FIREWORKS & HOT AIR BALLOONS CHECK OUT DAILYIOWAN.COM FOR CASEY SWOYER’S VIDEO OF HOW THE STUMPTOWN SHOOTERS PULL OFF A FIREWORKS SHOW — WITH THEIR CRANIUMS INTACT.

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA COMMUNITY SINCE 1868 The Daily Iowan

MONDAY, JULY 3, 2006 WWW.DAILYIOWAN.COM 50¢ Fatal chopper crash adds to Sloths’ Iowa list of aviation tragedies During a scene for the movie The Final Season, a helicopter carrying fate an the pilot, a photographer, and a producer hit a power line and crashed into a cornfield one mile west of Walford BY DEAN TREFTZ scene for the baseball- Schlotzhauer, was pro- Schlotzhauer, a resident THE DAILY IOWAN themed movie, The Final nounced dead at the scene, of Lenexa, Kan., worked on Ice Age Season, a Bell Jetranger III according to a Benton Coun- such movies as CSA: The A deadly helicopter crash helicopter carrying three ty Sheriff’s Office press Confederate States of northwest of Iowa City on people — the pilot, a photog- release. Pilot Richard Green America and the yet-to-be- June 30 added to Iowa’s rapher, and a producer — and producer Tony Wilson released The Raising of Jef- already-sizable list of notable crashed into a corn field one were flown to UI Hospitals frey Dahmer. He was 50 aircraft incidents while mile west of Walford after and Clinics, where they years old. shocking film buffs and east- hitting a power line. were both listed in critical mystery ern Iowans alike. Shooting a The cameraman, Roland condition, the release stated. SEE CRASH, PAGE 3 CHECK OUT DAILYIOWAN.COM FOR OUR VIDEO OF THIS THOUSANDS-YEARS-OLD CAPITOL SCENE DISCOVERY. ‘The adult sloth was probably 10 to 12 feet tall. It was big; you are looking at the size of an elephant.’ — Alex Bryk, Penn State sophomore and Iowa City native working on the project

BY BRYCE BAUER THE DAILY IOWAN In what is now a southern Iowa creek bed, two sloths — a young one and an adult — once lumbered across the land. Some 10,000 years later, UI researchers studying these bones think their calcified remains may help solve today’s global-warming crisis. “At the end of the Pleistocene, there was massive extinction — mammoths, mastodons, sloths, saber-tooth tigers,” said Alex Bryk, a Penn State sophomore and Iowa City native working on the project, which partially opened for display at the UI Museum of Natural History this weekend. The adult animal was originally dis- covered in 2001 by a Page County landowner. UI researchers started exca- vating in 2003 and discovered the approximately 1-year-old sloth in April. While the actual ages of the bones will not be known until a second sample is sent for radiocarbon dating because they were discovered in clay from the Pleis- tocene era, researchers surmise they are 12,000-13,000 years old, Bryk said. Now relegated to tropical regions, Melanie Patterson/The Daily Iowan sloths were once common across North Jazz enthusiasts fill the Pentacrest on July 1 to listen to the music of the jazz trio Bad Plus during the Iowa City Jazz Festival. The band America — ranging from the present-day played on the main stage and sparked a standing ovation from the crowd. Also check out dailyiowan.com for DI video editor Taylor locales of Florida to Alaska. Gentry’s audio slide show and video of a day at Jazz Fest. “There are a lot of schools of thought on why they went extinct: human interven- tion versus climate change,” Bryk said. “It’s difficult to think by shifting the cli- mate it would have mattered, because Florida and Alaska are different anyway.” A quiet revolution SEE SLOTH, PAGE 3 in Iowa soybeans CHECK OUT BY ABIGAIL SAWYER Asoyia company, will go on DAILYIOWAN.COM FOR DI THE DAILY IOWAN to become America’s only VIDEOGRAPHER non-genetically modified ERIC CONRAD’S The lumbering arms of a trans fat-free soybean oil. TRANS-FAT COM- crop sprayer pass over As more food processors MENTARY FROM fields ribbed with arrow- Laura Schmitt/The Daily Iowan nationwide abandon trans BRIAN OLSHANSKY, THE straight rows of soybeans. Mike Sladek drives a tractor uphill to spray herbicide on the soy- fat in production lines, new DIRECTOR OF CARDIO- While they appear identical Iowa innovations are beans growing on Jim Sladek’s eastern Iowa farm on June 27. The ELECTRO PHYSIOLOGY AND to the average Iowa heating up the cooking-oil beans are called “Asoyia” and can be manufactured into oils that A UI PROFESSOR OF legumes, these beans, mar- contain no trans fats. INTERNAL MEDICINE. keted by eastern Iowa’s SEE TRANS FAT, PAGE 3

BOWLSBY ERA HOW GREEN ARE THEIR THE ART OF FOLLY INDEX 88 31 C COMING TO A CLOSE ALLIES? A new group exhibition at Mythos Arts 5 ©

© 8 The Iowa AD looks back at a decade The Iowa Green Party is trying to round jumps off from a quotation from Classifieds Crossword 7 68 20 C Mostly cloudy, Euripedes: “From one man’s folly and a half of triumphs and a few up enough signatures to put a Opinions 4 breezy, 50% 10 came a universal curse …” 5 10 chance of T-storms disappointments. gubernatorial candidate on the ballot. 2 Sports

2 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 NEWS

The Daily Iowan Seeking the Greening of Iowa Volume 138 Issue 21 BREAKING NEWS STAFF BY LEAH DORZWEILER different counties will be needed candidate, garnered only 1.4 per- grass — rather than corn — for Phone: (319) 335-6063 Publisher: THE DAILY IOWAN by Aug. 13 to get the party’s can- cent of total votes, falling short of ethanol use. E-mail: [email protected] William Casey...... 335-5788 didate on the ballot. the 2 percent needed to retain “Corn is not really optimal for Fax: 335-6184 Editor: Amid the sea of jazz aficionados Although Hart admitted official political party status — ethanol use, whereas switchgrass, CORRECTIONS Meghan Sims...... 335-6030 who flocked to the Pentacrest this Barth’s chances of winning the thus forcing the minority party to a prairie grass native in Iowa, Managing Editor: Call: 335-6030 past weekend for live music and gubernatorial race were similar petition for candidacy in the 2006 could be harvested at 1,000 gal- Margaret Poe...... 335-5855 outdoor ambiance, a handful in to “a lightning-strike probability,” election. lons [of oil] per acre,” Barth said, Policy: The Daily Iowan strives for Metro Editors: attendance came with political she insisted there were valid rea- The Iowa Green Party decided although she added that the tech- accuracy and fairness in the reporting Lee Hermiston...... 335-6063 agendas. sons to petition for her candidacy. to support Barth’s petition after nology for switchgrass’ synthesis of news. If a report is wrong or mis- Mason Kerns...... 335-6063 Clipboards in hand, represen- “We want to make sure our Rep. Ed Fallon, D-Des Moines, the into ethanol still needs to be leading, a request for a correction or a Opinions Editor: tatives of Iowa’s Green Party fil- party’s platforms are known to party members’ favorite Democ- worked out. clarification may be made. Laura Michaels...... 335-5863 tered through the crowds, seeking Iowa voters,” Hart said. “We hope ratic candidate, lost the early Peverill Squire, a UI political- PUBLISHING INFO Sports Editor: enough signatures to put their to put pressure on the major par- June primary election to Secre- science professor, said Iowa his- The Daily Iowan (USPS 143.360)is Dan Parr...... 335-5848 candidate for governor, Wendy ties to take our issues into consid- tary of State Chet Culver, Hart torically has not supported third- published by Student Publications Inc., Tyson Wirth...... 335-5848 Barth, on the Iowa ballot in eration.” said. The Greens were particular- party candidates, but a push for E131 Adler Journalism Building, Iowa Arts Editor: November. The Iowa Green Party website ly opposed to Culver’s support of candidacy is not necessarily City, Iowa 52242-2004, daily except Charlie Moran ...... 335-5851 Iowa City resident Holly Hart, states the party is committed to the death penalty,she added. unwarranted. Saturdays, Sundays, legal and universi- Copy Chief: the secretary of the Iowa Green environmentalism, nonviolence, Barth said her campaign par- “Third parties are always use- Beau Elliot...... 335-6030 ty holidays, and university vacations. Party, estimated that upwards of universal health care, election ticularly advocates stronger regu- ful for trying to get attention for Design Editor: Periodicals postage paid at the Iowa 800 signatures had been collected reform, and decent wages for lation of “factory farm” hog lots, issues that might otherwise get Brittany Volk...... 335-6030 City Post Office under the Act of statewide as of Sunday evening. A workers, among other issues. taking the National Guard troops ignored,” he said. Photo Editor: minimum of 1,500 signatures of Jay Robinson, the Iowa Green out of federal control, and devel- E-mail DI reporter Leah Dorzweiler at: Congress of March 2, 1879. Laura Schmitt...... 335-5852 Iowa voters from at least 10 Party’s 2002 gubernatorial oping sugar beets and switch- [email protected] SUBSCRIPTIONS Web Editor: Call: Pete Recker at 335-5783 Tony Phan...... 335-5829 E-mail: [email protected] Business Manager: METRO Subscription rates: Debra Plath...... 335-5786 Iowa City and Coralville: $20 for one Advertising Manager: Man charged with semester, $40 for two semesters, $10 Cathy Witt...... 335-5794 burglary CLASSICAL GAS for summer session, $50 for full year. Classified Ads Manager: Out of town: $40 for one semester, Cristine Perry...... 335-5784 A St. Louis man was charged June 29 $80 for two semesters, $15 for summer Circulation Manager: with third-degree burglary after he session, $95 all year. Pete Recker...... 335-5783 allegedly broke into a car to steal money Day Production Manager: from its owner’s purse. Send address changes to: The Daily Heidi Owen...... 335-5789 According to police documents, Iowan, 100 Adler Journalism Building, Night Production Manager: Jerome Jackson, 20, allegedly entered a Iowa City, Iowa 52242-2004. Bob Foley...... 335-5789 Coralville woman’s car to take money out of her purse. Jackson was reportedly going door- to-door selling cleaning supplies on the METRO 500 block of Fifth Avenue in Coralville when he approached the woman’s 4 profs to conduct Heineman’s focus is sexual con- house. After opening the door, she sumer culture in post-World War ignored him, the documents state. After research abroad II Western Europe and North he left, she reportedly opened the door Four UI professors will conduct America, while Penny will examine again to find her purse, which had been research abroad this summer after Germans’ interest in American in her car, lying on the porch. receiving funding from the UI Indians during the past two cen- The woman gave a description of the International Programs Summer turies. suspect and the missing amount of Research Fellowship Program. With Paris as her base, urban money to police, the documents state, The faculty members, who were and regional planning Assistant and Jackson was reportedly found sev- each allotted $3,000 for travel and Professor Lucie Laurian is investi- eral blocks away with a similar amount other expenses, were selected gating the location of pollution of cash. He allegedly admitted to going based on their proposals to com- sources in French communities. to the woman’s door. plete international research proj- Law Professor Mark Sidel is The documents did not state how studying the influence of British, much money was taken. ects resulting in publication, exhi- According to a Johnson County jail bition, or performance. Canadian, and Indian governmental official Sunday evening, Jackson was History Associate Professors restrictions on the nonprofit sector being held on $10,000 cash bond for the Elizabeth Heineman and Glenn following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Penny will travel to Germany. — by Laura Shatzer burglary charge and for soliciting with- Katrina Hawthorne/The Daily Iowan out a license to do so. Sitting in their all original 1964 Chevy Impala SS, Pat and Don Pirkl wait for Coralville Mayor Jim Third-degree burglary is a Class D felony, punishable by a maximum of five Fausett to begin the town’s Ninth Annual Classic Car Cruise on Sunday. Approximately 30 classic cars years in prison and a fine not to exceed gathered in the McGregor Furniture parking lot for the drive through town. $7,500. — by Leah Dorzweiler METRO Ex-TA reaches plea agreement, court documents show. 2 named to public- Influenza Response Plan. Atchison will As part of the agreement, Hussain lead public-health emergency planning, agreement will plea guilty to first-degree harass- health posts under the direction of Merchant. A former UI teaching assistant ment, and the charge of tampering UI interim President Gary Fethke Merchant joined the UI faculty in accused of harassing a graduate stu- with a witness will be dropped. In announced the appointments of two UI 1981. In 1980, he co-directed the U.S. dent earlier this year reversed his addition, the state will also drop an leaders to prominent public-health Centers for Disease Control and original plea of not guilty on June 28. earlier first-degree harassment positions on June 30. Prevention’s response to the Mount St. Reza Hussain, 44, was charged charge — an aggravated misde- James Merchant, who has served as Helen eruption; he has also chaired Jan. 24 with first-degree harassment meanor punishable by up to two the dean of the UI College of Public numerous committees concerning and tampering with witnesses or years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Health since 1999, will serve as senior public health. jurors. According to court documents, Hussain is scheduled to be sen- adviser to the president for Iowa Public Atchison has been a professor in the he called the victim’s office and cell- tenced July 21; court records show the UI health-management and policy phone numbers more than 20 times, Health Policy and Programs in addition state will recommend a penalty of 10 department since 1999. Atchison acted threatening to kill the female victim to retaining his current duties as the and making her “pay for all the things days in jail, a $500 fine, and two years college’s dean. as the assistant director for the Illinois you did and put me through.” The vic- on probation. The agreement also calls Fethke also announced the appoint- Department of Public Health from tim’s identity has not been released. for him to undergo psychiatric and ment of Christopher Atchison, an asso- 1987-91 and served as director of the Hussain originally pleaded not substance-abuse evaluations and com- ciate dean for public health practice, to Iowa Department of Public Health from guilty to the charges in March but plete recommended treatment. become the designated public-health 1991-99. later switched his plea as part of an — by Bryce Bauer official for the UI-led Pandemic — by Matt Snyders CORRECTION In the June 30 article “UIHC smoke prevention and control at the Iowa from secondhand smoke.” According Secondhand smoke is responsible ban nears,” a Daily Iowan reporter Department of Public Health, as say- to the Center for Disease Control, for nearly 40,000 deaths, according erroneously paraphrased Bonnie ing “4,400 people nationwide, includ- 440,000 people nationwide die each to the American Cancer Society. The Mapes, the director of tobacco use ing 590 to 690 Iowans, die each year year from smoking cigarettes. DI regrets the error. POLICE BLOTTER Anthony Adams II, 24, Coralville, Maria Fleckenstein, 21, 225 E. charged June 30 with OWI. Kevin Pratt, 27, Jamaica Plain, was charged July 1 with public Washington St. Apt. 203, was Jennifer McCarville, 20, 517 S. Mass., was charged June 30 with intoxication. charged June 30 with OWI. Linn St. Apt. 12, was charged July 1 OWI. Fakhri Alsharairi, 46, Coralville, Cedric Franklin II, 25, 1012 Newton with driving with a suspended/can- Benjamin Reicks, 28, Lander, Iowa, was charged June 29 with violating Road Apt. 8, was charged June 30 celed license. was charged June 29 with public a no-contact domestic-abuse pro- with public intoxication. Matthew McVeigh, 20, Marion, intoxication. tective order. Cornelius Gibbs Jr., 26, 2404 Shady Iowa, was charged July 1 with uri- Andrew Reynolds, 19, Oxford, was Christopher Andries, 18, Cedar Glen Court, was charged June 20 nating in public. charged July 1 with OWI. Rapids, was charged June 30 with with violating a no-contact order. Christopher Meiborg, 22, North Donald Rice, 62, 2401 Highway 6 E. PAULA and presence in a licensed Michael Hanson, 21, 325 E. College Liberty, was charged June 20 with Apt. 2409, was charged June 29 liquor establishment after hours. St. Apt. 1615, was charged Sunday distribution of a controlled sub- with fifth-degree theft. Diego Arango, 26, 642 Hawkeye with keeping a disorderly house. stance to an underage person, pos- Charles Riles, 51, 840 Maggard St. Court, was charged July 1 with OWI. Matthew Hibbs, 20, 19 Woodcrest session of marijuana, and gathering Apt. 2, was charged July 1 with fifth- Christopher Baker, 39, 603 S. Summit Lane N.E., was charged July 1 with pub- where controlled substances were degree theft. St., was charged July 1 with OWI. lic intoxication and disorderly conduct. unlawfully used. Dennis Ryan, 58, 1906 Western Bret Bigley, 36, 143 Clapp St., was McKenzie Hill, 20, Coralville, was Renee Meyer, 19, Hudson, Iowa, Road, was charged June 29 with charged June 28 with violating a no-con- charged June 30 with PAULA. was charged June 30 with PAULA. third-degree harassment. tact domestic abuse protective order. Christina Hines, 18, West Liberty, James Miller, 21, 604 S. Clinton Cory Schmaltz, 19, Cedar Rapids, Aaron Brenner, 30, 225 Linden was charged June 29 with posses- St., was charged Sunday with public was charged June 30 with PAULA. Court, was charged June 30 with sion of marijuana. intoxication. Emily Sieren, 20, Cedar Rapids, interference with official acts. Jeffrey Holtkamp, 23, Fairfax, Iowa, Moniqueca Mondie, 27, 1926 was charged July 1 with PAULA. Jerome Brooks, 35, North Liberty, was charged July 1 with OWI. Broadway Apt. D, was charged June Joshua Simmons, 21, Coralville, was charged July1 with OWI. Elizabeth Ingram, 19, Lawrence, Kan., 30 with keeping a disorderly house. was charged June 30 with public Vanessa Casco, 20, Rock Island, Ill., was charged Sunday with PAULA. Michael Montgomery, 19, North Liberty, intoxication. was charged June 30 with OWI. Bridget Kemps, 20, 427 N. Dubuque was charged June 30 with PAULA. Melvin Steffens, 24, 615 1/2 S. Chad Clark, 40, Oxford, was St., was charged June 30 with PAULA. Gary Moreno, 18, Tampa, Fla., was Dubuque St., was charged June 27 charged June 29 with OWI. Brent Kendall, 27, Coralville, was charged June 30 with disorderly with driving with a revoked license. Jermul Cooper, 32, Toledo, Ohio, charged July 1 with assault causing conduct and public intoxication. Karleen Steichen, 47, Cedar Rapids, was charged July 1 with driving with bodily injury. Kenneth Murphy, 58, 1131 Third was charged July 1 with OWI. a suspended/canceled license. Melanie Koepp, 35, Cedar Rapids, Ave. Apt. 4A, was charged June 23 Gregory Thorne, 20, 434 S. Lawrence Cross, 40, 524 Minstrel Point was charged July 1 with OWI. with first-degree harassment. Johnson St. Apt. 4, was charged Lane, was charged Sunday with OWI. Karissa Kuntz, 20, Cedar Rapids, Dustin Northrup, 23, Cedar Rapids, July 1 with PAULA. Angela Desmidt-Kimber, 31, 1100 was charged July 1 with public was charged July 1 with assault Paul Throgmorton, 24, 508 S. Summit Arthur St. Apt. C2, was charged intoxication. causing injury. St., was charged July 1 with driving June 30 with assault causing injury. Kari Kutcher, 21, 719 E. Market St., Kevin O’Connor, 19, Burlington, with a suspended/canceled license. Ronald Erving, 50, address unknown, was charged June 29 with OWI. was charged Sunday with unlawful Anthony White, 52, address was charged June 28 with assault Benjamin Marquez, 27, 2128 S. use of authentic driver’s license/ID unknown, was charged July 1 with with intent to commit sexual abuse. Riverside Drive Apt. 121, was of another and urinating in public. public intoxication.

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 - 3 NEWS THE FINAL SEASON Crash hits film shoot CRASH Jiles Perry Richardson Jr. the conventional means to CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Known throughout the world control the plane, the crew as “The Day the Music Died,” managed to guide the airliner The jet-setting entertain- thanks to the 1969 Don to a Sioux City runway by ment industry is not unfamil- McLean song “American Pie,” adjusting the thrust of the iar with fatal helicopter acci- the accident put the Mason two remaining engines. dents, from musician Stevie City Municipal Airport on the Despite landing unevenly, Ray Vaughan’s Troy, Wis., map. catching on fire, and flipping crash, in 1990, to actor Victor A little more than a decade across the tarmac, the plane Morrow’s decapitation-by-pro- later, on Aug. 31, 1969, boxer came to a stop with more than pellor on the set of Twilight Rocky Marciano died when half of the passengers and Zone: The Movie, in 1982. his single-engine airplane hit crew alive. Iowa alone has several a tree several miles outside of memorable tragedies in its Newton. The former heavy- The Final Season is based aviation history. weight champion would have on the 1991 success of the The most famous Iowa turned 46 the next day. Norway, Iowa, high-school crash occurred Feb. 3, 1959, More recently, American baseball team. The production when a small charter plane Airlines Flight 232 crashed office could not comment on went down near Clear Lake, sensationally on July 19, the crash Sunday. E-mail DI reporter Dean Treftz at: Ben Roberts/The Daily Iowan killing Buddy Holly, Ritchie 1989. After losing one of the Anthropology student Meghann Mahoney collects bones from both an adult and young sloth while Valens, and the Big Bopper, DC-10’s three jet engines and [email protected] constructing an exhibit for the UI Museum of Natural History in Macbride Hall on June 29. The new Ice Age sloth exhibit opened this past weekend. Sloths in the brain SLOTH Adding more depth to the the team tediously glues them CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 mystery, Brenzel added many back together. To prevent mis- of the sloths’ food sources, takes and ensure that they can including some specially be stored, team members use a To help gauge the prehis- adapted to the herbivores, still specially formulated glue that toric climate, Bryk and other survive today, which rules out can be removed with acetone, researchers, including muse- the possibility of starvation. a.k.a fingernail-polish um curator David Brenzel and “When you are looking at an remover. UI students Dana Callahan avocado, you are looking at an “It is basically a giant puzzle and Elizabeth Hundelt-Colon, Ice Age ghost,” he said, noting with no box, so you just try to are taking isotopic measure- the avocado’s large seed would put the bones together” the ments and pollen samples. have required a sizable animal biogeosciences major said. “I’m convinced there are to disperse it. He also pointed “The gluing is sort of a delicate clues at the end of the Ice Age to the large spikes of the black process. It is easy to mess up.” that can be important for us as locust tree as another example Byrk said he has been gluing we go into the future,” said of the forest-dweller’s relative- Brenzel. “Do we necessarily the bones back together for ly recent presence, pointing about two years; the stumble through the next 500 out such spines are ineffective years of our time if there are researchers last went to the against present-day animals, dig site a couple of weeks ago some lessons we can learn such as squirrels. and are planning another trip from just 10,000 years ago?” Various bones from the two in August or September. He said they have already new sloths — the second most Eventually, they hope to put discovered pollen that shows complete specimens of their more of the bones on display at there were oak, pine, and cedar kind ever found — are dis- the museum — located in trees prior to the sloths’ demise. played side-by-side to demon- Those samples, along with strate the difference between Macbride Hall — in a “crime- other data, show the climate at the two. scene” layout, showing visitors the time was probably similar “The adult sloth was proba- how they were discovered in to present day but slightly cool- bly 10 to 12 feet tall,” Bryk river clay. The new display er. Brenzel said increasing fluc- said, noting it probably joins Rusty the Sloth, a furry tuations in annual tempera- weighed about two to three campus staple so popular it tures could have resulted in the tons. “It was big; you are look- has garnered a 321-member animals’ extinction — similar ing at the size of an elephant.” Facebook group, the Giant to the higher temperatures we So far, the excavators have Sloth Appreciation Society. are seeing now. recovered approximately 90 “I’ve seen thousands of 2- “This very successful animal, adult sloth bones and 30 child year-olds come around that which was around millions of bones from the underwater dig corner and just stop dead,” years, went extinct 10,000 site — but many are in shambles. Brenzel said. “I honestly years ago,” the 13-year muse- “Half of the bones are in like believe there is no child that is um employee said. “And that is 15 pieces,” Bryk said. “So, going to feel the same about pretty major,” noting that the when you are excavating the animals after they see that date corresponds with roughly pelvis, you gotta take out a 3- sloth.” the time humans began foot chunk of clay.” E-mail DI reporter Bryce Bauer at: appearing on the continent. After recovering the bones, [email protected] New oil gets the fat out TRANS FAT at Hamburg Inn No. 2, 214 N. awaits pending contracts with CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Linn St., which switched to the national food producers. oil eight months ago. “It lasted a Archer Daniels Midland, a market. Since the federal gov- week and a half, as opposed to a Midwest agricultural technology ernment mandated that trans- week with the old corn oil.” corporation, uses its unique fat content be listed in January, Tim Fischer, a co-owner of the demand for partially hydro- enzymatic introesterification Pit Smokehouse, 130 N. process to produce NovaLipid. genated oil, which harbors the Dubuque St., appreciates the This lava-lamp-like combination artery-clogging fat, has declined. health benefits after two years From Asoyia’s soybeans to a of using Asoyia. of 80 percent pure oil and 20 patented chemical process from “For as greasy stuff as I sell,” percent hydrogenated fat agriculture conglomerate said Fischer, whose restaurant becomes one solution through Archer Daniels Midland, area is known for its ribs and fried the patented chemical reaction. manufacturers are rising to the Oreos, “I try to make it as Instead of partial hydrogena- forefront of soybean develop- healthy as possible.” tion, the introesterification ment and processing. In anticipation of the labeling process uses complete hydro- Asoyia’s bean is a product of 28 mandate, eastern Iowa farmer genation to produce a non- years of crossbreeding by Walter Jim Sladek joined Fehr’s soy- trans, solid soybean fat. It turns Fehr, a professor of agronomy at bean testing team in 2000. soybeans into a 90 percent Iowa State University. He started Four years later, in 2004, steric acid and 10 percent pal- development nearly three Sladek and 24 other Iowans metic acid oil, a polyunsaturat- decades ago, after UniLever, a founded the Asoyia brand — so ed fat — which is known to European-based company, named because it sold “a soy- lower cholesterol. warned him about the potential bean from Iowa.” With the trans dangers of trans fat and offered fat-free oil from Fehr’s new bean, Within a week of the labeling funding for research to develop a Sladek saw an opportunity to announcement in 2004, Archer non-genetically modified, trans capture more of the food dollar. Daniels Midland began the pro- fat-free soybean, he said. Production began immediately, duction of NovaLipid, said Mark His challenge was to make putting out 3.5 million pounds of Matlock, the vice president of the bean stable enough to oil from 7,000 acres in the first research and development. The negate the need for hydrogena- year, said Rich Lineback, Asoyia’s company “definitely lost sales in tion — a process that increases vice president of sales and partially hydrogenated oil” to the oil’s shelf life but also adds marketing. Within two years, food giants, such as Kraft and harmful trans fats. demand quickly exceeded General Mills, at the time, he Fehr pinpointed linolenic supply, and the company said. But Matlock noted sales acid as the perishable chemical doubled in size, Sladek said. have increased for products low that causes spoilage over time. “As business grew,” Sladek in trans-fats, such as NovaLipid. Normal soybeans, he found, said, “we needed more acres Meanwhile, Asoyia founder have 7-8 percent linolenic acid. than our own.” But the Asoyia bean has just 1 Now, 175 contracted farmers Sladek marveled at the changes percent, making it naturally grow the Asoyia crop on 40,000 in the soybean industry. stable and ideal for packaged acres. Lineback expects expan- “It’s amazing how just chang- foods and fryers. sion to Sioux City, Des Moines, ing the bean can change the oil,” “Asoyia held up longer and and Illinois next year, adding he said. better in the fryers,” said Sam more acreage and three or four E-mail DI reporter Abigail Sawyer at: Maynard, the kitchen manager new production sites as he [email protected]

4 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006

WHAT SPARKS YOUR INTEREST? Help alert us to the issues. Paying Send letters to: OPINIONS [email protected]

MEGHAN SIMS Editor • MARGARET POE Managing Editor • LAURA MICHAELS Opinions Editor JACOB BENDER, TYLER BLEAU, JOSEPH DUNKLE, JAYNE LADY, ANDREW SWIFT Editorial writers the price EDITORIALS reflect the majority opinion of the DI Editorial Board and not the opinion of the Publisher, Student Publications Inc., or the University of Iowa. GUEST OPINIONS, COMMENTARIES, CARTOONS, and COLUMNS reflect the opinions of the authors and are not necessarily those of the Editorial Board. Who here is sick of spending more than $30 every time they fill EDITORIAL up their tanks? Me. You too, probably, unless you get some sort of masochistic satisfac- Flag amendment too close for comfort tion from paying up the you-know- what just to be able to drive your An amendment to ban desecration of the flag failed to pass in the Senate personal property, the flag is a symbol and, as such, holds no fundamen- car around for a few hundred miles. by one vote last week. Shameful. Not because Old Glory is a treasured tal difference from the other symbols we use to communicate — be they My car (a 1997 Oldsmobile national symbol deserving of the utmost reverence and respect, but flags, logos, written words, or spoken language. Choosing a particular Cutlass Supreme) can go around because it is a vivid example of the hysterical blindness to basic civil lib- symbol and reserving it as “special” for whatever specious reasons is and 300 miles on a full tank of gas. It erties that has become the American government’s signature affliction. will always be a restriction of expression. On a less general level, dese- does quite a bit better on the high- The concept of prohibiting desecration of the flag, however, is not new. crating the flag is, quite obviously, a politically charged action, and way and quite a Its roots go back to a law Congress passed in 1968, during the riots and although it might not directly involve the spoken or written word, it still bit worse in the antiwar protests of that year. Perhaps surprisingly, its constitutionality qualifies as a form of “speech.” This is what the Supreme Court decided city, but, over a remained unchallenged, until 1989, when the preceding national and in 1989, and its decision echoes many similar ones throughout the oak- long period of state statutes were struck down by a 5-4 Supreme Court decision that paneled annals of the court’s 218-year-long history; one of the cases came time, it usually saw flag-burning as a legitimate form of free speech. Congress responded from Iowa, Tinker v. Des Moines. averages out to by passing another Flag Protection Act, which was struck down again the Even when you put aside this willingness to torch the fabric of our about that. It following year. At this point, a brilliant plan was concocted to get around nation for the sake of a relatively cheap piece of cloth, it is difficult to has a 15-gallon the bill’s blatant unconstitutionality — change the Constitution. understand what exactly the backers of this bill expected to accomplish. tank, and that Since then, the Flag Desecration Amendment has been a perennial Now that the Vietnam War is over with, how many of us have actually works out to favorite of House Republicans, who have almost unanimously (excepting a been confronted with a flag-burning, save for watching one in Iran, around 20 miles lonely average of 12) voted in favor of the amendment for six-consecutive Palestine, or Iraq on TV? It seems that, more than anything, the amend- per gallon. ERIC Congresses. They have habitually been joined by about half of the House’s ment offers a magical solution to American fear of these people, fear Considering KOCHNEFF Democratic population, although this number has waned in recent years. made all the more acute by 9/11 — but, unfortunately, they are outside the average price Despite the House’s enthusiasm, the bill has only made it onto the the bill’s jurisdiction. If anything, passage of the amendment would prob- of gasoline in the United States right Senate’s docket three times (twice during election years), where its rejec- ably do little more than galvanize an army of nonconformists into doing now ($2.89/gallon for regular, accord- tion has enjoyed a margin of at least four votes, until, of course, last week. what they do best: trampling on anything set down as sacred or invio- ing to the American Automobile This seemingly subtle shift in the political climate — like those in the lable. Would that be the ringing reaffirmation of “freedom” the amend- Association), it costs me approxi- atmosphere — is troubling, to say the least. It signals an increasing will- ment’s supporters had hoped for? mately 14.5 cents for every mile I ingness to play fast and loose with the founding tenets of our nation for No, probably not. And it would come at an unacceptably high price — the drive (not including maintenance perceived increases in security or political gain. Aside from being erosion of the reasons we have for respecting the flag in the first place. costs). The past two weekends, I took the ol’ Cut-Supreme to Minneapolis, Chicago, and back, putting around LETTER 1,100 miles on my car, which works out to a cost of around $160 in gaso- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR may be sent via e-mail to [email protected] (as text, not as attachment). Each letter must be signed and include an address and phone number for verification. Letters line. Depressingly, considering gas should not exceed 300 words. The DI reserves the right to edit for length and clarity. The DI will publish only one letter per author per month. Letters will be chosen for publication by the editors according to was more expensive in the larger space considerations. No advertisements or mass mailings, please. cities, the cost was probably higher. GUEST OPINIONS that exceed 300 words in length must be arranged with the Opinions editor at least three days prior to the desired date of publication. Guest opinions are selected in accordance with word length, subject relevance, and space considerations. Ugh. When I first started driving, oh, nine years ago (wow), gasoline was just a Gratitude for Iowa smidgen over $1 a gallon, chump I’d like to share a few comments change, considering the amount we regarding Andrew Swift’s column, pay to fill up now. But, believe it or not, “Politics of Subsides,” June 29. we are only paying about 5 percent In my opinion, the crucial political more for gas than we were during the angle vis-à-vis agriculture has to do previous period of extremely high gas with local land-use issues. Speaking prices in the United States — the as an outsider, and bringing an out- energy crisis of the late-70s and early sider’s perspective (moved to Iowa ’80s. Adjusted for inflation, the average City from San Francisco two years gas price for the month of March in ago), I would say that if farm subsi- the year 1981 was $2.75, in today’s dol- dies are helping to see to it that lars, just 14 cents less than what we much of Iowa is not going to morph are paying now. into the sort of sprawl-monster That particular energy crisis was that’s eaten so much of our national fueled in part by the aftermath of landscape, then maybe we’d better the Iranian revolution, the taking have the good sense to be grateful of hostages inside the American for these props. Embassy in Tehran, which ended And, yes, I guess this means I’ll barely two months before the price take Jefferson’s dream over that of gas peaked, in 1981. represented by, say, Silicon Valley, The situation we are in today is Calif., a place once referred to as not so simple. That is, we cannot the “Valley of Heart’s Delight” when count on one event that will single- the region was bounding with handedly cause the price of oil to go down. Not that any global situation orchards. (Take it from someone can ever be directly attributed to a who’s stewed many an hour on single cause, but our current energy those hellish arterial roads — don’t crisis has literally hundreds of lev- try to go there now with your pic- els of complexity that further com- nic-basket and your best girl.) plicate the issue. Scott Taylor Speculation has largely fueled Iowa City resident our current state of affairs. Oil traders are concerned about every- COMMENTARY thing from peak oil to the ill effects we are still suffering from the after- math of that whole Hurricane Katrina thing. Congress: Cease role as rubber stamp However, the country of Iran and the goings on inside still have con- The Supreme Court’s rejection of the Bush administration’s plan for terrorist Qaeda suspects to trial. Many military lawyers believe terrorist trials could pro- siderable weight upon the price of trials has rightly been seen as a rebuff of the president’s unilateral legal approach ceed smoothly, using the normal system of courts-martial, which the military oil. The Council on Foreign Relations to fighting Al Qaeda. In a subtler way, it is also a profound rebuke to Congress. uses to try its own personnel. The administration has several concerns, chiefly estimates any kind of major military The nation’s legislature has mostly sat on the sidelines for the duration of the war the need to protect classified intelligence information and its desire to use evi- action against Iran could put oil at on terror, letting the administration make its own rules — and ride roughshod dence collected in the rough and tumble of war that might not be admissible in a more than $100 a barrel and the over the law, as well as fundamental American values. The court’s action forces conventional court-martial. Its own rules offered maximal flexibility at consid- cost of gasoline into the $5 per gal- the administration to invite Congress into the process of designing trials for erable risk to fairness. Congress must satisfy itself both that any deviations are lon range. You see, Iran borders the enemy combatants. This presents a major opportunity to bring the legal frame- truly needed and that they are no broader than absolutely necessary. Straight of Hormuz, probably the work of this conflict — and the country’s political system — back into balance. Legislators also have an important role to play concerning the court’s holding one channel in which all the oil com- This chance is far broader than the relatively narrow question of how accused on Geneva’s Common Article 3, which could have a major effect on treatment ing out of the Persian Gulf area terrorists should face justice. There is an opportunity to provide legislative standards for prisoners. The import of the decision is to make it a potential transits before heading off to mar- authorization — along with limits, safeguards, and accountability — for all of crime under U.S. law to treat prisoners inhumanely, yet the Geneva article is kets around the world. It wouldn’t the powers and practices the U.S. government may need in a long-term con- vague in its language. Given the administration’s ugly history of construing take much more than a few land- frontation with violent Islamist extremism. Congress should audit the adminis- vague language requiring humane treatment as allowing inhumane treatment, mines and one or two destroyed tration’s treatment of prisoners. It should scrutinize its interrogation methods, it cannot be permitted a free hand in that interpretation. including those that skirt prohibitions against torture. It should review the gov- At a minimum, Congress should force the administration to publish the guidance supertankers to send the price of oil ernment’s domestic surveillance and debate the proper balance between ensur- it gives to personnel in the field concerning the article’s meaning. One obvious place to incredible heights. ing Americans’ privacy and gathering intelligence effectively. to start would be to stipulate that the CIA’s network of secret prisons is not consis- Seeing as how many of the factors The immediate danger is Congress will become reckless and hasty and abdicate the tent with Geneva’s requirements: Its detainees must be transferred to U.S. facilities, that play into the cost of oil are responsibility the court has given it. With midterm elections looming, the administra- registered with the International Red Cross, and guaranteed humane treatment. completely out of our control, and tion may push for quick legislative fixes. It may ask for a simple statutory authorization This is a moment in which this country can correct the mistake of five years ago, also considering the incredibly for the military commissions it wants to use for terrorist trials. Having granted the when the executive branch sought to fight a novel war based on a combination of important role oil plays in our administration a blank check for so long, Congress should not offer a rubber stamp. outdated laws and new rules it made up on its own. The Supreme Court has created whole infrastructure, from jet fuel Instead, Congress needs to examine comprehensively what changes, if any, the chance to bring real law to the war on terror — if Congress is willing to do its job. for airliners and diesel for trucks, to the administration truly needs in the ordinary rules of military justice to bring This is an excerpt from an editorial that appeared in the Washington Post on Sunday. the lubrication of a printing press so you can read the newspaper every ON THE SPOT day, finding some kind of method for at least decreasing our dependency Do you think the amendment to outlaw burning or desecrating the flag should have passed last week? on oil (if not eliminating it) should probably be one of the most impor- I don’t agree No, just I’m glad that It’s not a tant issues facing our government. “with people because“ it’s a “it didn’t pass — “benefit for Whether that means corn-based burning it, but it mechanism for I think it’s anybody — ethanol and E-85 gasoline or hydro- does seem like freedom of ridiculous. It’s sometimes gen-driven automobiles and nuclear-powered electric plants, it freedom of speech. part of the free- frustrated people ” should be obvious to anyone that it speech. dom of speech can do anything. ” ” is time for an end to the days in that they’d be which oil plays a constant role in violating.” every aspect of our daily lives. Ryan Hoagland Ed Seaver Kevin Chick Alla Sheikh E-mail Eric Kochneff at: Cedar Rapids resident Scotland, S.D., resident UI graduate Iowa City resident [email protected]

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 - 5 CALENDAR-WORTHY CHARLIE DANIELS BAND AT FOURTH FEST, S.T. Morrison Park, 1512 Fifth St., Coralville, 8 p.m. today, free. ARTS&CULTURE MANLY ALPHABET SOUP being impressed with Manli- ness. The wit is still there, War as folly as art but it’s all been dumbed- down a few grades. Moments of sparkling hilarity do peek through, especially when Maddox utilizes complex flow charts and other inform- ative graphics. Fans of his humble start as author of The Best Page in The Uni- verse will enjoy only meager BOOK REVIEW morsels of what made him by Roxanne Calabris famous (such as his over-the- top cruel criticism of chil- The Alphabet of Manliness dren’s artwork). by George “Maddox” Ouzounian Every word is loaded and offensive. You’ll definitely Purporting to be one of the need to develop a thick skin most-surfed sites on the web quickly (especially if you’re of (although, at press time, merit in Maddox’s world, so be the “fairer sex”) to handle pas- alexa.com ranked it 6,601), forewarned. He has prepared sages such as “… you should The Best Page in The Uni- a smorgasbord of helpful leave [Midol] in a candy dish verse is an ongoing pop-cul- entries, including a surpris- in plain sight at least once per ture project written and main- ingly thorough treatise on month. This will help keep tained by Internet celebrity “Urinal Etiquette.” Another your woman’s irritability in Maddox, also known as chapter works as a sort of check. If you find that your George Ouzounian. field guide for those uninitiat- woman is not consuming the Best known for his biting ed into the clandestine art of Midol, you may consider mix- and often taken-too-seriously public groping. ing crushed tablets into her essays that tear apart every- Oh, and ladies, if you’re food.” This chapter, “Obedi- Beth Skogen/The Daily Iowan thing from popular movies to itching to pick up Manliness, ence,” instructs men on how to UI alumnus Steve Johnson stands in front of UI Associate Professor David Dunlap’s artwork at the Mythos his own idiosyncratic targets, as Maddox puts it in his intro- choose, bring home, and train duction, “I would say that it is a compliant wife. gallery on Sunday. The most recent show on display is a group exhibition, From One Man’s Folly: Maddox has finally experi- mented with a new medium: only for men in the same way Much of the insanely un-PC Meditations of the Aftermath of War, which contains five artists’ work. literature. that lesbian porn sites on the material is sure to inspire But should one expect more Internet are only for men.” plenty of e-hate-mail. The BY JILL BOCKES gallery will also hang poems by of his deliciously sadistic Truly, the comic-book-style more you read, however, the THE DAILY IOWAN EXHIBIT former Writers’ Workshop mem- essays in The Alphabet of illustrations bogart the spot- clearer it becomes that Mad- ber Marco Maisto and pieces Manliness (Citadel Press, light. The “Copping a Feel” dox’s over-the-top statements The plain white, computer- from Liz Haven, who participat- $15.95)? chapter is chock full of capti- and explanations are just that printed flier for the group exhi- What: From One Man’s Folly: ed in creating the theme of the Yes — kind of. While the vatingly comely chicks, care- — ridiculous entertainment. bition From One Man’s Folly: Meditations on the Aftermath of show. Each of her works will be new book keeps in line with fully rendered so as to appear Bottom line? Ouzounian Meditations on the Aftermath of War, an exhibit of new work by named after a piece of literature the voice of the website — almost true-to-life … that is, if doesn’t take his theories seri- War isn’t as colorful as most David Dunlap, Gelsy Verna, David that involves a conflict, such as pure snark and ostentatious real women had 13-inch ously, and you shouldn’t gallery advertisements. Heffner, Liz Haven, and Marco “Soldier’s Home,” whose name is delivery — it’s actually sort of waists and DD cups. But the either; one has to be able to This may be because Steve Maisto taken from a short story by a spoof. Manliness is in dic- drawings complement Mad- enjoy comedy at its lowest and Johnson, the owner of Mythos When: Opening reception: Tuesday, Ernest Hemingway about a tionary format, from “A” for dox’s text so sublimely that it dirtiest to appreciate Manli- gallery, 9 S. Linn St., spent most 5-9 p.m. man tormented by his memo- “Ass-kicking,” to “Z” for “Zom- seems a sin to have only his ness. But you shouldn’t dive in of his academic life studying lit- Where: Mythos, 9 S. Linn St. ries of World War I. bies.” It’s a database for all name on the cover. looking for Maddox’s now- erature. He earned his B.A. in Gallery Hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day But art dealer Johnson isn’t things macho. Yes, this is a hilarious guy. classic Internet cruelty — it English from the UI in 1971 and worried about igniting any Only those with hairy backs With a funny website. And ain’t here. spent the following two years in political outbursts during Inde- veils their meaning. and a penchant for (light- an amusing book. But, seri- E-mail DI reporter Roxanne Calabris at: the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. pendence Day. The subtle peach-pink and hearted) misogyny have any ously, I have a hard time [email protected] The flier contains a quote “I think it’s important to aqua watercolors from Univer- from Hecuba, by Euripedes: examine the nature of patriot- sity of Wisconsin art Professor “From one man’s folly came a ism,” he said. Gelsy Verna’s sketchbook depict universal curse, bringing death The antiques importer said to the land.” bomber-like airplanes. UI art Associate Professor David Dun- he avoided serving in Vietnam The well-versed gallery because he had a high draft-lot- owner, who usually deals in lap’s paintings are filled with tery number, and he would have ethnographic art from China, text and include journal pages India, Africa, and beyond, is — in oaken frames atop the can- fled to Canada before being hosting a show that hovers on vas — depicting swastikas made to participate in the war, current conflicts without falling transformed into geometric “as any patriotic American into a particular ideology. flower designs. should have done.” “Anyone expecting firebrand One of local artist David When asked to predict how politics isn’t gonna get it,” he Heffner’s cyanotypes — an the public will react to the polit- said. antiquated photo process that ical implications of the show, he But perhaps, just like a great creates prints in varying shades laughed and said, “I see massive piece of literature, the deeper of blue — features a skinless indifference.” themes of the exhibition are broasting chicken resting on a E-mail DI reporter Jill Bockes at: buried within a narrative that classical fluted pedestal. The [email protected]

6 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 SPORTS

SPORTS ’N’ STUFF Bowlsby takes a gander back

NATIONAL LEAGUE Tuesday’s Games BOWLSBY time. So, I admire our student- step dismantle his opponents on walking out of Michigan’s sta- L.A. Angels at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. athletes very much, and there the mat. And he was a three- By The Associated Press Baltimore at Chicago White Sox, 3:05 p.m. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10 dium, when we beat them 34-9, All Times CDT Boston at Tampa Bay, 3:15 p.m. are many of them I’ve devel- time national champion and East Division W L Pct GB Detroit at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. and the Michigan football team New York 48 33 .693 — N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m. oped good relationships, and it just a really successful competi- Philadelphia 37 44 .457 11 Toronto at Texas, 7:05 p.m. this, but it will likely be a stu- quit in the third quarter. And 1 Florida 35 43 .449 11 ⁄2 Minnesota at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. would probably be one of tor. He was always more 1 dent-athlete. There have been a you just don’t do that to a tradi- Atlanta 35 47 .427 13 ⁄2 those. But, beyond that, you’re representative of what I always Washington 35 48 .422 14 lot of them over the years, but tion-rich program, but that Central Division W L Pct GB WORLD CUP probably not going to pin me thought Iowa wrestling was. St. Louis 44 36 .550 — By The Associated Press somebody that was always fun Iowa football team did that. Cincinnati 44 38 .537 1 QUARTERFINALS down any further than that. Because he would go out, he was Houston 40 42 .488 5 Friday, June 30 to talk to and always positive 1 Look for the interview’s sec- Milwaukee 40 43 .482 5 ⁄2 At Berlin DI: What about putting the always focused, he would 1 and excited about the opportu- Chicago 30 51 .370 14 ⁄2 Germany 1, Argentina 1, Germany won 4-2 on 1 people aspect aside and talking always do his job, he was always ond half on Wednesday, when Pittsburgh 28 55 .337 17 ⁄2 penalty kicks nity they’ve had and those West Division W L Pct GB At Hamburg, Germany about on the field, on the court, a good student, he did all the Bowlsby reveals what’s San Diego 43 39 .524 — Italy 3, Ukraine 0 kinds of things. I don’t know 1 Colorado 42 39 .519 ⁄2 Saturday, July 1 that I’d care to whatever it may be. Is there things that you should do. But changed the most since he took San Francisco 42 40 .512 1 At Gelsenkirchen, Germany 1 somebody that stands out as the he just systematically just broke Los Angeles 41 40 .506 1 ⁄2 Portugal 0, England 0, Portugal won 3-1 on penalty single one out, but there have over, where he would spend the Arizona 40 42 .488 3 kicks best you’ve seen in your time at his opponents. It was fun to Sunday’s Game At Frankfurt, Germany been dozens over the years who $7.5 million expected to be San Francisco 6, San Diego 2 France 1, Brazil 0 have just been special people Iowa, just performance-wise? watch, because you always Today’s Games SEMIFINALS generated in the Big Ten Cincinnati (Harang 9-5) at Milwaukee (Bush 5-6), Tuesday, July 4 for the way they go about their Bowlsby: You know, I always knew what you could expect. So, 1:05 p.m. At Dortmund, Germany Channel’s first year, and why St. Louis (Reyes 1-2) at Atlanta (Smoltz 4-5), 6:05 task everyday. remember Mark Ironside. It’s he’s certainly representative. Germany vs. Italy, 2 p.m. Iowa sports teams may be in p.m. Wednesday, July 5 And the life of a student- probably not an artful way to I think our 2002 football Florida (Nolasco 6-4) at Washington (Astacio 0-0), At Munich, Germany 6:05 p.m. Portugal vs. France, 2 p.m. athlete is a tough one. There’s describe it, but Mark was a team was a really good football jeopardy. Pittsburgh (Maholm 2-7) at N.Y. Mets (Oliver 3-0), THIRD PLACE 6:10 p.m. Saturday, July 8 a lot of structure there and machine on the wrestling mat. team. Terrific offensive line and E-mail DI Sports Editor Tyson Wirth at: San Francisco (Lowry 3-5) at Colorado (Cook 6-7), At Stuttgart, Germany [email protected] 7:05 p.m. Semifinal losers, 2 p.m. sometimes not a lot of free He would just step by step by great balance. I’ll never forget Chicago Cubs (Marmol 1-2) at Houston (Clemens CHAMPIONSHIP 0-2), 7:05 p.m. Sunday, July 9 Arizona (Cruz 3-3 or Ed.Gonzalez 0-2) at L.A. At Berlin Dodgers (Lowe 6-4), 9:10 p.m. Semifinal winners, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Florida at Washington, 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. WNBA Chicago Cubs at Houston, 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 1:05 p.m. By The Associated Press San Diego at Philadelphia, 2:05 p.m. All Times CDT St. Louis at Atlanta, 6:05 p.m. EASTERN CONFERENCE Pulling hoops double duty San Francisco at Colorado, 7:05 p.m. W L Pct GB Connecticut 12 5 .706 — Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. 1 Detroit 11 5 .688 ⁄2 summer, knows he brings a lot game allows for all bases to be Currently an assistant at 1 PLAYER-COACHES Indiana 12 6 .667 ⁄2 AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 9 8 .529 3 to the table and is capable of covered and for the team to Iowa City West, Leloux does New York 4 11 .267 7 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10 1 East Division W L Pct GB Charlotte 3 13 .188 8 ⁄2 leading the team on the court. adapt to whatever is thrown not see his coaching career end- Boston 50 29 .633 — 1 Chicago 2 14 .125 9 ⁄2 “Our biggest advantage is their way. New York 46 33 .582 4 WESTERN CONFERENCE player-coach in the league. Last ing anytime soon, and he plans Toronto 46 35 .568 5 W L Pct GB having his understanding of “We share our duties, and we to one day run his own team. Baltimore 38 45 .458 14 Los Angeles 13 4 .765 — year, his team was able to win 1 1 Tampa Bay 35 47 .427 16 ⁄2 Houston 12 6 .667 1 ⁄2 the championship, and he basketball; he is very aware of talk in the huddle,” he added. “I really enjoy it and eventu- 1 Central Division W L Pct GB Seattle 10 8 .556 3 ⁄2 Detroit 56 26 .683 — Sacramento 9 8 .529 4 believes playing gives him an all of the players and their “With me out on the floor, I ally would like to get a head 1 1 Chicago 53 28 .654 2 ⁄2 San Antonio 8 8 .500 4 ⁄2 capabilities, and he is very might see some things better or Minnesota 45 35 .563 10 Phoenix 6 9 .400 6 edge as a coach. job, somewhere down the road,” Cleveland 37 43 .463 18 1 Minnesota 5 11 .313 7 ⁄2 “When I am out on the floor, unselfish,” Sanders said. “In things we aren’t doing, and he said. “Small high school to Kansas City 27 53 .338 28 Sunday’s Games West Division W L Pct GB Houston 77, Sacramento 62 it’s one of those things where our case a lot of players look up Kevin can make adjustments start with and see if I can work Oakland 42 39 .519 — Washington 81, Phoenix 78 to Kenyon because he was a and rotate players in and out of Seattle 42 41 .506 1 Today’s Game you can show my way up, but I’m not in a 1 Texas 41 41 .500 1 ⁄2 San Antonio at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. guys what you great basketball player for the the game.” Los Angeles 37 44 .457 5 Tuesday’s Games hurry.” Sunday’s Games No games scheduled mean,” he said. university.” This summer, Marcus Leloux, E-mail DI reporter Tony Gatz at: Boston 4, Florida 3 Wednesday’s Games Atlanta 10, Baltimore 3 Washington at Minnesota, 7 p.m. “If I say, ‘Hey, Sanders blends his coaching a member of the championship [email protected] Washington 6, Tampa Bay 2 Houston at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Philadelphia 11, Toronto 6 you need to do style with Murray to create an team run by Murray and Cleveland 6, Cincinnati 3 more of this or environment that they say Sanders last summer, is assum- Detroit 9, Pittsburgh 8 TRANSACTIONS Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 0 more of that,’ allows for a strong bond and ing the player-coach role for St. Louis 9, Kansas City 7 By The Associated Press Chicago Cubs 15, Chicago White Sox 11 BASEBALL then I can go productivity. In order to be suc- Community Pontiac L.A. Angels 4, L.A. Dodgers 0 American League BOSTON RED SOX—Sent OF Wily Mo Pena to cessful, they must focus on mak- GMC/Hodge Construction. This Colorado 4, Seattle 3, 11 innings out and show Pawtucket of the IL. Arizona 3, Oakland 1 SEATTLE MARINERS—Optioned INF-OF Mike them what I Murray ing their players comfortable. biggest adjustment so far for Houston 9, Texas 5 Morse to Tacoma of the PCL. N.Y. Yankees 16, N.Y. Mets 7 am talking Prime time league “We are both leaders in our Leloux has been worrying about TEXAS RANGERS—Activated RHP John Wasdin Today’s Games from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Nick Masset to N.Y. Yankees (Wang 8-3) at Cleveland (Sowers 0- about. I think, player-coach own way, and we try to do the the needs of his teammates. Oklahoma of the PCL. 1), 6:05 p.m. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed OF Alex Rios on a lot of times, things that are most impor- “You have to constantly Baltimore (Bedard 8-6) at Chicago White Sox the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Chad Mottola from (Garcia 10-4), 6:05 p.m. tant,” he said. “You have to think of the other players,” he Syracuse of the IL. players respond better when Boston (Beckett 10-3) at Tampa Bay (Kazmir 9-5), 6:15 p.m. National League they know that the guy telling make players feel they are said. “Is someone tired? Does ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Called up RHP Jason Toronto (Lilly 8-7) at Texas (Rheinecker 3-2), 7:05 Kinney from Memphis of the PCL. Optioned OF important. If we win, everyone someone else need to come in? p.m. them what to do can go out Timo Perez to Memphis. Minnesota (J.Santana 9-4) at Kansas City (Elarton SAN DIEGO PADRES—Activated RHP Woody there and do it, too. I think it wins; if we lose, everyone loses.” Do we have the right 3-9), 7:10 p.m. Williams from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Mike Detroit (Robertson 8-3) at Oakland (Blanton 7-7), makes a huge difference.” Murray shares this philoso- matchups? You have to worry Thompson to Portland of the PCL. Placed LHP Alan 9:05 p.m. Embree on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Cla L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-0) at Seattle (F.Hernandez Kevin Sanders, who began phy and believes that having a about everyone’s emotions and Meredith from Portland. 8-7), 9:05 p.m. coaching with Murray last two-headed approach to the not just your own.”

WOMEN’S OPEN Sorenstam, Hurst go head-to-head

WOMEN'S OPEN ‘I look forward to another long day tomorrow.’ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10 — Annika Sorenstam

They finished at even-par 284, and after the first 36-hole That it ended in a tie should on the par-3 13th, her stinger 5- Sunday at the U.S. Women’s have come as no surprise — the wood leaked into the muddy Open in 16 years, they headed other two LPGA Tour majors bunker and led to bogey. The home for one more round to also ended in a playoff, with decide who wins the biggest best she could manage were winning the Kraft pars the rest of the way, her prize in women’s golf. Nabisco, then losing to Pak in hopes ending on the 549-yard Michelle Wie had to settle for extra holes three weeks ago at another close call. the LPGA Championship. 16th, when she tried to reach The 16-year-old from Hawaii Experience goes to Sorenstam, the green in two and came up was tied for the lead with six who has 67 victories and nine short in a bunker. holes to play until failing to save majors, compared with five victo- But the kid kept everyone par from a bunker on the 13th ries and one major for Hurst. captivated again, especially on hole, then settling for pars the And while fitness figured to play the ninth hole. rest of the way. She closed with a role in the 36-hole finish on a 72 and tied for third with Se She was headed for a sure Sunday, Hurst showed it’s more double bogey with a tee shot Ri Pak and Stacy Prammana- about making putts. that plunged into knee-high sudh. Sorenstam and Hurst pulled , among five play- away on the back nine to turn weeds and a third shot that ers tied for the lead at one point this into a two-player race. sailed long into a bunker, leav- during the long day at Newport, Pak, who also closed with a ing her a shot straight down the lost her hope of becoming the 69, was one shot off the lead and hill. Wie played sideways to use oldest major champion in poised to win her second- the ridge and made a 6-footer to women’s golf when she three- straight major until she left her escape with bogey. putted for bogey on the par-3 approach on the 15th hole some But it wasn’t enough. 16th. She closed with a 73 and 30 yards short and made bogey. Wie has finished a combined finished sixth. Prammanasudh was an unlike- five shots out of the lead in the Since winning her second- ly contender, not because of her straight U.S. Women’s Open at inexperience but from hitting first three majors this year. Pine Needles in 1996, Soren- only five greens in the final “A shot here and there,” Wie stam has never been this close round. said. “I’m just getting closer and to hoisting the cherished trophy. She made one clutch putt closer. I’ve got to work on a cou- She marched to the cup as an after another, but when faced ple of things, and I’m right 18-foot birdie putt dropped on with a 15-foot birdie putt on the there.” the 15th to tie Hurst for the final hole that could have put lead, and she made a 20-foot pressure on the leaders, she left birdie on the next hole to go up it a foot on the low side. by one. Elise Amendola/Associated Press It was the second straight But on the par-3 17th, Soren- Annika Sorenstam reacts after she birdied the 15th hole during the year Wie was in a three-way tie stam hit a 6-iron that hopped fourth round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf championship Sunday at for the lead at the U.S. Women’s hard and wound up some 30 the Newport (R.I.) Country Club. Open, getting there with a 71 in yards beyond the hole and over short of the hole. She chipped 5 right lip of the cup, she covered the morning third round, after a the green. She chipped 8 feet feet from the pin, then had to her head in disbelief. 10-foot birdie putt dangled on past the cup and missed her par wait to see if Sorenstam would “I look forward to another long the lip. putt, leaving them tied going to deliver another stunning day tomorrow,” Sorenstam said. Unlike a year ago at Cherry the 18th. finish at an LPGA Tour major It will be the first playoff at Hills, when she stumbled to an Hurst caught a huge break this year. the U.S. Women’s Open since 82, Wie stuck around to the very when her tee shot landed just Not yet. 2003 at Pumpkin Ridge, when end. beyond a small creek, and she She ended 21 holes without a The 35-year-old Swede start- unheralded Hilary Lunke won had a decent lie in the thick birdie by making a 15-footer on ed walking to the right in antici- in a three-way playoff against rough. But the best she could the 12th to bring her back to 1 pation of the putt dropping, and and Angela Stan- do was run the ball toward the over for the tournament, tied when it caught a portion of the ford. green, and it came up 40 yards with Hurst and Sorenstam. But

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 - 7 But this was a case where clearly the terrorists or the people who finance them know quite well, because the Treasury Department “and the White House have talked openly about it, that they monitor the ledge international banking transactions. It’s not news to the terrorists. — New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller on “Face the Nation,” This column reflects the opinion of the defending his paper’s reporting that the U.S. was monitoring international” banking transactions. author and not the DI Editorial Board, DAILYBREAK the Publisher, Student Publications Inc., or the University of Iowa. ON DAILYIOWAN.COM Monday, July 3, 2006 horoscopes — by Eugenia Last VIDEO Video Series: DI reporters DI POLL THE take on Hawkeye athletes • Jazz Fest musicians and Log on to answer ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take better care of yourself. Proper diet, regular • Uptown Bill’s RiverRun WEB attendants this week’s poll exercise, and enough rest will make a difference. Take care of the needs of any • Fireworks pyrotechni- preview question: pets that you own. You can make a professional change that will lead to better cians put on a show • Hip-hop recording Fanny packs have been work relationships. • Transfat commentary • DI coverage on the April rumored the new fashion TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Get an early start today. You have no time to waste from Dr. Brian Olshansky, 13 tornadoes craze. What would you stuff if you want to keep things running smoothly. Organization and knowledge will Look for this in yours? button director of cardio-electro • Visiting artist Andrea be what’s required. Preparation will make the difference so don’t try to bluff your ANDREW R. JUHL throughout physiology and professor of Loest way through. the DI medicine at the UIHC • DITV — Interim UI Pres- • Airplane-size bottle of GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You will be the center of attention and the one who for more web your favorite beverage • Sloth bones found in Iowa ident Gary Fethke holds everything together today. You will catch the eye of someone who can help Lest we forget the coverage • Fudge • Diversity march you out. Love is in a high cycle, so put time aside for someone special. Home- • Cafe del Sol artisan coffee • A sapling Fourth of other roasting • DITV — President Bush’s • Pregnant photos of Brit- improvement projects will go according to plan. months: • Soldier’s homecoming visit ney Spears from her recent CANCER (June 21-July 22): Focus on work and earning a living. As soon as you • Kirk Ferentz’s comments Harper’s Bazaar spread try to take care of personal issues, you are likely to meet with opposition. Make the Look for this on his new boss, Gary Barta PHOTO • Binoculars changes necessary to rid yourself of negative people or circumstances. • Jan. 4, 1896: Utah, gate- button • The Iowa City Amateur • Fireworks show from • Former UI President LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Deal with any little annoyances from relatives, neighbors, way to Nevada, is admitted throughout as the 45th state. Radio Club ham-radio con- River Junction-based fire- David Skorton or friends. Once everyone knows where you stand, you will be free and clear to pro- the DI ceed. Don’t take on or spend more than you can handle. • Feb. 4, 1861: Six Southern for more DITV test works aficionados VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Organize your work schedule. Set up interviews, or look delegates create the coverage • DI reporter Matt Becker Last week’s results: What’s your favorite racy into changing your professional position. Leave ample time to attend fitness classes Confederate States of travels to Macksburg, Iowa, MP3s America, prompting local street name? even if you don’t feel up to it. for the National Skillet • The Tanks President-elect Lincoln to LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Get ready for a good time. Plan to do something spe- say “So?” He would later Throwing competition • P.O.S. Dingleberry Road (43%) cial, or visit your travel agent, and check out what’s available. Love is in a high rescind that remark. • Local band The Tanks • Jason Forrest B’Jaysville Lane (33%) cycle. A chance to do something nice for someone will be appreciated and the favor • March 4, 1837: Chicago is rehearsal • Local Bands Stoner Court (13%) returned. granted a charter, giving • Neko Case Vixen Lane (9%) • Kyrgyzstan visitors SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be very careful; someone may be trying to pull one Americans access to two Broken Woods Drive (2%) • Bahraini clerics • Owen over on you. Don’t divulge information that may be used against you. Cover your major-league teams that • Farmers’ Market back, and present your own ideas, or someone will take credit for what you have win the World Series at a done. combined rate of once every SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’ll feel a little confined if you don’t get out 47 years. and travel about today. You need to experience something new or different in order • April 4, 1818: A Flag Act is To submit events e-mail [email protected], to satisfy your needs. A financial deal is looking quite favorable. passed, mandating that the please put date of event in the subject and follow CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Observe what’s going on around you rather than American flag always has seven red stripes. Why not today’s events the format in the paper. trying to change things. Someone will have an emotional issue with you that must celebrate by having seven be resolved before you can move forward. Choose your battles wisely today. Red Stripes of your own? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make a move or a change to your residence. You • May 4, 1855: William will feel so much better in new surroundings. It’s time to get rid of some of the Walker departs San • Monday Matinee: Disney’s Lady • Monday Movie Memories, The things you’ve been hanging on to — negative possessions and people. Francisco with 57 men (and and the Tramp, 10 a.m., Cedar Sting, 6:30 p.m., Cedar Rapids Public PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A financial partnership can take a positive turn, but make a massive steel pair) to con- Rapids Public Library, 500 First St. Library sure everything is fair and in writing before you proceed. The more time spent check- quer Nicaragua. S.E. • Deathships, The Diplomats of ing out unfamiliar territory, the better equipped you will be to make changes. • June 4, 1812: Following • Toddler Story Time with Solid Sound, Great Lakes, Boo Louisiana’s admittance as a Nancy, 10:30 a.m., Iowa City Public Hiss, 7 p.m., Gabe’s, 330 E. Washington state, the Louisiana Library, 123 S. Linn • Hiawatha Public Library Story Territory has to be renamed • Glenn Lonsdale and Carlis Fau- Time, 7 p.m., Hiawatha Public Library, the Missouri Territory, an rot, noon, Cedar Rapids Public Library 150 W. Willman St. early demonstration of the • AARP Ice Cream Social, 2 p.m., • Story Time with Sara, 7 p.m., PATV Public Access Television cable channel 18 slow American learning Senior Center, 28 S. Linn Coralville Public Library, 1401 Fifth St. curve. • Cedar Rapids Kernels v. • Belly Dance for Fun and Fit- 7 a.m. Democracy Now 6:30 SCTV Calendar • Aug. 4, 1794: Hot as balls. Burlington, 2 p.m., Veterans Memori- ness, 7:30 p.m., Ambroz Arts/Cedar 11 Democracy Now 7 Education Exchange • Sept. 4, 1886: After almost al Stadium, Rockford Road S.W., Cedar Rapids Recreation Department, 2000 Noon Wocidj June 21 7:30 Live & Local 30 years of fighting, Rapids Mount Vernon Road S.E. 12:40 p.m. An Interview with 8 PATV Reserved Geronimo surrenders at • Farmers’ Market, 5 p.m., S.T. • Texas Hold ‘em Poker, 7:30 p.m., Chris 8:30 Nancy Cree Keyboard High- Skeleton Canyon. Quitter. Morrison Park, 1512 Fifth St., Iowa City Yacht Club, 13 S. Linn 1 Meher Baba, The Awakener lights • Oct. 4, 1957: CBS debuts a sitcom that gives genera- Coralville • Charlie Daniels Band, 8 p.m., 2 An Introspective of the African- 9 30 Minutes tions of young men recur- • Fourth of July Celebration, 5 Fourth Fest, S.T. Morrison Park American People 9:30 Bread of Life rent giggles over the name p.m., City Park • Belly Dance for the Serious 3 No Dogs or Philosophers Allowed 10 Intermedia Works: Fall 1999 4 Seed of Faith 11 Crosstalk: Million Man March “Beaver Cleaver.” • Euforquestra, 6 p.m., Fourth Dancer, 8:30 p.m., Ambroz Arts/Cedar • Nov. 4, 1899: Sigmund Fest, S.T. Morrison Park, Rapids Recreation Department 5 U.N. Report Midnight Intermedia Works Live 5:30 Islam: Dispelling the Myths March 31 Freud’s The Interpenetration of Dreams is published. Whoops! Freudian slip. • Dec. 4, 1872: The Mary Celeste is found crewless UITV schedule Campus channel 4, cable channel 17 and adrift, which really isn’t very funny, considering 10 3 p.m. “Live from Prairie Lights,” Richard Jackson & Robin Metz people died. GET IN THE DI Richard Jackson & Robin Metz 8 The Search for Water on Mars, — Andrew R. Juhl was born on • Like to eat? We’re looking for people obsessed with a particular restaurant If you think you’re one of those peo- 4 The Search for Water on Mars, Don Gurnett a Saturday in the park. He thinks it who have a favorite place to eat on that serves you up right two or more ple, please e-mail daily-iowan.edu or call Don Gurnett 9:35 Life, the Universe, and SETI was the Fourth of July. E-mail him or near campus. We’re looking for those times a week. the news desk at: (319)335.6063 5:35 Life, the Universe, and SETI in a Nutshell, Jill Tarter at: in a Nutshell, Jill Tarter 11 “Live from Prairie Lights,” [email protected] E-mail first and last names, ages, and dates of birth to 7 “Live from Prairie Lights,” Richard Jackson & Robin Metz happy birthday to… [email protected] at least two days in advance. Andrew Juhl has Hulk-Hogan-style July 3 — Chris Sorrell, 20 For complete TV listings and program guides, check out leg-dropped The Ledge. Hulkamania’s Arts and Entertainment at www.dailyiowan.com. running wild now, brother!

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WANTED PARKING space for rent at AVAILABLE August 2006- 804 N.Dubuque. 2007. Large bedroom in five Call (319)621-6750. bedroom apartment. W/D, C/A, two blocks from Sheraton, 522 S.Dubuque. Contact Kathy for AUTO DOMESTIC details, (847)354-0972. BUYING USED CARS HOUSEMATES wanted for We will tow. August. $300/ month. Near cam- (319)688-2747 pus/ downtown. (319)338-2365. HELP WANTED The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 3, 2006 - 9 TWO BEDROOM TWO BEDROOM THREE / FOUR DUPLEX HOUSE HOUSE TWO bedroom- 612 S.Dodge, close to downtown. H/W paid/ laundry/ no pets. $610. RCPM BEDROOM FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT THREE bedroom apartment. TWO bedroom. Quiet and spa- 2008 13th St. Coralville. Four CLOSE-IN houses for fall 2006. (319)887-2187. New paint, vinyl, and appliances. cious, newly remodeled. No bedroom, three bathroom, two uofihouserentals.com TWO bedroom, $540, In Iowa On busline. 961 Miller Ave. pets. $675 plus utilities. 1116 car garage, fireplace, balcony. LARGE 2-story, three bedroom. City. 10 minute walk from Law/ Available immediately. $745/ E.Jefferson St. (319)330-2744. (319)338-4774. 1708 E.College (near City High). UIHC. Gorgeous! DETAILS: month, H/W paid. (319)337-2685 4 BEDROOM house, two bath- Two car garage, gas fireplace, (347)512-7850. or (319)430-2093. rooms. Close-in, busline, free hardwood floors, C/A, W/D, dish- TWO bedroom. Iowa City. Off THREE bedroom townhouses CONDO parking, C/A, dishwasher, W/D, washer. Available 8/1/06. $1200/ Scott Blvd. and Court St. Dish- with vaulted ceiling, two car ga- leasing for fall. (319)631-3853. month plus utilities. washer, microwave, C/A, shared rage, fireplace, deck, C/A, micro- (319)354-7262. FOR RENT 4 bedroom, 2 kitchens, 2 bath- laundry. $520/ month. UI Staff wave, W/D hook-ups, 2 years THREE bedroom. Coralville. www.buxhouses.com rooms. Downtown. 5 S.Johnson. Discount. (319)354-1555. old. $966/ month. Coralville, on Available now. 1868 sq.ft. Dish- $1500. (319)354-2734. LARGE four bedroom, 1710 busline. (319)354-1555. washer, C/A, W/D hook-ups. E.College by City High. Two car Two bathroom, two stall garage. 408 S.Dubuque. THREE bedroom, two bath, garage, two gas fireplaces, C/A, (319)351-8404. 5 to 6 bedrooms, three bath- three finished levels, allows four W/D, D/W. Available 8/1/06. rooms. Parking. (319)338-4774. people. Free off-street parking, AD#2600. One bedroom on $1500/ month plus utilities. garage, A/C, dishwasher, W/D, westside, C/A, W/D facilities, 5 BEDROOM house, two bath- (319)354-7262. disposal. Close-in, free busline. cats okay, deck, parking. Call rooms. Close-in, busline, free www.buxhouses.com Leasing for fall. (563)570-0764. M-F, 9-5. (319)351-2178. parking, C/A, dishwasher, W/D, LOOKING for price? Location? leasing for fall. (319)631-3853. THREE bedroom. Close to UIHC AVAILABLE August 1. Two Quality? Very spacious 4-5 bed- and busline. New carpet and bedroom townhouse with ga- 535 S.Johnson. Four bedroom, room, energy efficient, appli- EFFICIENCY / EFFICIENCY / TWO BEDROOM TWO BEDROOM ances, no pets. Make a reason- FOREST RIDGE ESTATES on updates. Lots of space. rage, C/A, dishwasher. Near two car garage. Fireplace, W/D able offer. (319)621-6213. Benton St.- Two bedrooms, two Off-street parking. Available UIHC, Law school. $776/ month. hook-ups. Large yard. ONE BEDROOM ONE BEDROOM bathrooms, dishwasher, central August 1. $925/ month. Call Lori No pets. janjapats.com (319)338-4774. AVAILABLE now and August 1. EFFICIENCY and one bedroom. MEDICAL/ dental students, this air, on-site laundry, two free (319)400-1086 or (319)338-7058. Starting at $375/ month. Down- Close-in, pet negotiable. 6 bedrooms, three kitchens, four bedroom, two bath home parking spots. $595. SouthGate, (319)378-9622. . town and Westside locations. (319)338-7047. three bathrooms. Wood floors. across from dental college. (319)339-9320 jandjapts.com (319)338-7058. THREE bedroom. Available now AVAILABLE now and August 1. $1900. 529 Iowa Ave. Available now. Mod Pod Inc., www.s-gate.com ONE bedroom. Walk to campus. and August 1. $891/ month. Three bedroom townhouse with (319)354-2734. (319)351-0102. AVAILABLE now. One bed- August 1. Parking. $510/ month, garage, C/A, dishwasher. Near LARGE two bedroom apartment. Close to UIHC and law school. NEWLY remodeled, close to room, 332 S.Linn, $800/ month, water paid. No pets. UIHC, Law School. $891/ month. 918 N. Governor. Wet bar in Clean, quiet building. 9th St. Garage. C/A, dishwasher, patio, campus. Four bedrooms, two full rent negotiable. No pets. (319)936-2753. No pets. jandjapts.com basement. Three bedrooms, two Coralville. Available now, June no pets. (319)338-7058. baths, fully equipped, $1500. (319)338-7058. (319)338-7058. bathrooms. Parking. VERY large one bedroom. and August. $585. TOWNHOUSE. 419 S.Governor. (319)338-4774. Available August 1. AVAILABLE now. One bed- Close-in. C/A, parking. Security (319)351-7415. Three bedrooms. W/D hook-ups. AWESOME, new two bedroom. (319)621-6528, (319)354-6880. Fireplace, deck, W/D, garage in- A4 bedroom, three bathroom. room- $485; efficiency- $460. entrance. W/D. $625/ includes LARGE two bedroom. Available 1-1/2 bathroom. C/A. NEWLY up-dated through out. cluded. No pets. $690-755. on S.Lucas. Exceptionally spa- Close to UIHC and law school. off-street parking spot. Days immediately. Pets allowed. On (319)338-4774. Four bedroom house. Walking (319)338-2918. cious. (319)330-2696. H/W paid. 736 Michael St. (319)351-1346, after 7:30p.m busline. $525/ month. distance to downtown and cam- WALDEN RIDGE www.apartmentsbystevens.com (319)325-7616 and weekends (319)354-2221. (319)331-5777, (319)621-5154. pus. $1400/ month. August 1 TOWNHOUSES AD#32. Two bedroom on Olive BRAND NEW!! Two bedroom Court. Near UIHC. W/D lease. (319)431-9414. BEST one bedroom in Iowa City, VERY nice large refurbished one PARK PLACE & PARKSIDE Two, three, and four bedrooms condos available now. 2-story, hook-ups. Spacious, garage, no fireplace, woods, river, canoe, bedroom at 215 Iowa Ave. Rent MANOR in Coralville has two available, two bathrooms. W/D, NICE HOUSE two bathroom, dishwasher, W/D, garage. Call M-F, 9-5. $695+. Also, private room in is $650 which includes heat and bedroom sublets available im- dishwasher, two parking spots, Three bedroom. Muscatine Ave. fireplace, garage. Large deck. (319)351-2178. River home, $475. water. Available as early at July mediately with fall option. $565- basic cable. Cats and small dog Wood floors. Off-street parking. (319)321-2296. Please call (319)351-8404. 15, or later. Quiet nonsmokers $650 includes water. Laundry accepted with additional fee. AD#731. Three bedroom on Bur- Laundry. C/A. Fireplace. Bus- without pets please call CLEAN, quiet, one bedroom. on-site, 24-hour maintenance THREE / FOUR $750-$800. SouthGate EXECUTIVE suite two bedroom, lington St. Spacious, two bath- lines. Cat deposit. $1100/ month (319)631-1236 for more informa- H/W paid. Laundry. No smok- and off-street parking. Close to (319)339-9320. s-gate.com. two bathroom, quiet, up-scale, rooms, garage, W/D hook-ups, plus utilities. (319)338-3071. tion. Library and Rec Center. Call near Hancher. (319)338-0354. no pets. 10-month option. Call ing/ pets. Coralville. BEDROOM SIX bedroom house. Close to (319)354-0281. M-F, 9-5. (319)351-2178. (319)337-9376. DUPLEX IOWA CITY, luxury two bedroom campus. Off-street parking. Ga- CLOSE-IN, one bedroom. Avail- TWO BEDROOM PRICE REDUCED!!! condo, all appliances included, AVAILABLE August 1. Three rage, yard. Available July 1. able August 1. H/W paid. No Two bedrooms, one or two bath- A/C, deck, W/D, garage. Minutes bedroom, 1-1/2 bathroom, 2 car $1500/ month plus deposit. pets. Free parking. rooms in Coralville. On busline. FOR RENT from campus. Minutes from cam- garage, fenced yard, pet? Four (319)321-2239, (319)648-2679. Laundry facilities. Heat included. 2122 Davis Street, Iowa City. pus. $750/ month. occupants maximum. $1475/ 210 E.Davenport. $440/ month. THREE bedroom near campus. 2 large bedrooms, close-in, free No smoking, no pets. Private Two bedroom, one bathroom, (615)294-4880. month. (319)248-0554. (319)338-4306. Fenced yard, laundry, parking. parking, busline, A/C, dish- parking. Available August 1. garage, large bacyard, nearby LARGE three bedroom town- Non-smoking. $1110/ month. DOWNTOWN LOFT washer, W/D, new furnace. (319)351-8901, (319)351-9100. park. $650/ month. BRICK HOUSE house, two baths, skylight, August 1. (319)339-1223. APARTMENTS. (319)338-4774. Leasing for Fall. (319)341-9385. (319)339-4277. Three bedroom, three bath- SCOTSDALE apartments in off-street parking, W/D, C/A, room. Wood floors. Laundry, fire- BEAUTIFUL, Spacious, THREE bedroom, $966/ month, FIRST MONTH RENT FREE AD#4. Two bedroom apartments Coralville has two bedroom sub- yard, internet. No smoking, no place. C/A. Near park and on 2200 sq.ft. New four bedroom, Bowery St., parking included, HEAT AND WATER PAID available. Seven blocks from lets available immediately. $590 pets. $1225 plus utilities. After buslines. Off-street parking. 2-1/2 bathrooms. Fully equipped. A/C. No pets. (319)338-7058. Lantern Park Apartments campus, H/W paid. Rent as low and $620. Includes water. 1-1/2 6:30p.m. (319)354-2221. Near downtown. Pet deposit. On One bedroom apartments in bathrooms, on busline. 24-hour Fireplace. Back deck. Muscatine Ave. Available now. as $630/ month. Call for viewing, LUXURY three bedroom condo, THREE bedroom, two bath, Coralville near Coral Ridge Mall, maintenance. Call 2415 Catskill Court I.C. Available $1200/ month plus utilities. (319)338-6288. Available now. Near UIHC three finished levels, allows four Lantern Park Plaza, and Coral- (319)351-1777. August 1. $1295. (319)338-3071. KEYSTONEPROPERTY.NET $895. (319)331-8995. people. Free off-street parking, ville Recreation Center. On-site ALL utilities included; cats wel- (319)621-6528, (319)354-6880. garage, A/C, dishwasher, W/D, TWO bedroom. 900 sq.ft. Dish- CHARMING CARRIAGE laundry and extra storage unit. AD#4. Two bedroom apartment come; large windows, hardwood ONE bedroom condominium for disposal. Close-in, free busline. washer, shared laundry, C/A, mi- BEAUTIFUL three bedroom, two HOUSE APARTMENT $460. available. Seven blocks from floors; $1335; (319)621-8317. rent. A/C, laundry. One mile from Leasing for fall. (563)570-0764. crowave, next to park. Newer bathroom. Skylights, W/D, two One bedroom, garage. Some units allow cats for an ad- campus, H/W paid. Rent as low UIHC. No pets. $500 plus de- Building. Coralville, on busline. blocks from Co-op. $1050. No pets, smoking. No deposit. ditional fee. as $630/ month, call for viewing. CLOSE to everything, utilities posit. (563)263-5374. THREE bedroom, two bathroom, UI Staff Discount. $610/ month. (319)321-9597. Quiet downtown neighborhood. SouthGate, (319)339-9320, (319)338-6288. paid. Pets welcome. Three bed- W/D, $875. (319)354-2734. (319)354-1555. Prefer couple. s-gate.com room, $1400. 4 bedroom, GREAT location. Two bedroom. SPACIOUS Westside condo for sublease. Two bedroom, flexible $850, utilities paid. THREE bedroom. Pets. Large AD#82-21. Nice one bedroom TWO bedroom apartment, close $1600. 308 Church Street. W/D included, off-street parking. FORMER B&B. One bedroom start though July 2007. $795/ (319)688-9722 fenced in yard. W/D. $750. apartment in house close to to campus, August 1, 860 sq.ft., (319)350-8688. Close-in, pets negotiable. Avail- with office. Huge second story month includes one bathroom, (319)354-2734. campus with hardwood floors. four closets, dishwasher, park- able August 1. Lease length ne- apartment. Close-in, no pets. FREE heat, water, DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIEDS C/A, dishwasher, microwave, CLOSE-IN, newer, very spa- Two locations available! Call for ing. No pets. $740, H/W paid. gotiable. Call (319)321-6133. TWO bedroom. Iowa City. Quiet $675. (319)331-2242. parking, trash. 335-5784; 335-5785 fireplace, W/D, deck, garage, en- cious, energy efficient. 4-5 bed- details, (319)936-2753. neighborhood. Large yard. $750. [email protected] e-mail: HICKORY Hill Park area. Two try-door system, off-street park- room, parking, bus, fireplace, 2 bdrm, secured KEYSTONEPROPERTY.NET W/D, C/A, microwave, appli- Cats negotiable. (720)493-8795. TWO bedroom apartment, two daily-iowan- bedroom, two bath, three levels, ing. NO SECURITY DEPOSIT. FURNISHED quiet, modern, and building, under- (319)338-6288. ances. No pets. Reasonable car garage, W/D, C/A. $750. [email protected] balcony, deck, wood fireplace, (319)325-4667. UPSCALE newer 4+ bedroom, clean. Coralville. Energy effi- priced. Renting 8/1/06. ground parking, ALL utilities included; hardwood (319)936-4647 sauna, fenced yard, garage, 3 bathroom, 2500 sq.ft., fire- cient, on-site laundry, off-street DOWNTOWN four bedrooms. TWO bedroom by Coral Ridge laundry on-site. floors, large windows; cats wel- A/C, appliances, W/D hookups. (319)683-2324. place, 2 car, pets negotiable, parking, pool. Convenient to TWO bedroom apartments. Tri-County Real Estate, Mall and Golf Course. Fireplace, come; (319)621-8317. Pets negotiable. Call Aeries CLOSE-IN three bedroom $1395 or Rent to Own option. law/ UIHC/ Hy-Vee. Available D/W, decks, close to Close to graduate school. H/W (319)331-1382. W/D, deck, garage, security. Property Management house. No pets. Free parking. 1601 Wetherby Dr. August 1.(319)363-0000, UIHC & law school. paid. (319)358-7139 $690. (319)728-2419. ANDOVER SQUARE on Hay- FOUR bedroom, close-in, (319)338-4774. Available August 1. 208 E.Dav- (319)321-0203. (319)364-6076, evenings and www.jandmhomeweb.com $600/mo. wood Dr. Available now. 1-2 off-street parking included. $920 TWO BEDROOMS. enport (yellow house behind 210 http://ak-models.com/1601.htm weekends. bedrooms. $525- $600. Garage LARGE one bedroom. Quiet, no TWO bedroom on Finkbine- plus utilities. No pets. 648-2679 804 BENTON DRIVE. E.Davenport) $1000/ month. 338-4774 included. No pets. Ivette Rent- smoking, no pets. W/D, yard. ALWAYS ONLINE $565/ month, or Aber $550/ or 321-2239. $625/ month, water included. (319)338-4306. als, (319)337-7392. $495 plus utilities. After 7pm, www.dailyiowan.com month. H/W paid. Call Parking, busline, A/C, W/D MOBILE HOME FOUR bedroom- 805 Bowery, (319)354-2221. FOR RENT. Two bedroom (319)631-2461. hook-ups and laundry on-site. HISTORIC building near campus • • • • • • • • • • • • AVAILABLE August 1. Two close to downtown. Hardwood house at 1014 Friendly Ave. ONE bedroom, quiet and clean, (319)337-8544. and downtown has attractive bedrooms downtown. Starting at TWO bedroom, one block from floors/ air/ washer/ dryer/ pets $700. (319)338-0261. FOR SALE off-street parking, busline, large CHEAPER than rent!! 16x80, large one bedroom with dining Two $596/ month. H/W paid. No pets. UIHC/ dental school. $590/ negotiable. $1400. RCPM yard. $450 plus utilities. three bedroom, two bathroom, area and efficiency apartment janjapts.com (319)338-7058. month. Tenant pays utilities. (319)887-2187. FOUR bedroom house for rent bedroom (319)330-4341. HOUSE only $19,000/ obo. Must sell. with breakfast nook. Available Off-street parking included. No with sun porch. 656 S.Lucas. AVAILABLE immediately. Two FOUR bedroom. S.Clinton St. (712)683-5545. (319)354-7661. August 1. $650- $560, H/W paid. luxury units pets. Available now. QUIET one bedroom, east Iowa bedroom, near Finkbine Golf Available August 1. Great loca- Please call (319)339-1820, cell (319)321-2239. City, garage, $480 includes wa- FOR RENT DOZENS OF MOBILE Close to UIHC, Hwy Course, on bus route, heat /wa- tion. C/A, dishwasher, deck no FOUR bedroom house for rent. (319)331-9932. No pets please. ter. August 1. No smoking. W/D. HOMES FOR SALE ter paid! Call (319)631-2478. TWO bedroom S.Johnson. Dish- pets. $1350/ month. W/D, C/A. Available August 1. 218 & Kinnick. One block to bus. Cat negotia- LARGE efficiency. S.Dodge. washer, microwave, porch, (319)338-7058. (319)631-5152. ble. (319)321-1383. All price ranges Quiet, no smoking, no pets. Apply on-line. BEAUTIFUL, newer, large, free parking, $775. H/W paid. No LANTERN PARK FOUR bedroom house, 15 min- thru-out the area. A/C. Parking, yard. $495. After parking, bus. (319)338-2918. www.mikevandyke.com smoking or pets. Available TOWNHOUSES SPACIOUS three bedroom, two utes to campus, next to busline, 6p.m.. (319)354-2221. apartmentsbystevens.com August. After 6:30pm. No applications fee. Great Coralville location. Three bathroom. Fully equipped. Back $1150. Free parking, W/D, pets Visit our Website (319)354-2221. deck. $1045. 1220 3rd Ave. I.C. ONE bedroom apartments. Pets CLOSE to UIHC, dental, and law bedroom, 1-1/2 bathroom, W/D, negotiable, large backyard, for a complete listing Fall or immediate Available August 1. okay. (319)338-4774. school. Two bedroom sublets at TWO bedroom, Coralville, avail- C/A. $795. AVAILABLE NOW S.Lucas. (319)621-1104, newly that includes the availability. (319)621-6528, (319)354-6880 Seville Apts. $655, includes heat able now. 970 sq.ft. $595/ or August 1. SouthGate, remodeled. August 1st. features and photos ONE bedroom. 401 S.Dodge. Call 248-0534 and A/C. Laundry and parking month, water paid. Balcony, C/A, (319)339-9320 of each home $648/ month includes H/W and THREE and four bedroom du- FOUR bedroom- 805 Bowery, available. Call (319)338-1175. free parking, laundry on-site, on s-gate.com cable. Available July 30, 2006. or 631-2659 plex. Available now. Close-in, close to downtown. Hardwood busline. (319)339-7925. www.kisslisting.com • • • • • • • • • • • • LARGE four bedroom apart- pets negotiable. floors/ air/ washer/ dryer/ pets (565)505-9608. DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIEDS K.I.S.S. LISTING SERVICES ment. Three blocks from cam- (319)338-7047. negotiable. $1400. RCPM 335-5784; 335-5785 TWO bedroom downtown above (319)645-1512 pus. 308 Davenport St. W/D, (319)887-2187. e-mail: Joe’s Place. Available August 1. TWO bedroom duplex. Coral- hardwood floors, 1-1/2 bath- daily-iowan- 1-1/2 bathrooms, water and gas ville. $650 and utilities. FOUR large bedrooms, off-street NEW factory built home. room. No pets. August 1. APARTMENT [email protected] paid. A/C, deck. $850. (319)331-5550. 3 and 4 bedroom house. parking, large yard, no pets. 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom. $1350/ month. Call (319)351-4452. S.Johnson, E.Burlington. Hard- Available August 1. $1200/ Put on your basement .$39,980. FALL LEASING (319)530-7489. ZERO-LOT. Very nice three wood floors, porch, parking, C/A, Horkheimer Homes FOR RENT TWO bedroom, one bath unit, month. (319)351-9126. Two bedroom, close to UIHC, bedroom, two bathrooms. C/A, W/D, microwave, dishwasher. Mon.- Sat. 8a.m.-8p.m. $565 plus utilities, free parking, LARGE three bedroom apart- A/C, laundry, parking, busline. W/D, garage, deck, busline. No smoking or pets. Available GREAT three bedroom house. Sunday 10a.m.-6p.m. central A/C and laundry on-site. ment. Three blocks from cam- No pets. $950 plus utilities. August. $1295- $1775. After Garage, fenced yard. Available 1-800-632-5985 Located by the law school. Call pus, 308 Davenport St. $950/ -808 Oakcrest St., H/W paid (319)330-4341. 6:30p.m. call (319)354-2221. 7/31/06. (319)331-8995. Hazleton, Iowa. (319)354-2233 for showings. month. No pets. August 1. Call -415 Woodside, H/W paid (319)530-7489. $625-650. Call (319)430-9232. TWO bedroom, three blocks from downtown, behind LARGE three bedroom apart- FIRST MONTH RENT FREE Lou Henri Restaurant. C/A. ment for Fall. Close-in on REAL ESTATE HEAT AND WATER PAID $525- $650 plus utilities. Three S.Johnson St. $930- $950. Aber Avenue Apartments bedroom summer sublease also (319)351-7415. PROPERTIES Two bedroom apartments near available. (319)330-2503. UIHC. On-site laundry and on LARGE three bedroom apart- the city busline. $550. TWO bedroom, two bath, near ment. Four closets, one pantry. Some units allow cats and small campus, yard, parking, deck, 411 3rd Ave., Coralville. Utility dogs for an additional fee. C/A, D/W. No pets. room with W/D hook-ups. On SouthGate, (319)339-9320, (319)338-3935. busline, large shade tree. Pets s-gate.com considered. Available August 1. TWO bedroom, two bathroom, $675 plus utilities. FORMER B&B. Two bedroom in two balconies. Close to down- (319)331-8986. huge second story apartment. town, overlooking swimming Close-in, no pets. $675. pool. Free garage parking. Laun- MOVE-IN immediately to this [email protected] dry, elevator, all appliances. three bedroom, two bathroom (319)331-2242. Central A/C and heating. Call apartment with fall option. $775 ASI (319)621-6750. includes water, off-street park- ing, 24-hour maintenance, KEOKUK STREET TWO bedroom, walk to campus, 15-minute walk to hospital. Call APARTMENTS August 1, parking. No pets. (319)337-4323. Large two bedroom two bath $670, H/W paid. (319)936-2753. units with dishwasher, micro- ONE month free rent. Four bed- wave, central air, on-site laun- TWO bedroom- 521 Kirkwood, room, 1-1/2 bathroom. On-site dry, on city busline. $640- $670. walk to downtown. Two baths/ laundry and parking. One block SouthGate, (319)339-9320, water paid/ laundry/ no pets. from campus, near downtown. s-gate.com $680. RCPM (319)887-2187. (563)299-8069. THREE and four bedroom apart- Classifieds ments. Available August. Newly APARTMENT remodeled. -Four bedroom, one block from FOR RENT Classifieds Currier. -Three bedroom, one block from Post Office. Parking available. 335-5784 (319)331-6559. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE PROPERTIES PROPERTIES

SCOREBOARD DI SPORTS DESK WNBA THE DI SPORTS DEPARTMENT WELCOMES Houston 77, Sacramento 62 QUESTIONS, COMMENTS, & SUGGESTIONS. Washington 81, Phoenix 78 PHONE: (319) 335-5848 SPORTS FAX: (319) 335-6184 MONDAY, JULY 3, 2006 ANDRE AGASSI: LOST LAST WIMBLEDON, 8 WWW.DAILYIOWAN.COM Bowlsby looks back at Hawk career Today marks the beginning of Bob Bowlsby’s final week as the Iowa athletics director, a position Neifi Perez and Michael Barrett he’s held for a decade and a half. He sat down with The Daily Iowan for an exclusive half-hour MLB discussion on everything from the Pierre Pierce saga — which he called his tenure’s most difficult Cubs 15, White Sox 11 period — to why he didn’t retain Iowa’s winningest basketball coach ever and the most dominating CHICAGO (AP) — Michael Barrett and Carlos Zambrano homered off student-athlete he’s seen in 15 years in Iowa City. This is Part One of that interview. Mark Buehrle during a seven-run first SEE VIDEO OF BOWLSBY’S INTERVIEW, wouldn’t have given it to him. But inning, and the Chicago Cubs hung ALONG WITH AN EXTENDED we’ve given second chances to a lot of on to beat the Chicago White Sox on PART-ONE TRANSCRIPT, AT student-athletes over the years, and, by Sunday afternoon and avoid a three- DAILYIOWAN.COM. LOOK FOR and large, the ones who have had seri- game sweep. PART TWO ON WEDNESDAY. ous problems have made good use of Buehrle (9-5) allowed a career- the second opportunity.And I think 18- high 11 runs and 13 hits over five BY TYSON WIRTH to 22-year-olds make mistakes. So, I innings, as the White Sox lost for hope I don’t come away from it tainted just the third time in 16 games. THE DAILY IOWAN to the point where I don’t trust people Barrett hit a solo homer, and DI: A lot of kids growing up want to and give people second chances. But Zambrano added a two-run shot in be rock stars — or sports stars; what that was a difficult process, because it the first inning, as the Cubs took a was the moment where you said, “Hey, was so high-profile, and the duration of 7-2 lead. Neifi Perez hit a three-run I want to be an athletics director?” it was so long. drive off Buehrle in the fifth that Bowlsby: Well, I’m still a young DI: Another tough part of your job is made it 11-5, and Angel Pagan obviously the firing and the hiring. homered off Cliff Politte leading off man, so I don’t know that I actually had that moment. It’s just sort of You’ve overseen the changes from the seventh, to make it 12-7. three legends, in Tom Davis, Hayden Pagan, who turned 25 on evolved over time. I began my career here working in facilities, and in that Fry, and Dan Gable. Which of those Sunday, added a two-run shot in the was the hardest to fill? eighth, to make it 15-10. role, I spent a lot of time with the Iowa coaches. So, I sort of evolved into the Bowlsby: I think the Dan Gable Barrett had a career high four position was probably the hardest for athletics administration end of it, and hits, and Perez tied a career high the new coach to come into. we’ve just been kind of putting one foot with four RBIs, as the Cubs earned DI: How come? in front of the other since then. their second victory in 10 games. Bowlsby: Just because he’s such a DI: It’s a little bit different for you — Although he delivered at the legend and such an icon, and Tom when athletes have a good game, plate, Zambrano struggled through Davis was the winningest coach in the six-plus innings. they’re praised by everybody. And history at Iowa, and Hayden Fry was, He allowed seven runs and seven when they have a bad game, that’s as well. But I think Dan Gable is the hits, including a three-run homer by written about, too. But it’s not like best at what he does in the entire Juan Uribe and a pinch-hit shot by anybody ever says, “Great press con- world. So, anybody was going to have Jim Thome leading off the seventh. ference, Bob.” trouble coming in, in the aftermath of Zambrano left with an 11-6 lead and Bowlsby: Well, maybe you’ll say his highly successful tenure. So, I runners on first and third. that at the end of this interview think in terms of the difficulty for an (laughs). incoming coach, that one was probably DI: But when you’re talked about in the hardest. the public eye, it’s by nature, with I think Tom Davis, from a personnel MLB some exceptions, of course, criticism. standpoint, was probably the most dif- Do you ever get used to that? ficult one, because, unlike the other Twins 8, Brewers 0 Bowlsby: That just kind of goes two, I eventually got to the place MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The with the territory. I don’t think you can where I lost confidence in the ability of Minnesota Twins are winning so be in this business if that sort of thing Coach Davis and his staff to move our much these days that even ultra- bothers you, over the long term. I program forward in ways that would talkative center fielder Torii Hunter think everybody’s the same. People say make us more successful. Once I got to is speechless. you get thick-skinned. Well, maybe you that point, I knew it was time to make He grew more incredulous by the do. But those things, they occasionally a change. So, from that standpoint, it second as the list was read to him bother you, depending on who’s saying was difficult. We were never going to — 10 wins in a row, 18 of 19, 20 of it and what is said. But that’s just be terrible, but I didn’t feel we were 22. something that goes with the territory, Laura Schmitt/The Daily Iowan ever going to get any better, either. “What! I don’t …” Hunter stam- and you just live with that. The adage Hawkeye Athletics Director Bob Bowlsby talks about his career at Iowa and his DI: This is going to be a tough one mered. “I didn’t even think about is, “If things are going well, the coaches future as athletics director at Stanford in Carver-Hawkeye Arena on June 28. for you, probably. If you had to pick one that. We’re playing great ball.” are doing it all by themselves, and if favorite person you’ve worked with at Francisco Liriano struck out a thing’s are going bad, it’s the athletics other occasions, they’re unrealistically others? Iowa, in 15 years, anybody come to career-high 12 in eight innings, and director’s fault.” And, in a lot of ways, it negative. And I find myself sort of try- Bowlsby: Well, there’s no template mind first? Justin Morneau homered in the kind of plays itself out that way. ing to operate above the fray a for dealing with those kinds of situa- Bowlsby: Gee, that’s a hard question. Minnesota Twins’ 8-0 victory over DI: Is there a specific time or situa- little bit and stay a little more down tions. You know, you wish there was a There are so many great people. That the Milwaukee Brewers on Sunday. tion that’s most commonly misunder- the middle of the road, on those types manual you could go to and say, “OK, more than anything else will be my Liriano (9-1) allowed just three stood by people when they think they of things. you’re going to do these things, these memory of Iowa, all the terrific people hits and won his fifth-straight start could be taking control or doing things DI: Out of all the things you’ve seen five things in this order.” And it just I’ve had an opportunity to work with. for the streaking Twins, who have [better]? — you’ve been here 15 years and seen isn’t that way, so you kind of get it DI: I can’t let you off the hook. Is won 13 in a row at the Metrodome Bowlsby: No. I think probably per- a lot pass through — you recently said dumped in your lap, and you have to there one person who stands out? to improve to a major league-best sonality evaluations. People always, the Pierre Pierce process was, from work on dealing with it. Bowlsby: Well, you know, it will 30-10 at home. at times they may be unrealistically beginning to end, the most difficult I think, in retrospect, had we known probably surprise you to hear me say The Twins’ surge has coincided positive about what a given coach thing to deal with. Is there something he was going to make bad use of his with the 22-year-old Liriano’s inser- may be doing or not doing, and, on that made that more frustrating than second opportunity, we certainly SEE BOWLSBY, PAGE 6 tion into the starting rotation, back on May 19. He faced the Brewers at Miller Park in his debut, and he’s only gotten better since, giving up A couple of Prime one run and two hits in five innings to win that one. Time coaches double Sorenstam, Hurst head as players on their WRESTLERS teams, which can for Open playoff improve 5 ex-Hokie wrestlers communication sue school BY DOUG FERGUSON IOWA CITY (AP) — Five former ASSOCIATED PRESS between them members of the Virginia Tech NEWPORT, R.I. — Annika wrestling team filed a lawsuit June Sorenstam had to wait 10 years to and the players 30 against their recapture the U.S. Women’s Open former school. They are and thought it was in her hands seeking to transfer when a 30-foot birdie putt broke to Iowa to join gently toward the cup and started Primed for ex-Hokie coach to dip into the hole. Tom Brands, who But it rippled over the edge, became the sending her into an 18-hole playoff Hawkeyes coach today against Pat Hurst. double duty in April. Moments after Sorenstam’s Virginia Tech Brands birdie putt narrowly missed, Hurst BY TONY GATZ denied their Hawkeye wrestling made a superb par save from short THE DAILY IOWAN immediate coach of the 18th green, holing a 5-foot You won’t see Phil Jackson or Pat release from their putt that ended a marathon Sun- scholarships. The school says it will Riley suit up for NBA teams anytime day at Newport Country Club with soon, but in the Prime Time League, not grant releases until after the everything but a winner. 2007 season. player-coaches are not uncommon. Sorenstam recovered from an The five will lose a year of Former Hawkeye Kenyon Murray eligibility and not be able to receive ugly collapse on the front nine with pulls double-duty in the league by athletics scholarships at Iowa for a three birdies and wound up with an leading as coach and running the court year unless Virginia Tech grants even-par 71. Hurst, who leads the as a member of the Dan Wiese Market- them releases. tournament with 16 birdies, had a ing Research/Highland Park team. The wrestlers say that before they 2-under 69 to match the best score Murray, who played for Iowa from signed with Virginia Tech, Athletics of the tournament. Elise Amendola/Associated Press 1993-96, enters his third year as Director Jim Weaver told them they Pat Hurst hits out of the rough on the 11th hole during the fourth round of the U.S. could transfer without penalty if SEE WOMEN'S OPEN, PAGE 6 Women’s Open golf championship on Sunday at the Newport (R.I.) Country Club. SEE PLAYER-COACHES, PAGE 6