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Index

Calendar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Crossword, sudoku, cryptoquip . . . . .16-17
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18-19
Horoscopes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
News. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-11
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12-14
Arts purest form
Bill Selfs basketball camp
wraps up with scrimmage
with Jayhawks past & present
12 4
KU cover band of the 1970s reunites
for one fnal show in Lawrence
inside
10
vol. 116 issue 155 Wednesday, June 28, 2006
The sTudenT vOice since 1904
summer ediTiOn
Art class models imitate life for students
studying the human form
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Julie, who asked that her real name not be used, has been modeling for the Life Drawing classes for about a year. She and the other four models pose nude for these art classes.
i ndex 2 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
The University Daily Kansan is the
student newspaper of the University
of Kansas. The first copy is paid
through the student activity fee.
Additional copies of the Kansan are
25 cents. Subscriptions can be pur-
chased at the Kansan business office,
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk
Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN
0746-4962) is published daily dur-
ing the school year except Saturday,
Sunday, fall break, spring break and
exams. Weekly during the summer
session excluding holidays.
Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence,
KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by
mail are $120 plus tax. Student sub-
scriptions of are paid through the
student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-
Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence,
KS 66045
et cetera
Erick R. Schmidt, editor
864-4854 or eschmidt@kansan.com
Dani Litt, campus editor
864-4854 or dlitt@kansan.com
Jacky Carter, design editor
864-4854 or jcarter@kansan.com
Janiece Gatson, copy chief
864-4716 or jgatson@kansan.com
Joshua Bickel, photo editor
864-4821 or jbickel@kansan.com
Rachel Benson, sales manager
864-4462 or adsales@kansan.com
Scott Kvasnik, business manager
864-4462 or addirector@kansan.com
Malcolm Gibson, general manager,
news adviser
864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com
Kerry Benson, sales and marketing
adviser
864-7666 or benson@ku.edu
talk to us
All contents, unless stated
otherwise, 2006
The University Daily Kansan
Tell us your news
Contact Erick R. Schmidt or Dani Litt
at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com.
Kansan newsroom
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
quote of the week
fact of the week
Heres a list of last weeks most
e-mailed stories from
Kansan.com:
1. Lights, camera, action
2. New faces to fill old places
3. Davis: Who can stop Wade?
4. Letter to the editor: Petermann
5. Bank accounts cause discussions
free for all
Free for All callers have 20 seconds to
speak about any topic they wish. Kan-
san editors reserve the right to omit
comments. Slanderous and obscene
statements will not be printed. Phone
numbers of all incoming calls are re-
corded.
Hey, my opinion is White Castle rocks
KUs socks. Go Mizzou! Go White
Castle! Yeah, Lawrence, Lawrence
is for girls. Boo ugly girls, boo dirty
burgers yeah...
Garden
a little-known landmark on cam-
pus has fallen on hard times.
PAGE 3
colleGe band
Former students reunite their
former band for one more show.
PAGE 4
obituary
a follow-up story on a KU professor
who lost her battle with cancer.
PAGE 5
profile
One student at the University
learned early to deal with adver-
sity. PAGE 7
models
art class models are often stu-
dents, and the experience may be
more than you expect. PAGE 10
veGGie lunch
need a place for lunch? The ecu-
menical Christian Ministries has a
vegetarian lunch every Thursday.
PAGE 8
entertainment Wire
a look at whats going on in the ce-
lebrity world. PAGE 9
scrimmaGe
jayhawks past and present got to-
gether for a scrimmage at the end
of Kansas coach Bill selfs youth
Basketball Camp. Billy Thomas,
Christian Moody, and aaron Miles
participated. PAGE 12
column
Fred a. Davis iii previews the
2006 nBa Draft, which doesnt
include any Kansas players. That
could, and should change next
season, according to Davis.
PAGE 12
calendar
need something to do? heres a
look at whats going on in law-
rence and the surrounding area
for the week of june 28-july 4.
PAGE 20
inside sports
inside news
call 864-0500
answers. crossword
1. IF YoURE SEARCHING HIGH
AND LoW FoR PAPER ToWELS,
CoULD YoU BE A BoUNTY
HUNTER?
2. WHAT DID THE BoWLING PIN
PRoCLAIM To THE APPRoACH-
ING BoWLING BALL? PLEASE
SPARE ME!
3. IF SoMEoNE PREFERS To
DATE WITHoUT GETTING MAR-
RIED, I SUPPoSE HE WANTS No
RINGS ATTACHED.
put your best foot forward
answers. cryptoquip
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Kelsey Martin and Molly Murphy, both of Overland Park, chill out in front of the Kansas Union Wednesday afternoon. The pair
were on campus for the Kansas Journalism Institute last week. Both are students at Blue Valley Northwest High School and
were taking a class in yearbook design at the Institute.
Hersheys Kisses are called that because the
machine that makes them looks like its kissing
the conveyor belt.
Source: www.hightechscience.org
Just because your voice reaches halfway around
the worlddoesnt meanyouare wiser thanwhen
it reachedonly to the endof the bar.
Edward R. Murrow
NEWS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2006 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3
BY TOM SLAUGHTER
tslaughter@kansan.com
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
Its a landmark that students, fac-
ulty and alumni pass by every day
without even noticing.
Nestled along the exterior of the
Museum of Anthropology is Weaver
Courtyard, a garden that once served
as a serene place of respite for campus
visitors. However, the once-beautiful
alcove on the eastern side of campus
has become ragged, overgrown and
decayed; hardly a place most passers-
by would notice, let alone enter for a
breath of fresh garden air.
Students and faculty in the Mu-
seum, east of the Kansas Union, have
become irritated with the unkempt
nature of the courtyard. Bobbi Rah-
der, who works in the Center for In-
digenous Nations Studies, and some
of her students have worked on a
proposal for Facilities Operations
that would give them permission to
turn the area into a serenity garden
designed to celebrate diferent cul-
tures. Te proposal has not yet been
presented.
Mary J. Adair, Ph.D., associate cu-
rator for the Museum, said she is also
unhappy with the condition of the
garden. She ofered the ideas of turn-
ing it into a garden for monarch but-
terfies or a garden for native plants.
Either way, she said, changes need to
be made.
Its a poor refection of this build-
ing to have it in the condition its in,
Adair said.
Arthur B. Weaver and Amarette
Veatch donated the garden in 1960
in honor of their father, Arthur D.
Weaver. Arthur D. Weaver owned
the locally-renowned Weavers De-
partment Store Inc. He passed away
on June 29th, 1951.
Approximately 10 years later, his
children donated the Arthur D. Weaver
Memorial Fountain Court in a ceremo-
ny that took place in the courtyard. In
a statement found in the University of
Kansas archives, it was said that Since
this memorial has been designed and
planted with great attention to its ap-
pearance, it is hoped that visitors will
cooperate fully with the University in
CAMPUS
Photo courtesy Spencer Archives
This undated photo shows the Weaver Courtyard after its donation to the University in 1960. The courtyard, located next to the Mu-
seum of Anthropology in Spooner Hall, was a gift from the family who owned Weavers Department Store, 901 Massachusetts St.
Unkempt garden draws attention
SEE GARDEN ON PAGE 8
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NEWS
4 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
By Travis roBineTT
trobinett@kansan.com
Kansan senior staff writer
In a brick building on the south-
east corner of Ninth and New Hamp-
shire Streets where the white paint is
peeling of the walls and the wooden
foorboards are covered in a gray lay-
er of dust, old friends and their fami-
lies gathered on Saturday evening to
see the band Lonnie Fame and the
Belltones perform for the frst time
in 30 years.
Te Belltones are all about one
thing having fun, just like they
were when they got together at KU
in the early 70s. Made up of John
Bagby, Rick Caplan, Rick Sherman,
Alec Pollard, Mark Bovos, Pete Mar-
tin, Bill Snifen and Mike Herzmark,
the cover band rocked the dust right
of the dance foor to the rhythm of
dozens of famous hits from the 50s
and 60s, such as Johnny Be Good,
Rockin Robin and Great Balls of
Fire.
The band joked throughout
the entire performance, and at
one point, four members crudely
dressed up as women when they
played My Boyfriends Back and
If I was Bobbys Girl. They even
held a bubble gum blowing contest
after throwing dozens of pieces into
the crowd.
A lot of real bands would get
pissed of because these guys would
play so many gigs, Phil Menkin,
Lawrence resident and long-time
friend of the band, said.
Barb Snifen from Grants Pass,
Ore., who is married to the drum-
mers brother, remembered when
Te Belltones played at the Ball-
room in the Kansas Union in 1972
and rode motorcycles onto the stage
afer sneaking them in through the
back door.
Tis is great, she said. It brings
back all the memories, all the same
old gags. Tey move a little slower,
but Im impressed.
Te Ballroom concert was a
breakthrough for the band, which
had been playing at college parties
and small downtown venues. It was
also the frst concert performed at
the Union when beer was allowed.
Te Belltones eventually ended
up touring the Midwest, and afer a
short-lived small amount of success
and fame, everyone went their sepa-
rate ways. Some now live as close as
Prairie Village while others live as far
as Pennsylvania and California, with
careers ranging from journalism to
psychiatry.
Sherman, the keyboard player,
was the only member who went
on to become a professional mu-
sician.
We want everyone on the dance
foor, men, women, children and
grandparents, Sherman told the au-
dience, who clapped and stomped
Te Belltones back onto the stage
for an encore. Afer two more songs
the band was fnished.
Tat really is all the songs we
know, Pollard said. Well see you all
in another 30 years.
Edited by Dani Hurst
Reunited and it feels so good
After a 30-year hiatus, cover band Lonnie Fame and the Belltones performs together
tculturE
Contributed photo
Members of the band Lonnie Fame and the Belltones pose for a picture after their
show at a building on Ninth and New Hampshire Streets. The band, which played during
the early 70s in Lawrence, played together last Saturday for the frst time in 30 years.
Because sometimes the
lake water
seems a little bit warmer
with a few
beers
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Wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 5
t obituary
By adrienne Bommarito
abommaritor@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Deborah A.
Gerner, professor
of political sci-
ence, died June 19
in her home afer
a struggle with
breast cancer. She
was 50 years old.
Gerner started her
career at the Uni-
versity of Kansas in 1988 as assistant pro-
fessor of political science. In 1991 she was
promoted to associate professor, then in
2001 became a professor. Gerners main
area of study was the United States and
comparative foreign policy.
Gerner taught both undergraduate
and graduate courses in international
relations and foreign policy and in
comparative politics.
A 1977 graduate from Earlham Col-
lege in Richmond, Ind., Gerner double-
majored in religion and peace and con-
fict studies. In 1979, Gerner received her
masters degree in political science from
Northwestern University in Evanston,
Ill., and in 1982 she received her doctoral
degree from Northwestern University.
Prior to teaching at the University,
Gerner taught at the University of Iowa
and Hamilton College. She was also a vis-
iting professor at the American Univer-
sity in Cairo, Egypt, Birzeit University in
Palestine and at Northwestern University.
Gerner proved her knowledge of
political science in the three books she
wrote; One Land, Two Peoples: Te Con-
fict Over Palestine, 1994, Understanding
the Contemporary Middle East, 2000, and
When the Rain Returns: Justice and Rec-
onciliation in Palestine and Israel, 2004.
Gerner was honored with many
awards including a Kemper Award for
excellence in teaching, the Byron T.
Shutz Award for distinguished teach-
ing and the Distinguished Alumna
Award from Earlham College. She was
also a member of the University of
Kansas Womens Hall of Fame.
Gerner is survived by her husband,
Philip A. Schrodt, professor of political sci-
ence at the University; her parents, Henry
and Dorothy Love Gerner, of Indianapolis;
and her brother, Mark Gerner, of Evans-
ville, Ind.
A cremation is planned for Gerner
at the Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home and
Crematory, 601 Indiana St.
Edited by Dani Hurst
Dear Editor:
Yesterday, the General Assembly
of the Presbyterian Church (USA)
became the latest religious body to en-
dorse legal access to medical marijuana
for seriously ill patients. By consensus,
the denomination passed a resolution
urging Federal legislation that allows
for its use and that provides for the pro-
duction and distribution of the plant
for those purposes.
Te Presbyterian Church (USA)
joins the United Methodist Church,
Episcopal Church, United Church
of Christ, Union for Reform Juda-
ism, Progressive National Baptist
Convention and the Unitarian
Universalist Association in support
of medical marijuana.
On June 28th the US House will
vote on the Hinchey-Rohrabacher
amendment which would prohibit
the Drug Enforcement Admin-
istration from arresting medical
marijuana patients in those states
that allow medical marijuana.
Alaska, California, Colorado, Ha-
waii, Maine, Montana, Nevada,
Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont
and Washington have enacted laws
protecting patients from arrest by
state and local police.
A recent poll conducted by the
Drug Policy Forum of Kansas of
500 frequent voters statewide found
that 62 percent of Kansans are not
opposed to a law allowing people
with serious and terminal medical
conditions to obtain and use a lim-
ited amount of marijuana if recom-
mended by their physician.
If you agree that the doctor-pa-
tient relationship should be free
from government intrusion, please
contact your U.S. representative and
ask him to vote YES on the Hinchey-
Rohrabacher amendment.
Laura A. Green
Drug Policy Forum of Kansas
t letter to the editor
Regents approve fnal
year of tuition plan
Te Board of Regents approved
the fnal year of KUs fve-year
tuition enhancement plan on June
22. However, the tuition in Kansas
is still less than the national and
regional averages, according to a
press release.
Te Board of Regents is al-
ways reluctant to enhance tuition
rates, said Nelson Galle, chair-
man of the Regents, in the press
release. Unfortunately, tuition
enhancements are necessary if we
are to maintain the high quality of
education that Kansans deserve
and demand.
Resident tuition and fees at
the University, along with Kansas
State University and Wichita State
University, are 11 percent below
the regional average. Te tuition
and fees at Emporia State Univer-
sity, Fort Hayes State University
and Pittsburg State University are
32 percent below the regional av-
erage.
Rising natural gas and electric
rates have also afected tuitions by
increasing maintenance costs.
Christine Downey-Schmidt,
vice chairwoman of the Regents,
said in the press release that uni-
versities are forced to do more with
less funding.
Te six universities have moved
aggressively to cut costs, achieve ef-
fciencies and broaden their fund-
ing base to respond to enrollment
increases and the reduced share of
state funding, Downey-Schmidt
said.
Dani Hurst
Political science professor
dies after battle with cancer
NeWS
news
6 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
t campus
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Matt Petrie, Shawnee junior, eats at the veggie lunch Thursday afternoon at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Veggie lunch will still be available every Thursday beginning at 11:30 a.m. during summer classes.
By dani hurst
dhurst@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Some regard the summer Veggie
Lunch as one of the University of
Kansas summer secrets while others
just consider it a tasty lunch.
Veggie Lunch at the Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread
Ave., doesnt just end when the spring
semester ends but continues to serve
throughout the summer semester.
Veggie Lunch ofers vegetarian
food cooked by volunteers and do-
nated bread from both WheatFields
Bakery and Cafe, 904 Vermont St.,
and Great Harvest Bread Co., 807
Vermont St. Veggie Lunch requests
donations, any amount that a guest
can aford to give, which helps cover
the cost of the food.
Some people put in as much as
$20, Reverend Tad Holcombe, ECM
campus minister, said. Some dont
put any in. As long as the program
breaks even, it doesnt matter to him.
Holcombe said that fall and spring
Veggie Lunch normally serves about
110 to 130 guests every Tursday af-
ternoon, while the summer lunches,
still on Tursdays, only see about 30-
40. Holcombe attributes the decrease
in numbers to the summer heat and
the lack of bodies around campus.
Mike Parrott, Austin graduate stu-
dent and occasional volunteer cook,
said the cooking process could be a
daunting task, but there were al-
ways people to help out.
Parrott said he volunteers for many
reasons, one of which is because he
thinks of it as helping others by put-
ting food back into the community.
It gives you an opportunity to
learn about diferent cultures, Par-
rott said. Its kind of a perspective-
broadening experience.
Tis has nothing to do with just
one culture or religion, Holcombe
said. He said sitting around a table
is important to many people because
its about accepting everyone for who
Veggie Lunch
continues
in summer
see veggie lunch on page 8
843-6375 parking in the back
911 Mass. In Downtown Lawrence
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NEWS
wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 7
see photos page 8
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Jade Reeves has been photographing people, things, anything I see since she was 16. Photography is one of her main interests,
but Reeves, a Kansas Ciy, Kan., sophomore, also works at Pulse, the coffee shop in The Underground. Here, shes shown with some
of her black-and-white work, dating back to when she frst started taking photos in high school.
By adrienne Bommarito
abommarito@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Jade Reeves has learned a thing or
two about life. At 20 years old, she
has already learned about the severe
downsides of alcoholism, how to ac-
cept diversity in her life and how to
shoot a camera.
A Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
majoring in English, Reeves is the
oldest of six girls, ages ranging from
2 to 20.
Having fve sisters is complicated in
itself, but growing up with fve sisters
from diferent backgrounds and dif-
ferent parents makes it even harder.
Reeves is the only child from both
parents; two of her sisters are stepsisters
and the other three are half sisters.
Although they didnt live together,
Reeves credits her sisters for helping
her better understand people from
other cultures. Four of her sisters
are half-African American and half-
Caucasian, and the other is half-His-
panic and half-Caucasian. She said when
she was growing up she never knew the
diference, that they were her sisters and
always would be.
When I meet someone with a dif-
ferent culture, its easier to meet them
without having stereotypical difer-
ences, she said.
Reeves was raised mostly by her
mother, except for the three years when
she lived with her grandmother.
When Reeves was 8 years old, her
mother checked herself in for alcohol
abuse rehabilitation, and sent Reeves
to her grandmothers.
A few years later when Reeves was
a freshman in college, her father, who
she didnt meet until she was about 6
years old, also checked himself into
rehabilitation for alcohol abuse.
Because both of her parents are
recovering alcoholics, Reeves doesnt
see the need for alcohol in her life.
She goes out and has fun without it,
but said if she does drink, its very
limited and very controlled.
Reeves used her high school, JC
Harmon High School, Kansas City,
Kan., to get away from the chaos in
her life. She threw herself into jour-
nalism, starting as a photographer
and worked her way all the way up to
being editor-in-chief for two years.
However, photography is her fa-
vorite hobby and thus is the one on
Student fnds peace in photos
t profilE
NEWS
8 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
preserving its beauty.
While the current condition of
the courtyard defes this notion, it
is unclear where the blame lies as to
who should be taking care of it.
Joe Flannery, President and CEO
of Weavers, said that he was unaware
of any operation at the University
that should be keeping the courtyard
intact. He said that it was his under-
standing that the University and the
Weaver family had an agreement
that the Weavers would help with the
courtyards upkeep.
As time has passed and the people
who were instrumental in both the
opening and the upkeep of the courtyard
have died, little attention has been given
to the once-beautiful spot on campus.
Flannery agreed that the Weaver
Courtyard needs to be refurbished and
properly maintained. As the inquiry of
the courtyards condition brought at-
tention to the matter, Flannery said
that he decided something should be
done to maintain the area.
Because of our love for the Weav-
er family, well be happy to keep it
up, Flannery said. Well be happy
to maintain it.
Edited by Dani Hurst
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Emily Louni, Watson Library employee, and Nazim Louni, Algiers, Algeria graduate
student, enjoy lunch in the garden just south of Museum of Anthropology.
said. He said sitting around a
table is important to many people
because its about accepting every-
one for who they are and learning
from each other.
And the diverse groups of people
who Veggie Lunch attracts are what
some people like the most.
Gideon VanRiette, Iola senior and
administrative coordinator of Veggie
Lunch, said hes been coming every
week for a few years, and said that the
diferent types of people who come
are the most interesting part of the
whole program. He also said that the
heat may keep some people away in
the summer, but joked that July would
be even hotter inside the ECM.
Sarah Dees, Lawrence senior and
former coordinator for Veggie Lunch,
said that it was a lot more laid back in
the summer because there were a lot
less people. Dees said she liked the re-
laxed setting of the summer months,
but also enjoyed the excitement of the
fall and spring semesters.
Holcombe has been involved
with the program since its incep-
tion in 1999. Ten it was just a small
gathering, Holcombe said, but it
grew into something bigger.
Students arent the only ones to at-
tend Veggie Lunch, either. Professors
and Lawrence residents are also fre-
quent visitors.
Richard League, Lawrence resi-
dent, also remembered the days
when Veggie Lunch was little more
than a few friends eating together.
But he still comes every week like
clockwork.
League said he really enjoyed
coming and mingling with people
of diferent ages.
I love it, League said. Some
people call me a kid at heart. Ive
always been that way.
But overall, League said he just
liked the whole experience in general.
Teyre a very special group,
League said. Teyre very warm and
friendly.
Edited by Janiece Gatson
Last year, Reeves submitted
one of her photos to the Olive
Gallery, 15 E. 8th St., for an ex-
hibition to which anyone could
submit. The photo was of her
3-year-old sister. Reeves doesnt
know how long it hung in the
gallery, but it could still be there
because she hasnt picked it up
yet.
Reeves has shot pictures for
two weddings; her aunts and her
boyfriends best friend.
She enjoys photography, but like
many of her fellow schoolmates,
Reeves hasnt made up her mind
about what she wants to do afer
college.
Some days I want to own a cof-
fee shop, some days I want to do
photography, she said. And other
days I want to run a magazine.
Reeves currently works at Pulse,
the cofee shop in the Under-
ground in the basement of Wescoe
Hall.
Reeves started college as a
graphic design major, but decided
to switch to English because she
thought it would take less time to
fnish school.
Since starting college, Reeves
looks at life diferently.
Im in college now and kind of
away from it all, she said. Its in per-
spective.
Edited by Dani Hurst
garden (continued from 3)
picture (continued from 7)
veggie lunch (continued from 6)
entertai nment
wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 9
By meraiah foley
the associated press
SYDNEY, Australia Church bells rang
out over Nicole Kidmans hometown Sunday
to announce her marriage to country music
star Keith Urban in a lavish but intimate cer-
emony attended by relatives, close friends and
a smattering of Hollywood stars.
Te beaming bride wore a fowing white
Balenciaga gown and pearl drop earrings. Her
cream Rolls-Royce limousine drove from her
waterfront mansion across the iconic Sydney
Harbor Bridge, through streets lined with
cheering fans.
Kidman, accompanied by her father, Anto-
ny, smiled and waved to well-wishers outside
the Gothic-style St. Patricks College building,
which was dramatically foodlit for the eve-
ning ceremony.
Te nuptials were held in a small chapel on
the compound atop clifs overlooking a beach.
Urban, a Grammy-winning country music
star, wore a black suit with a white rose in his
lapel matching a bouquet clutched by Kid-
man.
Te ceremony was private, amid intense
public interest and speculation about the de-
tails. Te pastor said the Oscar-winning ac-
tress and Nashville, Tenn.-based singer would
have a traditional Roman Catholic service.
It was Urbans frst marriage. Kidman and
Tom Cruise divorced in 2001 afer 10 years of
marriage.
Te couple released an ofcial photograph
showing them smiling and holding hands.
We just want to thank everyone in Aus-
tralia and around the world who have sent us
their warm wishes, the newlyweds said in a
brief statement accompanying the photo.
Tey were expected to spend their wedding
night in Sydney before leaving for what local
media said would be a Fiji resort honeymoon.
Urbans manager said Saturday the couple
had wanted a normal wedding.
By david germain
the associated press
LOS ANGELES Adam Sandler took
charge of the remote control at the weekend
box ofce.
His comic fantasy Click, about a man
whose new universal remote takes control of
his life and leaves it in chaos, debuted as the
No. 1 movie with $40 million, according to
studio estimates Sunday.
Sonys Click bumped of the Disney-
Pixar animated comedy Cars, which slipped
to second place with $22.5 million, raising its
domestic total to $155.9 million.
Te weekends other new wide release Fo-
cus Features Waist Deep, starring Tyrese Gib-
son as an ex-con forced into a robbery spree to
collect ransom for his kidnapped son opened
strongly with $9.5 million to fnish at No. 4.
Waist Deep played in 1,004 theaters and
averaged $9,414 per cinema, compared to a
$10,670 average for Click in 3,749 theaters.
Click fnished in the ballpark of the open-
ing weekends for Sandlers other recent com-
edies, Mr. Deeds, Anger Management, 50
First Dates and Te Longest Yard, whose
debuts ranged from $37 million to $47 million.
Sandler plays a harried architect and fam-
ily man who receives a magical remote that
can fast-forward and freeze-frame his life. Te
movie co-stars Kate Beckinsale, Christopher
Walken and David Hasselhof.
Sandlers one of the most bankable stars in
Hollywood, said Paul Dergarabedian, presi-
dent of box-ofce tracker Exhibitor Relations.
Adam Sandler has this timeless appeal to au-
diences. Hes like a big kid, and people love
that about him.
Kidman, Urban wed in Australia
SandlerS new movie, click, takeS control of top Spot
t PeOPLe
t mOVieS
Feature Wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 11 entertai nment 10 the university daily kansan Wednesday, june 28, 2006
S
he stood still, seconds from
being naked in a roomfull
of strangers.
So I take my bathrobe
of now, Julie said, and dropped her
robe to the foor, Oh and Imnaked.
For most people, the ideaof standing
completely naked in front of a group of
strangers is one of a handful of least de-
sirable scenarios imaginable.
Julie, a junior at KU and a model
for the Life Drawing classes at the
University of Kansas, said she was
nervous the frst time.
Franklin Fantini, Lawrence junior is
one of four other models, in addition to
Julie, this summer. He had a diferent
experience his frst time. Fantini saidhe
was nervous, but was more apprehen-
sive about posing than being naked.
Posing is just as personal, Fantini
said.
Te classes in the art department,
part of the School of Fine Arts at the
University, utilize nude models for
the study and rendering of the hu-
man form, Leigh Ann Livingston, a
senior administrative assistant in the
art department, said. Livingston is
also in charge of hiring the models
for classes.
EMPLOYMENT
Livingston said that most of the
models were recruited by other mod-
els, and that their advertising is most-
ly word of mouth. Sometimes ads are
placed on bulletin boards in the Art
and Design Building, which is west of
Budig Hall.
Models arent always students and
are not required to be ft. Te art de-
partment prefers a variety of models for
the beneft of art students. Te students
also want a variety of models because
they want toobserve anddrawdiferent
body types, according to Livingston.
Models come in all shapes, sizes
and ages, Livingston said. We also
get a lot of former students.
Julie said she started at $8.50 per hour
andgot a dollar raise afer a year.
DRAWING
When it came to drawing from ob-
servation, Melissa Watson, the summer
lecturer of the Life Drawing course,
said the most important thing was that
artists brokedowntheir preconceptions
of what things looked like so that they
could actually drawwhat they saw.
Te idea of using the human
formis that it happens to be the most
complex, Watson said. Not only in
the amount of preconceptions that
we carry around as human beings
about what our body looks like, what
it should look like. Also because its a
machine that can do so much.
Watson eluded to the joints of the
human body as moving parts and de-
scribed the way a persons body looks
under diferent light and in difer-
ent positions to explain the machine
analogy.
POSING
Watsons classes usually begin with
Gestures, which require the model to
pose for 10 to 15 seconds in any posi-
tionthey choose before switching. Tis
exercise forces Watsons students to
work quickly without thinking much
about their preconceived notions.
Te longer poses follow, which can
be as brief as a few minutes or as long
as 45 minutes. Watson usually directs
the model for longer poses. Tose
poses allow the model to sit.
Even though theyre supposed to
remain still, the model can adjust
if a part of their body gets tired or
scratch an itch if they need to, Fan-
tini said.
MISCONCEPTIONS
Livingston said that many people
dont understand the purpose of us-
ing nude models in art classes.
Nudity is diferent from naked-
ness, Livingston said. Tis is a set-
ting in which the body is seen as an
object for study, theres a purpose. Its
not something to gape or gawk at.
Art students take the study of the
human form seriously. Katie Hunt,
Memphis, Tenn., sophomore, is a stu-
dent in Life Drawing this semester.
She said the atmosphere in the class-
roomis always professional.
Fantini attributes that profession-
alismto the purpose at hand.
Teyre not judgingme, Fantini said.
Were bothstudents trying todoa job.
Hunt and Watson said they were
nervous the frst time they drew the
nude human formin an art class. Wat-
son said she was anticipating feeling
uncomfortable, but said that the an-
ticipation was worse than the reality.
Te model sits down, theyre
nude and they look bored as hell,
Watson said. And youre like, oh, this
is actually really mundane. Tere is
nothing titillating about it, nothing
sexual about it.
Hunt thought it would be strange
the frst time she drew a nude model,
but said it wasnt.
Te teacher told us that its only as
awkward as you make it, Hunt said.
We were told to treat it as drawing
another object.
IMPACT ON MODELS
Julie said that her job was impor-
tant because art students need to learn
how to draw the human fgure, and if
they have to draw someone, she was
happy to help thembecome better.
Posing has helped her confdence
and her openness in relationships, so
she recommended that her friends
became models. Two of her friends,
including Fantini, have started pos-
ing for drawing classes because of
her positive experience. Fantini said
he would model for as long as he
could.
Afer the frst time, more than
a year ago, Julie has become more
comfortable posing. If you can stand
naked in front of 20 people, you can
do just about anything, Julie said. I
really enjoy it.
Editedby JanieceGatson
t art
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
A fnished sketch from the Life Drawing class sits on display in a hallway on the fourth foor of the Art and Design Building. Some models pose not only for drawing classes, but painting classes also.
models pose
for beauty of art
By jack Weinstein kansan staff Writer jweinstein@kansan.com
BY jIM SALTER
the associated press
ST. LOUIS Anheuser-Busch Cos.
Inc. will be the exclusive alcohol spon-
sor for the Super Bowl through 2012,
and the worlds largest brewer is add-
ing other sports to its long list of spon-
sorships.
Te St. Louis-based maker of Bud-
weiser, Bud Light, Michelob and other
beers announced on Monday it agreed
a deal with NBC, which will televise
the Super Bowl in 2009 and 2012. An-
heuser-Busch announced in March
agreements with CBS for the 2007 and
2010 games and Fox for the 2008 and
2011 Super Bowls.
Anheuser-Busch has been the Su-
per Bowls exclusive alcohol sponsor
since 1989.
Te deal with NBC also calls for An-
heuser-Busch to serve as exclusive al-
cohol advertiser for airing of the Ryder
Cup and the Presidents Cup fromnext
year through 2011. Anheuser-Busch
will sponsor the Kentucky Derby and
the Preakness through 2010.
Anheuser-Buschs 48.8-percent share
of the domestic beer market is partly
due to years of saturating sporting
events with marketing and advertising.
Te company was the exclusive beer
sponsor for this years Winter Olympics
and is the same for soccers World Cup.
It sponsors the Daytona 500 and other
NASCARevents, major league baseball,
golf s PGA Championship, the NCAA
basketball tourney and college footballs
prominent games.
Anheuser-Busch wont say how
much it spends on sports advertising,
but the fgure has been estimated at
$300 million.
We still believe live sports are very
much on target to our adult beer con-
sumer, said Tony Ponturo, vice presi-
dent of global media and sports mar-
keting for Anheuser-Busch. At least in
the beer category, theres nothing that
can beat a major live sporting event.
Advertising on sports remains the
crucial tool for reaching the brewerys
most sought-afer demographic
men ages 21 to 34 said Eric Shepard,
executive editor of the industry publi-
cation Beer Marketers Insights.
Its clearlyapriorityfor them, Shepa-
rd said, though he noted that as An-
heuser-Busch expands into other types
of alcoholic drinks to ofset a stagnation
of beer sales in recent years, it is fnding
newways to market its products.
Teyre adding other drinks, using
other media, Shepard said. In the last
couple of years, theyve become more
fexible.
Anheuser-Busch shares slipped 12
cents to close at $45.30 on the New
York Stock Exchange.
BY SAMuEL MAuLL
the associated press
NEW YORK Naomi Campbell appeared
in a Manhattan courtroomTuesday where pros-
ecutors said a plea bargain was possible in her
cell phone assault case. She did not speak during
the brief proceeding.
The real action came outside the lower
Manhattan courthouse, where some 50 pho-
tographers and camera crews waited for a shot
of the 36-year-old supermodel after her ap-
pearance before Criminal Court Judge Evelyn
Laporte.
Campbell, attorney David Breitbart and
Campbells small retinue were forced to hide in-
side the courthouse for about fve minutes until
a car arrived to take them away from the media
horde.
When Campbells case was called, prosecutor
Shanda Strain told the judge that no grand jury
action had been taken in the case. Te defense
then agreed to an adjournment pending a pos-
sible plea deal, and Laporte ordered everyone to
return to court on Sept. 27.
Campbell, wearing a tight black dress with 4-
inch heels, her long hair fowing down the length
of her back, was silent in the courtroom. She was
arrested March 31 for allegedly throwing a cell
phone at one of her employees in a dispute over
a missing pair of jeans.
She has called the allegations completely
untrue. But the housekeeper, Ana Scolavino,
was treated at Lenox Hill Hospital for an in-
jury to the back of her head after the inci-
dent.
Te volatile Campbell has a history of prob-
lems with her employees. In 2003, she was sued
by a former administrative assistant who said
Campbell had thrown a phone at her during a
tantrumtwo years earlier.
In August 2004, in the same apartment,
Campbell and her maid battled it out, with the
worker claiming the supermodel slapped her
across the face. Campbell accused maid Milli-
cent Burton of instigating the fght.
On Monday, in Manhattans state Su-
preme Court, another maid, Gaby Gibson,
filed a lawsuit accusing Campbell of per-
sonal injuries, employment discrimina-
tion, civil assault, civil battery and other
complaints.
The court document does not detail al-
leged acts by Campbell, but in a published
interview in April, Gibson said the catwalk-
er hit her on Jan. 17, called her names and
threatened to have her arrested. Gibson told
the New York Post that Campbell got upset
after being unable to find a specific pair of
jeans.
Louis Lanzano/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Model Naomi Campbell is escorted by a court offcer to her waiting vehicle following her hearing at Manhattan criminal court stemming froman alleged assault on her
maid,Tuesday, June 27, 2006, in NewYork. The defense agreed to an adjournment pending a possible plea deal, and the judge ordered everyone back in court on Sept. 27.
t PeoPle
t Business
Plea bargain possible in phone assault case
busch adds nbc to list of sponsorships
Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc./THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
This undated released by Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc. shows Bud Bowl bottles that were
part of the 1989 Anheuser-Busch Cos. exclusive sponsorship for the Super Bowl. The
worlds largest brewer will continue as the sponsor for the Super Bowl through 2012.
www.kansan.com page 12
wednesday, june 28, 2006
sports
sports
see baseball on page 14
by jack weinstein
jweinstein@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Four former Kansas basketball play-
ers returned to Lawrence to don the
crimson and blue in the annual Bill Self
Basketball Camp scrimmage June 21.
Billy Thomas, Aaron Miles, Michael Lee
and Christian Moody were met with
thunderous ovations from a packed
house at the 1,300-seat Horejsi Family
Athletic Center.
Te two teams in the scrimmage wore
either red shirts or blue shirts. Te alumni,
paired with Kansas freshman Darrell Ar-
thur, Brennan Bechard and sophomore
Roderick Stewart, made up the red team.
The blue team was comprised of juniors
Jeremy Case, Russell Robinson and Dar-
nell Jackson, sophomores Brandon Rush,
Mario Chalmers and Julian Wright, red-
shirt sophomore Matt Kleinmann and
freshman Brady Morningstar. The vic-
tory went to the first team to score 70
points.
Thomas, who played with the NBAs
Washington Wizards last season afer
breaking into the league for the frst time
with the New Jersey Nets in 2005, said he
looked forward to returning to the camps
scrimmage every year even though the re-
gime under which he played has changed.
He was the second-leading three-point
shooter in Kansas history, and played un-
der former coach Roy Williams until he
graduated in 1998.
A year away from Kansas basketball
hasnt hurt the all-time assist leader in
both the Universitys and Big 12 Confer-
ence history. Miles dished and drove past
defenders the entire game. Miles played
with the NBAs Golden State Warriors and
the Fort Worth Flyers of the National Bas-
ketball Development League the minor
league of the NBA last year. He said he
was glad to be back in Lawrence with the
t basketball
Old, new Hawks end camp
Former and current Jayhawks scrimmage at Selfs summer camp
Joshua Bickel/KANSAN
Former Kansas guard Aaron Miles autographs a basketball
Wednesday afternoon at the Horejsi Center after a scrimmage
between former and current Kansas players.
804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000
www.sunoweroutdoorandbike.com
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sports
wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 13
With the NBA Draf taking
place tonight in the Big Apple at
the famed Madison Square Gar-
den luckily the Knicks are only
making picks and not playing
there are a couple things this
years event brings to mind.
For starters, the lack of a con-
sensus No. 1 pick and an overall
lack of big name talent.
Te woebegone Toronto Rap-
tors hold the top choice and there
is no telling where the Canadian
Cagers might go with it. Experts
and mock draf boards have the
Raptors taking former Gonzaga
star Adam Morrison, Italian for-
ward Andrew Bargnani or trad-
ing out of the top spot, among
other scenarios.
But thats the problem; there
are too many scenarios. Nobody
in this years crop, err, patch of tal-
ent stands out. In past years youve
had locks at the top spot. In 2005
was Andrew Bogut, and before
that Dwight Howard and Emeka
Okafor were a push in 2004. In
2003 was the linebacker that hap-
pens to play the point-forward,
Mr. LeBron James.
Even afer you get past the frst
pick this year, theres still a lot of
uncertainty. Is LaMarcus Aldridge
and his 6-foot-11, 234 lbs., frame
ready to bang in the big time? Can
JJ Redick, virtually automatic in
college, get his shot of consistently
against the likes of a Kirk Hinrich,
Larry Hughes or Gilbert Arenas
on a regular basis?
One thing that is certain is that
no Jayhawks will be selected in
tonights draf and that is a good
thing. Next years draf, though,
will be a diferent story. Four of
KUs fve returning starters could
go pro next season. Will they? Of
course not, but well take a look at
who might.
Brandon Rush, the one player
who many thought was a one-
and-done guy when he landed
at Mt. Oread, proved in the Big
12 and NCAA tourneys that he
was about as ready for the NBA
as I am.
His postseason play aside,
Rush would have probably been a
late frst-rounder or early second-
rounder had he chosen to go pro.
Instead, Rush, afer a year of im-
proving his game and maybe, just
maybe, a deep tournament run,
the Kansas City, Mo., super soph-
omore should position himself
nicely in the 2007 NBA lottery.
Barring a major injury, I expect
this to be Rushs last season as a
Jayhawk.
Julian Wright, the most tal-
ented player on the KU roster
in terms of an all-around game,
could easily make the jump to the
next level afer the season.
At 6-8, 220 lbs. and growing,
the lanky Chicagoan reminds me
a lot of Marvin Williams only a
better defender the North Caro-
lina product who jumped ship af-
ter the Tar Heels won the title in
05 and was selected second over-
all by Atlanta in last years draf.
If Wright improves at the same
rate this season as he did through
the course of last year, I dont care
if Wright said he wanted to stay
six years at KU, this kid has top-3
talent, and hed have to seriously
consider making the jump.
Finally, theres the backcourt
duo of Mario Chalmers and Rus-
sell Robinson. While both are
tremendous defenders, Chalmers
edges Robinson by virtue of a bet-
ter ofensive game. However, be-
ing a coachs son, Chalmers will
stick around at least three years
and Robinson will beneft by stay-
ing all four.
And the two wildcard scenari-
os next season: CJ Giles and Dar-
rell Arthur.
Giles has yet to prove consis-
tently hes ready to be the man
in the middle for the Hawks, but
if he does this season, hes gone.
With his Marcus Camby-like body
and shot-blocking ability, the Se-
attle-native will be propelled into
the frst round by that alone.
And Arthur, aka Slim Shady? Hes
one dream away from going pro.
Davis is a Topeka senior in
journalismandenglish.
t serenity now
Starters could go pro next year
By fred a. davis iii
fdavis@kansan.com
guys.
They have a lot of potential, Miles
said, Hopefully with all the talent, how
they started playing well toward the end
of the season can carry over to next season
and bring a championship here. The effort
that they put into it is going to dictate re-
sults.
Lee, a Harlem Globetrotter for the past
year, echoed Miles sentiments about the
prospects of this years Jayhawks.
Teyre a good group, Lee said. If they
play together, the skys the limit.
Moody, who college
basketball broadcaster
Billy Packer, called the
greatest walk-on in the
history of Kansas basket-
ball, didnt disappoint, and
threw down several dunks
to the delight of fans.
Te game wasnt just
important to campers
and the fans, Self said
it requires extra efort
for former players to re-
turn. He said his players
looked forward to the op-
portunity to play against
former teammates and
NBA players.
Three players did not play in the scrim-
mage. Junior Forward CJ Giles sat on the
bench in street clothes. Hes restricted from
contact for another month after having
thumb surgery in mid June. Giles will re-
sume individual workouts in about a week.
Freshman guard Sherron Collins re-
turned to Chicago for personal reasons. Self
said it was a shame Collins couldnt make it
back for the scrimmage because everyone
in the crowd would have enjoyed watching
him play.
Junior forward Sasha Kaun was absent be-
cause he went home to Tomsk, Russia, to visit
his mother and renew his visa.
I dont think Sashas
been home for fve years
now, Self said. You take
for granted some people
get home sick being 45
minutes away. Heres a
guy thats gone fve years
without going home.
Tats tough for any
young person.
Te red team led most
of the game, but sopho-
more guard Chalmers
sealed the 71-66 victory
for the blue team afer he
split the defense for an
easy layup.
Edited by Dani Hurst
Hopefully with all the
talent, how they started
playing well toward the end
of the season can carry over
to next season and bring a
championship.
AARON MILES
Former KU basketball player
BASKETBALL (from page 12)
SPORTS
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Adverti sement
Wednesday, June 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 15
horoscope. wednesday, june 28
crossword. 1

5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffcult
The Stars Show the Kind of Day Youll Have:
sudoku
see page 17 for answers
ARIES
(March 21-April 19)
HHHHH Simultaneously, you
fnd seriousness and caring in
a key relationship. What you
do right now counts more than
you are aware of. Your creativ-
ity and imagination take you in a
new direction.
Tonight: Kick up your heels.
TAURUS
(April 20-May 20)
HHH You need to focus on and
emphasize your personal and/
or family life. You come from a
place of solidity and happiness.
Think positively about a serious
situation. You will turn it into a
productive opportunity.
Tonight: Happy at home. Share
your feelings.
GEMINI
(May 21-June 20)
HHHHH You might be dead
serious, but you can express
your feelings and decisions
diplomatically. The end results
will be far more successful and
a lot better for you and for oth-
ers. Take action and dont sit on
your duff.
Tonight: Chat up a storm.
CANCER
(June 21-July 22)
HHH You might feel fnancially
wired, but have little choice in
what you do or where you go.
Somehow, others dont respond
to your gestures as you would
like. You need to take a strong
action in order to get the results
you want.
Tonight: Buy yourself a treat.
Your feelings could play out
through spending.
LEO
(July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHHH You are all smiles.
Your strong sense of direction
will lead you. You might want
to understand more than you
have in the past. Your creativity
teamed with your self-discipline
could make an unstoppable
combo. Lighten up.
Tonight: Happiness surrounds
the Lion.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Slow down, and youll
succeed. When you run quickly,
you could make mistakes, as
you might not have time to think
through your response and de-
cisions. Take your time with a
gentle or caring person. A dis-
cussion is hush-hush. Keep it
that way.
Tonight: Take some time off.

LIBRA
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH Aim high and pre-
cisely for what you want.
Your gentle and direct style
draws better results than
others (and even you) might
think. Understand more of
what you want from someone
you care about. You can have
just that.
Tonight: Hang with friends.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH Take charge in a manner
that leaves no question who is
the director of a project. Laugh
and lighten up about what
needs to happen. You can be
oh, so serious! Enjoy the people
around you.
Tonight: Take charge, and oth-
ers will respond -- positively
or negatively, but they will re-
spond.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH Your creativity surg-
es and will for the next few
months. Mini wars could begin
if you dont have an outlet for
this special energy. Use your
vitality and dynamic energy to-
ward romance or a new hobby.
You just need to be yourself and
fnd the right venues for your
personality.
Tonight: Try tango lessons, or
start up a firtation.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Work with someone di-
rectly, and youll succeed.
Speeding could leap out of
control, or you might need
to disperse funds when you
dont want to. Restraint can
happen, but you might feel a
lack of connection with deci-
sions.
Tonight: A long-overdue talk.
Discussions evolve.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Instigate a talk, know-
ing what you can and cannot
accomplish. You could hit car-
ing, anger and a closing off -- all
simultaneously. Stop. You might
want to think before you step
into a mess.
Tonight: Let others take the ini-
tiative. Just sit back.
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Let others run with the
ball. Proceed and do what you
must. Just because someone
makes a suggestion doesnt
mean you need to follow it. A
walk around the block relaxes
even the most uptight Fish.
Tonight: Get some extra down-
time. Follow through on what is
important.

ACROSS
1 Incite
5 Thats a laugh!
8 Beyond control
12 Leeway
13 Katarina Witts
arena
14 Amahls night
visitors
15 April bloom
17 Overdo at the
beach
18 Rate
19 Came down in
buckets
21 Snitch
22 Take Train
23 Petrol
26 Roulette bet
28 Bracelet site
31 Vicinity
33 Pirates quaff
35 Abound
36 Schroeders prop
38 Dawn goddess
40 Billboards
41 Complain repeat-
edly
43 1, 2, 3, etc.
(Abbr.)
45 Swampland
fower
47 Rag
51 Moist in the
morning
52 Wonderland
affair
54 Clumsy feet
55 Hostel work
environment?
56 Clair de
57 Over 50 per-
cent
58 Strange
59 Meadows
DOWN
1 Bear in the air?
2 Tiers
3 Leaves
4 Eastern poten-
tate
5 With-it sort
6 Expert
7 Damn Yankees
song
8 Encompassing
9 Hawaiian volcano
10 Shrek, for one
11 Benevolent
16 Autocrat
20 Eureka!
23 Hiatus
24 Jackies second
mate
25 Seattle squad
27 Payable
29 Started
30 Type squares
32 Shrink
34 Papass Z co-
star
37 Tramcar con-
tents
39 Daytime drama
42 Cookout site
44 Play for time
45 Leading man
46 Celsius equiva-
lent of 32 degrees
Fahrenheit
48 Authentic
49 Lab vessel
50 Deli loaves
53 This clues place,
aptly
EntErtai nmEnt 16 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
ACROSS
1 Diamond arbiter
4 Skirt length
8 Cops protective
garb
12 Carnival city
13 Valhalla VIP
14 Rainbow
15 February birth-
stone
17 Overly theatrical
18 Deadly
19 JFK info
21 Piercing tool
22 January birth-
stone
26 Ill-tempered one
29 Shriners cha-
peau
30 Previous to
31 Own
32 Sherman called
it hell
33 Picnic hamperer
34 Away from
WSW
35 Card-table call
36 Rids of rind
37 December birth-
stone
39 Scale member
40 Put into the mix
41 Hire
45 Lion King villain
48 September
birthstone
50 1960s musi-
cal
51 Hodgepodge
52 Bottom line
53 Actress Ros-
sum
54 Paper quantity
55 Pond fsh
DOWN
1 Eurasian range
2 Silent actor
3 Bard
4 Punk hairstyle
5 Pastoral work
6 Insult (Sl.)
7 Whole number
8 Wakefeld cleric
9 Historic period
10 Scrooge por-
trayer
11 Recipe qty.
16 Macbeths title
20 Bugss devil foe
23 In the area of
24 One of HOMES
25 Change for a
ffty
26 At the home of
(Fr.)
27 Eastern royal
28 State with con-
viction
29 Bleacherite
32 Kind of chair or tie
33 Jackie Gleason
role
35 Pantheon member
36 Cheerleaders
prop
38 Tote
39 Old photo
42 Nexus
43 Sandwich treat
44 Bigfoots kin
45 The lassie
46 Rotating part
47 Intention
49 Brewery product
entertai nment
wednesday, june 28, 2006 the university daily kansan 17
crossword. 2
crossword. 3
cryptoquip (answers on page 2)
sudoku answers (from page 16)
3
2 1
ACROSS
1 Iridescent stone
5 Red Skelton
character
9 Tackle moguls
12 Gambling game
13 Teensy amount
14 Frank McCourt
memoir
15 Sherwood For-
est cleric
17 Puncturing tool
18 David, e.g.
19 Too coincidental
21 The guy
22 Ersatz chocolate
24 Between as-
signments
27 Neither mate
28 Senseless?
31 Mauna
32 Chic no more
33 Bills partner
34 Ticklish Muppet
36 Crafty
37 Omit
38 Underwent a
recession
40 Bell or Barker
41 FCC concern
43 Anise-favored
liqueur
47 Ostrichs cousin
48 Rodent in a
tongue twister
51 Elmer, to Bugs
52 moth
53 Online auction
house
54 Morks home
planet
55 Perches
56 Logical
DOWN
1 Slays, Sopranos
style
2 Audition goal
3 Met melody
4 Detest
5 Give as an
example
6 Boudreau of
baseball
7 List-ending
abbr.
8 Smith
9 Mate aboard
the Pequod
10 New Zealand
bird
11 Gilligans
home
16 Wish undone
20 Many millen-
nia
22 Might
23 Bohemian
24 White House
nickname
25 Benicio Toro
26 Some politicians
27 Snoot
29 Miss Piggys
pronoun
30 Jazz style
35 -Wan Kenobi
37 Beauty pageant
IDs
39 Takes to the lanes
40 Singer Davis
41 Give an ex-
treme makeover
42 Cupids feld
43 Handheld sec-
retaries (Abbr.)
44 One of the
brass
45 Volunteers
phrase
46 Terrier type
49 Overseas
agreement?
50 Can. prov.
Classified Policy: The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertis-
ing that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national
origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Miracle Video
SALE
BIG
Kansan Classifieds
classifieds@kansan.com
Dont forget the
20% student discount
when placing a classified.
With proof of KUID
JOBS JOBS JOBS
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
PHONE 785.864.4358 FAX 785.864.5261 CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM
AUTO STUFF JOBS LOST & FOUND FOR RENT
ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE SERVICES CHILD CARE TICKETS TRAVEL
SERVICES SERVICES
Part Time office assistant now thru next
school year, 15-20 hrs/ week Mon-Fri.
Flexible schedule, experience required.
Start $7.50-$8.00. Apply @ Schumm
Food Co, 719 Mass (Upstairs above
Buffalo Bob's).
Help Wanted: painting, cleaning,
grounds keeping, $8/hr. Email at
Lorimar@Sunflower.com
SELL BEER AT NASCAR
July 1st and/or 2nd. Average commission
$75 to $150 per day Plus Tips! GET PAID
CASH NIGHTLY!! Non Profit Groups
Welcome! www.WorkNASCAR.com or call
toll free: 877.EMS.0123
Teaching Opportunity
Rehabiliation Services and KU Center for
Research on Learning are establishing a
pool of instructors interested in periodic
part time contracts to teach literacy and/or
employability skills to individuals with
disabilities in KC, Lawrence, Johnson
County. For more information go to:
http://das.kucrl.org/teachingopportunity.-
html. Applications due by July 17
TUTORS WANTED
The Academic Achievement and Access
Center is hiring tutors for the Fall
Semester (visit the Tutoring Services
website for a list of courses where tutors
are needed). Tutors must have excellent
communication skills and have received a
B or better in the courses that they wish
to tutor (or in higher-level courses in the
same discipline). If you meet these qualifi-
cations, go to www.tutoring.ku.edu or stop
by 22 Strong Hall for more information
about the application process. Two
references are required. Call 864-4064
with questions. EO/AA (Paid for by KU).
CLASSI FI EDS
18 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2006

CAMPUS
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2003 Chandelier Mobile Home. 3 BR, 2
BA, FP & all appliances. Asking $24,000
or best offer. Call 620-229-3444.
Miracle Video
SALE
BIG
1 MONTH FREE RENT
3 BDR 2 bath spacious living room,
walk-in closets, swimming pool, KU &
Lawrence BR, laundry facility, on-site
mgmt., Peaceful setting, Cats welcomed
$650 Call 785-843-0011 or www.holiday-
apts.com
Dont forget the
20% student discount
when placing a
classified.
With proof of KUID
STUFF
JOBS
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
PHONE 785.864.4358 FAX 785.864.5261 CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN.COM
AUTO STUFF JOBS LOST & FOUND FOR RENT
ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE SERVICES CHILD CARE TICKETS TRAVEL
ROOMMATE/SUBLEASE
FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT
Are you 21? Do you like to go out at
night? Will your friends come to where you
work? Applications are being accepted by
West Coast Saloon for summer & fall wait
staff. Apply after 4pm 2222 Iowa.
Creative, Energetic Person. Promote trav-
el, tours, cruises and other fun events.
Opportunities for personal and business
development. 841-6254
Looking for 2 roommates M/F in a nice 3
BR apart. Low cost utils gets you almost
everything@ great location. 817-822-1119
Female roommate needed for coed 3 BR,
2.5 BA in nice townhome in quiet neigh-
borhood near 23rd & Kasold, $300/mo +
util. Call Abbie at 785-840-6462 or Trevor
at 316-215-2485. For summer and next yr.
Holiday
Apartments
2, 3, & 4 BR Apts.
& Townhomes
.
Great Floorplans
.
Walk-in closets
.
Swimming Pool
.
On-site Laundry Facility
.
Cats and small pets ok
KU Bus Route
Lawrence Bus Route
.
.
.
2 Bedroom $515 & Up
3 Bedroom $650 & Up
4 Bedroom $775 & Up
2 Bedroom Townhome $750
SPECIAL
SPECIAL
DONT BE LEFT HANGING
THIS FALL!
CURRENTLY LEASING FOR AUGUST 2006
Put down a low deposit for Fall on an
extra-large 1 bedroom apartment.
With washer/dryer hookups that will be
held for you until the date of move-in!
ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL
SMALL PETS WELCOME NO APPLICATION FEE
CALL OR STOP BY TODAY!
2401 W. 25th [9A3] 785-842-1455
Attention senior grad students, real nice,
spacious 3 or 4 BR house close to KU.
Hardwood floors, no smoking/pets 832-
8909 or 331-5209
House for Rent. 1st Month Rent Free. Au-
gust 1. 1446 Kentucky: 3 BR, LR, Kitchen,
1 1/2 BA, W/D, A/C, Walking Dist. to KU.
Call:785.979.7443 or 785.550.6557.
3 BR SPECIAL--Free Rent!
Quality, Affordable Townhomes
1, 2, 3 Bedroom available, include w/d,
dw, mw, fp, back patio. Great SW location!
Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes
785-841-7849
3 BR/ 3 BA walk-in closets, all appl, mi-
crowave, secruity system, off street park-
ing, close to campus. 900 blk Arkansas
call 843-4090, leave message.
1 MONTH FREE RENT
4 BDR 2 bath Peaceful setting, spacious
rooms, Large closets, swimming pool, KU
& Lawrence BR, laundry facility, on-site
mgmt., Cats welcomed $775 Call 785-
843-0011 or www.holiday-apts.com
Attn seniors, grad students. 1 BR apt,
quiet, real nice, close to campus, hard
wood floors, lots of windows, no smok-
ing/pets. Avail. 8/1 832-8909 or 331-5209
For Rent - 2 BR, 1 BA, Duplex. Close to
campus. $400 per month.
Available now. 785-838-8244
Studio near KU. 3 BR House. 2 BR office
Apt., or sleeping room/ possible exhange
for labor 785-841-6254.
2 BDR 1 bath Quiet setting, patio/balcony,
swimming pool, KU & Lawrence BR, laun-
dry facility, on-site mgmt., Cats welcomed
$515-535 Call 785-843-0011 or www.holi-
day-apts.com
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
In a Class of its Own.
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kansan.com
CLASSI FI EDS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2006 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 19
NEWS
20 The UniversiTy Daily Kansan weDnesDay, jUne 28, 2006
whats going onThings to do in Lawrence, Kansas City and Topeka from June 28 July 4
t calENdar
Summer has arrived, and Starlight
Teatre in Kansas City, Mo., is ready
to begin its 2006 season with River-
dance. Te show, which originally
began as an intermission act for the
Eurovision Song contest in 1994, has
had tremendous success. Now in its
11th season, the show has performed
in more than 30 countries on four
diferent continents. More than 18
million people worldwide have seen
the show, and it has sold more than
nine million video versions. Tere
are currently three separate tours;
one in Ireland and two in the United
States. In 1997, Bill Wheelan, River-
dances composer, won a Grammy
award for his original music and
lyrics. Jenna Woods, the shows as-
sistant wardrobe director graduated
from the University of Kansas.
When on the road, Riverdance
boasts a feet of 11 40-foot trucks just
to carry equipment from location to
location. Each show features 70 per-
formers who do a variety of dances,
which include traditional Irish dance
as well as tap dance and famenco
dance, which is a type of Spanish
dance. Tere are also singers high-
lighted during the show.
Despite its vast expanse of perfor-
mances, Riverdance has never been
at Starlight before. Esther Grenz,
senior account executive at Morn-
ingstar Communications Company,
explained that the theatre surveyed its
audience at the end of last season, and
people showed high interest in seeing
Riverdance perform.
Starlight Teatre seats 8,000 people
and ofers concessions along with bath-
room facilities for all guests. New to the
theatre this season is the indoor/outdoor
air-conditioned restaurant. Grenz said
if people want to eat there, they should
plan on making reservations before they
arrive at the theatre.
Riverdance will be performing
from June 27 until July 2, and there
are still tickets available for the show.
Te show starts at 8:30 p.m. Prices
range from $9.00 to $75.00; however,
if students arrive at 8:00 p.m., they
can purchase tickets for half price
with a valid ID.
Hali Baker
Bowling for Soup. The Granada.
lawrence, 7:00 p.m., all ages, $13.50
($15.00 at the door), www.ticketmas-
ter.com
Lynard Skynard/Three Doors Down
with Shooter Jennings. verizon wire-
less amphitheatre KC. Bonner springs,
7:00 p.m., $20.00-$65.00, www.ticket-
master.com
Kansas City Wizards vs. D.C. United.
arrowhead stadium. Kansas City, Mo.,
7:30 p.m., all ages, $14.00-$23.00,
www.ticketmaster.com
Lucky Break & Karaoke. vooDoo
lounge at harrahs Casino. north Kan-
sas City, Mo., 8:00 p.m., 21+, free, www.
harrahs.com
Riverdance. starlight Theatre. Kansas
City, Mo., 8:30 p.m., $9.00-$75.00,
www.kcstarlight.com
Kate Meyer. Gallery Talk. spencer Mu-
seum of art. lawrence, 5:30 p.m., free
Avant & Keyshia Cole. hale arena.
Kansas City, Mo., 8:00 p.m., $27.50-
$37.50, www.ticketmaster.com
Pete Yorn. Bottleneck. lawrence, 9:00
p.m., 18+, $20.00, www.ticketmaster.
com
Nathan Wolf Project. The jazzhaus.
lawrence, 10:00 p.m., 21+, $4.00, www.
jazzhaus.com
Censura and Standard Deviant. The
Granada. lawrence, 8:00 p.m., 18+,
$5.00, www.thegranada.com
Red, White and Boom 11. verizon
wireless amphitheater KC. Bonner
springs, 2:30 p.m., $15.00-$35.00,
www.ticketmaster.com
Tri Point Paradox. The jazzhaus.
lawrence, 10:00 p.m., 21+, $4.00, www.
jazzhaus.com
Son Venezuela. The Granada. law-
rence, 9:00 p.m., 18+, $5.00, www.
thegranada.com
AND 1 Mix Tape Tour. Kemper arena.
Kansas City, Mo., 7:30 p.m., all ages,
$20.00-$50.00, www.ticketmaster.com
Rob Bell. The Granada. lawrence, 8:00
p.m., all ages, $10.00, www.ticketmas-
ter.com
Kottonmouth Kings. Memorial hall.
Kansas City, Kan., 6:00 p.m., $25.00,
www.ticketmaster.com
Fourth of July Fireworks Spectacular
Show. Kaufman stadium. Kansas City,
Mo., 7:10 p.m., all ages, $7.00-$27.00,
www.kcroyals.com
Fourth of July. Burcham Park.
lawrence, dusk, all ages, free, www.
visitlawrence.com


wednesday
june 28
thursday
june 29
friday
june 30
saturday
july 1
sunday
july 2
monday
july 3
tueday
july 4
SPOTLIGHT: Riverdance
Aberdeen
Apartments
& Townhomes

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