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Defense wins championships

By Parmida Schahhosseini
Sports Writer

Having a defense is important to win games. One may think that it’s common sense. There are many examples even throughout Baylor Athletics that support this notion.

Last season, Baylor football played West Virginia early in the season. ESPN was basically giving Gino Smith the Heisman after torching Baylor’s defense for 656 yards and eight touchdowns. However, ESPN didn’t notice the fact that Baylor scored 63 points. Senior quarterback Nick Florence had 581 yards for five touchdowns. Usually those numbers would be enough to win, but they came up short. Throughout the season, Baylor was one of the highest scoring offences, finishing number two in the country, but they only won eight games. Against Texas, Baylor scored 50 points, but ended up losing 56-50. Football is a team sport and everyone could have done a bit more, but after scoring so much, what more was the offense supposed to do?

After being compared to a high school defense, Baylor got a wake-up call and beat No. 1 Kansas State in convincing fashion: 52-24. When the defense came together, Baylor began winning games and went to its third straight bowl game.

Great defenses allow teams to stay in the game. Perfect examples for this are the recent softball games. On Friday, freshman right-handed pitcher Heather Stearns started her first game and the defense let the game to get away from her. Fortunately for Baylor, Stearns won her next two. In recent games, Baylor’s offense has struggled scoring runs.

However, Baylor’s pitching and defense allowed them to remain close. After allowing a score once in each game against Northern Illinois on Saturday and Southern Mississippi on Tuesday, Baylor was sound on defense. This kept the team competitive. The games were never out of reach. The Lady Bears pitched well and stopped threats from opposing teams, which gave them a chance to come back and win both games. While head coach Glenn Moore wasn’t pleased with how the offense played, it’s still early in the season. As long as the defense is sound, they can stay in every game.

Head women’s basketball coach Kim Mulkey prides herself on having her teams playing sound, physical defense. Her 361-80 record in 13 seasons speaks for itself. Mulkey understands that playing good defense gives teams a chance to win. Senior center Brittney Griner, who holds the NCAA record for blocks at 693, recently said that blocked shots are important to her because it prevents opposing teams from scoring. Senior guard Jordan Madden and senior forward Brooklyn Pope have been putting pressure on opponents. The whole team contributes and plays unselfish ball, allowing the team to do what they do best — winning games. The Lady Bears have been defeating opponents by an average of 28 points due to the pressure they put on opposing teams, preventing them to keep up with the third best offense in the nation.

Whether the team is having a hard time scoring a run, or putting up 63 points on offense, the defense needs to do its job to win. A great defense can take pressure off any offense, no matter how good they are. Defense is what allows teams to stay in games, because anything can happen later in the game.

Momentum key for Baylor tennis

By Phillip Ericksen
Reporter

“We won.”

That’s all Baylor men’s tennis head coach Matt Knoll cared about last weekend in a dominant victory over Purdue.

The 18th-ranked Bears will play a doubleheader against Texas Pan-American at 11 a.m. and UT-Arlington at 3 p.m. this Saturday at the Hurd Tennis Center. The team (3-1) is looking to carry over its momentum from last weekend and a good week of practice.

Knoll said the team doesn’t practice any differently for doubleheaders, but concentrates on fundamentals and energy.

“We’re trying to push the physicality of our training these two weeks,” Knoll said. “We feel like we weren’t physically tough enough when we played up in Tulsa.”

The Bears’ loss against Tulsa on Feb. 3 is their only loss of the season.

“One good thing about losing is it’s hard to overlook anybody,” Knoll said. “It keeps you grounded, and that’s one of the reasons you play a tough schedule.”

“Our confidence is high, and I think we’re going to play a lot better down the road,” he added.

The team will play highly ranked teams such as UCLA, Virginia and Ole Miss over a four-day stretch in March, but the team isn’t overlooking the upcoming doubleheader.

“It’s a good opportunity to get matches in, especially for a couple of guys who haven’t played that much,” said sophomore Marko Krickovic, who is ranked 50th in the nation.

Senior Roberto Maytin returned to the team last week from a Visa-related trip to Venezuela, and freshman Julian Lenz returned from a knee injury. Both play pivotal roles on the team in singles and doubles.

“I’m just trying to stay back and find my rhythm,” Lenz said. “The whole team did a great job.”

Lenz is ranked 53rd in the nation in singles.

Sudoku solution: 02/14/13

02:14:13

 

Crossword Solutions: 02/14/13

Thursday

Students celebrate Valentine’s Day with gestures of love

IMG_2165 FTWBy Taylor Rexrode

Staff Writer

 

When all you see are red roses, candy hearts and pink plush animals, you know it’s Valentine’s Day.

But for many busy students, Valentine’s Day this year will lack the chocolates and fancy dinner that make Valentine’s Day famously romantic.

Arlington sophomore Shelby Blue and Tyler junior Matthew Baldwin will spend Valentine’s Day performing at opening night for All-University Sing, leaving little room for celebrating the holiday. They have been dating for seven months.

“My family is coming to watch Sing that day so Matt and I aren’t really going to get to see each other except maybe for an hour or so before Sing,” Blue said. “It’s going to be a really hectic Valentine’s Day but it’s going to be fun.  We’ll get to see all the hard work the other has been putting into Sing.”

Baldwin likes the ideology behind the holiday and believes that is what matters, even if he will spend this year’s holiday on stage.

“It’s a cool holiday to focus on someone you’re in a relationship with,” Baldwin said. “It’s a good excuse to tell someone you appreciate them. I look forward to cheering on Shelby at Sing.”

Even students not participating in Sing are toning down Valentine’s Day this year. Gainesville senior Elizabeth Puckett and her fiancé, Devvon Newman, will forgo the long-distance visit to save money for their upcoming nuptials.

“We’re not exactly doing Valentine’s Day in person this year,” Puckett said. “It’s in an effort to save money because we just paid a lot of money for our honeymoon in July.”

While many students on campus may not have a traditional Valentine’s Day, the holiday itself is still a billion-dollar industry, expected to bring in sales for candy, flower and jewelry companies.

For Baylor Flowers on South Fifth Street, Valentine’s Day is the busiest time of the year.

Lauren Darr, wedding coordinator, co-manager and designer at Baylor Flowers, says Valentine’s Day can be a stressful time of year.

“It’s not the same when you’re on this side of it,” Darr said. “We have 225 deliveries tomorrow and have had probably 60 pick-ups already. We ordered 1,500 red roses and we just ordered another 150 more. We started planning at Christmas and we ordered those at the beginning of January.”

Still, Darr said she enjoys the opportunity she has to meet new people and hear their stories.

“All the couples are different in the aspects of how long they’ve dated or been married,” Darr said. “There’s a lot of stories behind it. Some people are very specific and want a certain number of roses for the specific number of years in their relationship or marriage. It’s the thought that’s appreciated.”

Puckett said she believes that Valentine’s Day as a holiday should reflect the love felt toward a person throughout the year.

“Valentine’s Day shouldn’t be much different from any other day if you love someone,” Puckett said. “It is the day you go all-out and express love for another person; it’s just the day it’s OK with everybody else.”

DIY Project: Love Birds Diorama perfect for Valentine’s Day

craft FTWBy Caroline Brewton
Editor-in-Chief

I found this cute DIY project on Pinterest, though its original source was the blog House of Humble. I was looking for something to decorate my apartment for Valentine’s Day, and to take my mind off the fact that I’d be spending the day at work instead of being romanced, I decided to take on a project. To save myself some money, I adapted the project to incorporate things I already had in the house. I’d give the project a medium difficulty rating. It requires a basic knowledge of sewing, and I recommend being careful with the hot glue gun. Apart from that, it was pretty straightforward.

Materials:

1 glass jar (I used a Ball Mason jar from Hobby Lobby. I got the large size. It’s important to make sure the jar is large enough to fit your hand in).

1 Stick

2 small, feathered birds, small enough to fit in the jar side by side and light enough not to weigh down your stick too much.

Fabric scraps in coordinating colors (I used shades of blue that I had around the house.)

Sewing thread (I used white.)

Faux Spanish moss

Rubber band

Ribbon

Scissors

Saucer

Ball-point pen

Needle

Wire cutters

Directions:

First, take the Spanish moss and chop it into small pieces to simulate grass. Drop the pieces to the bottom of the jar until the entire bottom is covered and you have a layer of chopped Spanish moss about 1/4 inch thick.

Next, prepare the garland that will go on your stick. To make mine, I cut small diamonds out of the fabric scraps, which I folded in half and hemmed together to form upside down triangles. I used small stitches and matched up the sides, alternating fabrics. I sewed the triangles into a garland, leaving about two inches of thread on each side to tie the garland to the stick.

After that, prepare the stick. Make sure the stick is big enough to touch the sides of the jar inside where you want to place it. Cut it if necessary using the wire cutters.

Decide where and how you want to place your birds. I angled mine and had them face each other. Since they came on wire, I simply wrapped the wire around the branch to place them there. If your birds are not wired, I suggest using hot glue.

Finally, to finish the stick, the ends of the garland to each end of the stick. Trim excess thread. I put a dot of glue on top of each place I’d tied the garland to make sure it stays in place.

Next comes the hard part: setting up the stick in the jar. I took one end of the stick and dabbed hot glue on it. I angled the stick to fit the entire thing, as the stick was longer than the mouth of the jar was wide, plus it had the birds and garland attached. I hurriedly stuck the glue-containing end to the wall of the jar. After holding it in place for a few seconds to let the glue dry and ensure a good bond, I gently lifted the other, glueless end to the mouth of the jar and dabbled glue onto it to. I fastened it to the opposite wall of the jar.

Use the saucer to trace a circle onto the fabric. Cut out. You might need to trim a little off the circle so that you don’t have too much fabric. The fabric will cover the lid of the jar.

Screw the lid back onto the jar and use the fabric to cover it. Make sure the fabric is smooth on top. To this end, I placed several dots of glue on the rim of the lid before placing the fabric over it.

Place the rubber band over the fabric and lid. Use the ribbon to hide the rubber band by wrapping it around and tying a bow.

Happy Valentine’s Day, crafters!

BU alumnus helps students find their college boo with website

By Linda Nguyen

A&E Editor

 

A Baylor alumnus wants to redefine college dating.

Noah Mortel, who graduated from Baylor in 2008 with a degree in economics, marketing and international business, has created an online dating website called CollegeBoo geared specifically toward college students.

“There are thousands of students and each student is going in their own direction,” Mortel said. “It’s hard to meet people. A lot of times, their character doesn’t match something you prefer. It would be easier to have a central website you can match attributes based on what you prefer in a person.”

Mortel said the website includes features users will find familiar to other social networking sites. “There’s chat similar to Facebook chat,” Mortel said. “You can add friends. You can send a wink. You can upload songs, MP3’s. You can embed YouTube videos. You could also have blogs in your profile.”

Mortel said the website also has a feature that allows members to search their date’s preferences.  “There’s a lot of different things I’ve tried to do to make it different from other dating websites,” Mortel said.

Mortel said the website requires members to have a .edu email account to sign up.

“That gives you the ability to search for matches on your school network,” Mortel said. “It’s absolutely exclusive to students.”

Mortel said the website currently lists more than 3,000 schools, including community colleges.  “Any college, university with a .edu, I made sure to add,” Mortel said.

Baylor alumna Funmi Ogunro registered for the website when it first launched in January. “I registered for it at the first launch a while back,” Ogunro said. “I have a profile set up and everything. I think it’s a pretty cool website. I look at it like Facebook, but it’s more specific to the dating scene.”

Ogunro said the site is really good for current college students and recent alumni. “It’s a great website for narrowing down other educated people,” she said.

Ogunro said she thinks the website has potential and will take off.

“The thing about it is that the website has a database of all the schools, even medical schools in the Caribbean,” Ogunro said. “So some people internationally can register. It’s nationwide and it’s pretty fun. It’s easy to use. It has a nice interface and it’s simple to navigate through.”

Ogunro said she likes the features built into the site and has already met people through the site.

“Everyone has a wall, you can send gifts, and you can send videos,” Ogunro said. “It’s very fun and versatile. A few people from Baylor have messaged me. Even though I’m an alumna, I still message them back, even if it doesn’t turn into dating, but as a platonic type thing. “

Mortel is still trying to build a base of members on the website. The website features are all free, but Mortel eventually hopes to start charging a premium fee of $10 a month, $20 for three months and $30 for six months.

“I can’t charge right now. I’m just trying to build up the amount of users,” Mortel said. “Definitely in the future after I reach a certain amount of members, I will start charging. It’ll be free to join and I’ll have a premium service $10 for one month that will give you full access like private messaging and chat. Right now, I just started, so I’m trying to get more members.”

Ogunro said it’s a good website for college students to find potential dates. “I think CollegeBoo is a catchy name,” Ogunro said. “I think people might want to try it out because of the name. Like I said, I think it’s a cute website for other college students to find love.”

02/13/13: The Baylor Lariat

Learn new things

Dr. Dave Schlueter, Institutional Review Board chair, and Dr. Wade Rowatt, IRB vice chair, will be conducting an IRB seminar titled “Human Subjects in Research” at 3:30 p.m. on Feb. 26 in 303 Hankamer School of Business. All faculty, staff and students are invited to attend this event.

Take an interest

A Baylor in London summer study abroad program information meeting will be held at 3:30 p.m. today in 248 Castellaw.

Manhunt leaves deputy dead, cabin in flames

This undated photo released by the Los Angeles Police Department shows suspect Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles officer. Dorner, who was fired from the LAPD in 2008 for making false statements, is linked to a weekend killing in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented him during the disciplinary hearing. Authorities believe Dorner opened fire early Thursday on police in cities east of Los Angeles, killing an officer and wounding another. Police issued a statewide "officer safety warning" and police were sent to protect people named in the posting that was believed to be written by Dorner. Associated Press
This undated photo released by the Los Angeles Police Department shows suspect Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles officer.  Dorner, who was fired from the LAPD in 2008 for making false statements, is linked to a weekend killing in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented him during the disciplinary hearing. Authorities believe Dorner opened fire early Thursday on police in cities east of Los Angeles, killing an officer and wounding another.  Police issued a statewide "officer safety warning" and police were sent to protect people named in the posting that was believed to be written by Dorner.   Associated Press
This undated photo released by the Los Angeles Police Department shows suspect Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles officer. Dorner, who was fired from the LAPD in 2008 for making false statements, is linked to a weekend killing in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented him during the disciplinary hearing. Authorities believe Dorner opened fire early Thursday on police in cities east of Los Angeles, killing an officer and wounding another. Police issued a statewide “officer safety warning” and police were sent to protect people named in the posting that was believed to be written by Dorner.
Associated Press

By Gillian Flaccus 

and Tami Aabdollah

Associated Press

 

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. — The manhunt for a former Los Angeles police officer suspected of going on a killing spree converged Tuesday on a mountain cabin where authorities believe he barricaded himself inside, engaged in a shootout that killed a deputy and then never emerged as the home went up in flames.

A single gunshot was heard from within, and a law enforcement official told The Associated Press late Tuesday that officials had found a charred body.

If the body of Christopher Dorner is found inside, as authorities suspect, the search for the most wanted man in America over the last week would have ended the way he had expected — death, with the police pursuing him. He is believed to have killed at least four people.

Thousands of officers had been on the hunt for the former Navy reservist since police said he launched a campaign to exact revenge against the Los Angeles Police Department for his firing. They say he threatened to bring “warfare” to officers and their families, spreading fear and setting off a search for him across the Southwest and Mexico.

“Enough is enough. It’s time for you to turn yourself in. It’s time to stop the bloodshed,” LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith said at a news conference held outside police headquarters in Los Angeles, a starkly different atmosphere than last week when Dorner was on the loose and officials briefed the news media under heavy security in an underground hallway.

 

A short time after Smith spoke Tuesday, smoke began to rise from the cabin in the snow-covered woods near Big Bear Lake, a resort town about 80 miles east of Los Angeles. Flames then engulfed the building — images that were broadcast on live television around the world. TV helicopters showed the fire burning freely with no apparent effort to extinguish it.

“We have reason to believe that it is him,” said San Bernardino County sheriff’s spokeswoman Cynthia Bachman, adding that she didn’t know how the fire started. She noted there was gunfire between the person in the cabin and officers around the home before the blaze began.

Until Tuesday, authorities didn’t know whether Dorner was still near Big Bear Lake, where they found his burned-out pickup last week.

Around 12:20 p.m. Tuesday, deputies got a report of a stolen pickup truck, authorities said. The location was directly across the street from where law enforcement set up their command post on Thursday and not far from where Dorner’s pickup was abandoned. The owner of the vehicle taken Tuesday described the suspect as looking similar to Dorner.

A warden for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife traveling down Highway 38 recognized a man who fit Dorner’s description traveling in the opposite direction. The officer pursued the vehicle and there was a shooting at 12:42 p.m. in which the wildlife vehicle was hit numerous times and the suspect escaped on foot after crashing his truck.

After holing up in the cabin, there was a second gunbattle with San Bernardino County deputies, two of whom were shot. One died and the other was expected to live after undergoing surgery.

“We’re heartbroken,” Big Bear Lake Mayor Jay Obernolte said of the deputy’s death and the wounding of his colleague. “Words can’t express how grateful we are for the sacrifice those men have made in defense of the community, and our thoughts and prayers are with them and their families.”

The man believed to be Dorner never came out of the cabin, and a single shot was heard inside before the cabin was engulfed in flames, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press.

There were conflicting reports about whether a body had been found inside shortly after the fire, with both the Los Angeles and San Bernardino authorities disputing the find in separate news conferences. But an official later told the AP a body had been seen in the rubble. The official requested anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

Earlier, a SWAT team surrounded the cabin and used an armored vehicle to break out the cabin windows, the official said. The officers then pumped a gas into the cabin and blasted a message over a loudspeaker: “Surrender or come out.”

The armored vehicle then tore down each of the cabin’s four walls, like peeling back the layers of an onion, the official said.

Police say Dorner began his run on Feb. 6 after they connected the slayings of a former police captain’s daughter and her fiance with an angry Facebook rant they said he posted. Threats against the LAPD led officials to assign officers to protect officers and their families.

Within hours of the release of photos of the 6-foot, 270-pounder described as armed and “extremely dangerous,” police say, Dorner unsuccessfully tried to steal a boat in San Diego to flee to Mexico and opened fire on two patrol cars in Riverside County, shooting three officers and killing one.

Jumpy officers guarding one of the targets named in the rant shot and injured two women delivering newspapers Thursday in Torrance because they mistook their pickup truck for Dorner’s.

Police found weapons and camping gear inside the charred truck in Big Bear. Helicopters using heat-seeking technology searched the forest from above while scores of officers, some using bloodhounds, scoured the ground and checked hundreds of vacation cabins — many vacant this time of year — in the area.

A snowstorm hindered the search and may have helped cover his tracks, though authorities were hopeful he would leave fresh footprints if hiding in the wilderness.

Dorner’s anger with the department dated back at least five years, when he was fired for filing a false report accusing his training officer of kicking a mentally ill suspect. Dorner, who is black, claimed in the rant that he was the subject of racism by the department and fired for doing the right thing.

He said he would get even with those who wronged him as part of his plan to reclaim his good name.

“You’re going to see what a whistleblower can do when you take everything from him especially his NAME!!!” the rant said. “You have awoken a sleeping giant.”

Chief Charlie Beck, who initially dismissed the allegations in the rant, said he reopened the investigation into his firing — not to appease the ex-officer, but to restore confidence in the black community, which long had a fractured relationship with police that has improved in recent years.

One of the targets listed in the manifesto was former LAPD Capt. Randal Quan, who represented Dorner before the disciplinary board. Dorner claimed he put the interests of the department above his.

The first victims were Quan’s daughter, Monica Quan, 28, a college basketball coach, and her fiance, Keith Lawrence, 27. They were shot multiple times in their car in a parking garage near their Orange County condo.

Dorner served in the Navy, earning a rifle marksman ribbon and pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records. He took leave from the LAPD for a six-month deployment to Bahrain in 2006 and 2007.

He left the service on Feb. 1.

BU alum revamps Waco’s oldest hardware store

Owner Larry Dagley stands in his store titled Circle Hardware & Lumber that is currently undergoing renovations on LaSalle Avenue Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013. Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor
Owner Larry Dagley stands in his store titled Circle Hardware & Lumber that is currently undergoing renovations on LaSalle Avenue Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013. Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor
Owner Larry Dagley stands in his store titled Circle Hardware & Lumber that is currently undergoing renovations on LaSalle Avenue Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013.
Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor

By Taylor Rexrode
Staff Writer

A Waco alumnus is giving the oldest hardware and lumber store in Waco a makeover.

Accounting alumnus Larry Dagley and his wife Norma Dagley, an Alumna by Choice, bought the store last year as a venture into the retail market.

“It was a business opportunity and something I had never done before,” Dagley said. “It’s a great location and just down from Baylor. It was an opportunity to do something I hadn’t done in life.”

Circle Hardware and Lumber, established in 1945 on La Salle Avenue, sells hardware, electrical supplies, paint and accessories, lumber, lawn and garden tools and other items for residential and commercial needs.

Dagley said he hopes the renovations will expand the store, particularly in plumbing supplies, light bulbs and door and cabinet hardware.

The store will remain open for business through renovations, which will expand the store from 3,800 square feet to 5,800 square feet by mid-May.

When the Dagleys took over Circle Hardware, they signed up as members of the Do It Best co-op.

Do It Best helps independently owned home improvement retailers by keeping prices comparable to those found at retail giants like Home Depot and Lowe’s.

Brent Watts, manager of the Waco Do It Best warehouse, said Do It Best helps small businesses and customers get what they need in Waco.

“We carry hardware, lawn and garden, paint, ranching supplies, sporting goods,” Watts said. “It’s a wide array, but it’s much more than just hardware. In the co-op structure, the members actually own the company. Our members can buy in bulk so they can take advantage of large quantities of discounted items.”

Dagley said having a co-op nearby like Do It Best is a blessing for his business.

“Having that size warehouse in your backyard makes sense,” Dagley said. “It’s a terrific organization that allows us to get a product we don’t have in the store to the customer the next day.”

Working with Do It Best and the store renovations may help business, but it hasn’t changed the store’s focus on service.

“We are increasing the product mix,” Dagley said. “But we are still wanting to keep what has made the store successful in the past and that’s great service. Our customers are individual homeowners, remodelers and restoration companies and all those people down near Baylor. We want to be the one-stop shop for them to come in and get what they need to maintain their properties.”

Dagley has not always worked in retail.

Upon receiving his Bachelor of Business Administration in 1970, he moved to Houston and worked as an auditor for Arthur Andersen and Company for 15 years.

He eventually became chief administrative officer and chief financial officer for Transco Energy Co. and then CFO of Pacific Enterprises in California. The Dagleys moved to Waco in 2002 because he said he had “had enough of corporate life.”

Before moving back to Waco, Dagley stayed involved with Baylor in the years after graduating.

He was on the Accounting Department Advisory Board during the 1980s and was a regular season ticket holder for Baylor baseball, basketball and football for years.

“We’ve been great Baylor supporters through the years,” he said. “Baylor laid the groundwork for me to not only be an accountant but a businessman.”

Dagley said he is thankful for the years he spent at Baylor building lifelong relationships and connections.

“There were great professors who cared about me and they were interested in what I was going to do with the rest of my life,” he said. “Looking back on all those years, I think the training and experience I got made me a prepared for the business world. Never did I dream that I would own a hardware store but the friendships I made at Baylor laid the groundwork for it. You never know where life is going to take you.”

Obama calls for reform

President Barack Obama leaves after giving his State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday. Associated Press
State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.  Associated Press
State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
Associated Press

Rob Bradfield

Assistant City Editor

and Madison Ferril

Reporter

President Obama’s state of the Union speech was met with mixed reactions Tuesday night as he laid out his goals for the next four years.

While the president spoke on a range of topics, the President’s statements on economic reform, budget issues and the gun control debate stood out. Among some of the president’s stated goals for the next four years were a $9 federal minimum wage, a $2.5 trillion budget reduction and comprehensive immigration reform. The president’s overall message was upbeat.

“Together, we have cleared away the rubble of crisis, and can say with renewed confidence that the state of our union is stronger,” Obama said.

The president began by highlighting some of the successes of his first four years in office. Obama cited the withdrawal of overseas troops and the creation of 6 million jobs as just some of the improvements since the beginning of the financial crisis.

Among the president’s solutions to restart America’s economy is a change in how the education system works.

One of President Obama’s proposals struck at the very base of the problem — free pre-school education for all children in America.

“Every dollar we invest in high-quality early education can save more than seven dollars later on – by boosting graduation rates, reducing teen pregnancy, even reducing violent crime,” he said.

In addition, the President proposes changes in high school education that will make high school graduates more prepared for college and the job market ,and changes in the funding of college education to make it easier for students to get a quality education at a reasonable price.

“I ask Congress to change the Higher Education Act, so that affordability and value are included in determining which colleges receive certain types of federal aid,” he said.

One of the most surprising of President Obama’s goals was his promise to raise the minimum wage to $9.00 per hour. That may not be the final amount, but the President affirmed his commitment to making the federal minimum wage more in-line with the idea of a living wage.

“Let’s tie the minimum wage to the cost of living so that it finally becomes a wage you can live on,” Obama said.

Currently, the federal minimum wage is set at $7.25 per hour, which most states — including Texas — have set as their state minimum wage. Some — like Washington state with the highest minimum wage of $9.19 per hour — set their minimum wage higher. And a few, such as Arkansas and Mississippi, set their state minimum lower than the federal minimum or have no minimum wage at all.

According to President Obama, this increase in the minimum wage, along with incentives for businesses that employ Americans, and investments in research and green energy will help make American manufacturing competitive on the global scale.

Other economic recovery plans referred to by the President included Department of Defense partnerships with “economic hubs” to increase high-tech job opportunities, partnerships with “20 of the hardest-hit towns in America to get these communities back on their feet,” and projects aimed at improving infrastructure to make America more attractive to large employers.

In perhaps the most striking moment of the speech, President Obama began to talk about the recent string of gun violence. The president mentioned bipartisan plans for what he called “common-sense reform” including universal background checks.

The President emphasized the need for congressional discussion by telling the story of Hadiya Pendleton, the 15-year-old Illinois girl who performed at the inauguration and was shot earlier this year in the neighborhood near the Obamas’ house in Chicago. The President told Congress that it didn’t matter if they voted against it, the discussion needed to happen — especially for Pendleton’s parents because “They deserve a vote.”

“Gabby Giffords deserves a vote. The families of Newtown deserve a vote. The families of Aurora deserve a vote. The families of Oak Creek, and Tucson, and Blacksburg, and the countless other communities ripped open by gun violence – they deserve a simple vote.”

Several members of congress, including Arizona Republican Senator John McCain were shown wearing green ribbons in support of the families of the Sandy Hook Massacre.

Republican Response

Florida Senator Marco Rubio gave the Republican response to the State of the Union address.

In his speech, Rubio asked for smaller government, saying the tax increases and deficit proposals the president put forth will harm the middle class and will not help create jobs. He said the United States should lower its corporate tax rate to attract more overseas businesses. Rubio called for financial aid reform and incentives for schools to provide better education through more Advanced Placement and vocational programs in high schools. He said the United States must improve immigration and protect its borders. Overall, he called for more economic growth so the government could afford to help those who cannot help themselves.

“More government isn’t going to inspire new ideas, new businesses, and new private sector jobs,” Rubio said.

David Schleicher, president of the McLennan County Democrats, said that he was disappointed in the tone of Rubio’s speech.

“It seemed to create more tension than it was trying to solve,” Schleicher said. “He kept talking about feeling attacked. It was like he was still in campaign mode.”

Rubio said tax increases will not decrease the deficit and the government doesn’t have to raise taxes to avoid cuts.

“The choice isn’t just between big government and big business,” Rubio said.

Congressman Bill Flores said he doesn’t think President Obama addressed the deficit enough.

“There are better ways to reform deficit reduction,” Flores said. “In 2011, he said he wanted to freeze federal spending, but everything he proposed has some sort of spending increase associated with it.”

In reference to the president’s comments about gun control, Rubio said undermining the rights of law abiding American citizens is not the way to protect children. Flores said that he does not mind extending background checks, but that the government needs to discuss why people commit violent behavior.

“We need to focus on why people would pick up a weapon of any kind,” Flores said.

Survey says: Alumni still love good ol’ Baylor

By Kate McGuire

Staff Writer

 

A new national survey reveals that Baylor alumni believe Baylor is an excellent school and top in quality education.

Last fall, 609 alumni were asked to describe their experience of Baylor University and their time here, said John Barry, Baylor’s vice president of marketing and communications.

The results from the survey reflect what Baylor alunmi believe they need from Baylor and what they can give to Baylor.

Interviews were conducted from a sample of 4,494 random telephone numbers from the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.

The response rate from alumni was around 25 percent.

Barry said the four main things alumni are concerned with is how to stay connected to Baylor events, what Baylor is currently doing, how the Baylor Alumni Network is advancing the university and how alumni can best help the students.

Fifty-two percent of Baylor alumni who responded to the survey said it was very important for alumni to help support Baylor. As a result of this response, Barry said a goal for Baylor Alumni Network is to connect alumni to students through different engagement opportunities such as scholarships.

A new idea is to establish a mentoring experience for students from the help and influence of alumni.

“The alumni beg the question if we are doing the best we can to connect them to these things,” Barry said.

He said he believes that by collecting data from alumni, the Baylor Alumni Network can find better opportunities to provide their alumni connections to the university.

The collecting of this data is important for Baylor because it gathers opinions on matters on keeping alumni up to date with campus news and connecting them to the students, said Jeff Kilgore, vice president of the Baylor Alumni Association.

Of the Baylor alumni who responded, 98 percent have felt a special or strong bond to Baylor since graduation and more Texans are likely to say they have a strong bond with Baylor.

Of the respondents, 72 percent currently reside in Texas, about 54 percent were women and only about 10 percent have children who are able to attend college. 53 percent were non-Baptist Christians.

Barry started doing research 12 years ago at the University of Connecticut to study public opinion and has found the results to be helpful in determining what alumni want from the Baylor Alumni Network.

Once he began working at Baylor, he commissioned a national survey be taken of Baylor alumni of all ages.

The first survey began in 2007 and this is the second survey conducted since.

“Public opinion can be used as teaching tools,” Barry said. “I’ve always thought that it’s our responsibility to collect data to understand public opinion. The point is to find what alumni think of the university, what they want and measure that against what we’re doing.”

For a full report on the national survey, visit https://www.baylor.edu/alumni/doc.php/193441.pdf

Sitcom star shares stories at banquet

The Association of Black Students host the Black Heritage Banquet in honor of Black History Month, featuring keynote speaker Jasmine Guy in Cashion on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. Monica Lake | Lariat Photographer
The Association of Black Students host the Black Heritage Banquet in honor of Black History Month, featuring keynote speaker Jasmine Guy in Cashion on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. Monica Lake | Lariat Photographer
The Association of Black Students host the Black Heritage Banquet in honor of Black History Month, featuring keynote speaker Jasmine Guy in Cashion on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m.
Monica Lake | Lariat Photographer

Sanmai Gbandi
Reporter

Students, faculty and members of the community gathered together and celebrated black heritage.

The 26th Annual Black Heritage Banquet was put on by the Association of Black Students in conjunction with the Department of Multicultural Affairs.

The focus of the event was on the accomplishments of African- Americans throughout history and to also highlight key events like Brown vs. Board of Education and the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation.

The banquet featured a live jazz band playing selections from artists such as Luther Vandross and Stevie Wonder, and music from students Holly Tucker, Savion Wright and P.O.R.T.R.A.I.T.S., a group of three students singing without accompaniment.

Dallas freshman Constance Mary Davis, a member of the Black Heritage Banquet Committee, said there were many things to consider when planning the banquet.

“We had to think of a theme which was the Bible verse Romans 8:38,” she said. “There was marketing. We made announcements in Chapel and chose the menu items.”

Davis was pleased with the way the event came together. “I am very glad about the turn-out. I am surprised and relieved,” Davis said.

The keynote speaker was Jasmine Guy. She is most recognized for her role as Whitley Gilbert in the show “A Different World” that ran for six seasons (1987-1993). She also won six consecutive NAACP awards for lead actress in a comedy series.

She spoke about how the show gave her a platform to work with people such as Spike Lee, Redd Foxx and Bill Cosby.

“When I did ‘School Daze,’ there were not many movies being made by brothers, showing up in a cinema and being filmed in a studio,” Guy said. “When I walked into that audition, there were people there from the yellowest of yellow to the blackest of black,” she said.

It inspired her to see a person of color, Spike Lee, making movies about other people of color and being successful at it.

She had many stories about what it was like working on Broadway, directing T.V. shows, and working in television and film.

The overarching theme of her speech was living in a different world.

She emphasized embracing different walks of life and experiences in order to succeed and grow in your endeavors.

“Whatever your gifts are, whatever your first discipline, whatever you claim to be, doctor, dancer, you’re going to have to use all your gifts,” Guy said.

After her speech, the floor was opened for people in the audience to ask questions about her experiences.

The banquet was a way to bring together many different people from all walks of life and commemorate black history during Black History Month.

Davis said she hopes events like these will educate people on the impact African-Americans have had on American culture and help bridge the gap between races.

“I think it’s important to show that black history is also American history,” Davis said. “And I hope in the future we can get more races to come.”

Lecture series to focus on education

Brooke Bailey
Reporter

Students, faculty and the Waco community are coming together this week to discuss higher education issues as part of the School of Education’s Distinguished Lecture Series.

The series will take place Thursday and Friday, and is free and open to the public.

Dr. Paul Lingenfelter, president of the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, will lead the discussion both days.

Executive Vice President and Provost Dr. Elizabeth Davis will introduce Lingenfelter’s first lecture, “American Education Second to None: How Must We Change to Meet 21st Century Imperatives?” It will last from 4:30-6 p.m. Thursday in Bennett Auditorium.

The second part of the series, “A Conversation with Paul Lingenfelter About Changing Demands on Educators in the Community,” is scheduled for 8:30-10 a.m. Friday at the Community Auditorium, Education Service Center Region 12, located at 2101 W. Loop 340 in Waco.

The lecture series is designed for anyone interested in education issues affecting their community.

Dr. Jon Engelhardt, dean of the School of Education, expects a broad audience in attendance.

“We hope they will take away an appreciation for the challenges and the changes that education K-16 will be facing and will be needing to make,” Engelhardt said.

The K-16 movement centers on creating aligned policy for kindergarten through undergraduate studies.

Each semester the School of Education opens the Distinguished Lecture Series to the public for the discussion of issues in education.

“We asked him to speak because he has paid attention to the connection between K-12 education and higher education,” Engelhardt said.

Student social scientists tackle issues of inequality, discrimination

By Linda Nguyen
A&E Editor

At first thought, some people may associate research with mad scientists in a lab with test tubes and chemicals. Plano senior Olivia Ho does research every week, but she doesn’t work with test tubes or chemicals.

Social science research, which includes fields like sociology and psychology, involves the study of people and their interactions with one another.

“Social science research provides scientific methods to answer questions such as how much inequality there is in society, is it growing greater or declining, the nature of prejudice and discrimination, and how do you motivate people to care about the environment,” said Dr. Larry Lyon, professor of sociology, dean of the Graduate School and director of Baylor’s Center for Community Research and Development.

“I can’t imagine anything more interesting than those questions and anything more important than trying to answer those questions,” he said.

Ho does social science research, along with about 12 other students, in Dr. Wade Rowatt’s social and personality psychology research lab. Ho said their lab meetings run like small classes and there’s not a single beaker in sight.

“We all gather around and Dr. Rowatt starts off the meeting by addressing different things going on in the lab,” Ho said.

“He lets other people talk like the graduate students, or honors thesis students talk about their ongoing projects,” she said.

Ho also said researcher roles are different between hard science and social science research.

“In our type of social science research, you’re given a script and you memorize it, read it and follow the instructions,” Ho said. “You do a practice run on the person in charge of the study and once they approve you, you’re cleared to run participants.”

Ho said conversely, in a hard science lab there isn’t a script that you learn and read.

“It’s more procedural,” Ho said. “There isn’t a test where you get cleared to run. You do it over and over until you feel comfortable and then you do it yourself.”

Ho said there are definite benefits and ‘pros’ to working in a social science lab.

“Pros would be it’s more relatable and you do get to work with people a lot,” Ho said. “I feel like it’s fairly easy. It’s not complex.”

Ho said there are also cons to working in a social science lab compared to a hard science research lab.

“You don’t really get to work with science-y equipment,” Ho said. “You don’t feel like you’re making a huge impact whereas in hard sciences, I feel like you deal with much bigger topics.”

Hong Kong senior Evan Choi has worked in Rowatt’s lab for three years and is currently working on his honors thesis project with Dr. Matthew Stanford’s lab in the department of psychology and neuroscience.

Choi said he enjoys how applicable the research is to his daily life.

“I like research because it helps us to understand human behavior and the world in general,” Choi said. “It helps us gain knowledge into the world we’re living in and it’s fun to do research, looking at statistics and data.”

Choi said when he first began doing social science research, it was not what he had envisioned research being.

“I thought research was this environment of high technology, high ideas, people reading a lot, but when I started, it was really simple,” Choi said.

“You have hypotheses and you start testing,” he said. “It’s not as complicated as people think. You need to be very organized and take it one by one. You just need to be methodologically and logically sound.”

Choi said he enjoys social science research because of its applicability and accessibility to people.

“I guess one major difference between social science research and hard science research is that we deal with people and what we find, we can apply to normal life,” Choi said.

West Virginia travels to Waco for important Big 12 matchup

By Daniel Hill
Sports Writer

The Baylor Bears host the West Virginia Mountaineers at 8 p.m. today in the Ferrell Center. It’s a pivotal matchup for both teams as Baylor and West Virginia are neck and neck in Big 12 Conference standings.

After a lightning hot 5-1 start in conference, the Bears cooled off during a three-game losing streak. On Saturday, Baylor bounced back to end the losing streak by defeating Texas Tech.

In the Big 12 standings, Baylor is 6-4 while West Virginia is 5-5. The Mountaineers are riding high as they head Waco with a three-game winning streak.

If the Mountaineers can win in Waco, it means West Virginia would pass Baylor in the Big 12 standings.

“Playing in the Big 12, it’s a crazy environment going into somebody else’s court,” junior forward Cory Jefferson said. “When they come to ours, they’re going to have to play a tough game to come home with the win.”

West Virginia head coach Bob Huggins is known for having disciplined teams that play a physical, tough brand of basketball.

“They are the same physical team that you have come to know with Coach Huggins,” Baylor head coach Scott Drew said. “His teams always play really hard and we’ll have to be able to match that physicality.”

West Virginia and Baylor last met in the Continental Tires Las Vegas Classic tournament in December of 2011. The Bears won that game 83-81. Jefferson remembers how physical West Virginia was in that game.

He expects another tough game on Wednesday night against the Mountaineers.

“I think it will be more physical,” Jefferson said. “It actually was a physical game when we played them in Vegas, and it’s going to be physical tomorrow.”

Baylor is the best defensive rebounding team in the Big 12 at 39.7 rebounds per game. Drew said he is proud of the defensive effort because it means the team can still win even on nights where they struggle offensively.

“I love the defensive effort,” Drew said. “Offensively, we’ve been great at times and not so good at times. The defense is so important because some nights, the shots are falling and if you take care of the ball and rebound, then you give yourself a chance to win on those nights you don’t shoot it well. I think our guards have all improved, keeping the ball in front of them. I think the bigs have done a great job in helping and improving their interior defense. It’s been a collective effort and hopefully that’s something that can continue for the rest of conference.”

Over halfway into the Big 12 schedule, there is no true leader of the conference and several teams are still in position to win the regular season conference title. The Bears are only 1.5 games behind Kansas and Kansas State for first place.

Six teams are all within 1.5 games of first place in the Big 12.

“Our confidence is going to stay high because we know we are a good team,” junior guard Brady Heslip said. “We play together. The Big 12 is wide open. I don’t know what the standings are after last night’s games, but there’s a whole bunch of teams, six teams at the top that are all close together. If we string together some wins at home and on the road, then we’ve set ourselves up for a chance to win.”

Even though the Bears have aspirations of winning the conference, Drew knows that you have to take things one game at a time.

“I think that’s across the board in college basketball this year with the parity,” Drew said. “I think it’s exciting for Big 12 fans. Each game is so important and each game means so much. As you can see there’s not a lot of separation and that’s why you don’t want to look back and say ‘oh, if we had just done this’ then there’s going to be a lot of what ifs at the end of the year.”

Chafing. Eww.: Baylor toilet paper not doing its duty

ToiletPaperComicBaylor makes sure to equip the football team with the best gear. The Baylor Science Building has state-of-the-art science equipment. Armstrong Browning Library has beautiful art throughout its halls.

But no bathroom on campus has quality toilet paper.

Picture a student with back-to-back classes. This student is plagued with the task of rushing a trip to the bathroom to get to class on time. This student now has to deal with the nightmare that is one-ply toilet paper.

One-ply toilet paper is a burden for everyone. Few people purchase it to use in their homes, and when they do, they try to avoid making that mistake twice.

The idea behind buying one-ply toilet paper is that it saves money. While a roll of one-ply is cheaper than other thicker, softer options, no money is saved. Two-ply toilet paper is often soft and can do its duty without too much hassle. Few can realistically expect Baylor to provide three-ply toilet paper, the bath tissue of kings, but two-ply is reasonable.

Students that find themselves in the unfortunate situation of using an on-campus bathroom are seldom frugal with their toilet paper usage. Many students pull foot after foot of toilet paper so that the wad (or fold, if you decide to go that route) is thick enough for the job. The last thing anybody wants is to grab too little and get poopy hands.

With thicker toilet paper, students wouldn’t have to spend two full minutes pulling toilet paper from the dispenser. Charmin Ultra taught us that less is more when it comes to thicker toilet paper.

Improving the quality of toilet paper will help improve the university’s image. Nothing can ruin a visitor’s experience quite like a bad bathroom experience. Forcing prospective students and prominent visitors to use toilet paper with the consistency of saw dust and dead grass is inconsiderate if not downright insulting.

Limiting students, faculty and staff to one-ply toilet paper is comparable to forcing journalism majors to use typewriters. The technology has progressed so that the problems of the past can go away for good, but Baylor keeps us in the bathroom Dark Ages.

Software company Nitro commissioned a recent study that suggests that only 6 percent of Americans would be willing to use less toilet paper in order to help save the environment, but 31 percent said that they would give up books. Emphasizing recreational reading is another issue entirely, but the point still remains that Americans don’t mess around when it comes to our toilet paper.

It was 78 years ago that a company called Northern Tissue advertised its “splinter-free” toilet paper. Our condolences go out to anyone that has had to use toilet paper that is not “splinter-free,” but our current one-ply toilet paper is only a small step up.

Two-ply toilet paper was introduced in 1942, but Baylor has not bought in to this just yet.

This slope is slippery. If a company invents half-ply toilet paper, will Baylor purchase that to save money? Dare we comply?

Improving the quality of on-campus toilet paper is serious. Some of us can’t hold it in any longer. Everybody deserves better toilet paper on campus.

Viewpoint: Scout sounds off: BSA should include all

Before I begin, I feel like I need to list some credentials.

I am an Eagle Scout, and yes, “am” is the correct tense for that verb. I was in Troop 308, Longhorn Council (formerly Heart of Texas Council), and I was inducted into the Huaco Lodge of the Order of the Arrow as a Brotherhood member. My father was also an Eagle Scout and both my grandfathers were in scouting. My paternal grandfather was a Scoutmaster and received the Silver Beaver award.

Scouting was one of the best and most useful experiences I have had. The skills I gained, the leadership roles I was given and the fun I had are things that have shaped my adult life.

Which is not to say that I think that the Boy Scouts of America is a perfect organization.

For me, Scouts was all about getting you out of your comfort zone, encouraging you to try — encouraging you to fail even. It gave you the ability to push through your own self-doubt and find that inner well of strength.

Since I left Scouting, there have been a few organizational changes that I haven’t approved of — mostly relating to the merit badge system. Some of the new and planned merit badges have become a source of personal frustration.

In the end, however, my personal gripes with the merit badge system pale in comparison to an issue which has the potential to utterly destroy the institution of Scouting — homosexuality.

This is an issue that strikes people so hard that it has prompted some of my fellow Eagle Scouts to return their badges and renounce their rank.

I know how hard this decision must have been. I can remember the hard work, the pride, the sense of accomplishment. Setting that aside all that must have been difficult, and I both pity and admire those whose conviction was so strong they felt they had to.

I hope that their gesture helped make the BSA think about rescinding their ban, but in the end it was money that made them act.

First it was announced that some backers were going to withdraw funding because of the BSA’s policy of not allowing homosexuals or their children to participate.

Then the Scouts announced that it was considering a decision to let troops or councils decide for themselves whether or not to let homosexuals participate.

In response, other groups threatened to withdraw their funding completely,

That is honestly one of the most ridiculous things I have ever heard.

Defunding an organization that is as influential on as many people’s lives as the Scouts for not having discriminatory policies does nobody any good.

It says, essentially, “We want the main purpose of this organization to be discrimination against homosexuals.”

That is not now, nor has it ever been the purpose of the Scouts.

In fact, the Scouts can be incredibly tolerant.

The devotional book they give out at Philmont Scout Ranch is divided into three equal sections — Christianity, Islam and Judaism. At Philmont, I attended a Jewish service at an outdoor chapel while some of my friends went to the Islamic, Catholic and Protestant services and some other people I knew didn’t go at all.

So where did this policy come from?

Well as best as I can tell, its most recent resurgence began sometime in the last 15 years after a string of incidents of molestation by scoutmasters came to light.

The reaction from the Boy Scouts was to try and make Scouting safer for the scouts — a completely reasonable step — and they decided to do that by banning gay scoutmasters. That’s about where reality and rationality divorced.

The reasoning behind this seems to be based on the assumption that someone attracted to men would be more likely to be attracted to boys.

Once again, that is incredibly ridiculous.

Pedophilia and homosexuality are two different and completely unrelated behaviors. Adult, gay men are attracted to other adult men. Pedophiles are not attracted to any sort of adults.

Another argument used against homosexuals in Scouts is that it’s against the basic tenants of morality laid down in Scouting. That comes from a few lines in the Scout Oath — “do my duty to God and my country,” and “keep myself… morally straight.”

Notice that the phrase is morally straight, not sexually straight.

Also, I fail to see how homosexuality fails to uphold the promise to “Do my best to do my duty to God.” The operative word there is “best.” Even if you choose to believe that homosexuality is somehow set apart above all the other sins the Bible rattles off (greed, murder, adultery, etc.) then you cannot make a judgement on how good is any individual’s “best.”

Obviously, when a Scout or Scouter’s sins cross the line into legality or create a dangerous situation, a line must be drawn. Homosexuality does neither of those things.

A more foundational tenant of Scouting, in my opinion, is the Scout Law. The Law lays out all the things that Scouts are, or should strive to be. In fact, it goes a long way to define what is meant by “morally straight.”

A Scout is: Trustworthy, Loyal, Helpful, Friendly, Courteous, Kind, Obedient, Cheerful, Thrifty, Brave, Clean and Reverent.

Notice the words judgemental, discriminatory, hateful and heterosexual are conspicuously absent.

But that’s not really the point either.

Scouting is an international movement, and even in the states it’s incredibly diverse. There are factions that think that homosexuality has no place in Scouting.

That’s fine. No, really, it is. One of the things that Scouting gives us is an appreciation for the American system of free speech and diversity.

People have the right to think whatever they want, and they deserve the opportunity to be in Scouts like everyone else.

That’s why the plan proposed by the BSA is the best way to handle the issue. Let the troops decide for themselves. It’s democratic, it pacifies everyone and it gives people options. If a troop doesn’t want homosexuals they don’t have to have any, and if people don’t want to be in a troop that allows homosexuals, they don’t have to stay.

Granted, it’s a compromise, but that’s the way America was designed to work.

The point is that Scouting is an institution that everyone can benefit from and it does too much good for the people it helps mold to let it fade into history.

Rob Bradfield is a senior journalism major from Waco. He is the assistant city editor at the Baylor Lariat.

Sudoku solution: 02/13/13

02:13:13

Crossword Solutions: 02/12/13

Wednesday

Local boutique offers crafts event for Valentine’s Day

Harts 'N' Crafts workers prepares for a Valentines Day craft event at the Harts 'N' Crafts store on 8th Street and Dutton Avenue on Tuesday, February 12, 2013. Travis Taylor | Lariat Photographer
Harts 'N' Crafts workers prepares for a Valentines Day craft event at the Harts 'N' Crafts store on 8th Street and Dutton Avenue on Tuesday, February 12, 2013.  Travis Taylor | Lariat Photographer
Harts ‘N’ Crafts workers prepares for a Valentines Day craft event at the Harts ‘N’ Crafts store on 8th Street and Dutton Avenue on Tuesday, February 12, 2013.
Travis Taylor | Lariat Photographer

By Paula Ann Solis
Contributor

For those still searching for a Valentine’s Day gift, an arts and crafts event being held tonight by local Waco boutique Harts N Crafts may be the answer.

From 7 to 9 p.m., Harts N Crafts, located at 1125 S. Eighth St., next to Common Grounds, will host a Valentine’s Day party complete with free cupcakes and drinks where patrons will also have the opportunity to create handmade gifts for their loved ones.

“We will be offering more male-focused gifts so the ladies can pick up a gift for their guy,” said Jerri Schaeper, the store manager.

The boutique will have wooden letters, symbols and canvases available for patrons to paint and purchase. Prices range from $5 to $50. The store also carries ready-made crafts prepared by Harts N Crafts employees.

The Harts N Crafts boutique, owned by Baylor alumna Alicia Hart who graduated in 2002 with a degree in finance and international business, will also have free gifts available.

Everyone who stops by Harts N Crafts tonight will have the opportunity to design his or her own heart-shaped magnet for free.

Schaeper, a native Wacoan, said while Harts N Crafts hosts Valentine’s Day-themed parties every year, this one will be the best the store has ever had.

This year’s party, themed “All You Need Is Love,” will also mark the exclusive launch of a new clothing line, the Edna Rose Collection.

The chief designer of the new collection, Deanna Nail, is also a Baylor alumna who graduated in 1997 with a double major in marketing and real estate.

“That’s one reason Baylor is very near and dear to me and why we wanted to start the launch here,” Nail said. “The mission of our clothing line is to reach, inspire and empower women of all ages all over through apparel and accessories.”

Nail said part of the proceeds from this collection is donated to ministries such as Serendipity Ministry, a nonprofit, female-empowerment organization.

The Edna Rose Collection will premiere with a line of tank tops, T-shirts and scarves. Nail described the collection as a “comfortable, casual and affordable line.”

The mission of Harts N Crafts, said Schaeper, is also to “empower women while inspiring artists.”

As part of tonight’s event, all TOMS shoes will be on sale for $39, and all other store items will be discounted 15 percent. Any TOMS purchased in the store can also be painted for free.

Also, beginning today, Harts N Crafts will have fresh-cut flowers available for purchase as part of their new partnership with Bloomingals Floral Boutique, another female-owned Waco business.

Nail said later this year, she plans to return and introduce a fall line specifically geared toward game apparel.

“My hope is to teach women here that they can use their money wisely and that as they’re buying apparel they can make an impact and give back at the same time,” Nail said.

Red velvet crinkle cookies will delight your sweetheart and ruin your clean kitchen

afterpiccookies FTWBy Caroline Brewton

Editor-in-chief

This recipe is adapted from the Duncan Hines red velvet crinkle cookie recipe.

Ingredients:
6 teaspoons melted butter
1 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoons cornstarch
1 box Duncan Hines red velvet cake mix
2 large eggs
Parchment paper

Directions:

Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.

Line ungreased baking sheet with parchment paper.

Mix powdered sugar and corn starch together in a separate container from the other ingredients. Mix together the butter, cake mix and eggs until all lumps are gone and a dough forms. Roll the dough into small balls and cover in the powdered sugar and cornstarch mixture. Set on cookie sheet and bake for 9 – 11 minutes. Don’t worry if they appear puffy; they’ll deflate after cooling. Allow them to cool for five minutes and serve in the dining room.

Story:

My grandmother had this saying:

“A good cook never has a clean kitchen.”

Well, I like to think I’m a good cook, but I’m also a neat freak. I knew from the beginning that trying to make cookies from a cake mix had the potential to go horribly wrong. After all, cake mix is infinitely more runny than cookie dough.

When I looked at the recipe, I saw no additional ingredients that I could add to the cake batter mixture that would fix the problem. How would the cookies maintain their shape? Wouldn’t that make a huge mess?

Knowing that cornstarch was a thickening agent, instead of adding it to the powdered sugar like the directions said, I added it to the batter.

That was mistake No. 1.

The consistency of the dough almost immediately became thick and hard to mix, bending my cheap mixing spoon in half as I tried to drag it through. Frustrated and unwilling to waste any more cheap spoons (I’m a college kid. I’m not made out of spoons), I plunged my hands into the mixture to incorporate all the ingredients myself.

It was like something out of a nightmare. As soon as I sank my hands in, I knew I made another huge mistake. The entire mixture glommed onto them like my flesh was some kind of bizarre carb magnet. On my hands, the dough had roughly the shade and appearance of fake blood, and I was caked in it. I looked like a character in a B horror movie.

This would have been OK if I had already set out the powdered sugar to roll the dough balls in, but I hadn’t. I knew I would have to clean off my hands in order to proceed to the next step.

Waste not, want not. I didn’t want to waste good dough but I also didn’t want it all over my sink handles. I managed to unstick as much of the dough as I could and put it back into the bowl, but that didn’t end up being much, so I tried to lick off the rest.

I did enjoy the dough. It had a nice flavor, but licking was an ineffective strategy for removing the bits that were stuck to my skin. In fact, all I managed to do was make a bigger mess of myself. Now, my lips, hands and nose were covered in thick, goopy red dough. Frustrated with my inability to clean my murderous-looking hands and face, I had to resort to using half a bottle of Dawn Powerclean before I was free of the stuff. It was not ideal.

After that, everything went fairly smoothly, although the powdered sugar got everywhere. I rolled and placed the cookies on the parchment paper-covered sheet and popped them in the oven. I only baked them for the minimum nine minutes, and they turned out beautifully. So beautiful, in fact, that it was hard to see how such perfectly-formed and innocent-looking cookies had not only dyed my hands and face red, but resulted in the powdered-sugaring of my entire kitchen.

In the end, I was the agent of my own destruction. If I hadn’t added the cornstarch too early, I would have avoided the whole mess. In fact, by trying to pre-empt the destruction of my perfectly neat and clean kitchen, I sealed my own fate. I can’t tell you what will happen if you follow the directions. I didn’t. But using my methods will yield perfect cookies.

You just have to be willing to get your hands dirty to get them.

Difficulty rating:

Making the cookies is easy and fun. Cleaning up the cookies’ mess is neither.

Netflix, DreamWorks Animation produce children’s series ‘Turbo’

By Yvonne Villarreal
Los Angeles Times

Amid all the “House of Cards” chatter (e.g., ‘Hey, Kevin Spacey takes down the 4th wall Ferris Bueller-style!’ and “I watched all 13 episodes in five hours” OK, that was a stretch), Netflix has offered another talking point by announcing its partnership with DreamWorks Animation to produce a children’s series.

The video streaming service will add to its original programming slate later this year with a series based on the upcoming DreamWorks Animation flick “Turbo,” the companies announced Tuesday. The film centers on a snail that dreams big and fast.

The small screen adaptation, titled “Turbo: F.A.S.T.,” marks the first Netflix original series for children and will roll out exclusively on the service in December following the film’s big-screen 3-D release in July. The movie features the voices of Ryan Reynolds and Paul Giamatti no word yet on who will voice the characters in the show, but the series will pick up where the movie plot leaves off.

“Families love Netflix, so creating an original series for kids was a natural for us,” said Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos in a statement. “DreamWorks Animation has a long track record of creating incredibly successful characters and stories that delight people of all ages.”

The streaming service has been expanding its original programming. It presented all 13 episodes of its latest series, “House of Cards,” on Feb. 1 and will roll out the long-anticipated return of cult comedy “Arrested Development” later this spring. Focusing on children seemed only a matter of time. In 2011, it launched a Just for Kids section featuring content aimed at viewers ages 12 and younger (who can work an iPad like no one else). And Netlix said its members streamed more than 2 billion hours of kids content in 2012.

“Netflix boasts one of the largest and fastest-growing audiences in kids’ television. They pioneered a new model for TV dramas with ‘House of Cards,’ and now together, we’re doing the same thing with kids’ programming,” said DreamWorks Animation Chief Executive Jeffrey Katzenberg in the announcement. “DreamWorks is thrilled to be part of the television revolution.”

In addition to the new children’s series, “Turbo” and other new DreamWorks Animation features will become available on the service too, beginning with the studio’s 2013 roster.

No. 1 Lady Bears win big over Texas Tech

No. 12 Alexis Prince leaps for the shot on Tues., Feb. 12, 2013, at the Ferrell Center, when the Baylor Lady Bears took on the Texas Tech Red Raiders. Meagan Downing | Round Up Photo Editor
No. 12 Alexis Prince leaps for the shot on Tues., Feb. 12, 2013, at the Ferrell Center, when the Baylor Lady Bears took on the Texas Tech Red Raiders. Meagan Downing | Round Up Photo Editor
No. 12 Alexis Prince leaps for the shot on Tues., Feb. 12, 2013, at the Ferrell Center, when the Baylor Lady Bears took on the Texas Tech Red Raiders.
Meagan Downing | Round Up Photo Editor

By Maleesa Johnson
Reporter

The Lady Bears stayed on top of the Big 12 after beating Texas Tech 89-47 last night.

Though the ultimate result was the same as when they last battled the Lady Raiders, the statistics were noticeably different.

Senior center Brittney Griner’s season-high 40 points highlighted the Bears game against Tech in January. Of the 89 points scored this game, Griner was only responsible for ten of them.

“We’ve seen it all, and a win is a win,” head coach Kim Mulkey said. “We won by more tonight than we did with Griner getting 40 because as I like to say, we shared the wealth. There’s lots of scores on that stat sheet. Probably the most impressive thing about that is you had 34 field goals on 30 assists. That’s telling you a lot of kids are sharing the ball.”

Texas Tech’s strong defense, centered against Griner, forced the team to share the ball. This time it was junior guard Odyssey Sims that scored the most with a total of 18 points. However, much like Mulkey insinuated, the points were distributed across the team, with senior forward Brooklyn Pope scoring the second most at 17 points.

Sims put the heat on Tech as she assisted senior guard Jordan Madden on a three-point jumper early in the contest.

“We were just out there having fun,” Sims said. “We came out with intensity like we did when we played them the first time and we never let up.”

After a timeout at the 11:40 mark, both teams returned to the court equally as aggressive as before. Baylor continued widen the gap with a 24-15 lead with just over nine minutes to go in the first half.

Griner gave the team many opportunities as she continually grabbed rebounds. By the end of the first half, Baylor had 21 rebounds to Tech’s 13.

Griner was aggressive with her shot defense as Tech tried and failed on multiple inside shots, despite the lack of proximity between players. Griner finished the game with seven blocks

Senior forward Destiny Williams scored after a pass from freshman guard Alexis Prince. She was fouled on the play and went on the score the free throw.

A Tech player managed to elbow Griner in the face and was given a flagrant foul. Mulkey joked about it after the game and said that Griner must have been bent over.

The first half ended with Baylor out front with a 20 point lead, 46-26.

The game continued to heat up in the second half as Baylor widened the gap.

At the 16:39 mark, Pope went on a scoring streak and took Baylor from 57 points to 63 consecutively, leaving Tech no room to score.

“I just did the same thing I do every night, I’m in the same spot,” Pope said. “And I just made the shots.”

Freshman guard Niya Johnson also put in a great performance with her accurate passes throughout the entire game.

“She has the instincts not just for passing, but the right kind of pass.” Mulkey said.

Prince stole the show as she had several fast paced break aways.

With 8:55 left in the game, Texas Tech had scored just 45 points. Baylor kept them there until the last minute of the game. They concluded the game with 47 points, 42 points shy of Baylor’s 89.

The Lady Bears will next play at 1 p.m. Saturday against TCU.

Baylor Golfer wins UTSA tournament

By Ryan Daugherty
Reporter

The Baylor men’s golf team competed in its first tournament of the spring Monday and Tuesday at the UTSA Oak Hills Invitational in San Antonio and one of its golfers came out on top. Sophomore Kyle Jones finished 7 under par with a total score of 206, and even tied a career low round of 67 to claim his first career victory.

As a team, Baylor finished third overall, shooting 17 over and finished with a total score of 869. Only Oklahoma and North Texas placed higher as teams, and Wichita State and the University of Texas at Arlington rounded out the top five.

Alongside Jones, Baylor had five other golfers who competed. Sophomore Mikkel Bjerch-Andresen and senior Ryan O’ Rear tied for 25th overall with a final score of 8-over-par 221. Sophomore Filippo Zucchetti and Freshman Andreas Gjesteby tied for 30th, scoring 9-over-par 222. Sophomore Niclas Mansson tied for 39th, finishing 12-over-par 225.

Jones finished the first round tied for the lowest score with three other golfers with 69 on Monday. After the second round, which also took place on Monday, Jones trailed the top spot by one stroke at 3- under with a total score of 139. He was the only Baylor golfer to finish a round under par on Monday.

Jones entered Tuesday in third place and shot 4 under par, with a total score of 67 in the final round to claim the victory. His career-low score of 67 in the final round tied his other low score at the Turner Stone Intercollegiate in the fall of 2011.

Baylor’s golf team will next be making an appearance at the Bayou City Collegiate Championships in Houston from February 22 through February 24.

Softball sweeps Southern Miss

No. 9 infielder Kathy Shelton slides safely into second base during the game against Southern Miss on Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013, in Getterman Stadium. Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor
No. 9 infielder Kathy Shelton slides safely into second base during the game against Southern Miss on Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013, in Getterman Stadium.  The Lady Bears defeated the Golden Eagles 3-0 during the first game and 2-1 during the second. Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor
No. 9 infielder Kathy Shelton slides safely into second base during the game against Southern Miss on Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013, in Getterman Stadium. The Lady Bears defeated the Golden Eagles 3-0 during the first game and 2-1 during the second.
Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor

By Parmida Schahhosseini
Sports Writer

Baylor won both games of Tuesday’s double-header against Southern Mississippi. After a dominant first game, No. 22 Baylor (5-2) squeaked out a win after a walk off home run by freshman right-handed pitcher Heather Stearns to seal the deal.

Baylor needed to be aggressive on offense and it was in the first game. After sophomore outfielder Kaitlyn Thumann struck out, senior outfielder Kathy Shelton stepped to the plate and had a base hit. While running toward first base, the first baseman committed an error allowing Shelton to advance to second. Shortly after, freshman outfielder Linsey Hays was on to bat. Shelton stole a base sliding toward the third base. Hays hit the ball, but the centerfielder dropped it. Hays raced on to third base, and Shelton scored.

Junior first baseman Holly Holl walked in the third inning to put runners on first and second. Hays’ sacrifice allowed Thumann to advance to third base and Holl to advance to second. Junior left-handed pitcher Whitney Canion gave Southern Mississippi trouble not just with her pitching, but also with her bat. Canion singled left for a base hit allowing Thumann and Holl to score. Canion finished the game with 12 strikeouts, one hit, no runs and 2 RBIs.

“I am feeling like myself pitching, but not so much hitting, but I’m getting back on the mound and it’s what I love to do and it seems like every time I get out there I feel more and more like myself,” Canion said.

Baylor did miss opportunities to score more in the fifth inning when the offense had the bases loaded. Holl hit a double to start off the inning and Hays followed that with a base hit, which allowed Holl to move to third. Smith followed by getting hit with the pitch. The bases were loaded, but a fly ball by Chalmers forced Baylor to go back on defense. Baylor defeated Southern Mississippi 3-0 after Repka closed the game.

In the second game of the double-header, Stearns took the circle. In the first inning, Southern Mississippi found some offense after back-to-back base hits from Evans and Sher. Evens was thrown out while trying to advance to second. Southern Mississippi’s Nelson hit a double shortly after allowing Sher to move up to third. After a wild pitch from Stearns, Sher scored putting up Southern Mississippi 1-0.

Baylor’s offense struggled in the second game after an aggressive first game. Baylor had nine hits in the first game, but only had one until the sixth inning when it found some offense. Shelton singled up the middle, and stole a second shortly after. Holl doubled, which allowed Shelton to score, tying the game at one.

“Quite honestly I’m disappointed in our offense. As a coach, you want to put up more runs than that,” Moore said. “We need to give our pitching more runs. Our pitching is doing an outstanding job and we’ve got to find a way to score more runs.”

Stearns and the defense allowed Baylor to stay in the game. At the top of the seventh, Southern Mississippi had two outs, and Stearns pitched a strikeout to keep the score tied. Sterns followed with a walk off home run to end the game as she won her own game.

“’I felt good towards the end of the game, getting really comfortable, loose, and after the first two innings I was feeling good,” Stearns said.

Baylor’s pitching has gotten the job done with Canion, Repka and Stearns all having strong games thus far. Baylor won its last four games and will take on Northern Colorado at 3 p.m. and Pacific at 5:30 p.m. Friday at Getterman Stadium.

GEAR UP introduces new learning experience for high schoolers

Josh Day
Reporter

Move over paper textbooks: The future of education is here.

A group of 30 high school students from Waco and La Vega traveled across Baylor’s campus Saturday using iPads and a specialized augmented reality app to find and solve math problems.

Dr. Tommy Bryan, Senior Lecturer of Mathematics, said augmented reality and technology in education are becoming popular.

“I think we’re just on tip of the iceberg as far as what’s going to happen with education in the next 16 years with iPads and readers and that sort of thing,” Bryan said. “I think textbooks are on the verge of becoming obsolete in the near future.”

The high school students’ mathematical journey through the Baylor campus might be a vision of education’s future.

Saturday a group of Baylor professors and Department of Education students associated with the GEAR UP Super Saturday Math Initiative placed specific pictures around Baylor for different groups of students to find.

When a group found a picture, they aimed their iPad at it. On the screen, the picture would change into a math problem before their eyes.

On a brightly colored poster-board nearby, a piece of paper contained a set of four possible answers to their problem. When the students were confident in their own answer, they pointed the iPad at the sheet, which turned into the correct answer on the screen.

When they came back to the Draper Academic Building, they were given a chance to show the other groups how they solved their equations, write their own problems, and afterward eat at Penland Dining Hall.

Their project was a part of a seven-year federal initiative called GEAR UP, an acronym for Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs.

According to a GEAR UP press release, the Waco initiative was funded by a six-year $11.3 million grant involving Baylor, Texas State Technical College Waco, and the Waco Independent School District.

Saturday was the final day of the math program of the GEAR UP initiative for each of the students, all in their senior year of high school.

It was also the final day for Dr. Bryan, Dr. Rachelle Rogers, Assistant Clinical Professor in Elementary Education, and Dr. Trena Wilkerson, Associate Professor of Curriculum and Instruction to continue their work with the GEAR UP program.

Bryan, Rogers, and Wilkerson are the GEAR UP Super Saturday Math Initiative’s instructor, director, and principal investigator, respectively.

“It’s bittersweet. It’s sad, but it’s been very rewarding,” Rogers said.

For six years, Rogers and Bryan have been meeting with largely the same group of students on weekends and occasionally during the summer in a number of math-related interactive programs like the one on Saturday.

While they learned about math, the students were also taught lessons about college opportunities and life after high school.

The lessons were even found in the math problems on the augmented reality trail on Saturday.

“Each problem was triggered by an image, and each was geared toward a different major,” Bryan said.

The last meeting of the students’ senior year marked the end of the grant.

According to the U.S. Department of Education’s website, the program was “designed to increase the number of low-income students who are prepared to enter and succeed in postsecondary education.”

Rogers said the success of the program has also largely been because of the students.

“It’s amazing, they’re doing math problems on their weekends and summer breaks and they keep coming back,” said Rogers.

According to Rogers and Bryan, the results of the program have been clear and positive.

“Their scores have improved since they have been attending these events,” Rogers said.

Devin Scott is a Waco High School senior who has come to every GEAR UP math initiative event since the summer before his seventh grade.

“It’s opened up a lot of opportunities for me that I wouldn’t normally have seen,” Scott said.

He said he plans on studying kinesiology at Baylor, Texas Christian University or Texas State University.

02/12/13: The Baylor Lariat