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niversity niversity - UMKC WordPress (info.umkc.edu)
NIVERSITY NEWS UMKC’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER Vol. 79, Issue 19 Jan. 30, 2012 Cover article 13 COVER UMKC Students stars in “the Wrestling Season” at the Coterie Theatre 3 NEWS Civil rights laywer speaks at UMKC for MLK Keynot address. Photo courtesy of Google Images 9 SPORTS Men’s basketball team fights for Summit League qualifications Photo courtesy of UMKC Athletics Photo courtesy of the Cotorie Theatre 2|News Vol. 79, Issue 19 Going green UMKC’s own electric truck designated for delivery and pick up of campus recyling. photo courtesy of UMKC Sustainability A look at UMKC’s Sustainability initiatives Recycling contest scheduled to return to campus Kara Hart Cafeteria switches to compostable straws Teresa Sheffield Staff Writer Dining Service’s plastic straws are out, and 100 percent compostable straws are in. However, there is a catch: the new straws are nearly double the cost of the previous ones. “Even though the cost for these straws are about 100 percent more than the previous straws Sodexo used, to save the environment for our future and for our next generation has no value,” Dining Services Manager Jatinder Singh said. Singh said Sodexo’s switch underscores UMKC’s commitment to being a 100 percent recyclable and compostable campus. Other efforts by Sodexo to meet the UMKC goal include recycling all paper, cardboard and cans, using recycled napkins and composting about 90 percent of all food waste. “Sodexo has trained all our front-line employees and provided containers at all work locations to use food wastage,” Singh said. Singh said Dining Services is always looking for more ways to be environmentally friendly and hopes efforts will make campus better for students. “The switchover is good for the awareness that Sodexo brings to UMKC and to the students,” Singh said. “Sodexo is an international solution company and we have been trying to improve new and different items daily.” tsheffield@unews.com Asst. News Editor Last year, UMKC ranked 49th place in the RecycleMania competition. A goal to place in the top-5 in 2012 has been set. The 516 participating North American universities will begin the competition on Feb. 5. RecycleMania, which runs through March 31, is used to benchmark “college and university recycling programs to promote waste reduction activities,” according to the RecycleMania website. Past surveys have shown that 80 percent of RecycleMania participants schools saw recycling increase during the competition. “UMKC will compete against hundreds of other universities nationwide in collecting as many recyclables as possible throughout our campus,” said UMKC Sustainability Intern and a senior Urban Planning & Design major, Grace Bennett. During the competition, universities track recycling and trash from their campus. Schools are ranked based on the collection of recyclables per capita, the total amount of recyclables, the least amount of trash per capita and the highest recycling rate. “[We] strive to raise awareness on environmental and conservation issues, reduce waste and increase recycling across campus,” Bennett said. “This is a fun and easy event to achieve the goals. [It’s] as easy as tossing a recyclable item in the recycling bin.” To encourage competition, Bennett said the UMKC Sustainability will pick up recycling bins as usual, with extra pickup for departments that request it. The weight measurements are sent to the school from the company contracted to do its recycling. This year’s events will include Wasteless Wednesdays, on which UMKC Sustainability will organize events in the Student Union during lunch hours. These events include some promotional giveaways and outreach. RecycleMania was first started in February 2001 by Ed Newman of Ohio University and Stacy Edmonds Wheeler of Miami University with the goal of increasing recycling on their campuses. Since then, the 10-week competition between Miami University and Ohio University has spread to other universities. khart@unews.com UMKC Sustainability garners awards Kynslie Otte Staff Writer The Building Services’ commitment to sustainable environmental practices is threefold. “We invest in the future by being committed to protect the environment, campus resources and campus and local communities through best practices,” said the Building Services’ website. This new drive toward sustainability is one of the reasons why the Green Cleaning Awards (GCA) 2011 Higher Education Honorable Mention was given to UMKC. Cited by the American School and University Magazine (ASUM) were UMKC’s “campus-wide recycling efforts, Environmental Studies Student Association and UMKC Sustainability Team, a faculty/staff group that publicizes green cleaning and sustainability efforts.” Other awards that have been given to UMKC recently include Bridging The Gap, Inc.’s “Environmental Excellence Award,” a place on the Sierra Club’s “Cool School 100 Top Universities” and a designation as a “Best Program” by Mid America Regional Council-Solid Waste Management District. UMKC was also featured in Greenability Magazine as the “greenest” regional university. “We’ve got a pretty good system,” Operations Coordinator Matt Chiesi said of the green seal-certified soap dispensers used in all campus restrooms. “We’ve been following along with Building Services. It allows us to use less chemicals.” Chiesi said more improvements will come in the near future. Continued on Page 4 News|3 Jan. 30, 2012 Black History Month Civil Rights lawyer delivers keynote address Luke Harman Sports Editor The fourth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Keynote Address took place on Friday at the Student Union, attracting a diverse audience of 400. The keynote speaker of the night was Dr. Michelle Alexander, a civil rights lawyer, advocate, legal scholar and current Ohio State University professor, who teaches at the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity there. Alexander presented details of her lecture, what she labels "the issue of the New Jim Crow Laws". Alexander’s first book in 2010 is titled “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.” The publication and her Soros Justice Fellowship, received in 2005, was the foundation for Alexander’s keynote address. Alexander tackled issues of wrongful imprisonment, misidentification, the struggles previously incarcerated members of the public go through to gain employment after their release and possible holes in the United States legal system. While Dr. Alexander examines race, class and gender with respect to U.S. history and society, she also incorporated these ideas in terms of their impact on current issues within the U.S. in an attempt to increase the awareness, understanding and "undeniability" of the very issues which affect society. Alexander impressed the attentive audience with her own, personal experience. She helped to lead a national campaign against racial profiling by law enforcement during her time as Director of the Racial Justice Project for the ACLU of Northern California and the ideas she shared with the audience were emotion-filled and heartfelt as she expressed her desire to "impact the racial discriminations within what should be a modern justice system.” Dr. Alexander not only provided an opportunity to learn more about the U.S. legal system and its effect on communities of color, but also incorporated the legacy of King into her lecture. She forced the crowd to question its own role in working towards a more just society and expressing the freedoms of this nation to make society work for us all as a "solitary community and not just for ones own personal satisfaction". Alexander discussed the Midwest Innocence Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to providing pro-bono legal and investigative services for people wrongly convicted and imprisoned, as well as the Jobs for Justice program which aims at providing ex-felons with working opportunies nationwide. The keynote lecture ended with a positive reception from the audience for Dr. Alexander. The annual Martin Luther King Jr. Keynote Lecture, which was sponsored by UMKC’s Division of Diversity, Access and Equity (DAE), was a success, and after such a large turnout, should continue to be successful in years to come. lharman@unews.com Director of the Henry W. Bloch School of Managament’s Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Michael Song, Ph.D. photo courtesy of The Bloch School The Bloch School’s Entrepreneurship and Innovation program honored Lindsay Adams News Editor The UMKC Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation (IEI) entrepreneurship MBA emphasis was awarded the 2012 National Model Graduate Entrepreneurship Program from the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE). According to its website, The IEI “inspires and nurtures future generations of entrepreneurs, delivering transformational entrepreneurship education and experiences university-wide.” Both the IEI and MBA program are housed inside of the The Henry W. Bloch School of Management. “The significance of being recognized by an institution like USASBE as a model program is twofold,” said Teng-Kee Tan, dean of the Bloch School. “First, it confirms the excellence of our program across all key areas. Second, this award positions us as a national model that other institutions can adopt in their schools to build excellent programs for their region. This encourages investment in this institution so that we continue to become a national entrepreneurship education model for others across the country to emulate.” There were seven standards that were used to gauge the strengths of the programs, such as breaking edge program components, the overall strength of the faculty teaching at the school, the comprehensiveness of the program, and the connectivity of the students in the program on the entrepreneurial field and Kansas City. Continued on Page 5 Trivia Night to benefit School of Law’s Child and Family Services Clinic Kara Hart Asst. News Editor The UMKC Family Law Society will host its second annual Trivia Night at 6 p.m. on Feb. 10 at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (11 E. 40th St.). The event costs $200 for a table of eight, with proceeds benefiting the UMKC Child and Family Services Clinic. A silent auction and raffle will raise additional money. Door prizes will also be given out. “Contestants do not need to have a legal background to attend,” according to a UMKC press release. “Questions are not specific to the legal community, but will cover a wide range of pop culture.” Established in 2001, the Clinic has worked with more than 600 children while giving law students experience working with clients. Students in the clinic work under faculty, teaming up with area attorneys and child welfare agencies to work in areas of child probation, legal guardianship, adoption, paternity, child custody, support and visitation, divorce and modifications.” Students in the Clinic learn about Missouri’s child protection system and the juvenile court through hands-on experience. Students receive additional training from experts in domestic violence, drug testing and welfare programs. In April, the Clinic will partner with area agencies to present programs in its annual recognition of Child Abuse Awareness Month. Contestants may RSVP for the Trivia Night by emailing umkcfamilylaw@umkc. edu or contacting Laura Byerley at 816235-1592 or byerleyl@umkc.edu. khart@unews.com For more news, go to... www.unews.com 4|News Vol. 79, Issue 19 Police Blotter Lindsay Adams News Editor Jan. 20 10:59 a.m. Larceny Officers contacted roommates in regards to a theft of a student’s sweatpants and a button up shirt in Johnson Hall. 1:58 p.m. Fraud A student was scammed via email and filed a report at the International Student House. Jan. 21 2:11 p.m. Burglary The students returned to their study room in the Law School and found their textbooks missing. Jan. 22 2:22 p.m. Warrant Arrest Officers stopped a suspicious party who had a felony warrant at Oak Place Apartments. Jan. 23 9:13 p.m. Burglary A student reported $30 missing from her wallet at Johnson Hall. 11:29 a.m. Passing Bad Checks Officers took a report of a party who purchased items with an insufficient funds check at the University Bookstore. 3:25 p.m. Larceny A student’s unattended iphone was reported missing at the Law School. Jan. 24 10:29 p.m. Assault A student reported being struck multiple times by her boyfriend in Johnson Hall. Jan. 25 11:26 p.m. Telephone Threat Parking Operations at the Administrative Center reported someone threatening to hunt down their employees. 12:38 p.m.Larceny An employee reported a cordless drill missing from the back of the University vehicle in Parking Area 16. 3:35 p.m. Smell Of Smoke Officers and Fire were called due to the heavy smell of smoke in the Performing Arts Center. Jan. 26 10:13 a.m. Violation of University Rules and Regulations Parking Operations booted a vehicle for a fake permit at Oak Place Parking. 6:28 p.m. Larceny A student left his iphone at the Miller Nichols Library and returned to find it missing. ladams@unews.com ‘Green Clean:’ Cost effective Eco-friendly cleaning Nathan Zoschke Production Manager/Copy Editor In 2007, UMKC decided to shelve the cleaner it had used for years in favor of eco-friendly cleaners. The new system, now required by Building Services, was coined “Green Clean,” and is now used to clean 43 buildings on campus. “The products do a great job of cleaning, shining and disinfecting,” said Velda Robins, interim manager of Building Services, “You can’t argue with that.” The American School & University Magazine (ASUM) recently acknowledged UMKC as one of 10 U.S. universities to receive the 2011 Green Cleaning Award. Building Services has trained 275 employees through the Green Housekeeper Program Certification. The certificate has been made a requirement for eligible employees to advance in Building Service positions. “Since the implementation of the green cleaning program, hundreds of toxic chemicals have been eliminated from use on campus and have been replaced with just three daily cleaners with environmentally friendly ingredients,” ASUM said of UMKC. Many of the chemicals used in these chemical-based cleaners are not required to be on the label in some states, according to Terri Bennett’s Huffington Post article “Chemicals In Your Home: How Do They Get There?” Some of the chemicals in the cleaners are also flammable. A 5-year Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) study found concentrations of 20 toxic compounds were as many as 200 times higher in the air inside homes and offices than outdoors. Use of eco-friendly cleaning supplies is seen as a way to not only improve the air but also a way to potentially improve the health of students and staff. The switch to green cleaning supplies has also been a financially green decision. This switch has halved the amount spent on cleaners, a reduction from $300,000 in 2008 to $140,000 in 2011 for the green cleaners and A Campus Facilities employee using the eco-friendly cleaning products. photo courtesy of UMKC Public Relations Green Seal-certified hand soap. There has also been a decrease in the number of serious employee injuries from slips and falls. There were 462 lost hours in 2007 and only 80 lost hours January through August 2011, that is a mere 17 percent of the previous amount. Individual complaints about the sub-par quality of air and asthma and respiratory problems have also decreased. In addition to the changed cleaning liquids, for the last two years, custodians also use microfiber towels and flat mops instead of disposable cleaning towels and string mops and buckets. “[The microfiber towels] are not disposable and will stand up to repeated washings,” Robins said. “Soon all the bathroom towel dispensers will be automatic. They need little maintenance and dispense towels one at a time. We have made ergonomic changes, too. Crews have lighter-weight equipment and tools that require less force to use.” One complaint about green cleaning supplies is the lack of fragrance. “Like most of us, [those who complained about the lack of fragrance] connect a floral or pleasant chemical aroma with cleanliness,” said Corey Key, former head of Building Services and Grounds. “My task is to convince them that if we don’t smell anything, the unpleasant odors are gone and the products are doing the job.” nzoschke@unews.com Sustainability: Continued from Page 2 Mulching mowers that use the grass clippings as mulch for the lawns have been adapted. In addition, the school has worked to provide clean transportation alternatives. The $14 per semester flat rate bus pass fee allows students to use their ID’s to ride any KCATA Metro or Max bus. A bicycle rental program at Swinney Recreation Center also encourages clean commuting. Kaye Johnson, Sustainability Coordinator for Dining Services, said Dining Services has reduced the amount of waste and increased recycling as part of the Sustainability Goals for Zero Waste. Food Services also supports the UMKC Garden Collective, serving produce from a local, student-lead community garden. Compostable straws and bulk condiments, recent additions to Food Services this semester, are seen as green-friendly steps. Johnston said Food Services’ next step is to purchase more locally-grown food. In the past several years, Dining Services has greened up the cafeteria by providing cage-free eggs, composting pre-consumer food waste and oil and using 100 percent recyclable napkins and biodegradable cups and utensils. The 2010 opening of the Student Union also meant a commitment to green. The use of timers on lights in the Student Union minimized electricity consumption. Compositing bins in both the Student Union and University Center Cafeteria minimize food waste. Bookstore manager Chris Wolfe highlighted some of the contributions his department has made to green: “We have a cardboard compactor in the back where we crush cardboard and recycle, where previously it all just went right to the trash. We used to buy packing material in order to ship books back to the publisher, but now we save the packing material that comes in. We have more space in this location, so now we’re able to store it and reuse it.” Wolfe said that on Earth Day, April 22 of each year, the Bookstore hands out trees that are native to Missouri. Every work station is also provided with a recycling bin for paper and cardboard materials. UMKC sees its commitment to sustainability as not only the “green” thing to do, but also as a publicity tool. The school’s many awards have been publicized through local media, with presentations given to the KC Chamber of Commerce, Green Fest, Earth Day and U. S. Green Building Council (USGBC), among others. Johnson emphasized the contribution students make toward a greener campus “by reusing, recycling and composting as much as possible.” “It is important for students to encourage their peers to take a moment and put recyclables in the recycling containers, and compost in the compost container,” she said, when asked what students can do to promote green. kotte@unews.com Jan. 30, 2012 In pictures: Going green at UMKC 1. 2. 3. 5. 4. 1. A solar compactor uses renewable energy from the sun to compact trash. 2. E co-friendly green cleaners used by UMKC custodial staff. 3. S kylights in the Student Union reduce electricity consumption by using natural light. 4. A rain garden creates an aestheticallypleasing space and helps rainwater reabsorb into the ground. 5. A UMKC sustainability truck. 6. R ain barrels help reabsord water collected from gutters around campus into the ground. 7. C ompostable straws now used by Food Services are twice as expensive as normal plastic straws, but are seen as worth the cost. Photos by Lindsay Adams 6. 7. News|5 Bloch School: Continued from Page 3 In the past few years The Bloch School and IEI have been recognized within the top 25 in the nation by The Princeton Review, for both the undergraduate and graduate programs. As Mara Rose Williams wrote in The Kansas City Star, “Accolades keep coming for the University of Missouri-Kansas City Institute for Entrepreneurship at the Bloch Business school of Management.” The Bloch School of Management also ranked first in the country in innovation management research, according to The Kansas City Business Journal. The school beat out 624 programs from other universities. Each university was thoroughly evaluated by The Journal of Product Innovation Management. This award was thanks in part to research done by three entrepreneurship faculty members, including the executive director of the IEI, Michael Song. Song is the No. 1 scholar in the world on innovation management. Song’s research includes such fields as technological entrepreneurship, judging the value or lack thereof of new undertakings and emergent technologies, assessing the risk for such ventures, finding new ways to measure the values of new technology and R&D projects, as well as the management of a technological portfolio. According to his UMKC faculty page, “Based on a data set consisting of more than 3,000 new technologies development and commercialization, he has developed several global benchmark models of new product development process designs. He has also developed a technology risk assessment model and option approach to evaluate new technologies and start-up companies.” Included in the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s Big 5 initiatives is the goal to make Kansas City the nation’s strongest entrepreneurial city. “UMKC is committed to the importance of entrepreneurship education and infusing an entrepreneurial and innovative mindset across all disciplines, including law, engineering, health sciences, public administration, performing arts and others. This drives UMKC to be one of the central pillars in the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s Big 5 initiatives along with 6|News Vol. 79, Issue 19 Black History Month Black history is still overlooked, scholars say Louis Trigg Staff Writer When Dr. Carter G. Woodson pioneered Negro History Week in 1926, he and other scholars observed the week that included the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, then perhaps the two most influential historical figures in African -American history. Woodson created the week to acknowledge the contributions of black people in America, which he found had been overlooked. In his book “The Mis-Education of the Negro,” Woodson wrote: “The so-called modern education, with all its defects, however, does others so much more good than it does the Negro, because it has been worked out in conformity to the needs of those who have enslaved and oppressed weaker peoples.” Nearly nine decades later, debate still remains about whether or not the educational system has been perverted to exclude the acknowledgement of American achievements and contributions made by black people. In 1986, the first year Dr. Martin King Jr. Day was recognized as a federal holiday, President Ronald Reagan addressed Left: W. E. B. DuBois, a prominent writer. Second left: Frederick Douglass, an abolitionist. Center: Ida B. Wells, a journalist. Second right: E. Franklin Frazier, a sociologist. Right: Harold Cruse, a pioneer of AfricanAmerican studies. Source: Google Images the exclusion by issuing Presidential Proclamation 5443. The proclamation proclaimed “the foremost purpose of Black History Month is to make all Americans aware of this struggle for freedom and equal opportunity.” “Black history is a book rich with the American experience but with many pages yet unexplored,” Reagan wrote. In modern times, scholars explain the lack of familiarity with black history at the university-level by describing a two-tier account of American history. At an annual meeting of the Organization of American Historians in 2003, University of Michigan History Professor Kevin Gaines said the bifurcation of American history and African American history is a real concern for the educational system. “African American history is American history,” said Dr. Clovis Semmes, hrofessor and director of the Black Studies Program at UMKC. “The problem is the AfricanAmerican experience is always considered to be of less importance.” The advent of programs like the Black Studies Program at UMKC and other schools has brought academic attention to black history, but the question remains as to whether those programs are sufficient. Anthony Shiu, assistant professor of English Language and Literature, said the problem is compounded by K-12 schools that don’t adequately cover African-American history. “There are always concerns about progress, especially since students, for the most part, don’t have a chance to engage in the deep study of these fields but, rather, have to experience a curriculum that tends to see African American history and literature as ‘additions’ to the curriculum instead of viewing them as basic fundamentals that deserve more time and attention,” Shiu said. Some scholars have also questioned the lack of black study course requirements. Semmes believes an introductory class should be required, at least. “We need to learn all of these things to understand fully the human experience and to bring to bear the reality of this so-called ideal of equality, democracy,” he said. ltrigg@unews.com Women’s Center celebrates 40th anniversary with community events Lindsay Adams News Editor The UMKC Women’s Center is commemorating its long run as one of the oldest university women’s centers in the U.S. and the second oldest in the Midwest. It was founded in 1971 and has given 40 years of service to UMKC and the community. “This is an important anniversary not just for UMKC, but also for the community,” said S. Sloane Simmons and Bill Smith, co-chairs of the 40th Anniversary Planning Committee. “UMKC and the Women’s Center matter to all of Kansas City – which is why we have worked hard to include all of the community in the 40th anniversary celebrations.” Three events are planned this semester to celebrate their anniversary, they are part of a yearlong celebration that started in September with the event, Quilts on the Quad. The first is an art exhibit, “Stitches: An Exhibit of Textiles” by Nedra Bonds, which is featuring the Women’s Equity Quilt. Women artists from around the country added to the art piece, each sewing one square of the collective quilt. The exhibit begins with a 5:30 p.m. reception on Thursday, Feb. 2. It will be held in the second floor Dean’s Gallery of the Miller Nichols Library, 800 E. 51st St., Kansas City, Mo. 64110. The event is free. The exhibit runs from Feb. 2-April 13. This exhibit was created to commemorate the 40th Anniversary. The reception will include a play inspired by the quilt, inspired from interviews and writings of those that contributed to the work. The play Nedra Bonds with Kathleen Shaw, author of “Stiches” at the Quilts on the Quad event celbrating the Women’s Center 40th anniversery. is written by local photo courtesy Google Images playwright and UMKC University Libraries, UMKC Department alumna Kathleen Shaw. It is produced by Professor Jennifer Martin, of Theater, UMKC Conservatory of Music a faculty member in the Theatre Department and Dance, the ArtsKC Fund, and the Her and features students in the Undergraduate Art Project The second event is the Women’s Center Theatre Program. The dance accompaniment to the play will feature students from “Vanguards and Visionaries” reception. the UMKC Conservatory of Theater and This exhibit features several local female artists that have helped to shape the visual Dance. The new exhibit is co-sponsored by arts of Kansas City over the past several decades. This event will ake place at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 1 at the LeedyVoulkos Arts Center at 2012 Baltimore, Kansas City, Mo. 64108. The free reception will commemorate the past leaders at the UMKC Women’s Center. The reception will allow attendees to meet the former directors, staff and members of the Chancellor›s Advisory Board to the Women’s Center, as well as observation the exhibit Vanguards and Visionaries. · The final event of the yearlong honoring of the 40th year of the Women’s Center is the Women’s Center 40th Anniversary Gala. It will occur on Friday, April 20 at 7 p.m. at the River Market Event Place at 140 Walnut Street, Kansas City, Mo. 64106. There will be a silent auction for whose attending to participate. Guests will be serenaded by the music of the Barclay Martin Ensemble. They will play the premiere of a new piece that was written specifically for this event. All proceeds from the gala will go to the UMKC Women’s Center’s programs and services. Individual ticket prices for the Gala begin at $20 for UMKC students and $65 for others. ladams@unews.com News|7 Jan. 30, 2012 Tennis Roos compete against top opposition in Oregon Kyle Martin Staff Writer The Men’s Tennis team travelled to do battle with Portland, No. 56 Idaho and No. 75 Oregon this past weekend in Portland and Eugene, Ore. The Roos (0-4) dropped all three of their contests as they were blown away by No. 75 Oregon (3-0) on Sunday and then fell at No. 56 Idaho (3-1) on Saturday, after their previous day defeat to Portland (2-0) on a testing weekend that proved to be extremely tough competition for the Blue & Gold. UMKC 0 – 6 No. 75 Oregon Against the Oregon Ducks in Eugene, Ore., the Roos were simply outclassed, both technically and athletically as they fell 0-6 to a far superior team who warrant their national ranking. Summit League Player of the Year Nino Hasandedic fell at the No. 1 line to Duck Alex Rovello 6-3, 6-0, while in-form Roo Junior Grant Fleming’s efforts still proved futile at No. 2 as came up short against Robin Cambier, 6-2, 6-3. In the contest, the Roos failed to win a single set, falling in straight sets in both doubles and singles play albeit the doubles games were more competitive and encouraging from a UMKC standpoint. UMKC 0 – 4 No. 56 Idaho For their first battle in Eugene, Ore., the Roos came up against an in-form Idaho Vandals outfit. While the scoreboard does in fact make for bleak reading, it does not accurately reflect the Roo efforts in the game. Fleming (line 2), Senior Gustavo Guerin (line 6) and Freshman Conner Edwards (line 5) were all ahead in their matches, but the damage had already been done as Hasandedic, and Sophomore’s Tomas Patino and Cameron Schoenhofer had already been defeated in straight sets and the matches in which the three led remained unfinished. In the doubles matches, the Roos continued to struggle as all three of their lines fell in their contest with their Vandal opponents. UMKC 1 – 6 Portland Before setting of for Eugene, Ore., the Roos faced Portland in Portland, Ore. on Friday morning. Despite a win from Fleming at the No. 2 line, the Pilots came out on top in a 6-1 victory. Hasandedic again struggled at the No. 1 line, losing 6-4, 6-3 to Michel Hu Kwo, while Patino fell 7-5, 6-4 at No.3 and Schoenhofer was defeated 6-1, 6-3 at No. 5. The best performance of the day came from Fleming, who defeated Idaho Pilots’ Stefan Micov 6-4, 7-5 in a lengthy and testing encounter. In doubles play, Fleming and Junior David Heckler lost 8-1 at No. 1, while Sophomore Max Helgeson and Guerin were beaten 8-2 at No. 3. The combination of Hasandedic and Schoenhofer almost proved a masterstroke but they were narrowly beaten 8-7 in an intense doubles battle. Looking to bounce back from last weekends’ defeats and hoping to register their first win of the season, the Blue & gold will travel to Omaha, Neb. for a contest with Creighton on Feb. 9. kmartin@unews.com Upcoming events Women’s Basketball Southern Utah Cedar City, Utah Jan. 30 8 p.m. South Dakota Vermillion, S.D. Feb. 4 5 p.m. Vermillion, S.D. Feb. 4 7:30 p.m. Men’s Basketball South Dakota Track & Field Shocker Quad & Multi-Meet Wichita, KS. Feb. 3-4 8|Sports Vol. 79, Issue 19 Track & Field Distance Runners impress in Jayhawk Classic Kyle Martin Staff Writer The track and field team competed in the Jayhawk Classic, hosted by the University of Kansas on Friday in Lawrence. Junior Autumn Scott finished 1st in the women’s 600-yard run with a time of 1:27.78, while sophomore Veronica Rollins placed 2nd with a school-best 1:25.68 in her respective session. Johnathon Barnett placed 2nd in the men’s 600-yard run with a time of 1:16.73. In a later session of the same event, senior Redell Frazier recorded the third best performance in UMKC indoor track and field history as he clocked in at 1:12.99. The Roos were impressive throughout the invitational, particularly in the distance events. In the men’s 3,000 meters event, sophomore Alloch Burton finished 3rd with a personal-best 8:54.81 in the morning event, while reigning Summit League Champion Cosmos Ayabei followed up in the evening event with an astonishing time of 8:29.60 to take 1st place. Ayabei now hold four of the top-five best indoor performances in this event in UMKC history. In the women’s mile, senior Jylian Jaloma finished 1st as she clocked 5:04.66 for the second best performance in school indoor history. Another second-best performance in school history was from senior Aubrey Frederking as she came in at 3:00.27 in the women’s 1,000 meters, which was enough to clinch 3rd place. In both men and women’s distance medleys, the Roos finished in 2nd place with times of 10:18.78 and 12:28.51 respectively. In the field events, the women’s side seen Freshman Briana Carter place 5th in the “Flight One” triple-jump with a personal best mark of 38-00.75 (11.60 meters), while Senior Denise Branda finished in 3rd position in the weight throw as she marked 54-01.75 (16.50 meters). On the men’s side, the Roos proved dominant in the weight throw as sophomore Kris Leverette and junior Ramon Nelson clinched 1st and 2nd in the event. Leverette’s monstrous mark of 57-10.05 (17.64 meters) was the best by any Roo performer so far this season, while Nelson’s 57-02.00 (17.42 meters) wasn’t far behind. Next on the agenda for the track and field Roos is the Shocker Quad & Multi-Meet event, hosted by Wichita State Feb. 3-4 in Wichita, Kan. kmartin@unews.com Rugby team finds its niche on campus Lindsay Adams News Editor Rugby has been struggling to compete and thrive on the UMKC campus for approximately three years. “I believe it is important to establish our team on campus because it is a contact sport which we do not have,” said Aaron Dzik, a member of the UMKC Rugby team. “People enjoy watching football on Saturdays, but our school lacks a football team, so why not replace it with a more aggressive sport which provides the same quality of athletes for a very enjoyable watch?” Doing so, however, has been an uphill climb. The rugby team has had trouble recruiting new members due to the relative obscurity of the sport to many people, and the popular thought that rugby is a rough and dangerous game. According to Dzik, the most rugby is shown in the sports media is the “occasional highlight of someone getting hurt on ESPN, which promotes the idea that it is a very dangerous sport which will guarantee injury for anyone who plays. However more players are seriously injured while participating in a football game than a rugby game.” Rugby has been given more of a focus in recent years, due to multiple films’ releases that feature the sport, such as “Invictus” and “Forever Strong” “I love playing because it is a unique sport that doesn’t get a lot of recognition at the moment but is rapidly growing throughout the United States as of recent years,” Dzik said. However, the rugby team is closer to establishing themselves for good on the UMKC campus than they have ever been. The new year has finally given the rugby team some new recruits. The team has enough players to participate in multiple tournaments this Spring. One of the tournaments is as soon as Feb. 3-4 at the Kansas City Soccer Dome. “In one word I would describe my rugby experiences as unforgettable,” said Dzik, “I decided to play rugby here because I wanted to use my abilities to help establish a team for future students.” It seems as though UMKC Rugby is finally on its way to becoming a stronger presence on campus. ladams@unews.com Softball host American Red Cross Blood Drive in memory of ‘Shonda’ Stanley Luke Harman Sports Editor The UMKC Softball Team will be hosting a blood-drive in memory of former-player Rashonda Stanley who passed away in early October last year. The Drive will be run by the American Red Cross and is an effort by the UMKC Athletics Department to appeal for blood donations to help those in need in the remembrance of their fallen teammate, friend and family member. Softball star Chelsea Hartwig is the athlete voice and coordinator of the event. When asked of the importance of donating this coming Monday, Hartwig simply responds that “there is always a need for blood, each donation can save up to three lives”. With Shonda’s recent loss so close to home here on campus, Hartwig states that Shonda was “always working to help others, whether it was by joining the bone marrow registry, doing community service or her future pledge to donate her kidney to someone in need”. “We, as a team, felt this Blood Drive would be a great way to help those in need, in memory of the person who was always doing just that”, Hartwig said. So why come on out to donate? Hartwig and the UMKC Softball team believe the better question is “Why not?” and would like to express their deepest appreciatiation in advance for all those who will attend Monday’s event. The Drive will be held at the North Lobby of the Swinney Recreation Center, located at 5030 Holmes Street, on Monday Jan. 30 and will run from 9.00am until 2.00pm. Walkups are welcome, but potential donors are encouraged to sign-up for an appointment time so as to avoid any long waits. Appointments will take place every 15 minutes starting at 9.00am. lharman@unews.com Sports|9 Jan. 30, 2012 Women’s basketball Team still on track for Summit League Championship despite two straight losses Kyle Martin Staff Writer The women’s basketball team’s Summit League record took a hit this week as it fell to 5-5 for the season after defeats to the Western Illinois Leathernecks and the Oral Roberts Golden Eagles. The Roos (148, 5-5 in Summit League play) currently sit in 5th position in the standings as they aim to cement their place in the post-season championship. Oral Roberts 83- UMKC 70 In Saturday evening’s contest with the Oral Roberts Golden Eagles, the Roos fell. Three players posted career-high rebounds in the game as the Roos outrebounded their opponents 53-33 in Tulsa, Okla. Junior Kim Nezianya collected her fourth double-double of the season as she led the Roos with 14 points and a career-high 15 rebounds. Senior Dayon Hall-Jones also recorded 14 points, while guards LeAndrea Thomas and Eilise O’Connor produced 11 and 10 points respectively. The Golden Eagles (14-7, 8-2 in Summit League play), who are currently in second place in the Summit League behind the 9-1 South Dakota State Jackrabbits, were led by an unstoppable Kevi Luper as she collected 31 points on the night. At the half, the Roos only trailed 31-27 despite only shooting 1 for 14 from threepoint range. While the Roos battled back and put the home side under pressure for the majority of the second half, it was the Golden Eagles’ efficiency towards the end of the contest which proved vital. With just under three minutes left to play, Oral Roberts increased its lead to a game-high 19 points after an excellent 12-2 run and while the Roos answered with a 10-4 run to close out the game, the margin was just too great. Western Illinois 66- UMKC 63 In Monday night’s home contest with the Western Illinois Leathernecks, the Roos came out on the wrong end. The game was perhaps the most tense contest seen at the Swinney Recreation Center this season as both teams matched each other both offensively and defensively for the duration of the night. Sophomore guard O’Connor was on fire, draining 18 points and adding seven rebounds and three assists to the Roo cause. Hall-Jones added 12, while sophomore center Ashli Hill hit 10. After trailing for the entire first half, the Roos netted the last seven points of the period to take a 35-32 lead into intermission. The Foreign Language Academy drill team graced the Swinney Recreation Center crowd with a half-time performance filled with drumming and dances, and while the players applauded, the entertainers’ exit from the court was little to smile about during the next few agonizing minutes as the Leathernecks went on an 11-0 run. The visitors built a game-high five-point lead, before Roo Kaycie Boyles reduced the lead to the Roos’ 62-60. The Roos’ three-point attempt was off target as they missed their chance to send the game into overtime. The Blue & Gold will now hit the road for games at Southern Utah in Cedar City, Utah on Jan. 30 before facing South Dakota in Vermillion, S.D. on Feb. 4. kmartin@unews.com Men’s basketball Team struggles to maintain form with two defeats Kyle Martin Staff Writer The men’s basketball team suffered consecutive road defeats against the Southern Utah Thunderbirds and the Oral Roberts Golden Eagles. The team now currently sits in the last remaining Summit League Championship qualification spot to 9-15, with a 3-9 record in Summit League. Southern Utah 57- UMKC 47 Oral Roberts 77- UMKC 67 On Saturday night the Roos fell to the Summit Leagues’ only remaining undefeated team, the Oral Roberts Golden Eagles in Tulsa, Okla. The league leaders improved to 20-4 (12-0 in Summit League play) and are now in the driving seat to take the Summit League regular season honors as their recent 13-game win-streak leaves them three games clear of South Dakota State, which sits in second place with a 9-2 record. The Roos battled throughout the contest and had four players score double-digits. Sophomore forward Trinity Hall led the Roos with 17 points, while senior guard Reggie Chamberlain added 16 of his own. The ever-improving Junior Staton Thomas netted 15, while Kirk Korver scored 13. After a slow start, which saw the Roos fall The towering Summit League leaders recovered and kept the Roos at bay for the rest of the game and took the contest by 10 points while shooting a blistering 60 percent from the field. Senior Reggie Chamberlain driving forward against Golden Eagles player at Saturday’s game. photo courtesy of UMKC Althetics behind 12-2 within the opening minutes, the Roos clawed back into contention as they drew to within four midway through the first half. However, the star on the night was Golden Eagle Dominique Morrison as he hit an 28 points in the contest, and it was his fine scoring which took the home side into intermission 36-25 to the good. In the second half, the Roos matched their opponents stride for stride and a 15-2 run in the space of three minutes reduced the deficit to 53-51. In Thursday night’s battle with Southern Utah in Cedar City, Utah, the Roos fell 4757 to the fourth-place Thunderbirds (12-10, 7-5 in Summit League play). Chamberlain led the Roos with 17 points and Korver pitched in with 12 in a game which was simply thrown away as the Roos shot 22.7 percent. In the second half , they scored only 14 points. At intermission, the Roos seemed to be in a dominating position as they took a 3320 lead into the locker room. A 13-1 run from the Thunderbirds quickly changed the momentum of the game in the beginning of the second half and the home team never looked back as it stormed to a 12-point lead. The Blue & Gold will be now face South Dakota in Vermillion, S.D. on Feb. 4 as they look to hold onto that coveted Summit League Championship playoff spot. kmartin@unews.com 10|Feature Vol. 79, Issue 19 Jazz Festival to feature Roy Hargrove Jazz Studies faculty Douglas Auwarter Jazz Percussion Bram Wijnands Jazz Piano Bobby Watson Jazz Studies Al Pearson Jazz Trumpet Michelle Heiman Feature & Chief Copy Editor Jazz Studies Director Bobby Watson keeps this saxophone, as well as a piano, in his office in the Performing Arts Center. photo by Michelle Heiman A closeup of the director of jazz studies Michelle Heiman Feature & Chief Copy Editor Stan Kessler Jazz Trumpet Roger Wilder Jazz Piano Rod Fleeman Jazz Guitar Gerald Spaits Jazz Bass Dan Thomas Jazz Studies, Saxophone Feature11 Jan. 30, 2012 Bobby Watson, the eldest of six boys, graduated from the University of Miami before moving to New York City in 1976. It was here, with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, that he got his start on the big stage. The Jazz Messengers referred to being educated by Blakey as the ultimate “postgraduate school,” where young players earned their “doctorates.” Watson spent about 25 years in NYC before coming to UMKC in 2000 with the William D. and Mary Grant Missouri/Distinguished Professorship in Jazz Studies. Here, he teaches Jazz Orchestra, Combo, Composers Workshop Ensemble, Jazz Ear Training, Improvisation 3 and 4, Jazz Composition, Independent Study and Research Problems. He also teaches various clinics and master’s classes around the world, such as Tucia Jazz in Soriano nel Cimino, Italy in 2009. “I enjoy sharing what I’ve learned over the years with students,” Watson said. “I enjoy seeing the light bulb go off when they have these epiphanies. And I try to find something to help each student, because each student has strengths and weaknesses.” Outside of UMKC, he tours with his band, sometimes a quartet, a quintet or a sextet. He also composes. “I’m always writing,” he said, “trying to get better.” From 1979 to 2009, Watson earned 15 honors and awards, as well as having 10 professional affiliations, three endorsements, and being the founder and owner of the New Note Records label and the Lafiya Music publishing company. Beyond these accomplishments, Watson still has several aspirations. “I would like to be able to write a movie, and maybe record with strings,” he said. “I would like to be able to fly first-class everywhere I go.” He also wants to win a Grammy one day; he already has three nominations under his belt. Someday, he wants to receive a Guggenheim too. Watson’s wife, Pam, is a pianist, singer and composer. His son Aaron is a sous chef, and his daughter Lafiya is an online media manager who also handles websites and photos. Lafiya created a website for her father, www.bobbywatson.com. Inside the classroom, Watson said he has a “metaphysical style.” “I introduce as much technical information as I can, but I like to talk about the applications of it over a period of time,” he said. “I don’t expect students to master what I give them within a semester, or two, or in their time here at UMKC.” Watson also considers himself a part motivational speaker. “The ‘final frontier’ is in the mind,” he said. “Change can happen in a year, month, a week, a day, an hour, a minute or a second. Your life is never the same after that, after it ‘clicks,’ as they say.” mheiman@unews.com The annual Jazz Festival and George Salisbury Memorial Scholarship Concert will be held at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 3 in the Student Union. Tickets are required at $10 each, and the proceeds will go toward the scholarships for Jazz minority students. “As a strong advocate for music education, and jazz education, I enjoy seeing the knowledge and understanding of America’s indigenous art form being shared and enjoyed by America’s youth,” said Jazz Studies Assistant Director and instructor Dan Thomas. “These students gain experience performing and improvising in front of a new audience as well as experienced jazz musician/educators.” The featured guest artist is two-time Grammy winner Roy Hargrove, trumpet. Hargrove won a 1997 Best Latin Jazz Performancy Grammy with his band Crisol for the album “Habana.” In 2002, he won a Best Instrumental Jazz Album, Individual or Group Grammy with Herbie Hancock and Michael Break for their collaboration “Directions in Music.” Hargrove’s first commercial recording was with Jazz Studies Director Bobby Watson. “We are very proud that, for the first time in our history, we will be having two big bands from the Conservatory perform on the evening concert with our featured guest,” Thomas said. “The quality of our program has risen so much and never before have we had two bands perform in the evening concert.” The concert will be hosted by Watson and Thomas. The UMKC Jazz bands will also perform at the festival. “What separates UMKC from many festivals throughout the country is that we are noncompetitive,” Thomas said. “We really want to emphasize the expressionist and formalist side of music education. We feel that if we were a competitive festival, a number of schools would focus on receiving hardware and might not explore as much of the repertoire, or take time for improvisation or creatively interpret the music.” Visit the central ticket office website for more tickets and information at: www.umkc.edu/ adminservices/cto. mheiman@unews.com Jazz Studies Assitant Director Dan Thomas, saxophone, performed at Jazz in Tune in Lincoln, Neb. photo courtesy of Dan Thomas Jazz program has friends Michelle Heiman Feature & Chief Copy Editor The Jazz Studies program “is known for helping each student develop his or her individual sound and for creating an encouraging environment,” according to its unofficial website, umkcjazz.posterous.com. Students from the program have performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland and the North Sea Jazz Festival in the Netherlands, and have earned awards at the University of Notre Dame, the University of North Texas, Elmhurst College and the University of North Carolina – Greeley. There are multiple Jazz performance opportunities such as the Jazz Combos, the Concert Jazz Band and the 11 O’clock Jazz Band, for which auditions are open to all students, regardless of major, just before the fall semester. The jazz ensembles are part of the Conservatory’s Instrumental Studies program. There are several Jazz Combos, led by Adjunct Instructor Doug Auwarter, Adjunct Instructor Gerald Spaits, Instructor and Assistant Jazz Studies Director Dan Thomas, Professor and Jazz Studies Director Bobby Watson and Adjunct Instructor Bram Wijnands. Combo rehearsals are twice a week, and they perform live at local Kansas City jazz clubs, as well as performing at concerts in the Conservatory. The Concert Jazz Band, directed by Watson, is the “flagship jazz ensemble of the Conservatory,” according to the Conservatory’s Jazz Performance The Conservatory Jaz Band in front of the Performing Arts Center. photo courtesy of the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance Opportunities page. This band consists of five saxophones, four trumpets, four trombones and the rhythm of a piano, guitar, bass, drums and percussion. The 11 o’clock Jazz Band, directed by Thomas, was formed in 2000. It includes five trumpets, four trombones, five saxophones, piano, guitar, bass and drums. This band performs in concerts on and off campus several times a year. Spaits teaches the bass students, as well as directing a combo two times a week. “The level of students has risen since Bobby’s taken over,” he said. “The kids can go out and play professionally, and they’re on the right track.” Spaits said he likes everything about teaching, especially “when it works.” “I like it when they appreciate what I do,” he said. “And when someone tells me that something I said helped them.” Some Jazz students have started a student organization, The Jazz Collective. According to Senior Brian Steever, the contact for The Jazz Collective, the group “exists primarily as a way to get funding for master classes.” The RooGroups profile says the group’s purpose is “to seek funding for guest artists and advertise for their appearances.” Membership requirements include being a part of the UMKC Jazz Department. Jazz Friends, founded in 2000, “aims to encourage the creative artistry and talent of UMKC Conservatory students and faculty, heighten the eminence of the Conservatory’s Jazz Studies Program and celebrate the legacy of Kansas City jazz.” Scholarships are a priority for the organization, as are funding for guest artists, providing unique sheet music for the Concert Band and helping with financial support so the groups can travel to national and international competitions. mheiman@unews.com 12|Arts & Entertainment America I Am: Vol. 79, Issue 19 The African American Imprint Kharissa M. Forte Forum Editor “What is perceived dismantles the taught idea of a savage, barbaric people unable to operate in a refined, cultured manner. In fact, just the opposite is exposed. “ On October 22, 2011, Union Station introduced to Kansas City its most racially radical exhibit to date, America I Am: The African American Imprint. The display was presented by Tavis Smiley, a Black author, advocate, and philanthropist who is popular Reading in the time of technology Lindsay Adams News Editor This column is all about books; some books that have or will spawn television shows or movies, but still, just books. In almost all cases, the books are better. If you’re not a fan of reading or literature, let me just say that if you think you don’t like to read, it is probably because you haven’t found the right book yet. I have always loved escaping, relaxing and exploring through reading. Once I started college, it progressively became more difficult to find time to read for pleasure on top of my already heavy literature-class workload. Many people feel they do not have time to read a book with busy schedules, and it discourages them from even starting. Now for those of you who may be rolling your eyes and insisting you don’t have the time, you honestly do. It just requires you to take a break from other leisure activities. I’ve realized there is a very simple way to find time to read for leisure, and it is comprised of three simple steps. 1. Put away the computer beckoning you to immerse yourself in social networking and spoof videos. Even if you intend to buckle down and really start that book you’ve been meaning to read for the last month, you’ll never follow through with reading it if a friend sends a link with the next viral video or if you’re Facebook-stalking the cute guy who sits next to you in literature class. 2. Put away your phone and iPod. This will allow you to immerse yourself in a new world. While you are losing an hour of texting, emailing, internet chatting, Angry Birds or Annoying Orange Videos, the hour spent reading will more than make up for any possible trauma from technological withdrawal. 3. Find a quiet space for an hour or so. If you complete these three steps, you’re all set. There is really nothing worse than taking the time to get into a book, and then having it disappoint you. Because of the time commitment it takes to finish a book, the bad taste it leaves is far bitterer than seeing a bad movie or television show. Thus, over the next semester, I will be reviewing and suggesting great books and book series that will keep you on the edge of your seat, guessing whodunit, laughing, reading at stop signs and other various side effects of brilliant novels. Over break I took advantage of the three weeks by trying to catch up on the reading I hadn’t kept up on during my semester. I finally read “Watchmen,” the iconic graphic novel by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. It is about a wave of “superheroes” who fight crime. They are coined the “Watchmen” until they are torn apart by public fear, their own deep-seated insecurities and in-fighting. Once a controversial superhero, The Comedian, is found murdered, events are set into motion that bring the “watchmen” out of hiding, and set a relentless paranoid vigilante, Rorschach, into a search that leads to destruction. The nonlinear narrative sweeps between the many characters, times and planets. The depth of not only the story, but the drawing, lends itself to rereading and discovering the layers that create the novel. “Watchmen” creates a believable alternate U.S. history in which the story is set, using events such as the Vietnam War and The Cold War as the backdrop. The characters are compellingly and chillingly drawn, most notably in the character of Rorschach whose constantly shifting mask mimics his inscrutiable psyche. The unfolding of the story is long and tortured and one of the more impressive things I have experienced. This will captivate even those who are not graphic novel readers. ladams@unews.com for his radio shows and television broadcasts. The forty-seven-year old social leader created the exhibit to answer a question posed by precivil rights movement forerunner, W.E.B. DuBois. The question: “Would America have been America without her negro people?” Upon visiting, one will conclude a resounding no. As onlookers walk into the gallery, they come face to face with this very question plastered in big, glowing orange letters on a wall. After voyaging into small rooms and hallways with introduction-styled artifacts, the journey begins. It starts in Africa, educating viewers on the beauty and riches of the motherland, a name that descendants have affectionately given to the continent. Spectators are able to admire original art created by Belin, Yoruba, and Mali tribes. Most importantly, they are able to gain insight on an authentic, civilized society of people ruled by kings and queens adorned in stunning attire and headdresses. What is perceived dismantles the taught idea of a savage, barbaric people unable to operate in a refined, cultured manner. In fact, just the opposite is exposed. Continuing on, the exhibit commences the transition Africans that altered their lives from royalty to ruins. The raw and harrowing image of metal, rusted chains forced tightly around the necks, wrists, and ankles of Africans were carefully concealed in glass cases; an eerie feeling of the souls of those who were once coerced to wear them drifts at each station. Pistols operated to murder sick slaves, chains, and various types of whips were also on display. The Middle Passage sector of the exhibit illustrated the different places in which kidnapped Africans were sent to such as South America, North America, and Jamaica. The next rooms show several stimulating personal items. Two frocks once belonging to Frederick Douglas – a man who escaped from slavery and became the father of the civil rights movement – lay next to each other. Dolls and blankets created by a slave woman are out for everyone to marvel at, as well. The rooms also show many different pieces slaves made: jugs, vases, bowls, and irons. Talented and skilled, these objects were not kept for themselves. Masters would take these items and sell them, pocketing whatever profit was gained. As the exhibit persists, the era of freedom is launched with the flaunting of the Declaration of Independence (a document that did not free slaves, but freed America from British rule. The wording created by the founders of this document was used by many slaves to petition their rights as human beings to be free people), the 13th Amendment (ended slavery), 14th Amendment (gave Africans citizenship, making them African-Americans), and the 15th Amendment (gave African-Americans the right to vote). Next, the civil rights movement is revealed. Astonishing artifacts are seen in various rooms. One of the most remarkable artifacts is the journal and Qur’an belonging to Malcolm X. Another staggering object is an original autographed copy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s first book, “Stride Toward Freedom.” Moving forward, audiences wander into a startling room with a hanging Ku Klux Klan robe. A bright, red background hangs behind the malicious cloak, symbolizing the countless drops of blood spilled by the hands of KKK members. The advertising images of “coons,” “mammies,” and “black-faces” are also gawked. Following this daunting corridor, watchers come into a room filled with spirituality as the power and influence of the Black church – the centerpiece of African-American culture – is paraded. Strong, inspirational sounds of gospel choirs fill the room’s space. The last few rooms show Black achievements from the first Black sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, to Black sports teams and Black music. The stage attire of legends like Luther Vandross, Etta James, and Smokey Robinson are carefully draped Continued on Page 16 Arts & Entertainment|13 Jan. 30, 2012 Tattoo of the week Kierei Broadus Kynslie Otte UMKC Student Meredith Wolfe as Kori and actor Tosin Morohunfola as Matt in the Coterie Theatre production of “the Wrestling Season.” photo courtesy of the Coterie Theatre ‘The Wrestling Season’ pins audience to stage Lindsay Adams News Editor “The Wrestling Season” is more than just entertaining and thought-provoking. It is more than just well-acted and technically sharp. It is something that excites and enthralls the audience every moment an actor is on stage. The plot of “The Wrestling Season” is a fairly generic teenage angst plot. It addresses the lives of eight teenagers in their last year of high school. A rumor gets started that two friends on the wrestling team, Matt and Luke, are gay. There is the mean girl, rather cleverly named Heather, her well-intentioned sidekick, Nicole, who allows herself to get pushed around, the school slut, Melanie and an outsider named Kori. Kori is friends with Matt and Luke, not to mention the two homophobic jocks, Willy and Jolt, who start the rumor. However, rather than retreading the ground John Hughes has overused, it attacks the material from a fresh, new and heartbreakingly honest perspective. The rumor sets into motion a series of events that cause the characters to make difficult and often destructive choices. They realize things about themselves and each other that make the show much richer than most depictions of the teenage experience. “It’s so fun to do this and play the archetype of the jock, the jerk jock,” said Rufus Burns, who played Jolt in the show. “I’ve had experiences, I’ve had friends, I’m sure I’ve had moments myself in my life where I was a bit of a jerk, so I take those moments and I get to blow it up onstage.” The rumor slowly eats away at Matt and Luke. One of the most notable visualizations of this was a moment when Matt was jumping rope and the other actors moved around him, catcalling, snickering and whispering. The wrestling worked as a metaphor for the struggles the teenagers experienced. There is a character called the Referee, who through his calling of the different moments in the show as if each scene were a match, gives a sly commentary on the power struggles of the characters. The acting was exceptional. The actors created a fleshed-out individual character and worked as a single unit during the ensemble chorus chants that were incorporated in the show. The set was minimalistic, with only a platform that had a slightly raised wrestling ring on it. The lighting was used to great effect with transitions, mood and place. The Continued on Page 20 Staff Writer Student Kierei Broadus made the decision to get her first tattoo in January 2009 when she was 19 years old. In the beginning, her tattoo was simply the letter “K” on the upper-middle section of her back. Broadus proceeded to extend her tattoo from just one letter into an entire piece of artwork down her mid-back. When asked what the initial letter “K” stood for, Broadus said, “I got it for the first letter in my name, and in my son’s name (Kaleb). I turned it into ‘karma’ in March of 2011, when I was 21.” The tattoo covers most of her back and was inked at “Freaks” on Burlington for $180. “I decided to have it cover so much of my back because it plays a large part in my everyday decisions,” Broadus said. “Before acting, I remember to think, because the consequences can decide what happens in the present and future.” While discussing why she got the tattoo, and why she chose to extend it, Broadus said, “I turned the tattoo into ‘karma’ because I had a lot of things going on in my life and I couldn’t understand, ‘Why me?’ According to Hindu and Buddhist beliefs, [karma] is the act of good or bad, which result in consequences that are either good or bad in a person’s present life or their next existence. The overall meaning is in order for me to live a better life, I need to make better choices. To have good occur in my life, I must start with myself and do good regardless of the circumstances, the person, et cetera.” Broadus said her parents weren’t thrilled about her new tattoo. “My parents don’t know I’ve extended the piece, but I’m sure they would overreact. When I got the ‘K’ they assumed I was trying to show I’m an adult and can make decisions on my own, regardless of how permanent they are. They didn’t know about the ‘K’ until after I got it done. They were supportive with one tattoo, but now I have five. Although they all have a significant meaning, they think it’s a little extreme.” Despite her parents’ reaction, it does not undermine the significance of the tattoo. It is also helpful to have a supportive group of friends. “My friends think the tattoo is cool,” Broadus said. “It represents what I’m always trying to convince others they should consider when making decisions. Because it‘s further down on my back, people typically ask what the entire tattoo is if they can’t see it.” While explaining why she chose her back for the tattoo, Broadus said, “I chose to get it on my back to decide when I do and don’t want to expose it.” Her back also supplies a larger canvas when she decides to add more to the extensive and intricate tattoo. “I plan to get it more detailed in the future, so there will be more room for the extra work.” If you have a tattoo with a personal story, deep significance, or one that’s simply exotic, contact mhartigan@unews.com to be featured in a future issue. kotte@unews.com 14|Arts & Entertainment Vol. 79, Issue 19 ‘Form Follows Function’ Exhibit showcases Theatre department’s costumes, lighting and scenic design work Kynslie Otte Staff Writer On Friday, Dec. 2, the UMKC Theatre Department opened an exhibit at the Box Gallery in the Commerce Bank building at 1000 Walnut St. The exhibit is called “Form Follows Function,” and its primary goal is to highlight the hard work the costume, lighting and scenic design graduate students contribute to UMKC performances behind the scenes. The exhibit showcases costumes that have been used in UMKC Theatre productions (such as “Our Town” and “Great Expectations”), as well as small-scale replicas of a variety of different sets. Sarah M. Oliver, visiting assistant professor of Costume Technology, spoke briefly about the model sets. “I think a lot of times, the people in the audience don’t realize we do this work for the director,” she said. The scenic design students make models like the ones on display in the “Form Follows Function” exhibit for each and every play the department does, meaning they are not strictly for entertainment. There are pieces of art in the exhibit created by students using various types of fabrics and dying processes. Also lining the walls of the exhibit are costume sketches drawn by the students. The exhibit is beautifully compiled, and accurately showcases a side of the Theatre Department that isn’t often seen. “It’s always about the play. And it’s about what the character needs and what the director wants for each character,” Oliver said. “It isn’t always about making the person look lovely. Sometimes it’s about making them look grotesque, recessive or wild. The design has to serve that.” “Form Follows Function” is curated by Oliver and Associate Professor of Costume Design Lindsay W. Davis. Davis began working at UMKC following a 30-year career in New York. He designed for 13 Academy Award-winning actors, and has received design awards in New York, Los Angeles, Florida, Washington D.C. and San Francisco. He also designed for productions internationally in Europe, Japan and Korea. Oliver has created costumes all across the country, including the New York Opera and the Los Angeles Opera. She has also been a seamstress or costume designer for nearly every theatre company in the Kansas City area. The UMKC Theatre Department has been considered one of Kansas City’s best-kept secrets. It has been ranked by U.S. News and World Report among the top graduate theatre training programs in the country. Part of the purpose of the exhibit was to give the department a portion of the recognition it deserves. On Jan. 12, the “Form Follows Function” exhibit was featured on KCPT’s “The Local Show.” “The Local Show” spoke very highly of the exhibit, and praised the Theatre Department for its success. The “Form Follows Function” exhibit will continue running through Feb. 24. The exhibit is open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. kotte@unews.com Advertisement Arts & Entertainment|15 Jan. 30, 2012 Common: The Dreamer/The Believer Despite high anticipation from fans and critics alike, the album is only subpar Rating: 3 out 5 Stars Pandora radio to go global? Kara Hart Asst. News Editor T he album is inconsistent. The theme is not clearly defined. The concept of dreaming and believing seems to be just a catchy idea. There are a couple of tracks that don’t need to be on the album. Mixed messages are constantly present, Kharissa M. Forte causing the CD to contradict itself. It’s just a jumbled mess. With that said, however, there are plenty of good tracks. Lyrically, Common has obviously grown (though “Ghetto Dreams” and “Sweet” evidently do not reflect his growth) from hits like “I Used to Love Forum Editor H.E.R.,” “Come Close” and “Go.” Musically, No I.D. conducted fabulous work on the production side. Basically, if tracks two, four and maybe nine were omitted, then The Dreamer/The Believer would be a five-mic album. Since that isn’t the case, three mics it is. Expressive and jazzy, “Gold” is a song that multi-generations can enjoy. Lonnie Rashid Lynne began his rap career in 1991 under the alias of a simple moniker: Common. Common recently released his ninth album, “The Dreamer/The Believer.” The project was produced completely by No I.D. Despite high anticipation from fans and critics alike, the album overall is subpar. Here’s why: Track #6: Lovin’ I Lost A soulful sound explodes from the speakers, setting the tone of the album. Common’s wordplay and lyrical style perfectly match the music’s artistic attitude. Powerful, yet gentle; inspiring, yet not too complicated. His most poetic line states, “Maybe I’m a hopeless hiphop romantic; I’m a dreamer.” The track’s sweet noise is concluded with a shift into an original poem by the incredible African-American activist and poet, Maya Angelou. The teacher of sorts uses her feature to encourage African-Americans to continue to dream. And then the second track shoots it all to hell. Track #7: Raw (How You Like It) Track #1: The Dreamer feat. Maya Angelou Track #2: Ghetto Dreams feat. Nas After such a renowned icon wrapped up the first track, it’s astonishing that no more than five seconds into the second track, Common is tossing around the n-word and other unnecessary obscenities. Here, he delivers a message of what he envisions his dream wife to be: a b---- with big t----- with a baby in one arm, a skillet in the other and who is good for pretty much nothing but lying on her back and watching reality shows. Nas’ verse isn’t any better; he wants his b---- to buy him nice s---. What a dream, gentlemen. Two thumbs up on being positive role models for young black men. Track #3: Blue Sky This is absolutely beautiful. Common mentions different people he looked up to while growing up, such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Denzel Washington. Common does a great job catering to No I.D.’s production on this track, but Kanye would’ve killed it. Even so, the song does a pretty good job of stimulating listeners to achieve their goals. Track #4: Sweet Contrary to its title, “Sweet” is anything but. With pointless and redundant curse words. This time, however, Common seems to be speaking to someone directly. It isn’t clear who caused Common’s anger. Lyrics suggest he may be spitting fire at a wannabe rapper who apparently has challenged Common at his craft. Whoever it is, the song is obviously filler and the album could have done without. Track #5: Gold Common bounces back to his wholesome, good-boy side. This tune is very mellow, comprised of a modern-day Motown feel. The latter half of the song is all instrumental with a little ad-lib singing. Here, Common divulges a story of heartbreak and a relationship’s demise. He briefly mentions his father on this track and how growing up without him in the home contributed to the heartbreaker Common has become. Sampled from The Impressions’ “I Loved and I Lost,” No I.D. does an amazing job of renovating the 1968 hit into a new reverberation. As this song wraps up, the first half of the album is complete. It starts off good, but the temporary musical switch-up about a minute into it throws everything off. It sounds like the CD is skipping. However, it’s intentional since it appears more than once. It seems the title is a play on words. Beyond discussing unsafe sex, Common uses this term to paint a picture of the type of artist he is: real, rare, unrestrained and raw. Track #8: Cloth Another love song, Common speaks to his girlfriend concerning how awesome they are together. The cloth is described as keeping the two as one. A victory song, the tune is perfect for any couple who has endured a range of ordeals and distress together, yet come out on top. Track #9: Celebrate The feel-good song “Celebrate” is a party hit for family gettogethers and high school reunions. When drama ceases and nothing but positivity, love and optimism remain, “Celebrate” is the song to commemorate happy days. Track #10: Windows “Windows” is a charming song, uplifting and empowering young women, particularly his daughter. Ironically, this song comes eight tracks after he refers to his future wife as a b----. Track #11: The Believer feat. John Legend A reccurring theme of persistence appears but alters from an encouraging memo of dreaming to a sanction of believing the dream will actually come true. John Legend’s hook continually sings, “They will talk about us,” a feat that comes when dreams transpire into realities. Track #12: Pops Belief Common’s father presents an impromptu spoken word piece that addresses what he believes to be true for the past – starting back with creation – the present, and the future. The last track on the album, “Pops Belief ” rounds out the CD with a delivery that essentially ties it back to the beginning of the project. kforte@unews.com Pandora, the No. 1 online radio service, is looking to launch globally, giving college students around the world hours of free, personalized radio service during long nights of homework and studying. Currently, Pandora’s licenses only allow for U.S. distribution, but that could change. “The opportunity for us is global,” said Tim Westergren, the co-founder of Pandora. “That’s the big vision.” Many of Pandora’s listeners are students. “I usually listen to [Pandora] when I wake up and when I’m cleaning or in the shower and when I do homework,” said Jenny Carter, a junior communications major who recently switched to Pandora from Slacker Radio. Carter said she has only been using Pandora for about three months, but many of her friends have been using it longer. “My favorite thing is that the commercials are so short,” Carter said. Pandora’s ads are spaced out about every 10 songs and last less than a minute, but are necessary to cover the royalty costs Pandora pays for its music. According to Pandora’s FAQ page, “Advertising allows us to cover these costs while offering you a lot of great music for free.” According to a recent article by Jefferson Graham in USA Today, Pandora’s user registration increased from 75 million last year to 125 million this year. Average monthly listening per user is now up to 18 hours, according to the article. Pandora is now available on tablet computers, smartphones, audio receivers and even in the car, with its now 16 alliances, including Kia and Acura. According to Triton Media, the personalized radio service now owns 68 percent market share of Internet radio listening and had nearly 900,000 different “sessions” of radio listening with users this past November; Clear Channel, another online radio service, ranked in 2nd place with only 117,374 sessions. Martin Pyykkonen, an analyst at Wedge Partners, said Pandora has the advantage of being the first and having the widest reach compared to other personalized radio services. khart@unews.com 16|Arts & Entertainment Vol. 79, Issue 19 APCinema Movie Night The Health Journal Tower Heist Cabbage and potatoes Ingredients: Directions: 1 head of green cabbage 1 yellow bell pepper 1 red bell pepper 4 potatoes 4 cups of chicken stock 3 Wyler’s bouillon cubes A pinch of sea salt 1. Fill up a large pot (the larger the better) with four cups of chicken broth and water until the pot is half full of liquid. Cook on high heat. 2. Sprinkle a pinch of sea salt and three Wyler’s chicken bouillon cubes into the pot. 3. As the liquid is heating, chop up the potatoes, peppers and cabbage and place them in a bowl. 4. Dump the bowl of vegetables into the pot. 5. Cover the pot with a lid and turn the heat down to medium. 6. Let cook for one hour, then enjoy. Recipe of the week: Kharissa M. Forte Forum Editor Sports Editor APCinema hosted a movie night in the Student Union theatre this past Monday, and while the attendance was nothing to write home about, the event itself proved to be a welcome surprise for all present. The fifty-odd students who attended were greeted on the night with no guest speakers, no opinion surveys and basically no fuss, just a simple cinematic experience right here on the Volker Campus. The film of choice was Tower Heist, a comedy caper about working stiffs who seek revenge on the Wall Street swindler who stiffed them. The all-star cast seen Ben Stiller star alongside comedian Eddie Murphy. While the production opened with an apology for the poor projection quality of the large screen, i couldnt help but take this statement as some form of educated sarcastic whit as the event itself was flawless and littered with free candy from the theatre shop. Monday night, free movie, free candy, free event - so why is this great events arena of the Student Union theatre so under-used? For starters, the events at the Student Union, much less the Student Union theatre, are not well advertised online. The 329 seater arena is an amazing location for similar event to the APCinema movie night, right in the heart of campus, and perhaps most importantly for students, it is completely free. The only real way to find out about these events is to stop by the Student Union at some stage during the day to check the events schedule but in what is ultimately a University which is making the switch from ‘commuter college’ status, the number of bodies either walking through the building, or indeed staying around campus that long with no notice, is a fraction of what attendances could be like were there to be advanced notifications or online event schedules for students to view. So until that changes, your stuck with the task of going from class to the Student Union to check a posted events schedule in the hope of finding something that fits into your day, only to return later to experience it. And until this promotional technique changes, and changes drastically, then the Student Union theatre will only fill 50 seats out of its capacity. That being said, with the proper promotional strategy, theatre events could be crowded with stressed students looking to enjoy a free movie and beying for free candy. lharman@unews.com Cabbage is a Mediterranean vegetable that resembles lettuce. There are several types of cabbage: red, green, Napa, bok choy, Brussels sprouts and Savoy. The health benefits of cabbage are illustrious. For starters, cabbage is a source of Vitamin C. Cabbage is also rich in fiber, which is helpful for healthy digestion. Another marvelous health benefit is that cabbage generation to the next, I created my own. Let me tell you, it’s delectable. My cabbage and potatoes dish is the perfect dinner choice during the winter season. It’s hearty, nourishing, and almost too easy. The recipe feeds up to eight people, making it perfect for get-togethers or leftovers. Excellent by itself, my meal also pairs well with corn on the cob (healthy) and corn bread (not so healthy). At just 100 calories a cup, it’s well worth a try. Health Tip of the Week: Sit up straight! Did you know that posture can make or break the health of your back? If you find your back constantly uncomfortable and in need of some tender loving care, the first step to fixing it is to check your posture. Slouching can really damage your back and shorten your walking days as you get older. If you want to minimize your chances of Quiz scooting around with a walker, cane or wheelchair one day, then take care of your back. Start by checking your posture as soon as you sit down and straighten it up. Doing light back exercises position are excellent, too. Bonus: the stretches can be done on all fours, while standing or while sitting. Simply take a deep breath and move into cat position as you exhale, hold it for three breaths and then sit up on the last exhale. Take another deep breath in and move into cow position as you exhale. Hold it for three breaths, and then sit up on the last exhale. Repeat twice. kforte@unews.com Answers: 1. True 2. True 3. False 4. False Luke Harman is a great detoxifier, causing it to be an ideal veggie when wanting to rid the body of impurities and toxins. Digestible both raw and cooked, I opt for cooking my cabbage. The crisp, edgy flavor of raw cabbage just doesn’t gratify my taste buds. I recently prepared cabbage for the first time without the help of my mom and my grandma, a feat that neither of them thought would yield success. Instead of borrowing from their traditional recipe passed down from one How much did you learn from this week’s Health Journal? Take the quiz and find out! America I Am: Continued from Page 12 behind glass walls. Finally, the last room is a video demonstration of the exhibit. It is an audiovisual commentary of the influence and impact of African-Americans on America from beginning to present day. The last day of the America I Am: The African American Imprint was originally on Sunday, January 8. However, due to popular demand, the exhibit was extended to Sunday, January 29. Though the tour has concluded in Kansas City, it is a traveling exhibit. More information can be found on America I Am: The African American Imprint by visiting www.Facebook.com/AmericaIAmExhibit kforte@unews.com True or False: Brussels sprouts are a type of cabbage. True or False: To detoxify means to rid the body of impurities and toxins. True or False: Slouching won’t harm your back. True or False: Having good posture doesn’t play a role in the health of your back. Jan. 30, 2012 New Executive Chef Joins UMKC Dining Services Please welcome Chef Jeremy O’Neal as the newest member of the UMKC Dining Services Management Team. Jeremy joins our team with sixteen years of experience as a professional chef and looks forward to bringing many new and exciting menu offerings and events to the Resident Dining Program. We encourage everyone to drop in and introduce yourself to Jeremy and share any thoughts or concerns you have regarding the Caf. He looks forward to meeting each and everyone of you. Arts & Entertainment|17 U-News on the web www.unew.edu Find us on Facebook University-News Follow us on Twitter @UNewsScoop 18|Forum Vol. 79, Issue 19 The Real Housewives of Everywhere They’re called TV personalities for a reason Kharissa M. Forte Forum Editor It all started with Desperate Housewives, a fictional television series launched by ABC in October of 2004. The outlandish drama, passionate romances, and never ending mayhem were all I needed to be one of the 2.1 million fans hooked to my set intently watching every episode. A year and a half later, Bravo came out with The Real Housewives of Orange County. The new show included all of the confusion and chaos that had me addicted to Desperate Housewives with one bonus: this was real life. Or it claimed to be, anyway. After RHOC aired, I completely forgot all about Desperate Housewives. Then, when The Real Housewives of New York City came out in 2008, I nearly lost my mind. The interesting factor with this group of ladies is that it included Bethenny Frankel, a single chick with no kids who was adamantly pursuing happiness in love and in work. She now is – in my opinion – the most successful “housewife” who has reached her goals and even has her own thriving Bravo series, Bethenny Ever After. With two Real Housewives series down, the beginning of an incredible new reality television era was born. Later during the same epic year that RHNY debuted, the best Real Housewives cast popped into the picture: The Real Housewives of Atlanta. RHOA starred the loud hot mess diva that we all have come to love, NeNe Leakes. With an attitude as thunderous as her mouth, Leakes was the perfect feature on NBC’s Celebrity Apprentice last year. I delightfully recall when she and Latoya Jackson had a brief altercation in which Leakes referred to her as “Casper the friendly ghost.” I nearly peed my pants, I laughed so hard. Soon after the ATL crew came about, Bravo ran smack dab into its first RH failure: The Real Housewives of D.C. The cast was dull and mindnumbing to say the least. RHDC was nothing but a wearisome washed up version of the New York City cast. Needless to say, it’s no longer on the air. Just when I thought it couldn’t get any livelier than the Atlanta girls, Bravo bounced back with The Real Housewives of New Jersey. And they are off the chain. Between Teresa Giudice flipping tables, Danielle Staub’s criminal past, and Jacqueline Laurita’s jacked up relationship with her daughter, my head was spinning a mile a minute. Giudice is the next housewife to be featured on Celebrity Apprentice premiering on February 19. Then two years ago came – my favorite – The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. While the RH casts of other cities seem to be nothing more than high profiled socialites, RHBH stars actual celebrities. There’s, the sister duo, Kyle and Kim Richards who are the real life aunts of Nicky and Paris Hilton. Kyle appeared in shows as old as Little House on the Prairie and as new as ER. Older sister, Kim, is known for her Disney roles in Escape to Witch Mountain, Return from Witch Mountain, and several television appearances. RHBC also stars Kelsey Grammer’s exwife, Camille, Kharissa M. Forte whose divorce proved to be the best thing that could ever happen to her bank account. The newest member of the cast is the sweet and daring Brandi Glanville. Her claim to fame: ex-husband Eddie Cibrian left her for LeAnn Rimes. What a douche. Moving on. The only Real Housewives series that I never really got into was The Real Housewives of Miami which made its debut in February last year. The network is currently filming a second season, so it must’ve done alright. America isn’t the only country obsessed with the RH sensation. Believe it or not, there’s a Real Housewives of Athens, Israel, Vancouver, and Brazil/Mulheres Ricas, too. VH1 must have caught the bug, as well. Shows like Basketball Wives (the best freakin show ever to grace my television set), Basketball Wives L.A. (#epicfail), and Love & Hip Hop are very popular with women all across the country. As entertaining as these shows are, I do have a little concern. The images these women are displaying are subconsciously tarnishing how real women in real life view relationships with other women, relationships with men, and how to define self-worth. I mean, let’s face it; they’re on the air for a reason. They’re called TV personalities for a reason. She’s either a hoe (sorry) or she’s in some sort of dysfunctional relationship. And if she doesn’t fit into one of those categories, she’s a mean girl or a control freak or classless or insecure or… you get the picture. For every five cast members with an issue, there’s only one who really does have it all together. Think about it. Remember on Basketball Wives when Evelyn confessed to Tammy that she had an affair with her husband? That was beyond messed up. To top it off, Evelyn then had the audacity to tell Tammy that she was a “non mother f****** factor” during the affair. She deserved to get beat up. She even went as far as to create and sale t-shirts with the crass phrase splattered over it! Was she serious about donating the profits of the shirt to Tammy’s charity? See, this is exactly what I’m talking about. What does this say to viewers about how we are supposed to treat each other, how we should value the principle of marriage, and what should determine our selfworth? Not a whole lot. I guess what I’m trying to say is that, yes, these shows are entertaining and I hope that they never end, but – at the same time – we can’t let these characters influence who we are as women. If anything, we should learn from their drama and choose better paths to venture down. Until next week. kforte@unews.com Failure 101 The drive to triumph is what will make you try again and again until you achieve success Ben Campero Staff Writer/Distribution Assistant Every person has his or her own definition of success, and we all want to be successful. If we don’t achieve success, then it is said that we have failed. Many people are afraid of failure. Nobody wants to fail, but you have to understand that failure is a part of everyone’s life. Every single person in the world fails at least once in his or her life. The reason is simple: there is no perfect human being. Since we were little kids, we were taught that failure is bad. Indeed, there are some people that are extremely value perfection and whose biggest fear in life is failure. But the problem is that you can’t avoid failure; it’s going to happen sooner or later. The people that are not used to failing will have a harder time overcoming it. I am not afraid of failing anymore. To be honest, I don’t even remember being afraid of failing and I really have to thank my parents for this. Since I was a kid, they taught me that it’s ok to fail and that it is ok to fall down. They taught me to see failure as an opportunity, as something good, as a second chance, and as something that will make you stronger. This has really helped me so much in my life. Thanks to my parents, I learned to see failure as part of life and as a positivity instead of a negativity. On the other hand if you’ve been taught all your life that failure is a bad thing, what should you do when you fail? • Take a break. If you suddenly failed without expecting it, it is ok to take a break. It is ok to be sad; you can even cry if you need to. Take one Ben Campero or two days at maximum to recuperate. Any longer would be giving up and giving up is not allowed. The sooner you start trying again, the better. • Analyze. Think about what went wrong. What happened to cause failure? Once you have identified these things you can: a) Try again, but this time harder and putting more effort into your goal. b) Try again, but this time change the strategy. • If you fail again, repeat steps one and two until the desired outcome is obtained. These are three simple steps that will lead you to success. I will advise you that the hardest step to follow is the second one. I’m amazed of how many people give up after failing just once. The questions that you need to ask yourself are, “How bad do I want it?” and “Am I willing to do everything I can to achieve success?” The drive to triumph is what will make you try again and again until you achieve success. Remember, if you want to succeed, failure will always be needed. You will have to try again. It’s up to you to see the positive part of failing. A great example of this concept is Thomas A. Edison. When he was asked about all the times he failed in his experiments while trying to create the light bulb, he allegedly said, “I have not failed 1,000 times. I have successfully discovered 1,000 ways to not make a light bulb.” bcampero@unews.com See more at www.unews.com Forum|19 Jan. 30, 2012 Ugly and unsafe Mal Hartigan Arts & Entertainment Editor “The yard in front of the building literally looks as if a murderer dug a giant trench to bury a body and carelessly threw the dirt back on top.” Usually, when braving the cold winter, it’s difficult to notice the appeal of our campus. During the fall semester, however, it seems impossible to overlook the ginkgo trees creating a beautiful overhang when strolling on the sidewalk toward Haag Hall and the attractive landscapes dispersed throughout the rest of campus. The architecture is also far more inspiring than that of my hometown’s university, Missouri Western. Buildings seen in the quad and even the unused Epperson House are all aesthetically charming. Yet, if you take a stroll around campus toward the UMKC houses located on streets such as Charlotte and Holmes, the appealing appearances quickly dwindle away. I’ve worked at The University News for two semesters. The office building is located on Holmes Street. Various problems tend to rise monthly – sometimes even weekly – with the quaint little news house in which our staff spends Sundays editing the paper. Since we have keys to the building, some staff members (including me) choose the U-News house as an ideal study location. The house is usually empty and quiet and it’s easier to focus without distraction. But unfortunately, upon approaching and even entering the building, its physical appearance becomes distraction enough. Most homeowners can understand that houses tend to depreciate unless they are wellmaintained. If you frequent Home Depot, you’ll see plenty of families purchasing supplies in order to ensure their home remains stable. It is questionable whether or not the U-News house is legitimately maintained. This is not to say that I’m complaining about the fact that the building UMKC allows us to occupy isn’t “good enough,” but there are some outright issues that Mal Hartigan need fixing. For starters, as I walk up the stairs to the front door, it’s impossible to avoid noticing the front lawn. The yard in front of the building literally looks as if a murderer dug a giant trench to bury a body and carelessly threw the dirt back on top. The lawn is an eyesore to avoid at all possible costs. I haven’t inquired how it obtained such a grotesque appearance, but the yard was dug up nearly two months ago without any sign or promise of a solution. One would think that having such an unattractive mess in the front yard would reflect poorly on UMKC; it is their property, Music to soothe Kynslie Otte Staff Writer Being a college student can be incredibly stressful, which I’m sure is not a surprise to anyone. It also isn’t easy living on your own while working a full time job. When I begin to feel overwhelmed, I step back from the madness for a moment and turn on something soothing by one of my favorite bands. Regardless of the mood I’m in, I always feel just a little bit better after doing so. Music has always been an incredibly influential part of my life. When I was just three years old, my grandmother forced me to take piano lessons. I took lessons for about eight years and resented her for it for most of that time. She always told me I would thank her when I was older. She was right. Since then, I have become somewhat of an amateur musician. I taught myself how to play the guitar and I also dabbled in violin for awhile. In my opinion, having a strong musical background has made me a very well rounded individual. When life gets a little crazy, music is the first thing I turn to. Music has a way of impacting a person that is comparable to almost nothing. It has the ability to make one incredibly happy, or even “oh my god, I think I might die” sad. I think music allows people to express their emotions in a way that they would otherwise be unable to. I can almost guarantee that everyone has at least one song that makes them nostalgic of a different time, happy enough to dance around without inhibition, or sad enough to lock themselves in a dark room for days. In my life, music has proved to be a great way to network. As a freshman in college, I moved 500 miles away to the University of Oklahoma. I didn’t know a soul. I wasn’t as nearly as outgoing then as I am now. In my free time, I would sit outside my dorm on a bench playing my guitar. It’s unbelievable that I made as many friends as I did that way. If I hadn’t taken my guitar with me when I moved, I’m not sure I would have survived the semester. Any time I started to feel lonely, I would just pick up my guitar and play around for awhile. It was a great distraction and it was a productive way to spend my free time. My roommate may not have appreciated it as much as I did, but it certainly proved to be a good vice. You don’t necessarily have to have any sort of musical talent to have an appreciation for music. In fact, a large number of the people I know who consider themselves to be music connoisseurs don’t have the slightest idea how to play an instrument. So the next time you feel like you’ve got your back against the wall, turn on some feel good music and dance around for awhile. I bet you’ll feel a thousand times better. kotte@unews.com after all. The issue has yet to be resolved and will likely remain that way until someone has the time (or remembers) to remedy the issue. Sometimes on Sundays, I would also go onto the secondfloor balcony to have a smoke. The balcony overlooks the horrendous front lawn and the rest of Holmes Street. I quit doing this because of the condition of the balcony. Made of once-sturdy wooden planks, it has begun to sag and tilt, giving the impression that it could collapse at any moment. This is concerning because it’s clear to anyone who stands on the balcony that it may be considered unstable, but I have not received a notification from anyone on the U-News staff or anyone affiliated with UMKC that the balcony is unstable and should be blocked off. Needless to say, I smoke on the front steps now. The building also has a very slight tilt to it as well, which has occurred from the shifting foundation. The U-News house is very old. Oftentimes, old houses are to be coveted. They hold a lot To file or not to file? Kara Hart Asst. News Editor In the mail, I recently received a “Combined Tax Statement” in regards to my savings account from my bank. On the same day, I also received a document from one of my previous colleges with the header “Information for Determining Federal Tax Benefits for High Education Expenses.” I have no clue what to do with either of these. These pieces of mail make it undoubtedly clear that state and federal tax preparation time is here, and it’s also time to renew my FAFSA again. I can’t speak for anyone else, but I’m confused of history, typically have wooden floors, and nostalgic creaking steps. This is not the case with our building because it has been poorly maintained. The shifting foundation has caused problems inside the house, as well. Upstairs, the doors to our Editor-In-Chief ’s office are hard to open or get stuck. Let me be clear: I am grateful for the building UMKC allows us to have. I love having a private edifice for staff members where we collaborate and produce our independent student newspaper. I appreciate how beautiful Holmes Street is and the wonderfully paved parking lot in which we’re allowed to park our vehicles. There are even adorable gardens around the sidewalk leading to building. I am not asking for a mansion to work in; that would be highly unnecessary. Observing our building just leads me to question how much pride UMKC takes in all of their structures, or if they need more funds to fix and properly maintain them. mhartigan@unews.com Kara Hart by all of it. I’ve filed my FAFSA every year since I graduated from high school, but I’ve never filed taxes before because I’ve never had a job until this semester. I really think that there needs to be a class in high school that teaches all of this. There may be classes available in some schools, but I know there weren’t in mine. The government decided to add a “Personal Finance” curriculum requirement for high school students, starting with my class year, in order to help students learn how to manage finances for the future. In this class, we went over writing checks and how to balance a checkbook. I already knew how to do these things, so Continued on Page 20 To file or not to file: Continued from Page 19 this class did nothing for me academically. The check and checkbook are almost extinct thanks to debit cards and online banking, which dumbs everything down and makes it to where people don’t even have to do math. Therefore, there are probably more important topics that the class should have taught than what to write in “Pay to the order of ” and which box to put the check number in. The class didn’t even mention anything about taxes. I don’t even know if I am supposed to file taxes since I didn’t have a job. With the ever popular third or fourth party story about someone they know being fined or put in jail for not filing their taxes, it’s a pretty important and worrisome issue. Every time I ask people for help, I get mixed results. Some people say that I have to because I’m in college and receive grants and loans. Others tell me since I don’t have an “earned income,” I don’t have to file taxes. It would have been beneficial to have all of this explained in a high school course before it got to this point. We already have to take the “Personal Finance” class, so why not just add a segment about taxes to the curriculum? It seems like more people need help with taxes than balancing a checkbook. I definitely feel that there needs to be an addition to high school curriculum somewhere that educates students about W-2’s and taxes. After you are out of high school – or even before that, if you have a job – it becomes an annual ritual in life. Since high school is supposed to get you ready for the “real world,” as so many of my teachers cautioned, it would probably help to discuss such a topic, so that people will be burdened by it every year for the rest of their lives. audience was seated on all four sides of the square stage, requiring extreme creativity with the blocking of the show. The blocking was fresh and inventive, incorporating much of the physicality of wrestling. This extreme physicality was a challenge for the actors involved. “They specifically were looking for people who had an athletic awareness about them,” Burns said. “Leigh [the wrestling season director]really focused on putting us in the mind frame of wrestlers so he had us do wrestling drills. We had two hours of wrestling practice before we even touched the script.”During the actual wrestling matches depicted in the play, the two actors showed the most important parts of the match in slow motion. Every character is moving in half-time with reverberating rock music. The wrestling scenes are as gripping and high octane and many film action scene. A Chat with Fische and Chips: A melllo dou of mates conversing at random It draws in the audience even if they have no interest in the sport of wrestling. “When I first heard we were going to be wearing singlets, I got a little nervous. Oh, singlets, pretty exposed, but I think that’s the point of it,” Burns said. “We’re all the same, and we’re all exposed in the same way to some degree.” There are moments of pain and fear the audience experiences with the characters. While some of the scenes may cause the viewer much anxiety, like a disturbingly murky sexual encounter that verges on assault and a beating received by one of the characters, it’s hard to look away. “The Wrestling Season” has a simple and yet timeless message. “You have to be true to yourself, and once you’re true to yourself, negative things that come your way are a lot easier to dismiss,” Burns said. ladams@unews.com Come join the team! Writers and Photographers needed! NIVERSITY NEWS Editorial Board Editor-in-Chief Advertising Manager Business Manager Production Manager Production Assistant News Editor Asst. 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