041612

5
oreador T aily T he D Serving the Texas Tech University community since 1925 www.dailytoreador.com MONDAY, APRIL 16, 2012 VOLUME 86 ISSUE 122 twitter.com/DailyToreador RaiderFest Tech sweeps Houston Page 7 Page 6 Sunny EDITORIAL: 806-742-3393 ADVERTISING: 806-742-3384 BUSINESS: 806-742-3388 FAX: 806-742-2434 CIRCULATION: 806-742-3388 EMAIL: [email protected] Today Tuesday 75 46 82 52 Classifieds ................... 7 Crossword .................. 6 Opinions ..................... 4 La Vida ....................... 3 Sports .......................... 7 Sudoku ....................... 2 INDEX WEATHER Buy online at dailytoreador.com DT Photos Sunny Cardone: Women better with Obama OPINIONS, Pg. 4 TechBriefly Tech cheer wins third place at national event The Texas Tech Cheer Squad placed third this weekend at the 2012 Na- tional Cheerleaders As- sociation and National Dance Association Col- legiate Cheer and Dance Competition. The competition, hosted in Daytona Beach, Fla., was comprised of more than 250 squads across the United States, as well as Canada, Costa Rica and Japan. According to a news re- lease, the Tech cheerleading team left Nationals with a final score of 9.303, behind Oklahoma State Univer- sity and the University of Louisville. Five alumni of the Texas Tech Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering were presented with the 2012 Distinguished Engi- neer Award on April 13, as recognition for the most prestigious graduates of the college. Capt. John Alexander, Elizabeth Holland, James Lowder, Alan Smith and Karan Watson joined 207 of their fellow alumni who have received the award since its inception in 1996, according to a news release. “The Distinguished En- gineer Award is an op- portunity for the Whitacre College of Engineering to recognize our exceptional alumni,” said Al Sacco Jr., dean of the College of Engineering, in a state- ment. “Our entire scholarly community is proud of the accomplishments of our latest group of alumni to earn the title Distinguished Engineer. These individuals have set themselves apart in various and unique ways as outstanding engineers and business leaders and are a testimony to the excep- tional education provided by our faculty and staff to all our students: past, present and future.” 2012 distinguished engineers named ➤➤[email protected] Relay Rally Linda Brice, an associate pro- fessor in the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center’s School of Nurs- ing, organized the first Stork’s Nest program in Lubbock 10 years ago. The Stork’s Baby Shower, meant to raise money for prenatal care for pregnant teenagers and women in Lubbock, was hosted Friday at the International Cul- tural Center and raised more than $100,000. The Stork’s Nest is a national project by March of Dimes and Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. The Larry Combest Community Health and Wellness Center, a nonprofit nurse-managed primary health care Stork’s Nest baby shower celebrates 10 years of giving back to community School of Nursing raises more than $100,000 for prenatal care By NICOLE MOLTER STAFF WRITER BABY ITEMS WERE on display in the International Cultural Center on Friday during the Stork’s Nest Baby Shower event. The Stork’s Nest program provides an incentive for prenatal care for expecting mothers by giving them baby goods for proper care. PHOTO BY SCOTT MACWATTERS/The Daily Toreador center operated by the School of Nursing, is also a part of the program. “The goal for the Stork’s Nest is to try and have every baby born in Lubbock a healthy term baby,” Brice said. “We know that a lot of moms do not start prenatal care until later in their pregnancy — and especially our teens.” The Stork’s Nest program provides prenatal care begin- ning in early pregnancy and obstetric care for women who are likely to deliver pre-term or low birth weight babies where the baby or the mother may have complications, Brice said. STORK’S NEST Page 2 ➤➤ Riding on the bus while wear- ing headphones may seem normal and relatively safe, but a recent self-defense class warns against doing so. The Student Counseling Cen- ter and the Robert H. Ewalt Stu- dent Recreation Center hosted a self-defense class Saturday to teach participants self-defense knowl- edge and to bring awareness to Sexual Assault Awareness Month. Tom Glasscock, a group fitness instructor for the Rec Center, taught the class to four female participants. He began by explaining he would focus more on scenarios rather than just self-defense moves. He said it is not that he thinks young men today cannot defend the women around them, he just does not know if they would. “We live in an increasingly deteriorating society,” Glasscock said. “No longer can a woman rely on the men around her to aid her, so she needs to learn how to extract herself from difficult situations.” Glasscock showed the par- ticipants several moves to perform to remove themselves from a situation, both on the ground and standing up. Glasscock has worked in bars for several years and said he has seen situations of someone being backed into a corner. He showed the participants how to effectively remove themselves from a corner. Student Counseling Center, Rec host self-defense class Class hosted as part of Sexual Assault Awareness Month By PAIGE SKINNER STAFF WRITER DEFENSE continued on Page 5 ➤➤ TOP: CANCER SURVIVORS walk around Memorial Circle during the first lap of the Relay For Life on Saturday. ABOVE: Arie Head, a Tech alumna, speaks at the opening ceremony of the American Cancer Society’s annual Relay for Life on Saturday at Memorial Circle. Head has battled cancer for most of her life after first being diagnosed with ovarian cancer at age 14. PHOTOS BY SCOTT MACWATTERS AND LAUREN PAPE/The Daily Toreador Tech community joins together for Relay for Life Golf-ball-sized hail was not enough to deter Mimi Medrano from walking around Memorial Circle for 12 hours Saturday. Texas Tech hosted its ninth annual Relay for Life Saturday night, raising money and awareness for the American Cancer Society. Medrano, a freshman biochemistry major from Mansfield, was walking with Tau Beta Sigma and Kappa Kappa Psi. When the hail hit, the group took cover, but returned to relaying as soon as possible. She said the two groups were walking for survivor Connor Davis and they would continue into the morning. “It’s a great way to give back,” said Misti Welch, the committee manager of development for the ACS. As manager of the many volunteers, Welch said, this year’s event garnered a lot of excitement. Not only were there more groups involved than last year’s, but it was hosted in Memorial Circle for the first time. Though Urbanovsky Park, Relay for Life’s first home, was larger, Welch said, Memorial Circle had always been a goal since it is in the heart of campus. Groups and organizations set up tents, chairs and even couches around the circle, ready for a long night. “It’s overnight, because cancer never sleeps,” said volunteer Holly Wright, a freshman marketing major from Corpus Christi. Activities were conducted through the night, she said, to keep people fresh and awake. “As a committee, that’s what we’re trying to do,” said volunteer Andrew Maxwell, while wearing a bright purple Relay for Life bodysuit. “We want to keep people energetic all night.” The volunteers hosted live music, said Maxwell, a senior university studies major from Richmond, Va., and a “Miss Relay” pageant, a combination of a beauty pageant and drag show. Many groups on the circle had fundraisers set up, Welch said, to add to the $50,000 already raised. By HALLIE DAVIS STAFF WRITER RELAY continued on Page 5 ➤➤ @dailytoreador Follow The DT on Twitter

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oreadorTailyTheD

Serving the Texas Tech University community since 1925 www.dailytoreador.com

MONDAY, APRIL 16, 2012VOLUME 86 � ISSUE 122

twitter.com/DailyToreador

RaiderFest Tech sweeps Houston

Page 7Page 6

Sunny

EDITORIAL: 806-742-3393 ADVERTISING: 806-742-3384 BUSINESS: 806-742-3388 FAX: 806-742-2434 CIRCULATION: 806-742-3388 EMAIL: [email protected]

Today Tuesday

7546

8252

Classifieds...................7Crossword.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6Opinions.....................4La Vida.......................3Sports..........................7Sudoku....... ... .. ... ... ... . .2

INDEX WEATHER

Buy online at dailytoreador.com

DTPhotos

Sunny Cardone: Women better with Obama

OPINIONS, Pg. 4

TechBriefl y

Tech cheer wins third place at national event

The Texas Tech Cheer Squad placed third this weekend at the 2012 Na-tional Cheerleaders As-sociat ion and National Dance Association Col-legiate Cheer and Dance Competition.

The competition, hosted in Daytona Beach, Fla., was comprised of more than 250 squads across the United States, as well as Canada, Costa Rica and Japan.

According to a news re-lease, the Tech cheerleading team left Nationals with a final score of 9.303, behind Oklahoma State Univer-sity and the University of Louisville.

Five alumni of the Texas Tech Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering were presented with the 2012 Distinguished Engi-neer Award on April 13, as recognition for the most prestigious graduates of the college.

Capt. John Alexander, Elizabeth Holland, James Lowder, Alan Smith and Karan Watson joined 207 of their fellow alumni who have received the award since its inception in 1996, according to a news release.

“The Distinguished En-gineer Award i s an op-portunity for the Whitacre College of Engineering to recognize our exceptional alumni,” said Al Sacco Jr., dean of the College of Engineering, in a state-ment. “Our entire scholarly community is proud of the accomplishments of our latest group of alumni to earn the title Distinguished Engineer. These individuals have set themselves apart in various and unique ways as outstanding engineers and business leaders and are a testimony to the excep-tional education provided by our faculty and staff to all our students: past, present and future.”

2012 distinguished engineers named

➤➤[email protected]

Relay Rally

Linda Brice, an associate pro-fessor in the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center’s School of Nurs-ing, organized the fi rst Stork’s Nest program in Lubbock 10 years ago.

The Stork’s Baby Shower, meant to raise money for prenatal care for pregnant teenagers and women in Lubbock, was hosted Friday at the International Cul-tural Center and raised more than $100,000.

The Stork’s Nest is a national project by March of Dimes and Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. The Larry Combest Community Health and Wellness Center, a nonprofi t nurse-managed primary health care

Stork’s Nest baby shower celebrates 10 years of giving back to communitySchool of Nursing raises more than $100,000 for prenatal care

By NICOLE MOLTERSTAFF WRITER

BABY ITEMS WERE on display in the International Cultural Center on Friday during the Stork’s Nest Baby Shower event. The Stork’s Nest program provides an incentive for prenatal care for expecting mothers by giving them baby goods for proper care.

PHOTO BY SCOTT MACWATTERS/The Daily Toreador

center operated by the School of Nursing, is also a part of the program.

“The goal for the Stork’s Nest is to try and have every baby born in Lubbock a healthy term baby,” Brice said. “We know that a lot of moms do not start prenatal care until later in their pregnancy — and especially our teens.”

The Stork’s Nest program provides prenatal care begin-ning in early pregnancy and obstetric care for women who are likely to deliver pre-term or low birth weight babies where the baby or the mother may have complications, Brice said.

STORK’S NEST Page 2 ➤➤

Riding on the bus while wear-ing headphones may seem normal and relatively safe, but a recent self-defense class warns against doing so.

The Student Counseling Cen-ter and the Robert H. Ewalt Stu-dent Recreation Center hosted a self-defense class Saturday to teach participants self-defense knowl-edge and to bring awareness to Sexual Assault Awareness Month.

Tom Glasscock, a group fi tness instructor for the Rec Center, taught the class to four female participants.

He began by explaining he would focus more on scenarios rather than just self-defense moves.

He said it is not that he thinks

young men today cannot defend the women around them, he j ust does not know if they would.

“We live in an increasingly deteriorating society,” Glasscock said. “No longer can a woman rely on the men around her to aid her, so she needs to learn how to extract herself from difficult situations.”

Glasscock showed the par-ticipants several moves to perform to remove themselves from a situation, both on the ground and standing up.

Glasscock has worked in bars for several years and said he has seen situations of someone being backed into a corner. He showed the participants how to effectively remove themselves from a corner.

Student Counseling Center, Rec host self-defense classClass hosted as part of Sexual Assault Awareness Month

By PAIGE SKINNERSTAFF WRITER

DEFENSE continued on Page 5 ➤➤

TOP: CANCER SURVIVORS walk around Memorial Circle during the fi rst lap of the Relay For Life on Saturday. ABOVE: Arie Head, a Tech alumna, speaks at the opening ceremony of the American Cancer Society’s annual Relay for Life on Saturday at Memorial Circle. Head has battled cancer for most of her life after fi rst being diagnosed with ovarian cancer at age 14.

PHOTOS BY SCOTT MACWATTERS AND LAUREN PAPE/The Daily Toreador

Tech community joins together for Relay for Life

Golf-ball-sized hail was not enough to deter Mimi Medrano from walking around Memorial Circle for 12 hours Saturday.

Texas Tech hosted its ninth annual Relay for Life Saturday night, raising money and awareness for the American Cancer Society.

Medrano, a freshman biochemistry major from Mansfi eld, was walking with Tau Beta Sigma and Kappa Kappa Psi. When the hail hit, the group took cover, but returned to relaying as soon as possible. She said the two groups were walking for survivor Connor Davis and they would continue into the morning.

“It’s a great way to give back,” said Misti Welch, the committee manager of development for the ACS.

As manager of the many volunteers, Welch said, this year’s event garnered a lot of excitement. Not only were there more groups involved than last year’s, but it was hosted in Memorial Circle for the fi rst time.

Though Urbanovsky Park, Relay for Life’s fi rst

home, was larger, Welch said, Memorial Circle had always been a goal since it is in the heart of campus.

Groups and organizations set up tents, chairs and even couches around the circle, ready for a long night.

“It’s overnight, because cancer never sleeps,” said volunteer Holly Wright, a freshman marketing major from Corpus Christi.

Activities were conducted through the night, she said, to keep people fresh and awake.

“As a committee, that’s what we’re trying to do,” said volunteer Andrew Maxwell, while wearing a bright purple Relay for Life bodysuit. “We want to keep people energetic all night.”

The volunteers hosted live music, said Maxwell, a senior university studies major from Richmond, Va., and a “Miss Relay” pageant, a combination of a beauty pageant and drag show.

Many groups on the circle had fundraisers set up, Welch said, to add to the $50,000 already raised.

By HALLIE DAVISSTAFF WRITER

RELAY continued on Page 5 ➤➤@dailytoreador

Follow The DT on

Twitter

21

La Vida Page 3Monday, April 16, 2012

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The “American Idol” judges didn’t stutter: Jessica Sanchez “ain’t going home.”

The 16-year-old high school student from San Diego who powered through the Jazmine Sullivan ballad “Stutter-ing” on Wednesday, was revealed to have received the fewest viewer votes on Thursday, but the “Idol” judges unanimously decided to save Sanchez before she could even fi nish her last-

chance performance of Deborah Cox’s “Nobody’s Supposed to Be Here.”

“Give me that mic,” interrupted Jennifer Lopez. “This is crazy! Yes, we’re using the save. You ain’t going home.”

Sanchez, sometimes known as her sassy alter ego “Bebe Chez,” had been deemed one of this season’s front-run-ners, consistently impressing the panel with savvy-beyond-her-years takes on such tunes as Whitney Houston’s ver-

sion of “I Will Always Love You” and Beyonce’s “Sweet Dreams.”

Elise Testone, the rockin’ 28-year-old teacher from Charleston, S.C., who sizzled with Lady Gaga’s “You and I,” and 20-year-old student Joshua Ledet, of Westlake, La., who earned a standing ovation from the panel for Bruno Mars’ “Runaway Baby,” joined Sanchez as the bottom three vote-getters. It was the fi rst time at the bottom for Sanchez.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A two-headed longhorn. A pair of 40-foot-tall cowboy boots. A panel van riddled with shotgun holes. An entire beer joint re-created in an art gallery.

The Texana-themed art of Bob “Daddy-O” Wade is neither an exag-geration of the Lone Star State’s repu-tation nor a view askew of the state’s sizable sense of self-worth.

Texas really is that big, it really is unique, and Wade — who understands that better than any singer, songwriter or fi lmmaker in recent history — is as big and iconic as the state he chronicles.

“It’s always weird, twisted, funky stuff,” says the 69-year-old artist, Austin-based for the past 16 years. “Some people see (my art) and think it’s over the top, but it’s not. I tell them that Texas is really like this.”

His latest public installation, for example, pays tribute to one of the more obscure cul-de-sacs of the Texas pop-culture map: Leslie’s Fried Chicken. Generations of drivers on Interstate 35, for example, gauged their progress by their proximity to Leslie’s Waco location near the interstate.

Austin’s Laguna Gloria recruited Wade and eight other artists or col-lectives to build “Zip-A-Tee-Doo-Dah,” a miniature golf-course on the tree-shaded grounds of the Austin art organization. Though some played fast and loose with the concept — includ-ing messages about commercialism and impossible-to-beat loops — Wade revisited his past.

He taught community-college art in Waco. And his fi rst exhibit at Laguna Gloria, 1975’s “Texas Formal

Garden,” features live chickens.Wade’s contribution is a two-

tiered hole in which putters send the ball between the legs of a menacing, 8-foot-tall ceramic rooster. The ball rolls down several feet of PVC-pipe al-ley and empties onto the ground fl oor, where a 6-foot statue of Leslie’s famous blue-and-white chicken awaits. Live chickens, in a specially built henhouse off to the side, complete the effect.

It’s called “Chicken Ranch.”That sort of thinking is what drew

Andrea Mellard, curator of the “Art on the Green” exhibit, to recruit

Wade.“I knew this was his aesthetic,” she

said. “He has this ‘big, bold, roadside attraction’ vernacular. It’s larger than life, and Bob is a larger-than-life character.”

Wade’s last big job, before the golf course, was “Wired for Sound,” a fac-simile of Lily’s, a downtown Lockhart beer joint, erected in a Texas Lutheran University art gallery last year. The exhibit’s walls were wrapped in alu-minum foil, just like the original bar, and it included a Wurlitzer jukebox and mismatched chairs and tables.

With about 15 to 18 children in a preschool class, it can be diffi cult for them to receive one-on-one at-tention from an adult.

A select few Texas Tech students try to change this every week, by pre-paring preschoolers for kindergarten.

JumpStart is a nonprofi t organi-zation that allows college students to help out at local preschool centers and teach preschoolers the funda-mentals they need for kindergarten, including reading and social skills.

Dawn Burke, the program direc-tor for JumpStart, said itsmission is to ensure the children are prepared to enter and succeed in school.

The 45 Tech JumpStart students work at five different preschool centers.

“We are based on college cam-puses, about 60 different campuses across the country, right now,” Burke said. “What we do is we recruit and hire college students who go out and mentor preschool children in language and literacy, social skills.”

She said there is a big gap in preschooler’s literacy skills, so the JumpStart students help the pre-schoolers with reading.

“We have a specifi c curriculum that we use in the classrooms,” Burke said, “and we really focus on

those skills so that those children are up to par with their peers when they get into the kindergarten classroom.”

JumpStart recruits students from every college at Tech, not just education majors, Burke said. If a student is eligible for work-study, they can get paid for his or her work with JumpStart.

The JumpStart students work 300 hours within a school year and then get a bonus at the end of the year for completing all their hours.

But, it doesn’t go without hard work and dedication to the pre-school children.

Each session plan is revolved around a child’s storybook. After reading the book to the children, each JumpStart student is in charge of a center for the preschoolers.

The centers are books, puzzles, art or science activity and dramatic play.

But, Burke said, the best thing about having the JumpStart students help out with the preschoolers is that the children have one-on-one conversations, something most children miss out on if they’re in group care.

“Because, when you have one teacher with 15 children, it’s really hard to have individual conversa-tions,” she said. “So, by us being able to go in and have six or seven

college students work with the little ones, they can have a lot more individual conversations and then that just goes back to them learning their vocabulary and building their knowledge base. So when they do get into kindergarten, they have that foundation there.”

Christopher Hernandez, a Jump-Start group leader, said he sees a difference among the preschoolers throughout the time the JumpStart students spend with them.

“At fi rst, whenever they get in there, they are very shy and very timid with us,” said the senior social work major from Midland, “and then about the middle of the year, they’ll talk to us, they’ll tell us sto-ries and everything like that. And at the very end, whenever we’re about to leave, you’ll see them talking like that amongst their peers. T hey’re telling stories to them and using all this different language they’ve learned throughout our vocabulary, throughout the book.”

April Valdez, assistant direc-tor of Talkington Early Learning Center, said the preschool children love having the JumpStart students around and the preschool teachers consider them a big help.

“They are able to give them one-on-one time, which is something teachers can’t really do because we have classrooms,” Valdez said. “And

having them come in and having so much of them, they get to have the kids one-on-one and read to them and talk to them and explain it to them more, so it helps that out.”

Burke said she has always en-

joyed working with children, but has recently also discovered she enjoys working with college students as well.

“It’s really neat to see the chil-dren get so excited about having a

Texas Tech JumpStart friend,” she said, “and so, I think, that encour-ages them to think about going to college later in their life, to have those good role models.”

Tech students, JumpStart prepare preschoolers for kindergartenBy PAIGE SKINNER

STAFF WRITER

SAMANTHA MAURIN, A senior visual studies major form Arlington, reads "My Big Balloon" to a preschool class in the Erskine Early Learning Center on Thursday as a part of the Texas Tech student organization JumpStart.

PHOTO BY EMILY DE SANTOS/The Daily Toreador

➤➤[email protected]

Artist’s works as big and unique as Texas ‘Idol’ judges save finalist from elimination

22222

APRIL 16, 20122 WWW.DAILYTOREADOR.COMNEWS

WASHINGTON (AP) — Five years after the U.S. housing bust sent sales and prices plunging, the spring home-buying season is pointing to a long-awaited recovery.

Reduced prices, record-low mort-gage rates, higher rents and an improv-ing job market appear to be embold-ening many would-be buyers. Open houses are drawing crowds. A wave of foreclosures is leading investors to grab bargain-priced homes.

And many people seem to have concluded that prices won’t drop much further. In some areas, prices have begun to tick up.

Interviews with more than two dozen potential buyers, sellers, brokers, Realtors and economists suggest that confi dence is up and that sales will move slowly but steadily higher.

“The biggest challenge that we’ve had over the past four years is fear — fear that the economy is collapsing, that property values are collapsing, that the world is coming to an end,” says Mark Prather, a broker at ERA Buy America Real Estate in La Palma, Calif. “The fear factor is all but gone.”

Prather says the number of prospec-tive buyers who contacted his company last month was about 35 percent more

than a year ago.The spring buying season got an

early lift-off from an uncommonly warm January and February — a winter that was the best for sales of previously occu-pied homes in fi ve years. Permits to build houses and apartments rose in February to their highest level since 2008.

“People feel much more confi dent,” said Steve Brown, co-owner of real es-tate company Irongate Inc. of Dayton, Ohio, who says sales jumped more than 16 percent for the fi rst two months of 2012 over the same period last year. “There’s no question there’s a good feeling in the marketplace.”

CARTAGENA, Colombia (AP) — President Barack Obama’s willingness to engage with America’s adversaries comes with promise and peril, a reality hammered home by signs of progress in nuclear talks with Iran and a setback in North Korea’s provocative rocket launch.

In Colombia, where Obama is at-tending a summit with Latin American leaders, the president has been confront-ed by the stubbornly stalled U.S.-Cuba relationship, despite his offer of a “new beginning” with the communist nation.

The convergence of events focused fresh attention on a foreign policy strategy that puts a premium on keeping the door open for diplomacy, even with countries the U.S. considers “bad actors.”

Obama administration offi cials say the strategy has improved the U.S. stand-ing in the world by showing that America is more willing to look outward, 10 years since President George W. Bush branded Iran, Iraq and North Korea as members of an “axis of evil.” White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes credited U.S. engagement with Iran and North Korea with allowing the U.S. to rally international support for stronger penalties when those nations proved to be defi ant.

But the president’s critics say his open engagement policy is naïve and weak.

The criticism came from Obama’s fel-low Democrats during the 2008 election, including from campaign rival Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama’s secretary of state. Republican candidate Mitt Rom-ney has used a similar line of attack to go after Obama’s foreign policy in this year’s presidential race.

Almost immediately after North Korea’s failed rocket launch Thursday, Romney accused Obama of trying to appease the reclusive communist country by dangling a food aid deal “that proved to be as naïve as it was short-lived.”

Romney has accused Obama of engaging in a policy of appeasement with Cuba, and giving the communist-run government “gifts” when he lifted restrictions on travel and remittances to Cuba. Romney has said that if he were negotiating with Cuba as president, he would want to know what he was go-ing to get in return before making any concessions.

Mixed results for Obama openness with foreign foes

Home-buying season signaling recovery

ERIN WELKER, A senior nursing student from Garland, bids on a basket in a silent auction at the Storks Nest Baby Shower event Friday in the International Cultural Center. Proceeds from the live and silent auc-tions will go to the Storks Nest program in Lubbock, which incentivizes prenatal care for expecting mothers.

PHOTO BY SCOTT MACWATTERS/The Daily Toreador

The goal of the annual Stork’s Nest Baby Shower is to collect brand-new baby items and raise enough money to buy bigger baby items, such as car seats and mattresses, as well as to con-tinue the Stork’s Nest incentive program all year long, Brice said.

“The points that the moms earn by going to the doctor, by taking classes, getting the baby’s well-baby check-ups and immu-nizations,” Brice said, “they can trade them in for brand-new baby items.”

There were an estimated 30 moms, either expecting or with newborns, who attended the baby shower, said Lindsey Mullin, a senior nursing stu-dent from Farwell.

“It’s been really neat how many people have been willing to give to it, whether it’s donations or money,” said Caitlin Blair, a senior nursing student from Abilene. “The community is re-ally involved.”

Kmart, My Cup of Tea and Hol-lyhocks were some local business who

donated to the baby shower, Brice said. First Capital Bank, the co-sponsor for the event, ra i sed more than $24,000 for the pro-g ram. More than 11,000 letters were also sent out to ask community businesses, or-ganizations and individuals for help.

“ K m a r t played a huge part in it,” Mullin said. “They donated, like, $30,000 just by themselves in baby items, but other little baby shops donate stuff like just clothes, blankets. There’s big items

like cribs, and car seats, and mattresses and things like that, too.”

The program has grown every year since Brice started the baby shower to benefi t the Stork’s Nest program, said Amy Johnson-Rubio, director of program services for March of Dimes in Lubbock.

“We do have a storefront that looks like a baby boutique,” she said, “and it’s also where we teach our classes, so (the moms) come there to get the items. Really, our interest is just in women getting the prenatal care they need and the education they need to have the healthiest baby possible.”

The Stork’s Nest Baby Shower received between $105,000 and $110,000 in donations this year, Brice said. After 10 years of having the event, the program is within $20,000 of donating half a million dollars’ worth of baby items back to the community.

“I think it just shows giving back to the community,” Blair said. “Dr. Brice is amazing about getting involved; she’s got more projects going at once. It shows getting involved in the com-munity and giving back.”

Stork’s Nest↵CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

““It’s been really neat how many people

have been willing to give to it, whether

it’s donations or money.

CAITLIN BLAIRSENIOR NURSING STUDENT

➤➤[email protected]

Editor-in-ChiefJose [email protected]

Managing EditorBrett [email protected]

News EditorCaitlan [email protected]

La Vida EditorKassidy [email protected]

Opinions EditorChris [email protected]

Sports [email protected]

Photo EditorBrad [email protected]

Electronic Media EditorAndrew [email protected]

Copy EditorJennifer McKown

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OpinionsPage 4Monday, April 16, 2012

“... Democrats have been able to

pass important legislation making equal pay in the workplace law.

Let us know what you think.Check out The DT online at

www.dailytoreador.comBlogs, polls, video, slideshows,

article comments and more.All available online now.

“Not only has he earned more degrees than

Barack Obama from Harvard ... he would be the most crimson

commander-in-chief since

Franklin Delano Roosevelt ...

This week, Democrat-ic strategist Hilary Rosen offhandedly re-

marked that Ann Romney had never worked a day in her life because she was a stay-at-home mother.

The last few days have caused her to backtrack under rightful criticism by the right and the left sides.

There are a couple of issues I have with this statement. Fore-most is the most obvious; the implication that stay-at-home parenting is any easier than a full-time job.

I don’t know the circumstanc-es at the Romney household, but being a stay-at-home parent is a full-time job. My mother was also a stay-at-home parent, and wrangling six kids into order all day is far and away more difficult than being a political commen-tator at CNN.

Rosen was trying to make a point about the fortunate ability of the Romney family to only have one working parent, but she did so in the wrong tone. For most families, the choice to no longer work and become a full-time caretaker isn’t one decided by wishes, but rather by financial needs.

With the wealth of the Rom-ney family, this was almost cer-tainly never an issue. There was never a long discussion about what the family would need to

Tony Cardone

C a r d o n e i s a j u n i o r computer science major from San Antonio.➤➤ [email protected]

Women better with Obama

cut back on in order for Ann to stay at home and take care of the children, as would be required in most families.

Rather than portraying Ann as a slouch who isn’t used to work, it would have been a pe r f ec t t ime to attack the R e p u b l i c a n Par ty ’s aver-sion to people who don’t take home a pay-check, such as s tay-at-home parents , col-lege students a n d j o b l e s s Americans.

These peo-p l e a r e f r e -quently brand-ed as lazy, unmotivated and people who contribute to the problems in modern America. They don’t need government assistance or tax breaks because they aren’t actively contributing to the economy.

Ann Romney shouldn’t be branded as a lazy, do-nothing cit-izen just because she chooses to

stay at home and raise her family. Neither should college students for furthering their education. And we should especially not characterize jobless Americans as lazy, because the mere thought that living on jobless benefits is a luxurious life is delusional.

The value of an individual cannot solely be measured in terms of how much money he or she makes. This is where Re-publicans are weak and Rosen missed a chance to emphasize in her commentary.

Also missed was a chance t o h a m m e r home the prog-ress Democrats have made in order to give t h e a v e r a g e A m e r i c a n woman a fair shake in the w o r k p l a c e . Showing the country that — despite the seemingly in-

consequential Republican feet dragging — Democrats have been able to pass important leg-islation making equal pay in the workplace law.

Ann Romney might not have needed it, but her fellow females who are able to get fairly paid jobs in the private or public sector are largely thanks to

Democrats. Most Republicans don’t know who Lily Ledbetter is, and the ones that do almost certainly do not like her.

Ann Romney might not have to worry about health care costs due to her family’s enormous wealth, but the average Ameri-can woman probably does.

Women who value their right to be an equal in society will almost certainly be better off under a Democratic administra-tion than under a Republican one. Women who want to live a healthy life without going into financial distress will be better off with a second Obama term rather than with a Romney ad-ministration.

This is the point Rosen and all Democrats need to hammer home this election season. Call out Mitt Romney and demand he point to one piece of legisla-tion he or his yet-to-be-named running mate have authored or supported which brings equal rights for women.

And if — by some miracle, — there is one found under a bunker somewhere, challenge them to find one that supports women’s health. I am quite con-fident none of those exist.

Last Thursday, Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Rom-ney attributed President Barack Obama’s alleged ineptitude to his having “spent too much time at Harvard, perhaps.”

If learning at this univer-sity has the potential to dull one’s faculties, Romney must be speaking from experience. Not only has he earned more degrees than Barack Obama from Harvard, but, if he becomes president, he would be the most crimson commander-in-chief since Franklin Delano Roos-evelt, class of 1902.

Romney has not one, but two advanced degrees from this institution. He graduated from the joint J.D./M.B.A. program in 1975, and from there entered the business world. While Presi-

dent Obama spent three years here, Romney spent a total of four.

If Romney has indeed become aware of the deleterious effects of a Harvard education, it must have been a recent epiphany.

Three of his sons attended Harvard for their M.B.A.s, sug-gesting either that their pres-ence on this campus was an act of rebellion against their reluc-tant father, or that Romney has only caught on to the crippling effects of a Harvard education in the past few years.

Then again, even this sce-nario seems doubtful. After all, Romney counts economics Professor N. Gregory Mankiw and Kennedy School Fellow Meghan O’Sullivan among his top advisers.

Most likely, Romney’s appar-ent change of heart towards his alma mater is an attempt to tap into anti-intellectual sentiment

in order to rile the Republican base.

Since he has a hard time impressing the far-right wing of the Republican Party with his pedigree, maybe Mr. Romney thinks he can fool them into only scrutinizing his opponent’s.

B u t s e r i -o u s l y , h e ’ d h a v e m o r e l u c k t r y i n g t o c o n v i n c e them that he’s a l w a y s b e e n “severely con-servative.”

A l t h o u g h Romney’s re-cent conver-sion to anti-intellectualism may seem hu-morous, what it says about his candidacy is troubling.

A l t h o u g h t h e R e p u b -l i c a n P a r t y styles itself as the pa r ty o f me r i toc r acy, their appreciation for individual achievement seems to be rather limited.

Academic and intellectual merit are regularly disparaged by Republican party leaders, even as they routinely exalt the value of hard work. Experience in academia—a field in which so many conservative luminar-ies have served—is mocked as not being “a real job.” It is no wonder that there is a dearth of

Republicans in our nation’s top universities.

In the same breath that Re-publicans undermine the value of academic and intellectual accomplishment, they bristle when anyone speaks against the interest of those whose

a c c o m p l i s h -m e n t s h a v e been financial.

For exam-ple, any sug-ge s t ion that those whose “ r e a l j o b s ” have brought them immense wealth ought to pay a more in taxes is de-cried as “pun-i s h i n g s u c -cess.”

It speaks to the power of the ex t r eme r i g h t i n t o -day’s Republi-can party that trash-talking a c a d e m i c achievement

is de rigeur even for candidates who hail from Massachusetts, received two Harvard degrees, and are supposedly members of the Republican establishment.

This is not simply anti-elit-ism, but anti-intellectualism. In an age when the nation’s prob-lems are increasingly complex, requiring the kind of expertise that a good education provides, we cannot afford to mock those who pursue one.

By HARVARD CRIMSON EDITORIAL BOARD

HARVARD CRIMSON (HARVARD U.)

Romney panders anti-intellectualism

You may have already spent your lunch money on a donation toward the KONY 2012 effort, but there’s a new fundraising campaign that may actually have more impact than the leaky Invisible Children movement.

Ann and Phelim Media LLC is currently raising funds to expose the truth about “fracking” through their documentary entitled FrackNation.

While the word “fracking” may pierce the heart of any crazed envi-ronmentalist, many Americans are unfamiliar with the details of this process. Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is a process that has been used by the oil and gas industry for decades. Engineers pump water and chemicals into shale rock to create cracks, and then harvest oil and natural gas that would otherwise remain trapped underground.

The entire process is carefully overseen and monitored with state-of-the-art technology, and it has opened up thousands of jobs. We have seen the success of fracking in North Dakota and other states where the unemployment rate has shrunken to 3 percent. Wages are so high in North Dakota that Mc-Donald’s is actually offering $15 an hour to keep up.

Not only does fracking provide jobs, it reduces energy costs so people can afford their utilities. For those living off small wages or miniature pensions, this could mean the difference of living in a small house or in a cramped trailer.

Critics complain about the chemicals used in the fracking pro-cess, including hydrochloric acid, diesel fuel and benzene; yet there is no proof behind accusations of water resource contamination.

And now critics have fl ocked behind the latest environmentalist propaganda to hit HBO.

Josh Fox’s “Gasland” (2010), which relies heavily on anecdotal evidence, argues that fracking is poisoning our water supplies and making our water fl ammable. The trailer for this fi lm sensationally features a man igniting the water fl owing from his faucet.

Yet as fi lmmakers Ann McEl-hinney and Phelim McAleer point out in their trailer for FrackNa-tion, water has been fl ammable in

places for centuries. This is simply the result of natural gas bubbling up through water sources, thus making it ignitable. It has occurred in states such as West Virginia, Kentucky and New York. There is actually a place in New York called Burning Springs known for its fl ammable water — hence the name “Burning Springs.” Discovered in 1669, the springs were burning away well before fracking became popular.

Whether or not the burning bush that spoke to Moses was also a result of ancient fracking still remains ques-tionable (sources say that Al Gore is fl ying his corporate jet into Egypt to conduct further research.)

As for the claim of water contami-nation, McElhinney and McAleer found this was a downright lie.

None of their interviewees re-ported any contaminants in their water supply. McAleer actually questioned Fox on camera about his claims regarding contamination in “Gasland,” and the footage was immediately forced off YouTube and Vimeo by Fox’s lawyers.

Can you say “suspicious?” What are they trying to hide?

Environmentalists also blame fracking for seismic disturbances. This may be true, but so does the process of obtaining geothermic power — a so-called “sustainable” source of energy.

Liberals constantly point to loop-holes in federal laws that would otherwise restrict fracking, but federal bureaucrats would have already found a way to stop it if it posed any real health issues. After all, they’ve had decades to look into it.

The ugly truth: they have no proof. Rather, they have proven that it’s safe.

Lies have unfortunately infi ltrated the environmentalist narrative yet again and have attracted the ears of celebrities such as Mark Ruffalo. Why? Because scaring people about fl ammable gas is fun and profi table to them.

Stories about fracking are wrong and threatening their future. Cheap energy and an abundance of jobs are at stake here. Will we miss out on this opportunity because of environmen-talist propaganda and its celebrity following?

For $1, you can become an execu-tive producer of FrackNation, which is expected to be released in June. I encourage you to resist the current narrative, and visit FrackNation.com today.

Don’t get gassed up with fracking

By BRENDAN PRINGLEMUSTANG DAILY

(CAL POLY SAN LUIS OBISPO)

211

5APRIL 16, 2012WWW.DAILYTOREADOR.COM LA VIDA

Couple enjoy 83 years of lovePARIS, Texas (AP) — At ages 17

and 19, Eunice and Lloyd Ford were married in secret late one night by a Baptist preacher in west Paris.

Eunice, aided by her aunt, left her parent’s home under the pretense of go-ing to a show in town, but instead met up with her love, Lloyd, and eloped.

That was the night of April 9, 1929.Lloyd, 102, and Eunice, 100, re-

cently celebrated their 83rd wedding anniversary.

The couple still live in their home of several decades in Rugby, with one of two children, Gary Ford, living next door.

The longtime couple still remem-ber their younger days, when Eunice lived in Hugo and Lloyd on the prop-erty where Camp Maxey sits today near Powderly — the place they met.

Eunice’s grandparents lived near Lloyd’s family and she grew up friends with Lloyd’s sister. Both insist they “never knew the other existed” until their mid-teens. Both families were hard-working farmers.

“I didn’t know she was there,” Lloyd said. “I was just a little squirt and she was even smaller.”

“We would go down there in a wagon, work all day, come in and milk a cow, feed the hog if we had one, and just live like you want to,” Eunice said.

When Lloyd and Eunice “started

going together,” and began talking of marriage, Lloyd had a spat with Eunice’s father, and rather than Lloyd asking her father for permission, the couple decided to elope.

Lloyd’s mother took Lloyd to Coo-per to get a marriage license. Eunice waited at home for their car to pass back by and listened for the horn to sound, signaling Lloyd had secured the license.

“I went way over back in the pas-ture to drive the cows up that evening and I heard the horn,” Eunice said. “I went and got my suitcase ready for that night. It was dark and I carried my suitcase out to the edge of the yard where the lamp light wouldn’t shine on it. She (Eunice’s aunt) got it and put it into her car. We were going to the show that night because it was her birthday. We never did make it to the show.”

She left a note for her father before leaving that night.

“When I lived at home, it was a habit when we washed dishes at night to turn a plate down for breakfast,” Eunice said. “I wrote a note that I was gone to get married and when he (her father) turned his plate over, he got the note. It said ‘When you read this, I’ll be Mrs. Lloyd Ford.’ I added some more to it — I added it wasn’t a ‘have to.’”

The couple resisted Eunice’s father’s wishes to have the marriage annulled,

and lived with Lloyd’s parents until a house opened up in the Ford’s Acad-emy community.

They began making their living growing and selling tomatoes and watermelons.

After they were forced to sell their land when Camp Maxey was formed, Lloyd began running a grocery on N. Main Street in Paris.

“He gave me a dollar a day and I drove 10 miles to work every day,” Lloyd said.

Later, Lloyd and Eunice bought a grocery store in Rugby and adjacent house, and operated Ford’s Grocery for many years before transforming it into a lawn mower and chain saw repair shop.

In 1979, Lloyd retired and the couple moved to their current house, which sits on the property where the Rugby School used to be.

Until 2011, the couple maintained a one-acre garden. They attribute their long, healthy lives to eating fresh foods from their own garden, lots of hard work and good rest.

Eunice said in 83 years of marriage, they’ve never had a fi ght.

“We never have fought,” Eunice said. “We’ve gotten mad at one anoth-er, but we never have fought. Usually if he got on me about anything, I walked off and left him. We never did quarrel.”

“Anytime you put alcohol into a ‘I want to have fun’ party situa-tion with mass groups of people of different ethnic origins or mentali-ties, you’re going to have clashes,” he said. “And I can honestly say there wasn’t a Thursday, Friday or Saturday night I didn’t have to break up a fi ght when I was working in the bars.”

After about 45 minutes of instructing self-defense moves, Glasscock had the four participants sit around him in a semicircle to discuss different levels of security.

First was white level, which meant a person was secure and not aware of any attackers. He gave the example of walking around campus

or riding the bus with headphones in and not paying attention.

Yellow level was the second, which meant a person was cautious and aware. He advised everyone should always be at a yellow level.

And the last two were orange and red. Orange being a person is in danger and there is a possible tar-get, and red is a person in confl ict and choosing to fi ght to get away from an attacker.

One part ic ipant , Lauren Thompson, said she trained with the Federal Law Enforcement Center in Georgia for a Homeland Security internship and wanted to go to the class to freshen up on some self-defense moves.

The forensic science gradu-ate student from Graham said she thinks people on campus are typically unaware of their sur-

roundings.“I think so,” she said about

Lubbock being a problem city of as-sault. “And people being unaware, especially on campus. People don’t pay attention to what they’re do-ing. This just mental state of just, ‘You’re going to win’ whatever situation you’re in and people need to realize that.”

Lauren Thompson brought her sister to the class, Jenny Thomp-son, to help her understand the basics of self-defense.

Jenny Thompson, a freshman speech pathology major from Graham, said she found the class helpful. Walking around Lubbock, she said, she would feel threatened, but now has the mentality of code yellow, always being aware of her surroundings.

Defense↵CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

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‘The Cabin in the Woods’ refreshingly unique fl ick

LondonWeldon

Weldon is The DT’s movie re-viewer.➤➤[email protected]

“The Cabin in the Woods” is a horror/thriller co-written and directed by Drew Goddard, Joss Whedon being the other co-writer and the producer, starring Chris Hemsworth, Jesse Williams, Kristen Connolly and Anna Hutchison. The film follows a group of older teenagers ready to get away from the city and enjoy a weekend in the forest.

After finding their destination, “The Cabin in the Woods,” they start to explore, leading to a dis-covery that one can only dream of. As the film develops, secrets about their whereabouts are uncovered and the fight for their lives begins.

Coming from the director of “Cloverfield,” this isn’t the typical teen slasher flick.

There really was something for everyone in this film because there was just enough action to keep the audience entertained, but also sur-prised everyone and was an outright black comedy, as well.

The cinematography contrib-

uted to the storyline even more. It kept you captivated into the story, not wanting to look away. New secrets were spilling out and you didn’t want to miss the next piece of the puzzle. Every main character did their part on staying true to their stereotypical roles, like the jock, the slut and the nerd, but it wasn’t overdone. You can’t help but like all of them.

Without giving too much away, I would like to stress that you will not be disappointed. There are some surprises that will shock you, which makes it even more worthwhile. The chemistry onscreen was impec-cable, along with the direction of the entire film. The less you know

about this film going in, the better. Don’t go in expecting the typical “kids in the wilderness” plot. To go into any more detail would be spoiling the movie, so with that being said, every horror fan needs to see this.

Overall, I would give this movie three-and-a-half out of five stars. There weren’t any gimmicks or major cheesiness holding this film together, unlike every other horror movie ever made. It is a refreshingly new concept. We’ve all been com-plaining that they haven’t made any unique scary movies in awhile — well, here you go. Do yourself a favor, don’t watch the trailer more than once and go into this ready to be surprised with twists and turns coming from every way. If you want to be taken for an exhilarating ride, shell out the extra cash for this fun and soon-to-be-classic flick.

Texas eatery serves $12K, 10-course Titanic mealHOUSTON (AP) — Crystal tin-

kles as women clad in dinner best bow their heads over champagne glasses, listening attentively to the captain’s evening address. The Armagnac they sip is circa 1900. The dishes, crystal and silverware also hark back to a bygone era — one when the Titanic sailed the high seas, destined for disaster.

On this evening, though, the cap-tain is Ryan Roberts, executive director of Cullen’s restaurant in Houston.

“We’re here to remember the people who perished on that fateful night, so if we could just bow our heads in a moment of silence,” Roberts said, his white-gloved hands reminiscent of the opulence of the Edwardian era that birthed the lush fi rst-class cabins and dining rooms of what was then the world’s largest ship.

It’s the 100th anniversary of the maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic, which hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic on a frigid, dark night, killing 1,514 people. And to mark the occa-sion, 12 people in Houston enjoyed a replica of the lavish 10-course dinner the wealthiest people aboard the ship enjoyed just before the crash.

The dinner was one of many served from New York to Memphis, Tenn., and across the oceans to Hong Kong, as chefs attempted to transport diners to a time when waiters in starched coats and napkins hanging from their arms served an upper class that was far removed from the common man, who fi lled the lower portions of the Titanic and went largely unnoticed by the wealthy until

they perished together in the cold sea.At Cullen’s, Roberts and Chef Paul

Lewis spent months researching the menu, the waiters’ attire, the china, silverware, crystal, wines, cognacs and Burgundies, hoping to offer their guests an experience as close to the actual event as possible. Pairing up with the Museum of Natural Science to include a tour of its Titanic exhibit, they came up with a $12,000-per-person meal that will be offered through September, when the ship’s relics will move on to a new destination.

After viewing the exhibit, diners are driven by limousine to the upscale res-taurant about 20 miles south of down-town Houston, where they are seated in an exclusive dining area suspended over the main hall. There, they are treated to an array of foods from around the world prepared by cooks who have for months practiced and discussed how to interpret a menu too lavish for today’s palette.

The truffl es are from France, the oysters from neighboring Louisiana, the salmon from Scotland. The portions, however, have been scaled down, and some — such as the Consommé Olga, a Russian-style meat broth — were given a more modern twist.

“We wanted to make sure there’s enough there to give you the fl avor or the substance but nothing to make you hugely uncomfortable sitting there, dreading the next course,” Lewis said.

“Dinner back then was a little bit different as well. If you didn’t want a course, you just waved it off and the waiter would just skip you and go onto

the next person,” Lewis said. “Of course, we don’t want that. We want to make sure that everyone gets a little bit of everything.”

Finding the menus from the Titanic — fi rst, second and third class — was fairly easy. They are among the artifacts that were recovered from the wreckage. Rather, it was making sense of the scant descriptions, such as “roast duckling, apple sauce,” that was more complex, Lewis said. He cross-referenced the menu with other research, then came up with his interpretation of the meal.

But what did the waiters wear? To answer this question, Roberts went to the movie and fi nally dressed his waiters in white tuxedo jackets, making sure all, including himself, donned white gloves.

Unable to fi nd a complete set of china, silverware and flatware for a 10-course meal or confirm the au-thenticity of HMS Titanic sets offered online, Roberts fi nally turned to those who have some memory of the era.

“We begged, borrowed and pleaded with a lot of grandmas to find that china,” he said, noting that diners will eat off of sets from the 1900s “that none of us have even touched and weren’t allowed to eat on,” Roberts said.

Tracking down some of the food was also a challenge, Lewis said. Truffles, for example, are between seasons and the chef was reluctant to use a canned variety. So he called in a favor from a friend who works at a restaurant in New York and the earthy mushrooms arrived barely 48 hours before the big dinner.

The event began with open-ing ceremonies and then a survi-vors’ lap. After that, each orga-nization sent people out to walk, so they would have someone on the sidewalk at all times.

Then the hail hit. Many participants went into

Holden Hall to wait it out, said Chris Forbus, a senior communi-cations studies major from Little-field; but, in light of the danger, many students left entirely.

“The entire circle was full of people,” he said, “and now we can barely fill the fountain (area).”

Medrano said it would take a lot more than just wind and hail to keep her from walking.

Davis, a senior music major from Plainview, continued walk-ing as well. He said he had been participating in Relays for Life since before he was diagnosed with cancer.

“It’s … a fun night to hang out with friends,” he said, “and it’s good exercise.”

In addition to Davis, Me-drano said, she also walked for two others in her family who had been diagnosed with cancer.

“It could happen to anybody,” she said.

Luminaries lined the walkway, with names of either memory or celebration. At about 11 p.m. a

ceremony was hosted to honor all of them.

Forbus said it was important to take this time to be serious and remember why Relay for Life ex-ists. Participants and volunteers took the microphone and told their own stories, or the stories of loved ones while the remaining participants listened in complete silence.

Even during this , people walked their required laps.

Davis was one of these, sur-rounded by sorority and frater-nity brothers and sisters in a move of unity.

“When I’m here with friends who support me,” he said, “it means a lot more.”

Relay↵CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

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2112

APRIL 16, 20126 WWW.DAILYTOREADOR.COMLA VIDA

Tech community enjoys RaiderFest

ABOVE: AN ARTIST draws a caricature of Bailey Broadhead, a sophomore sociology major from Arlington, Alexandra Raquepaw, a junior human development and family studies major from Cibolo, and Jodwighta Birch, a senior personal financial planning major from Katy, during RaiderFest on Friday at the rec fields.

RIGHT: GABRIEL HINOJOSA, a freshman energy commerce major from El Paso, attempts to stay balanced on a mechanical bull during RaiderFest on Friday at the rec fields.

PHOTOS BY ISAAC VILLALOBOS/The Daily ToreadorABOVE LEFT: JEFFREY Payne, a freshman undecided major from Escondido, Calif., fi ghts Clint Baack, a freshman architecture major from Seguine, in a sumo match during RaiderFest on Friday at the rec fi elds.

ABOVE RIGHT: JACOB Mendoza, a sophomore mechanical engineering major from Manitou Springs, Colo., performs an acoustic set with original songs during RaiderFest on Friday at the rec fi elds. Mendoza was the winner of the Texas Tech singer-songwriter competition.

Follow The DT on Twitter@dailytoreador

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LIVE WHERE YOUR FREE to be yourself... Lynnwood Townhomes. Garageswith 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes. Private baths,fenced yards, pets ok. Free cable and Internet. On-site management and maintenance. Lynnwood-townhomes.com 785-7772.

TEXAS TECH Offi cially licensed rings. Men’s from $745. Women’s from $445. Varsity Jewelers. 1311 University.

BEST LAY IN TOWNMattress, Furniture. Huge discounts. 5127 34thStreet (34th & Slide). 785-7253.

SUMMER LEASE. May 15th to August 15th. 2 blocks off campus.Near 20th & Boston. Large 2 bedroom home.$800/month + pet fee. Some utilities paid. 795-2011. Call Ann or BJ 795-2011.

NEAR TECH 3/2. Hardwood Floors. Central Heatand Air. W/D Hookup. Alarm System. $1125+Bills2124 29th Street. 806-787-6564.

OUTSIDE SALES Associates Needed in Lubbockand surrounding areas. Base Pay + Commissions+ Bonuses Part time and Full time availableCall Jason @ 806-570-6020

ALLAMERICANSTORAGE.COMRates $10 and up. Free truck. 24/7 Rental station.Clean. 5839-49th 792-6464

CLOSE TO TECHWe have some wonderful 1, 2 & 3 bedroom homeswith nice appliances. Reasonable prices. See Annor BJ at 4211 34th or call 795-2011.

NEAR TECH 2/1. Hardwood fl oors. Central heatand air. W/D hookups. Water paid. $650/month.2205 26th. 806.535.1905.

4,3,2,1 BEDROOM HOUSESPreleasing Now for June. Contact Joe 806-441-0611http://merlinspetshop.com/tech-terrace-rentals

AVAILABLE NOW. 3/3/2 Duplex. 306 N.Chicago. Renovated. Quiet. CLEAN! Central Heat/Air. W/Dconnections. Managed lawn. $925/$800Dep. 806-790-8103.

2/1 HOUSE near campus. Central H/A. SecuritySystem. Washer/dryer connections. 2311-32nd.$650/month, $400/deposit. 544-3600, 787-2323.

YOUR GIFT MEANS THE WORLDConsider donating your eggs to help other women.Your time is worth $3500. The Centre for Repro-ductive Medicine. 788-1212.

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT wanted for manag-ing Linux Server and building Webpages as part ofa research grant. 8.50/hr, 20hrs/week, throughend of Summer. Email: [email protected] formore information.

THE GAS LIGHT & THE LANTERN TAVERN Wait staff and bar-tenders needed. Apply in person after 4pm at5212 57th Street or 3502 Slide Road.

3/2/1 LOCATED at 3709-39th Street. Hardwoodfl oors, fi replace, central heat/air, refrigerator, stove,dishwasher, washer/dryer connections and largebackyard. $600 deposit and $975 a month. Pic-tures available now via email. 806-470-6559 [email protected].

OM Threading, Nails and Spa. 4505 34th St. Eyebrows Threading $8, Nails $25, Facial $50,Pedi/mani $30, Schlack Nails $20, Haircut $10.806-771-0160

BROADWAY BEVERAGE$1 off 30 packs and 18 packs Fridays and Satur-days. 10% off all liquor with Tech ID. Free ice withpurchase. 7 minutes east of campus on Broadway.Just past the frisby golf course at Mckenzie park.Broadway and Martin Luther King. Come party withus. 744-4542.

This establishment, Texas Tech, and The Daily Toreador do not encourage underage drinking or alcohol

abuse.

STELLA’S NOW HIRING*Cocktails, *Deli, *Servers, *Bussers, *Greeters &*Line Cooks. At least 1 years’ experience and fi nedining knowledge a plus. Apply in person @ Stel-la’s 50th & Utica or E-Mail Resume to: [email protected]

KIDS SPORTS facility hiring Experienced Gymnas-tics, Sports & Summer Camp instructors for boys &girls. Must be responsible, positive & FUN! Visit RSA-GYM.com or 795-7625.

PRIME POOL Maintenance seeks swimming pooltechnicians and a General Manager. Big opportuni-ties for students and graduates alike. A pick-uptruck and swimming pool experience strongly pre-ferred. Call (806)773-9987

$5,500-$10,000 PAID EGG DONORS. All Races. N/Smokers, ages 19-27, SAT>11/AC-T>24/GPA>3.0 Reply to: [email protected]

50TH STREET CABOOOSEHiring - Cocktails, Bartenders, Hosts. Wednesdaycollege night. $12 buckets, $3 You-call-it, freepong tournament, cash prizes, 1/2 price appetizers3-6pm Monday-Friday. 5027 50th Street 796-2240

ACCOUNTING INTERN needed immediately. Responsible for accounts receivable. 20-25hours/week. Entry level, begininning accountingclass or experience preferred. [email protected]

ACCOUNTING INTERNSHIP. Accounting assis-tant with accounting background. Junior/Seniorlevel accounting student fl exible hours. Attention todetail. Answer multiline phone. Send resume [email protected].

COPPER CABOOSEHiring bartenders, cocktails, doormen for FreeTexas Hold’em Thursday/Sunday and Free PongTournaments Tuesday 8PM. $12 Buckets. 56th & Ave. Q. 744-0183.

BOYS GYMNASTICSCOACH

TEGA seeks knowledgeable and energetic coachto assist with competitive boys team and recre-ational classes. Apply at TEGA Kids Superplex,7621 82nd St, 806-866-9765. www.tegakids.com

DEPENDABLE PERSON with good telephoneskills for telemarketing. Calls made from our offi ceMonday - Thursday, 6 to 8 PM. $10.00/hr plusbonus. Call Reggie at 794-6336. FARMERS IN-SURANCE.

EARN $1000-$3200 a month to drive our new carswith ads. www.CarDriveAds.com

ENTRY LEVEL SALESPerfect for college students. Only work 5 hours aday, have mornings and nights off, make seriousmoney, this is a salary job with comission. Toschedule an interview call 792-2400 and ask forBB.

ESTABLISHED RESTAURANTNow taking applications : Operation Hours: 11amto 10pm daily, Apply in person only. El Chico 4301 Marsha Sharp Freeway next to Ottos GranaryVariety of openings. Flexible Shifts, Cashier,Server, Buser Needed.

GET A FREAKING JOBSupertan is hiring. Apply online www.getasupertan.-com or 4 locations: 82nd & Slide, 4th & Slide, 82nd& Iola and 82nd & University.

NORTHLUBBOCKSTORAGE.COM

Now leasing for summer! Drive-up or Climate Con-trol units available. 2910 N. Frankford Ave. 806-747-8673

1,2&3 BEDROOM HOMES TECH TERRACE. Pre-Lease Today For June 1stOccupancy. TTUrental.com

SPECIALTY STOREFlexible Hours, Cleaning, stocking, salesStore Hours 9am - 9pm daily, 12-9pm SundaysApply in person only. Otto’s Granary4119 Marsha Sharp Freeway. Between El Chicoand La Quinta.

FURNISHED ROOM available at Retreat. May 21-August 10. Private bedroom and bathroom in a 3bedroom house. $640/month includes utilities andfurniture. 281-479-5905

NICE APARTMENTS and HOUSES 1/2 Block fromTech on 14th and 15th streets. Clean, Convenient,Comfortable, Reasonable, Free Parking 762-1263

SEEKING MOTIVATED individuals & self starterswith a desire to succeed. Contact 8322123396 or2102794981

NEED CASH Buying any gold/silver jewelry. Any condition. Avery and others. Varsity Jewelers 1311 University.

SUMMER HELP needed. Lubbock Country Club isseeking certifi ed lifeguards and poolside waitstaff.Excellent pay, fl exible hours. Apply in person 3400Mesa Rd. 762-0414.

1, 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMSPre-leasing houses now for summer/fall. Go toTechTerrace.com

4 BEDROOM, 4 Bath, 3 Car Garage townhomesfor $1,600. It includes the cable, internet, wash-er/dryer and lawn care. Please call 806-448-1321for more information.

IS ENGLISH your second language, or does it justseem that way? For help with writing projects, dissertations etc. or for tutoring call Meg 368-0154.

Sports Page 7Monday, April 16, 2012

By MICHAEL DUPONT IISTAFF WRITER

PHOTO BY BRAD TOLLEFSON/The Daily Toreador

TEXAS TECH CENTER fi elder Barrett Barnes catches a pop fl y during the Red Raiders' 15-4 victory against Houston on Friday at Rip Griffi n Park.

NEW YORK (AP) — LaTroy Hawkins has heard the stories from his 87-year-old grandfather, about his days of picking cotton in Mis-sissippi, about the times when there were no black players in big league baseball.

And about what it meant when Jackie Robinson broke the game’s color barrier.

“Without Jackie, I wouldn’t be in front of you,” the Los Angeles Angels pitcher told several dozen kids at a Bronx ballfi eld Sunday. “Jackie’s role in my life has been tremendous.”

From Dodger Stadium to Fenway

Park, there were ceremonies as Major League Baseball honored Robinson and his legacy. Video tributes and on-fi eld celebrations at every ball-park included his family, his former teammates, players from the Negro Leagues, NBA great Bill Russell and members of the Tuskegee Airmen.

Players, managers, coaches and umpires all wore No. 42 on Jackie Robinson Day to remember the 65th anniversary of the day the future Hall of Famer fi rst took the fi eld with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Markers on each base noted the occasion.

MLB honors Robinson with ballpark tributes

➤➤[email protected]

Wacky may not be the most profound way to describe the Red Raiders’ game Sunday afternoon at Rip Griffi n Park, but it certainly could be the most accurate.

The Red Raiders had a com-manding lead for a majority of the game before allowing Houston to score eight unanswered runs in the last two innings to tie the game at nine. However, Texas Tech was able to score two runs in the bottom half of the 12th to take a 10-9 victory.

Sunday also was Autism Aware-ness Day at the ballpark. Tech coach Dan Spencer spoke briefly about the importance of awareness for the disease and how autism has affected the life of his son Wade along with his family. Nine-year-old Grant Taylor, who also has autism, sang the national anthem.

The two teams finished up a three game series with Tech sweep-ing the series winning all three games.

Although the Red Raiders

jumped on the Cougars early — leading 9-1 going into the 8th inning — the Cougars rallied back with a three-run homerun from Casey Grayson to shorten the defi -cit to just two runs. Pitcher Codey Morehouse then tripled in the ninth causing two more runs to score.

The Red Raiders were able to prevail in extra innings thanks to an offensive series ending with Bar-rett Barnes driving in Nick Hanslik — who led the inning off with a single to get on base — to plate the winning run.

“I think that it could’ve been a defl ating loss obviously to give up that many runs late,” Spencer said after his team surrendered eight runs in the 8th and 9th innings. “Hopefully, you learn from it and understand that you can’t give people extra opportunities and that no game – especially at Rip Grif-fi n when the wind is blowing out 40 – is safe.”

Hanslik played a key role in the Tech victory logging his fi rst career four-hit game and also scoring the game-winning run.

“You just gotta be ready when your name is called,” Hanslik said. “You just gotta give it everything you have. I just went out there and tried to do what I could for the Red Raiders. Luckily we got the win.”

The Red Raiders are now on a four-game winning streak heading into a midweek matchup with non-conference opponent New Mexico.

A string of wins like these could be exactly what the team needed, Barnes said.

“Whenever you can win a series at home it’s a big deal, especially to come out and sweep a team like that and then sweep the entire week like that,” Barnes said. “It just gets you back on track. I think that’s the biggest thing we did today – we got back on track, played good baseball and put up plenty of runs.”

Monday is an off day for the team, but it will head to New Mexico for a quick two-game series before continuing Big-12 Confer-ence play against Oklahoma State next weekend.

Red Raiders survive late Houston rally, win in extra innings

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APRIL 16, 20128 WWW.DAILYTOREADOR.COMSPORTS

Track, fi eld nabs 16 titles; Grimes sets personal record

By ANDREW NEPSUNDELECTRONIC MEDIA EDITOR

As the Texas Tech track and fi eld team approached its fi rst home outdoor meet of the season, indoor All-American hurdler Katie Grimes said, she was not feeling at her best.

“I didn’t feel like I was in the right mindset before the race, so I kept trying to visualize and go through my normal routine,” she said. “I felt ready enough, but I just wanted to get through the race.”

And get through the race she did. Grimes obtained a personal best

run in the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 12.99 seconds as the wind slowed down just enough for her run to be eligible for the national rank-ings — which pushed her to sixth nationally.

“When I saw the time at the end, I was shocked and I was happy,” Grimes said. “I didn’t think (the time) was legal, and then they said it was and I was ecstatic.”

Caitlin Waters and Devin Bailey

each notched a fi rst-place fi nish in the 800-meter and 1500-meter runs, respectively. Additionally, Tech’s women 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams continued their domi-nance with times of 44.46 and 3:36.19.

Because of the vigorous and relentless wind, the pole vault and high-jump competitions were con-ducted indoors. Shade Weygandt, 2010 Big 12 Conference pole vault champion, placed fi rst in the pole vault as she cleared the bar at 4.21 meters.

Narrowly missing a fi rst place fi nish in the 100-meters by two hundredths of a second, senior Terra Evans said, she felt she ran a good race after coming off a ham-string injury in the fall.

“This was probably my best executed race this year,” she said. “So I’m happy about that.”

Tech head coach Wes Kittley said he was quite pleased and en-couraged by the effort of the track and fi eld team as a whole — Grimes

in particular. “We had some really good

things happen today and it started with Katie Grimes mainly with that 12.99,” he said. “That’s a phe-nomenal run, wind-aided or not.”

Grimes said she attributes her success this year to her growing experience and assistant coach Dion Miller.

“He’s been focusing a whole lot on me and my technique,” Grimes said. “And just put a lot of time into me.”

Kittley said the track and fi eld team has now built a tradition and is thinking bigger things nationally.

“We’ve had a little bit of his-tory now,” Kittley said. “The kids have really bought into that, and I think that we’ve raised the bar and I think they are starting to reach those goals.”

The No. 8 Red Raiders and No. 11 Lady Raiders will next compete in the Mt. SAC Relays from Thurs-day to Sunday in Walnut, Calif.➤➤[email protected]

PHOTO BY SCOTT MACWATTERS/The Daily ToreadorTEXAS TECH’S TRAVIS Dunn leaps into the sand during the Long Jump event in the Texas Tech Open on Saturday.

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