moves include
walking like an Egyptian and
disco pointing la Saturday
Night Fever.
Created by celebrity ftness
trainer Beto Perez, Zumbas pace
is similar to aerobic interval
training. Some routines speed
heart rate up and others slow
heart rate down. This allows the
body to burn more calories. An
hour of medium-intensity Zumba
burns anywhere from 500 to 700
calories.
It all depends on how hard
you push yourself. The idea is to
keep moving and having fun,
Parker says.
Something from nothing
Perez created the workout
when he was forced to improvise
during his ftness class. He forgot
his normal routine music and
had to make do with the tunes
he had in his car: traditional Latin
music. His antics went well as his
Latin ftness class became the
most sought-after class at his
gym. At that point, he named his
class Rumbacize. He changed
the name to Zumba when he
brought his trend to the United
States in 1999. Perezs concept for
a Latin-infused dance class took
off in 2002 after he marketed
thousands of at-home videos in
the States. Demand for Zumba
instructors followed.
Katy Parker is one of 2,000
Zumba instructors worldwide.
She took a trip to Miami for
an intense weekend Zumba
certifcation clinic and came
back to Kansas as an offcial
Zumba trainer in 2005. She was
directly trained by Perez during
her two-day workshop where
she learned all the basic steps
to everything from salsa to
tango. She then learned how to
choreograph the steps to hip-
hop and Latin music and was
encouraged to add her own
spice to the routines.
Zumba is comparable to other
dance class workouts, such as
Jazzercise, but the atmosphere
of Zumba class sets it apart from
other dance-inspired ftness
trends. Perez designed the
workout to be fun and easy to do
so participants would stick to the
workout. He describes it as a feel
happyworkout.
Parker mixes moves such as
the lawnmower with Latin
dance steps, and then throws in
a little disco to make it fun. The
repetition of these moves keeps
the workout toning and cardio-
heavy, but the familiarity of the
junior high dance moves keeps it
lighthearted and fun.
Throwing in moves like that
breaks up the routine, Parker
says. Its benefcial, too. Moves
like leaning side to side and
putting your fnger over your lips
makes working your sides more
fun,she adds.
Come one, come all
For the next hour, Parker leads
her class middle-aged women
and men, a few KU students and
alums through Will Smiths
Getting Jiggy Wit It, more Latin
music and a cool down to Kelis
Milkshake.Dressed in a tank top
and camoufage pants, she has
the men emulating her hip pops
and hip rolls as her long blonde
ponytail bounces up and down.
Elizabeth Doak, Dallas junior,
shakes it in the back of the
workout room. Though it is her
frst time at Zumba, she catches
on quickly and loosens up to the
music. She moves to the beats
freely and smoothly, and takes a
moment to laugh at herself if she
gets off track.
Its fun because youre
comfortable doing the steps. You
can do as much or as little as you
want,she says.
Doak says she feels like she
is getting just as much or more
of a workout than her usual
routine of elliptical training and
running. She likes that there is no
equipment or partner required
to participate in Zumba, and
all she has to show up in is a T-
shirt and sweats or shorts: no
special dance shoes or clothes
are required. Others in the class
don all black and jazz shoes, tank
tops and shorts or sweatpants.
The informal environment of this
Latin-inspired dance class keeps
the atmosphere laid back for
such an energetic workout.
Growing demand
The popularity of Parkers Zumba
class at Lawrence Athletic Club
is evidenced by the growing
numbers who come to the class
each week. Parker teaches fve
days a week, and had to split
the Sunday class into two back-
to-back sessions because more
than 60 people showed up.
Zumba is the only class that a
non-gym member may attend
at Lawrence Athletic Club.
After signing a waiver, Zumba
attendees pay $3 per session
to work out for an hour. In that
hour, Parker instructs 10 Zumba
routines, including a warm up
and cool down.
Participants under 18 must have
parental permission to attend
the regular Zumba class. Parker
also offers a kids-only Zumba
class for those under 14.
Zumba welcomes all ages, she
says. Weve had senior citizens
in here, younger kids and even
pregnant women.
Perfect your dance
moves and break a
sweat with this new
workout
Shake it faSt
03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 17
heaLth
by kim Wallace
PHOTOS/ MARLA KEOWN
Katy Parker leads a
Zumba workout, which
mixes traditional and
modern dance moves,
at Lawrence Athletic
Club, 3201 Mesa Way.
by Eleni
Eleni Mandell plays the type
of music youd expect to hear
in a dark, after-hours club full
of misunderstood poets, jazz
pianists and acoustic solo artists.
On her latest album, Miracle
of Five, Mandell plays soft music
mixed with jazz fourishes and
soul-baring vocals.
Moonglow, Lamp Low
opens the curtain on Miracle
of Five with percussive
acoustic guitar and emotional
saxophone by Ryan Feves.Girls
features jazzy drumming, vibes
and Mandells intimate vocals.
Wings in His Eyes is another
jazzy track, this time with viola
and upright bass anchoring
the song. On Somebody Else,
Mandell picks things up with a
busy drum part, a wavy organ
and subtle acoustic guitar.
Miracle of Five has several
great tracks, but how many
sleepy lounge songs can you
hear before you wish something
different would happen? Like
a lot of albums, Miracle of Five
wouldve been better with a
little more variety.
Miracle of Five
18
JAYPLAY 03.15.2007
All rAtings Are out of A possible five stArs.
Music
Comic books have been turned
into feature-length flms for almost
30 years now, but rarely have they
been as innovative or enthralling as
the work of Frank Miller. In 2005, Miller
helped bring his Sin City comic to life,
producing one of the most exciting
flms in years. He also helped resurrect
the Dark Knight by inspiring Batman
Begins. Millers work is brought to the
big screen once again, this time with
lackluster results, with the release of
300.
The flm tells the story of the Battle
of Thermopylae, in which a band of
only 300 Spartans fought off at least
200,000 Persians intent on taking over
Greece. But the truth is just too boring,
so historical inaccuracies are woven
throughout.
300 has a distinct color pattern and
countless men and women in peak
physical condition, so theres no doubt
that its nice to look at. The flm also
proves that action sequences can be
effective even if they are all in slow
motion.
Unfortunately, the moments
between action scenes bog the
movie down. When the characters
arent fghting, theyre talking, which
is where the problem lies. Much of
the dialogue is taken verbatim from
Millers comic. While Miller can craft a
great story, he doesnt have much of a
penchant for the way people talk. The
hammy dialogue might have worked
for the noir-driven Sin City, but here it
cheapens the characters and the thrills
theyre supposed to produce.
Ultimately, 300 can be exciting,
but it seems that when it gets going,
it slows itself down, along with the
audiences interest.
Rated: R
Running time: 120 minutes
300
Movie
Chris Brower
Jared Duncan
Mandell
S
c
o
re
with
Four!
Fresh Philly Cheese Steaks
at
843-SUBS (7827) 1601 W. 23rd St.
Philly Cheese Steak
Chipotle Cheese Steak
Chicken Cheese Steak
Big Kahuna Cheese Steak
The Tao
of Compassion
I lay on that road for what
seemed like an eternity before
some other travelers arrived
and called for help. My foot had
started to swell and I wasnt quite
sure what had just happened.
It was a clear and beautiful
Saturday afternoon last
September and I was on the
way to a potluck. As I moved
along the bumpy, rural road
that runs between my house
and Lawrence, I noticed a car
entering the road from a hilltop
driveway in the distance but
immediately lost sight of it as
I entered the base of a closer,
smaller hill. As I crested the hill, it
became horribly apparent that I
had misread the situation.
In the other car I saw long, dark
hair surrounding the slender face
of a middle-aged woman. Her
name was Michele Bird and she
most likely died instantly when
my little red Honda T-boned her
Toyota Camry.
Im a frm believer that we
create our own reality and get
what we want out of life. But
after the crash I was forced to ask
myself,Why would
I ask for so much
physical pain?
Why would anyone
ask to deal with
the guilt over the
death of that lady
in the other car?
Even though
I know what the
police investigation
proves I am not
responsible that
she lost control
of her car and ended up sliding
toward me in my lane I cant
help but feel guilty.
Besides pain and guilt, why
would anyone ask for the fear
associated with a highway
collision? During the accident
it was like I was a black hole
watching the universe get
sucked toward me in slow
motion. I vividly remember
my car collapsing to form a V
that pointed right at me and
bent around the
passenger side of
her car. Then the
airbag deployed
and beat me into
place. The collision
ended with a horn
that wouldnt stop
beeping and my
engine revving
loudly. The airbag
defated, leaving
a smoky haze and
chemical smell.
I thought there might be a
fre, so I undid my seat belt to
get out of the car but my door
wouldnt open. My window was
down, so I climbed out and fell
to the ground. I tried to stand up
but my right leg couldnt hold
my weight. It was like my ankle
wasnt there any more. To get to
what seemed like a safe distance
away, I dragged myself 30 feet
down the road. As I lay there
pulling pebbles out of my palms
and from under my fngernails, I
nursed my shattered ankle and
wondered what had happened.
My right foot had been
crammed up into my leg, forcing
my ankle to dislocate to the
point of being at a right angle to
my foot and leg. Because I didnt
have the lap belt down in front
of my pelvis, my seat belt was
too high and cut my liver. I had a
couple of fractured bones in my
left foot and much of my upper
body had been beaten black,
blue and yellow.
The abdominal surgery came
the day after the accident and
caused the most pain, if for no
other reason than the catheter
the doctors installed. Two weeks
later I was healthy enough
to have ankle surgery, which
resulted in pain similar to the
pain before they reset my ankle
on the day of the accident. If we
get what we want out of life, then
what was I getting out of this?
The accident gave me the
wisdom of knowing that we are
all responsible for each others
well-being. We are responsible
at any moment, but particularly
when we drive a one-ton hunk
of metal 50 or 60 miles per hour
across a world full of fragile
life. If we slip up, we cant help
but recognize how we are
responsible for each others well-
being. Even more importantly, I
gained compassion.
Compassion is a virtue found
in many world religions, like
in my own Judeo-Christian
tradition, and its central to the
Buddhist and Taoist philosophies
that refect my adult spiritual
views. In Taoism, compassion is
considered one of humanitys
three greatest treasures next to
patience and simplicity.
Since the accident, I readily
empathize with people who
are scared, in pain or wish they
could go back and make things
different. I have to take away
something from the crash beside
scars, and I take compassion.
I wish that I could go back and
be the hero who rescues a lady
stuck in a ditch instead of being
another victim. But I know that
the one thing we dont get out
of life, no matter how badly we
want it, is the chance to go back
and make things different. Im
not responsible for the crash, but
Im always responsible for the
reality I create because I have
to live with the results of my
unconscious decisions.
Luckily for me, Taoism offers
help for situations like this in
chapter 58 of its essential text, the
Tao Te Ching: Good fortune, we
say, can come from disaster. And
the reverse is true as well. Who
knows where all this will lead?
speaK
03.15.2007 JAYPLAY 19