ASU Student Media
Pitchfork Arizona State University’s Dining Guide & Directory
what’s on the
Menu? SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE
STATE PRESS
FEBRUARY 22, 2006
R U AN A T S
T
RE
B O W L I N G G R E E N E R Y • B U R G E R K I N G • C A M P U S CO R N E R S • C H I L I ’ S • D I B E N E D E T T O S • J I M M Y J O H N S • K F C
L O N G J O H N S I LV E R S • M A R C O S • M R . S P O T S • PA PA J O H N S • Q D O B A • S U B WAY • T R O T T E R S • W E N D Y ’ S
Memoirs of a Geisha
CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE,
THE FILM SOCIETY AT CMU,
CELEBRATION! CINEMAS AND
THE CMU COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION
Good Night and Good Luck
& FINE ARTS AND PRESENT...
The Constant Gardner
Central Michigan
INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
Mad Hot Ballroom
Woman Thou Art Loosed
March 30 - April 9 PARTICIPATING THEATRES: CELEBRATION! CINEMA BROADWAY THEATRE CMU’S PARK LIBRARY AUDITORIUM
For more information:
www.cmfilmfestival.com
A Very Long Engagement
Good Bye Lenin!
6 Monday, April 3, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian
The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Monday, April 3, 2006
Plan now for Summer & Fall!
Housing guide
ATTENTION CSU STUDENTS! Tired of throwing your money away on rent while you’re in school? Buy with your parents and you can: PRE-LEASING SPRING SEMESTER 1ST PLACE TO LOOK
Now Leasing!
“A Great Place To Live” 1/2 Block to CSU Large 2 bedroom units Several Lease Choices Fall leasing available now Newly remodeled club house!
at 970-40-ALOHA
for all your real estate needs. Great Homes Townhomes and Condos Call for showings 1220 W. Elizabeth #F 970-472-8165 www.1234rent.com
Housing Fair 2006!
Do ONE-STOP shopping for a place to live off-campus! April 19&20 10:00am - 3:00pm Lory Student Center Main Ballroom
Vantage Properties
Ready for privacy? Upgrade your lifestyle! Our houses are the best in town.
15 person hot tub Work out room Computer room Game room & TV lounge
New laundry facility 5 new Penthouse units available for fall
3 bedrooms 3 full bath 2 bedroom 2 1/2 bath Washer/dryer in each unit
Now available for fall: • 1-6 bedrooms • Close to campus • Platinum properties
Walk to Elizabeth St. shops & dining
Come by our office today at 1113 W. Plum Street, Fort Collins. Office open from 8-6 Mon. thru Fri. 12-4 Sat. & Sun. Pick up a brochure of all of our platinum properties listed.
Laurel Street Lofts Howes Street 1-4 bedrooms Cambridge House Apartments
Best Location In Town 1113 W. Plum (off Shields)
We are scheduling showings now 7 days a week. Don’t delay -- call today!
Phone: 970.419.8394 or 970.218.2396 www.cambridgehouseapts.com
970-218-2396 or 970-419-8384
Ramblewood Apartments Pre-Leasing Starts
March 27th
FREE weekday shuttle to CSU FREE basic cable Basketball court Coin-op laundry w/TV lounge
• • • •
155 Briarwood Rd. 970-484-5559 Just West of Taft Hill Rd and LaPorte Ave.
www.ramblewoodapartmenthomes.com FREE computer lab with high speed internet FREE 1100 sq. ft. Fitness Center Clubhouse w/TV lounge and billiard table NO hidden fees
Where value & comfort meet
C
at & Frien Dog dly!
970.482.1054 1117 CITY PARK AVE. WWW.RAMSCROSSING.COM
A Great Place • A Great Price • Extra Large Updated Studios, 1-2 Bedrooms • Furnished & Unfurnished • Pet Friendly • Huge Decks/Patios • AC • Fixed Utility Fee • 5 Modern Laundry Facilities • Swimming Pool • FREE Expanded Basic Cable • Plenty of FREE Parking • Park Like Setting
Pricing $440-$660
Make Money! Build your credit! Save your parent’s money! Not have to pay capital gains tax! Not have to have your parents co-sign for you on your next home!
Call the Hawaiian Shirt Guy
Sponsored by Off-Campus Student Services (970)491-2248 www.ocssral.colostate.edu
Cambridge House Apartments
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Affordable Luxury Living • 30 Brand New Flats, Lofts, and Penthouse Lofts • Designer Kitchen & Bathrooms • Flexible Floor Plans • No Pets • Decks • AC • Swimming Pool • Fixed Utility Fee • Washer/Dryer • FREE Expanded Basic Cable & Hi-Speed Internet • Plenty of FREE Parking • Beautiful Views & More
Pricing $550-$950
Sign A Lease before April 20 & Avoid Rent Increases!
Specializing in CSU Student purchases & First-Time Home buyers Sean M. Dougherty
RE/MAX Alliance, Downtown 800-477-1781 • 970-402-5642 www.HawaiianShirtGuy.com
7
8 Monday, April 3, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian
GUIDES repulsion” in her photography: a picture of different sized and colored mattresses lining a barbed wire fence below attached balloons. Strauss has been called the “chronicler of Philadelphia's mean streets,” and true to her title, she has traditionally shown this — literally. Her pictures of the view above I-95 are sold for $5 a piece, and prove that she’s out to make a point, not a profit.
EDUCATING THE YOUTH OF PENNSYLVANIA: WORLDS OF LEARNING IN THE AGE OF FRANKLIN
Van Pelt-Dietrich Library Rosenwald Gallery 3420 Walnut St. Mon-Fri, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., free, until May 31 (215) 898-7088 http://benjaminfranklin300.library.upenn.edu Now students can find another way to honor the memory of our school’s founding father besides urinating on his bench. Penn’s Rare Book and Manuscript Library has organized this exhibit to pay tribute to Franklin’s vision of education in late 18th century United States. The exhibit, which will be convenient-
ly displayed on the sixth floor of Van Pelt until the end of May, features original documents, books, artifacts and photographs.
1001 Cathedral Rd., Bryn Athyn, PA Sun, 3 p.m., $5-10 (215) 502-2993 www.glencairnmuseum.org
The Glencairn Museum has described “Posaune Decouple” as “a unique trombone performance, with players from all over the world.” And they’re true to their word: the performance creAMERICA atively displays the trombone as Kirby Center 71 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, a beautiful instrument (not just that horn that your brother PA played in marching band). The Fri, 8 p.m., $35-45 piece progresses from a solo by (570) 826-1100 Glenn Dodson to a duo, trio, quarwww.kirbycenter.org tet and so on until the 10-piece fiAccording to the publicists at nale. This amazing performance the Kirby Center, America was pays the trombone the tribute it discovered in 1972, when the duo deserves. put out the song “A Horse with No Name.” I always thought SPOKEN HAND PERAmerica was discovered in 1492 CUSSION ORCHESTRA when Columbus sailed the ocean Painted Bride Art Center blue. It is amazing to me that I 230 Vine St. have made it all these years with Fri-Sat, 8 p.m., $15-30 such false information. Since (215) 925-9914 America (the band) is responsi- www.paintedbride.org ble for clearing this all up for me, I will definitely have to thank Everyone loves a groovy beat. them backstage after the show. And I don’t know anyone who Now all I want to know is, who’s dislikes a percussion orchestra. coming with me? When combined, they form the grooviest, most provocative band ever: Spoken Hand PerPOSAUNE DECOUPLE cussion. The Spoken Hand PerGlencairn Museum
CONCERTS
cussion Orchestra includes the foremost performers of the Spoken Hand music scene, and they will be performing this Friday and Saturday at the always eclectic Painted Bride Art Center.
CURTIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Kimmel Center Verizon Hall 260 S. Broad St. Sun, 8 p.m., $5-34 (215) 893-1999 www.kimmelcenter.org
Samuel “Magic Fingers” Krall (a world renowned musical historian and classical guitarist) has said the following in regards to The Curtis Chamber Orchestra, “I like coming to Philly to perform for three reasons: the great crowds, the cheese steaks and the Curtis ensembles.” A man with a name like “Magic Fingers” can’t be wrong; come see the orchestra perform music composed by Stravinsky and Bartók. Their performances of these modern pieces are sure to change the way you think of symphony music.
TAKING BACK SUNDAY Trocadero 1003 Arch St. Sun, 6 p.m., $21
(215) 922-LIVE www.thetroc.com Taking Back Sunday has a new album, Louder Now, that will most likely fill their set at Trocadero. If you are interested in listening to the sweet, new, hard pop/punk music first-hand, then this show is for you. If you’re worried that the new material won’t live up to Taking Back Sunday standards, then you have nothing to fear. The Alternative Press called the band’s sophomore effort “the album most bands wish they could make,” so come and prepare to be pleasantly surprised.
THE BEACH BOYS
Scottish Rite Auditorium 315 White Horse Collingswood, NJ Fri, 6 & 9 p.m., $49 www.ccparks.com
Pike,
Broadway wanted their fix of the Beach Boys, so they released Good Vibrations, a musical based on the songs of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys last year. But since the musical closed this year, if you want to get your Beach Boys fix, check out their live concert this Friday evening at 6 and 9 p.m. The group mourns the absences of
Your Spring Guide to Boutiques Forbidden Planett
Jewelery, Shirts, Gifts & Judaica
Arch St
N 4th St
N 3rd St
Necklace by M. Negrin Market St
♣ S 3rd St
S 4th St
2003 Walnut St. - 215.568.6878
311 Market St.- 215.629.2347
www.dahliasjewerly.net
www.meandblue.com
53 North 3rd St. - 215.923.1523 10 North 3rd St. - 215.923.SEXY www.esque-eyewear.com
Chestnut St
www.forbiddenmall.com
21st St
20th St
Walnut St
specializing in jeans fitting
Where Style Stops
153 North 3rd St. -215.925.5455
48 South 3rd St. - 215.238.0825
210 Market St. - 215.923.9681
www.thirdstreethabit.com
www.sugarcube.us
www.charliesjeans.com
WWW.34ST. COM
♣
Locust St
233 Market St. - 215.829.4900
19
Week of September 22, 2006
Blue Devil Living A guide to buying, renting, and furnishing a home or apartment for Duke University and Medical Center. Look Inside for: Realtors Apartments Homes Home Improvements
The Chronicle THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Advertising Supplement
Chapel Tower Only our transportation options will take you where you want to go!
1315 Morreene Road • 800-550-0282 • Email: ct@gscapts.com
Duke Manor It’s all FREE - GSC Express shuttle to Duke, Safe Rides service, high speed wireless internet, fantastic fitness center and more!
311 South LaSalle Street • 800-433-2801 • Email: dm@gscapts.com
Duke Villa Multiple choice! 27 Floor plans, all 2 blocks to Duke!
1505 Duke University Road • 888-329-1761 • Email: dv@gscapts.com
Colonial Townhouse Apartments Newly renovated spacious townhouses with Southern charm.
2920 Chapel Hill Road • 800-550-0284 • Email: col@gscapts.com
Atrium
Now professionally managed by
Open, airy & bright! Living at Atrium feels just right!
3800 Meriwether Drive • 888-338-1493 • Email: at@gscapts.com Which to choose? Contact our FREE APARTMENT
1-888-GSC-APTS
LOCATOR
E-mail: nclocator@gscapts.com
www.gscapts.com
Out & About in The ‘Boro
!
NEW
Open All Day Everyday 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Dine In, Take Out or DRIVE-THRU! Express Bowl - Chicken Bowl - Shrimp Bowl - Steak Bowl
All New Jr. $2.99 Jr. $3.95 Jr. $4.95
Express Bowl Combo - Chicken Bowl Combo - Shrimp Bowl Combo - Steak Bowl Combo
$4.50 $5.50 $6.95
- Nikko Bento - Super Health Combo I - Super Health Combo II
Jr. $4.50 Jr. $5.50 Jr. $5.95
(All combos served with drink, rice, choice of salad, vegetable or extra rice)
$5.95 $6.95 $7.95
Maki SUSHI Combo 12 pieces
$5.95 $4.50 $4.50
- Vegetable Combo $3.50 - California Comob $4.95 - GSU Combo $4.95
2 Locations Nikko Steakhouse Nikko Express 609 Brannen Street 701 Peidmont Loop (Buckhead Plaza) 489-4007 489-4003 We accept Eagle Express!
B e s t i n B o r o 4 y e a r s & B e s t S u s h i 11 t h H o u r s R e a d e r s C h o i c e
3AVANNAH S *APANESE 2ESTURANT .OW IN 3TATESBORO
.ORTHSIDE $RIVE %AST IN 3OUTHERN 3QUARE #ENTER s .EXT TO + -ART 0ĂFS FYQJSFT 4FQU $PVQPO SFRVJSFE
*R #HICKEN "OWL 3.15 *R 3HRIMP "OWL 9 #HICKEN "OWL 50 3HRIMP "OWL 50 3HRIMP #HICKEN 75
0ĂFS FYQJSFT 4FQU $PVQPO SFRVJSFE
FAX
RENTING MOVIES JUST GOT EASIER!
Come visit us and see if your late fees are gone!
And for the rest of September ALL Rentals only .99¢ (including video games) Flight 93 Available this week!
Offer includes both Video Warehouse stores!
1200B BRAMPTON AVE 871-7012
199 NORTHSIDE DRIVE 489-4279
681-5418
Take a BITE Out of the ‘Boro! ADS@GEORGIASOUTHERN.EDU WWW.STP.GEORGIASOUTHERN.EDU
fax: 486-7113
Express Tune & Lube Tire, Alignment & Exhaust Center 612 S. Zetterower Avenue
489-4444
www.expresstuneandlube.com Monday – Friday 7:30am – 6:30pm Located a half block north of Wendy’s.
Oil Change Special ˜VÂ?Ă•`iĂƒĂŠĂ•ÂŤĂŠĂŒÂœ xĂŠÂľĂŒĂƒÂ°ĂŠÂœvĂŠ >ĂƒĂŒĂ€ÂœÂ?ĂŠ Includes up to x7Óä]ĂŠx7Îä]ĂŠ 5 qts. of Castrol £ä7Îä]ĂŠÂœĂ€ĂŠĂ“Ă¤7xä
™x 95 £Ç 13
f$
10W30 or 20W50
expires 8/31/2004 0RICE APPLIES TO MOST VEHICLES %XPIRES 9 30 6
SURVIVAL GUIDE
75
Living from the inside
ut
Soulscape
Sundays @ 11:00am
Give us an hour and 1811 N. Linden, Normal we’ll change the way www.heartcc.org you think about church. Services: Sunday 9:30 & 11 am
A worship service with students in mind Sponsored by First United Methodist Church of Normal www.normalfum.com
211 N. School • Normal 452-2096
• DEVOTIONAL MEETINGS
Judson Fellowship Baptist Campus Ministry Worship on Sundays at 6 “1x6” Sponsored by Judson Baptist Fellowship
At the Campus Religious Center 210 W. Mulberry, ISU Across from Manchester Hall
All Ages Service 11am Sundays Meets at University Christian Church 206 North Street, Normal (309) 287-6386 journeyfellowship@mac.com *childcare is provided*
2005-06 Indiana State Women’s Basketball Schedule with Results Nov. 11 Nov. 14 Nov. 18 Nov. 25 Nov. 26 Dec. 4 Dec. 7 Dec. 10 Dec. 17 Dec. 20 Dec. 30 Jan. 1 Jan. 7 Jan. 12 Jan. 14 Jan. 20 Jan. 22 Jan. 26 Jan. 28 Feb. 4 Feb. 10 Feb. 12 Feb. 17 Feb. 19 Feb.24 Feb. 26
Tennessee-Chattanooga (1) vs. UConn vs. Wisconsin-Green Bay vs. Kentucky (2) vs. Pepperdine/Hofstra Tourn. (2) vs. Butler (3) vs. Toledo at Loyola (Illinois) at Youngstown State at Eastern Kentucky at Evansville * vs. Southern Illinois * vs. Illinois State * at Bradley * at UNI * vs. Wichita State * vs. Missouri State * at Drake * at Creighton * at Illinois State * vs. Bradley * vs. UNI * at Missouri State * at Wichita State * vs. Creighton * vs. Drake *
W 74-53 L 43-86 W 98-59 L 58-68 W 91-73 W 85-72 W 74-56 W 93-80 W 95-57 W 96-81 W 79-69 W 74-61 W 92-76 W 70-59 W 74-62 W 85-60 W 58-34 W 92-87 W 79-60 W 75-71 W 75-71 W 53-41 L 46-76 W 88-85 W 78-58 L 65-70
Mar. 2 Mar. 4 Mar. 10
at Southern Illinois * vs. Evansville * vs. Southern Illinois/Creighton (4)
W 82-70 W 86-56 TBA
MVC WILDCARD SUNDAY
Games highlighted in blue denote home games. * Denotes Missouri Valley Conference Game; Times Are Local To Terre Haute (1) Sportsview.tv Preseason Women’s National Inviation Tournament (Terre Haute, Ind. & Other Campus Sites. (2) Pepperdine Tournament (Malibu, Calif.) (3) State Farm Hoosier Classic (Munci, Ind.) (4) State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Women’s Basketball Tournament (Springfield, Mo.)
State Farm Missouri Conference Womens’s Basketball Tournament St. Louis, MO March 9-12, 2006
Times Listed are Easten Standard Time
Cyan Magenta
Yellow Black Green 608 INDIANA DAILY STUDENT
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2006
BOOK: Professors make
CONDOM: Machine
contributions
remains in Collins
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
tors inspired her to contribute. “The timing was perfect,” she said. “It turned out to be exactly the right time to assess Chief Justice Rehnquist’s legacy. It was also clear when we were writing the book that we were toward the end of Rehnquist’s career and we had a substantial body of case law to analyze.” Executive Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at the IU School of Law John S. Applegate said in an e-mail that the law school is proud of the faculty participation in this book. “When you consider that four of the members of this absolutely stellar group of scholars are faculty members at Indiana Law, you realize what an extraordinary faculty we have,” he said. Bradley, who clerked for Rehnquist in 1975 and 1976, said he liked the justice. “He was a very nice guy and had a good sense of humor – he wasn’t at all pompous,” Bradley said. “We didn’t see eye-to-eye politically, but he liked to argue, so there was no problem voicing my views... (But) in terms of what the opinion would look like, I had a great deal of input. It was a very rewarding experience.”
Condom vending machines might be gone for good, but condoms are hardly scarce on campus. Visitors to the IU Health Center can pick up free Lifestyles latex condoms at several locations. Students are asked to limit the number of packages to three or four per visit. “The idea is more educational,” Jessup said. “It just raises their consciousness of having safe sex. Sometimes our students like to experiment to see if they’re willing to even try this, and we let them do so for free.” Nowadays, the presence of condoms on campus ranges from the weekend antics of the Pizza Express Man to the rape awareness efforts of local student activists. Despite the lack of machines currently on campus, the public acceptance of these latex contraceptives seems to have come a long way. “The stigma that was attached to purchasing condoms before seems to be less today,” Jessup said. “There isn’t the same mystique as before.”
PAGE 3
Students develop individualized majors By Kourtney Schepman kschepma@indiana.edu
Japanese animation, musical theater, enigmatology (the study of puzzles), contemporary dance and fashion design are just some of the unconventional majors that students can pursue through the Individualized Major Program. Since its inception at IU in 1969, the IMP has enabled students in the College of Arts and Sciences to construct their own major based on their interests and professional goals. The students are not only able to construct their major, but can also construct the listing of the courses they take throughout their college careers. Raymond Hedin, IMP program director for the past nine years, said he believes the program enables students the freedom to explore areas of interest that are not traditionally found in the IU curriculum. “The IMP serves a double function: making it possible for students to create for themselves majors that don’t exist, and may never exist institutionally, and serving as a proving ground for new majors that then become institutionalized,” Hedin said.
Each potential member of the IMP has to go through the application process. In this process the students are asked to write an application explaining the major they want to go into and the reason IMP will be able to help them with this major. The students are then interviewed by the staff and are accepted on the merit of their interest and validity of the major of their choice. Jackie Brown, a Japanese animation major in the IMP program, was recommended for the IMP by her academic adviser because she wasn’t content with her secondary art major. Brown said she felt the general art major was not exactly what she was interested in. “I told my adviser how much I really wanted to animate,” Brown said. “She told me that I could create my own major. I thought, ‘No way!’” As Brown looked into the IMP and her major in Japanese animation, she became more excited as she was able to explore and construct the courses she would be taking. She was able to model Japanese culture and learned about computer programs in animation through telecommunications courses.
Thursday, Feb. 2 Alumni Hall, IMU 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Camp Day 2006 offers you a great opportunity to meet Camp Directors from across the country. This is your chance to successfully find summertime employment at a camp. This summer work is a job that is exciting and offers a valuable learning experience. 855-9136 for more info.
www.indiana.edu/~career/employers/fair/fairs.php#46
CAMP KENTAHTEN If you are seeking the opportunity to positively influence the lives of children, we at the Tim Horton Children’s Foundation would love to talk to you about joining our team at Camp Kentahten. We are a non-profit charitable organization committed to providing a fun-filled camp environment for children from economically disadvantaged homes.
Carrie Patterson – Camp Director 49 Kentahten Trail Campbellsville, KY, 42718 Phone: 270-465-9250 patterson_carrie@timhortons.com www.timhortons.com
“Techniques of Japanese animation as well as the culture that is presented in it are obviously different than other countries in so many ways,” Brown said. “I want to learn and create my own animations that will stay true to the real Japan, not the stereotypical Japan.” The IMP also helps students gain experience in the workforce through internships available through the program. Abbey Stemler is a member of the IMP student activities committee and is responsible for coordinating and attending student events for the program. She said she believes the IMP gives students a step in the right direction in achieving success in their endeavors. “You can receive grants to complete internships or research for your senior project,” Stemler said. “For example underwater archeology majors could go to Rome and dive, or music business majors could go to Nashville (Tenn.) The possibilities are endless.” Students like Brown in the program are responsible for completing a final project that is evaluated by an IMP faculty committee. The project encompasses the knowledge they
have accumulated in the major of their creation. “The project can be a research paper akin to an honors thesis, a creative project such as a dance performance, a collection of stories or a film, or an internship in their field, so long as the internship includes professional responsibilities,” Hedin said. The program has gained much acclaim from the students and faculty who are part of it. “I give mad applause to the IMP program, and everyone who works for it,” Brown said. “The IMP program allowed me to study a subject in-depth that I would not be able to study elsewhere.” While the program poses challenges to many who enter into it, Hedin said the students who go through the program are well on their way to successful careers. “The experience can be initially daunting, since students must put in quite a bit of effort and thought up-front,” he said. “But the great majority of students feel that the effort is worthwhile because they come out of the program with a degree that means a great deal to them.”
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Monday, Nov. 13, 2006
KANSAS STATE COLLEGIAN
Page 3
Comedian mixes news, personal history By Megan Molitor
like to be former president Bill Clinton. “How much fun would it be to be him?” he said. “Life is about living, growing old and then talking about what you’ve done,” Kennedy said. “Bill Clinton would always win those conversations. They should make a musical about his life, with solos by Monica Lewinsky and Janet Reno.” Kennedy said he is half Colombian and half English. “I’ll talk in Spanish to somebody, and they will talk back in English, because they’re offended that I assumed they spoke Spanish,” Kennedy said. “I’m the whitest-looking person ever.” Kennedy said he moved multiple times as a child, living in Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States, Hong Kong, among other places. “I had a really cool childhood, getting to grow up in Hong Kong,” he said. “All your
KANSAS STATE COLLEGIAN
Current events collided with sexual humor Friday evening in the K-State Student Union. Andrew Kennedy gave a comedic performance in the Union Courtyard to a crowd of about 60 people. It was part of the After Hours program and was sponsored by the Union Program Council. Kennedy began with his impression of K-State. “You guys have bowling right downstairs, so this must be a big school,” he said. “What is there to do here on weekends? Are you all drunk right now? I saw beer being dispensed downstairs quite regularly.” Kennedy spoke about the recent mid-term elections and gave an impression of President Bush. He compared Bush to former presidential candidate Al Gore and explained what it might be
toys are made where you’re living. Everything is always in stock. It’s awesome.” From his time spent in the area, Kennedy said he also speaks Cantonese, a language that can get confusing at times. “Even though it’s the same word, when you say it in different tones, it has a different meaning,” he said. “For example, ‘yes’ and ‘vagina’ are the same word.” He has three brothers, all of whom look totally different. “If you look at a photo of my family, it looks like a bunch of random people just gathered at a bus stop,” he said. Continuing on family, Kennedy spoke about what it was like to become a parent. “It was the greatest thing to ever happen to me,” he said. “I never knew I could love someone so much that I would eat food off their face. I have all their music in my cars, and so it’s been four years of not lis-
tening to normal music. I sing theme songs with the voices now.” Many students said they enjoyed the presentation. “I’m a big fan of the AfterHours program,” Chris Miller, sophomore in elementary education, said. “I got here a little late, but it was really good. I thought (Kennedy) related well to the audience and got them involved.” Lexi Janezie, freshman in graphic design and UPC member, said UPC arranged Kennedy’s visit through a regional organization that suggests possible events for UPC. “It was really funny, but we already knew he would be good,” Janezie said. Kennedy said he doesn’t make up the things in his comedy. “Everything I say is true,” he said. “That’s what makes it funny. Sure, I embellish it, but the foundation is always true.”
$2 OFF IN NOVEMBER Steven Doll | COLLEGIAN
Comedian Andrew Kennedy performs before a crowd of about 60 people Friday in the Union Courtyard of the K-State Student Union. His performance was part of Union Program Council’s After Hours.
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