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BY KELLY STRODA

kstroda@kansan.com
Somewhere thousands of miles
from Lawrence, a child walks
through his village but every-
thing is blurry. Its possible that
he has never clearly seen the faces
of his parents, siblings or friends.
A pair of prescription eyewear
could change that.
Tyler Reynolds, a 2010 gradu-
ate of the University, recently
founded OJOS: Eyes Toward
Progress, a movement that hopes
to provide eyewear to those in
need in developing nations.
Vision is everything,
Reynolds said.
When you give someone
vision, he said, youre giving that
person a new life, too.
According to the World Health
Organization, about 314 mil-
lion people around the world are
visually impaired. Eighty-seven
percent of these people live in
developing countries.
Reynolds said he has always
been interested in optometry and
helping people overseas.
He said he had heard of TOMs
Shoes creator Blake Mycoskie,
who donates a pair of shoes to
a child in need for every pair of
shoes he sells. Then he had the
idea to do something similar with
eyewear.
In January, Reynolds heard
Mycoskie speak at the Lied
Center as part of the Student
Lecture Series.
I thought to myself, This is
fate, Reynolds said.
After that, he said he went
home and started laying out the
blueprints for OJOS.
Now, Reynolds, Tim Shockey,
who is a fellow 2010 graduate,
and Liam Kirby, a senior from
Lawrence, are working together
on the movement.
OJOS is teamed up with a non-
profit group, New Eyes for the
Needy, which is based in New
Jersey. It gathers glasses collected
by other organizations. Eyewear
that is donated to OJOS is sent to
New Jersey and then New Eyes
for the Needy distributes the eye-
wear overseas.
New Eyes for the Needy also
helps ensure people overseas get
the correct prescription.
It does no good if its not the
right prescription, Shockey said.
Reynolds said if somebody
wears the wrong prescription, the
persons eyes could potentially be
further damaged.
By next summer, the trio
hopes to set up a business that
will sell a line of non-prescription
sunglasses, which will be avail-
able at Sharks Surf Shop. A large
percentage of the proceeds will
go toward producing prescription
eyewear to send to developing
countries.
BY JUSTINE PATTON
jpatton@kansan.com
Body aches, a chest-burning
cough, fever, chills and fatigue.
Sound like fun? Sarah Hutchings,
a senior from Topeka, can attest
from personal experience that it is
not. In August of 2009, Hutchings
fell victim to the H1N1 virus and
suffered those symptoms for seven
full days.
It was awful, Hutchings said.
As this years flu season kicks off,
students can easily prevent them-
selves from suffering Hutchings
fate. By getting a flu shot at one
of KUs on-campus flu clinics, the
quick prick of a needle can greatly
reduce students chances of ward-
ing off the nasty virus for five to
six months.
Patty Quinlan, the nursing
supervisor at Watkins Memorial
Health Center, said KU clinics only
charge $15 for a flu shot and also
offer a nasal spray for $20.
Quinlan said students should get
a flu shot, because if they dont, they
may miss major class time. Most
students dont sweat missing a class
every now and then, but Quinlan
said odds are that students with the
flu will miss more than just a few
lectures.
Getting influenza is not a
choice. It wipes you out for days
on end anywhere from three to
seven days, Quinlan said. If you
THURSDAY, OcTObeR 21, 2010 www.kAnSAn.cOm vOlUme 123 iSSUe 44
D
AILY
K
ANSAN
T
HE
U
NIVERSITY
The student voice since 1904
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
2010 The University Daily Kansan
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3B
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Cryptoquips . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1B
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TODAYS WEATHER
weather.com
Sunny
73 48
PM Showers
77 55
FRIDAY
Scattered T-Storms
75 50
SATURDAY
INDEX
HIGH
LOW
Today
Strong Hall
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 26
Burge Union
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 27
School of Pharmacy
Noon to 2 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 28
The Underground
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 2
Nichols Hall
Noon to 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 3
Strong Hall
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 4
Anschutz Library
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
The Underground
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 10
Kansas Union
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Where TO dONaTe prescripTiON glasses
Peoples Optical, 737 Massachusetts St.
Peoples Optical, 2600 Iowa St.
Kevin Leahan & Associates, 935 Iowa St., Suite 3
Donations can also be sent by mail:
OJOS: Eyes Toward Progress
P.O. Box 1657
Lawrence, KS 66044
Dalton Gomez/KANSAN
Ann Ailor, an alumna with a degree in nursing, gives Dereck Holmes, a sophomore fromLaw-
rence, the fu shot Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union. The fu clinics ofer fu shot injections
for $15 and nasal mist for $20.
Flu cliNics
Dont let this seasons
fu get the best of you
healTh
SEE flu ON pAGE 3A
Ben pirotte/KANSAN
Dayona Nett, a junior fromKingman, and Autumn Smith, a freshman fromKansas City, Kan., create a 3D design using cans for the Homecoming event Canstructionin front of Wescoe Hall onWednesday. The cans fromCanstructionand other
donated supplies will be used for another event, Stuf the Bus,which will later donate the supplies to local charity organizations, such as ECKAN food pantry in Lawrence.
canstructing america
Howard Ting/KANSAN
Fromleft, TimShockey, Tyler Reynolds and LiamKirby are working with OJOS to give people
in need prescription eyewear. So far, 100 pairs of glasses have been donated.
SEE VISION ON pAGE 3A
a visiONary prOjecT
JAYpLAY | INSIDE
International students face
varying challenges in adapting
to college life at the University.
Students
adjust to
new culture
FOOTBALL | 1B
Coach Turner Gill said after
practice on Wednesday that
one of his goals for Saturdays
Homecoming game is to limit
the number of penalties.
Penalties
hurting
ofensive
potential
Alumni donate glasses
to needy children abroad
cAmpuS | 8A
Hypnotist
enthralls
crowd of
students
Frank Winters was named
Best Male Artist of 2010 by
Campus Activities Magazine,
and he packed the house at
Woodruf Auditorium.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
The Arctic expresses the sum of all
wisdom: silence.
Walter Bauer
FACT OF THE DAY
The Antarctic is a continent entirely
surrounded by oceans; the Arctic is
an ocean almost entirely surrounded
by continents.
qi.com
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Featured
content
kansan.com
KUJH news updates
Check in at noon, 1, 2, 3 and 4 p.m. for live
Kansan news briefs at Kansan.com/videos.
nDesktop Conferencing with Adobe Connect
Prowill take place from 9:30 a.m. to noon in the
Budig PC Lab. The event is hosted by the Depart-
ment of Instructional Services.
Whats going on?
THUrsDAY
October 21
sATUrDAY
October 23
sUnDAY
October 24
nThe Department of Visual Art will present an
exhibition titled Dynamism of Forms and Pathways of
Desire from 1 to 4:30 p.m. in the Art and Design Buil-
ing Gallery 302.
MOnDAY
October 25
nThe School of Music presents the Visiting Artist
Series: Kansas City Trombone Quartet at 7 p.m. in
Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
nThe Student Involvement and Leadership Center
will host a homecoming pancake breakfast on the
Staufer-Flint lawn. Tickets cost $5.
nNeed a Halloween outft? University Theatre will host
a costume sale in Murphy Hall from 9 a.m. to noon.
nThe Department of Psychology will present a social
psychology colloquium from 4 to 5 p.m. in Fraser Hall
547.
nFilm and media study students can learn How to
Apply to Graduate School from 2:30 to 3:45 p.m. in
Oldfather Studios 100.
FriDAY
October 22
http://www.facebook.com/doleinstitute
TUEsDAY
October 26
nFlu immunizations are available to students and
faculty from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Burge Union.
ET CETErA
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of
Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies
of The Kansan are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan
business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr.,
Lawrence, Kan., 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the
school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams and
weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions
by mail are $250 plus tax. Student subscriptions are paid through the student
activity fee. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 2051A Dole
Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Dr., Lawrence, Kan., 66045
COnTACT Us
Tell us your news. Contact Alex
Garrison, Erin Brown, David Cawthon,
Nick Gerik, Samantha Foster, Emily
McCoy or Roshni Oommen at (785)
864-4810 or editor@kansan.com.
Follow The Kansan on Twitter at
TheKansan_News.
Kansan newsroom
2000 Dole Human Development
Center
1000 Sunnyside Ave.
Lawrence, Kan., 66045
(785) 864-4810
KJHK is the student voice in radio.
Each day there is news, music,
sports, talk shows and other con-
tent made for students, by students.
Whether its rock n roll or reggae,
sports or special events, KJHK 90.7
is for you.
MEDiA PArTnErs
Check out Kansan.com or KUJH-TV
on Sunflower Broadband Channel 31
in Lawrence for more on what youve
read in todays Kansan and other
news. Updates from the newsroom
air at noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m.
The student-produced news airs live
at 4 p.m. and again at 5 p.m., 6 p.m.,
every Monday through Friday. Also
see KUJHs website at tv.ku.edu.
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WiTH THE KAnsAn
Get the latest news and give us
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2A / nEWs / THURSDAy, OCTOBER 21, 2010 / THE UniVErsiTY DAiLY KAnsAn / KANSAN.COM
Please recycle
this newspaper
WEDnEsDAY
October 27
nThe Ofce of the University Registrar will be collect-
ing messages in support of veterans on campus all day
on Wescoe Beach. The messages will then be displayed
at the Veterans Day ceremony.
ODD nEWs
Man asks cop for ride,
arrested for cocaine
REDWOOD CITy, Calif. Au-
thorities say a 19-year-old North-
ern California man was arrested
after he asked a police ofcer for
a ride, agreed to be searched and
was found to have cocaine in his
pocket.
Ongley Raymond Ocon III was
charged with felony possession
of cocaine.
San Mateo County prosecu-
tors say Ocon left a party Sunday
morning, walked up to a Red-
wood City police patrol car and
asked for a ride home to Danville.
The ofcer asked Ocon
whether he was carrying
anything illegal.
Chief Deputy District Attor-
ney Steve Wagstafe says Ocon
initially responded yesbefore
pausing and saying no.
Wagstafe tells the Contra
Costa Times Ocon then agreed
to be searched, and the ofcer
discovered the cocaine.
Associated Press
Volleyball photo gallery
Go to Kansan.com/photos to see pictures from
Wednesdays volleyball match against Texas.
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
KJHK, 90.7
n Gordy Hofman reads Black Friday Script
nRomanian Film Series Starts Thursday
nBig Bad Voo Doo Daddy Swings through
the LIED Center
nMovie Review: Animal Kingdom
Undergraduate Courses:
wMiddle East Studies
wFine Arts Studies
wManagement & Economics
wLife Sciences
Graduate Programs:
wMasters in Middle Eastern History
wMasters in Conict Resolution
and Mediation
wTESOL Teaching English to
Speakers of Other Languages
Study in the most
exciting, vibrant
city on
Earth.
Tel Aviv
University
St udy Abroad
Program
www.telavivuniv.org
www.testprep.ku.edu 785-864-5823
GRE

LSAT

GMAT

TEST PREPARATION

100097
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / THURSDAY, OCTObeR 21, 2010 / NEWS / 3A
think about it, if five is the norm,
who can afford to miss five days
worth of class?
Some students get flu shots for
reasons other than their concern
for their GPAs, however.
Derick Holmes, a sophomore
from Lawrence, plans to spend his
winter break sailing on a cruise
ship in the Caribbean with his
family. Although he has never got-
ten the flu, Holmes said protecting
himself during the holiday season
was well worth the stop to the
clinic.
Fifteen bucks is worth not get-
ting sick, Holmes said.
Quinlan said the influenza
virus is spread as easily as people
breathe. So she strongly recom-
mended that all KU students get
the flu shot. Not only will it keep
students from suffering, but it
could also help keep the virus off
campus, Quinlan said.
For more information, students
can visit http://www.studenthealth.
ku.edu/flu/flu_seasonal.shtml.
Edited by Kelsey Nill
Reynolds, Shockey and Kirby
havent yet had the chance to go
overseas to witness their hard work
and donations, but they hope to
soon.
I look forward to the day when
we can collect the eyewear and then
deliver it personally, Reynolds said.
More than 100 pairs of glasses
have been collected and sent over-
seas so far. OJOS has three drop-off
boxes around Lawrence where peo-
ple can donate prescription glasses
that they no longer wear.
Lacey Breech, a senior from
Cassoday, donated two pairs of
glasses to OJOS about a month ago.
She said they were glasses she had
when she was younger that had
been lying around.
I never really knew what to do
with them or had a good reason to
give them away until now, she said.
Editedby DavidCawthon
flu (continued from 1A)
goVERNmENT
feds could take action
if California legalizes pot
AssociAted Press
SAN FRANCISCO Federal
officials havent ruled out taking
legal action if California voters
approve a ballot initiative that
would legalize recreational mari-
juana use in the state, President
Barack Obamas drug czar said
Wednesday.
In a phone interview with
The Associated Press, Director
of National Drug Control Policy
Gil Kerlikowske said Justice
Department officials are looking
at all their options for responding
to the measure, which would con-
flict with federal laws classifying
marijuana as an illegal drug.
Among them, he said, is follow-
ing the recommendation nine of the
nations former Drug Enforcement
Agency chiefs made last month
in a letter to Attorney General
Eric Holder: having Obama sue
to overturn Proposition 19 as an
affront to federal authority.
The letter from the former
DEA administrators, a number
of whom are not only practicing
attorneys but former state attor-
ney generals, made it very clear
that they felt that pre-emption was
certainly applicable in this case,
Kerlikowske said.
Holder told the former DEA
heads last week that that the U.S.
government plans to vigorously
enforce federal laws outlawing
marijuana possession and distri-
bution even if the activities are
allowed under state law. But the
attorney general did not respond
directly to their suggestion that the
administration should go to court
if California passes the first-of-its-
kind measure aimed at treating
marijuana the same as alcohol.
The attorney general made
it clear the federal government
will continue to enforce the mari-
juana laws under the Controlled
Substances Act. Its a duty and
responsibility of government. Its
not something where they can say
which laws they want to enforce
and which they dont, Kerlikowske
said. That being said, the
Department of Justice is looking at
and in discussions about whatever
options might be available.
Proposition 19, a state consti-
tutional amendment on the Nov.
2 ballot, would allow adults at
least 21 years old to possess up to
1 ounce of marijuana and grow
25-square-foot pot gardens for
personal pleasure. It would also
authorize county and city govern-
ments to regulate and tax commer-
cial cultivation and sales.
Kerlikowske was in Southern
California on Wednesday for a
visit to a Pasadena drug treat-
ment center where he planned
to discuss new government data
on marijuana abuse in California
with Dr. Drew Pinsky, host off
the VH1 show Celebrity Rehab
with Dr. Drew. The data show
that California already has a much
higher percentage of children in
treatment for marijuana use than
the rest of the
country.
In California,
47 percent of
those undergo-
ing drug treat-
ment for mari-
juana in 2008,
either volun-
tarily or after
encounters with
the criminal
justice system,
were under 18, compared with
28 percent for the country as a
whole. Kerlikowske said liberal
attitudes toward marijuana in the
state, which has the nations most
liberal medical marijuana law, are
a factor.
People dont want to see some-
one jump in from Washington and
tell them how to vote, he said.
But I think its also important
the people of California get the
facts, and the way this proposition
is being sold doesnt hold up to
scrutiny.
Kerlikowske, the former police
chief of Seattle, criticized claims
by Proposition 19s supporters that
the law would free up time and
money law enforcement agencies
now spend pursuing marijuana
offenses.
Law enforcement agencies
are not spending an inordinate
amount of time chasing adults
around for small amounts of mari-
juana, he said. Here in California,
the jail resources, law enforcement
resources, court resources are not
being overburdened with adults
going through the system for per-
sonal pot possession.
Critics of federal marijuana
policy said the government would
have a hard time persuading a
court to strike down Proposition
19 in its entirety.
If the federal government goes
into court to stop Proposition
19 based on pre-emption under
the Supremacy Clause, the fed-
eral government will lose, said
Allen Hopper, former director
of the ACLU Drug Law Reform
Project. The
federal govern-
ment cannot
force California
to leave state
marijuana laws
on the books, or
force California
to use state law
e n f o r c e me nt
personnel and
resources to help
enforce federal
marijuana prohibition. This is a
fundamental tenet of our federal-
ist system of government.
They also disputed Kerlikowskes
contention that marijuana arrests
are unusual in California, point-
ing to state Department of Justice
figures showing that more than
61,000 people were arrested on
misdemeanor pot possession
charges last year.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
recently signed a law reducing
possession of 1 ounce or less of
marijuana from a misdemeanor to
an infraction punishable by a $100
fine that doesnt require a court
appearance.
Drug czar says Justice Department is exploring options
Proposition 19 would
allow California adults
at least 21 years old to
possess up to 1 ounce of
marijuana for personal
pleasure.
VISION (continued from 1A)
enroll@ku.edu
785-864-5823
online.ku.edu/udk
110383
ENROLL TODAY!
KU Online Courses
with KU Independent Study
s3TARTANYTIME
s3ELFPACEDFORmEXIBILITY
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correspondence, keeping you on
track to graduate in four years.

4ALKTO9OUR!DVISOR
-
KANSANGUI DE. COM/ TOPOFTHEHI LL
VOTE ON
pi ck your

LOCAL
FAVORITES
for the 2010
Top of the Hi l l
*
*
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
An older individual, possibly a
grandparent, makes you aware
of circumstances from the past
that answer a lot of questions.
This gives new perspective.
TAurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 5
Wherever you fnd yourself
today, accept a service role.
Others depend on your logical
recommendations. You serve
yourself this way, too.
GeMini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 6
Unless plans arise to spend time
with someone special, stick
close to home and get to bed
early. Still, a magical night is
worth yawns the next day.
CAnCer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 9
This is no time to keep secrets.
Share information as well as
logic. Then others understand
your motives and will support
what youre up to.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6
One-sided thinking creates
extra stress for you and your
favorite people. Review the facts
to discover a previously unex-
plored option. Try it out.
VirGo (Aug. 23-sept. 22)
Today is a 7
Balance your checkbook before
spending any money. This is
no time to be frivolous. Your
energys better spent consider-
ing your next step.
LibrA (sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is a 7
Your favorite person wants to
take an entirely new direction.
Youd prefer sticking to the
familiar path. Either way, a map
is helpful.
sCorpio (oct. 23-nov. 21)
Today is a 7
Apply your best efort to get
more work accomplished now.
An older person has a defnite
idea of whats needed. Its up to
you to make it happen.
sAGiTTArius (nov. 22-Dec.
21)
Today is a 6
From your perspective, an older
group member causes extra
trouble. If you need results now,
discuss it in person for best
resolution.
CApriCorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8
Repairs create a drain on your
bank account. Resist the desire
to redesign things and just fx
whats necessary. Youll be glad
you did.
AquArius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6
Spend part of the day on a cre-
ative writing project. Do some
Internet research to gather
information to fesh out a plot
or character.
pisCes (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6
An older person makes you
aware of your own creative po-
tential. Consider their sugges-
tions in private. Adjust the idea
to ft your personality.
4A / enTerTAinMenT / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010 / THe uniVersiTY DAiLY KAnsAn / kAnSAn.COm
10 is the easiest day, 0 the most
challenging.
HorosCopes
All puzzles King Features
CooL THinG
Todd Pickrell and Scott A. Winer
Blaise Marcoux
LiTTLe sCoTTie
MonKeYziLLA
Kevin Cook
MoVies
MoVies
Actor Norton to
take on new role
McLatchy-tribune
CHICAGO In town two
weeks ago with director John
Curran for the opening of the
Chicago International Film
Festival, Edward Norton took
some time on a warm, summery
day to check out Millennium
Park, photograph Cloud Gate
(the Bean) with his cell phone,
soak up the skyline and talk
about Stone.
By the time I got to him, hed
blown out his speaking voice, or
nearly. He ordered a grapefruit
juice (Fresh?) and left the cof-
fee to the one with the ancient
tape recorder.
In Stone, which opens
Friday, Norton plays a shrewd,
cryptically motivated prisoner
angling to get out on parole.
His parole officer, played by
Robert De Niro, isnt sure what
hes dealing with. The two mens
verbal sparring sessions, along
with the cons deployment of
his wild-eyed school teacher
wife (Milla Jovovich), set into
motion questions of moral righ-
teousness, stability, faith and
redemption.
Though Norton and direc-
tor Curran had collaborated on
The Painted Veil, to stimulat-
ing results, the actor held off on
committing to the project.
He and Curran continued
talking, even as they both got
into other things.
When the economy tanked,
Norton says, John started see-
ing that as a jumping-off place,
a way of looking at this idea of
people on cruise control, liv-
ing lives built around assumed
structures of solidity. Marriage.
Church. Job. Pension funds. All
that can get wiped out like that.
Norton snaps his fingers.
Horror flm looks to
avoid sequel curse
LOS AnGELES Throughout
the making of Paramount Pictures
Paranormal Activity 2, an unset-
tling specter foated over the
production.
The sequel/prequel was haunt-
ed by memories of Hollywoods
last efort to clone a similar scary
story: Artisans Book of Shadows:
Blair Witch 2, which took in less
than 20 percent of the preced-
ing flms revenues and was so
decisively despised by critics and
audiences that it tainted 1999s
original Blair Witch Project by
association.
We were worried more than
anything else that the new movie
wouldnt work, says Oren Peli,
the former video game designer
who wrote, directed and edited
the frst Paranormal Activity
and served as a producer on the
update, which premieres Thursday
at midnight but was shown in 20
selected cities late Wednesday
night. And Im sure there are a lot
of people who will want to make
sure that its not Blair Witch 2.
Paranormal Activity 2 plays
very much like the original
blockbuster, sharing its look
and internal logic. Screenwriter
michael R. Perry (TVs Persons
Unknown,Stephen kings Dead
Zone) and director kip Williams
(The Door in the Floor) set the
new flm in the days just preced-
ing, and then the hours overlap-
ping with, the ghostly invasion of
katie and micahs nearby dwelling
in Paranormal Activity.
McClatchhy-Tribune
YOUR #1
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The Bottleneck

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Thursday, October 21st
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Big Smith
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Sunday, October 31st


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Wednesday, November 3rd
Mayer Hawthorne
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Saturday, November 6th

Wednesday, November 10th


March Fourth
Marching Band
Thursday, November 11th
The Heavy w/Wallpaper
Friday, November 12th

w/XimenaSarinana
Saturday, November 13th

Monday, November 15th


Matt Costa w/Everest

Fri Oct 29
Gogol
Bordello
w/ Forro in the Dark
Nov 12 & Nov 13
Yonder
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Liberty Hall

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Darling, if you survived
Dads Weekend at
your sorority house,
I think you can more
than handle our
fraternity party.
To contribute to Free For
All, visit Kansan.com or
call (785) 864-0500.
nnn
I wish I could make my
Facebook status SUPER SINGLE.
nnn
I am done playing this game
where you get what you want
then leave... Its over... either
treat me right or go fnd
someone else.
nnn
Rock A Thon! Savin the ta-tas!
nnn
I know all the major chords,
ef her gently, and a blues
progression... still not enough
guitar to get me laid.
nnn
Camoufage pants are for ffth-
graders, not college students.
nnn
I am currently reading about
African witchcraft. Be jealous.
nnn
Im too sexy for my shirt, too
sexy for my shirt, too sexy for
my shirt... Im too sexy for my
pants...
nnn
Katy Perry is basically a slutty
Zooey Deschanel... and has
more fans. Coincidence?
nnn
I once had sex with a set of
brothers right after each other.
Skanky? Yes. Something to
brag about? Defnitely.
nnn
Is it bad that I faked having
a sore throat and pretended
to not be able to talk, just so I
wouldnt have to speak to my
roommate?
nnn
Those religious people tricked
me by telling me it was a
basketball schedule when it
really was just biased literature.
Never again, I say. NEVER
AGAIN!
nnn
Stranger things have
happened than a red-haired,
green eyed girl not being sexy..
nnn
Just found out my roommate
just had a booty call with her
long-time ex... I got to babysit
her frog during the hook up
sesh.
nnn
Im such a baby, yeah, the
dolphins make me cry.
nnn
Ben and Jerry, you are the only
two men in this world that I
could ever love right now.
nnn
My mother is making my life
Hell.
nnn
You ever notice how much kids
suck? Give me three minutes in
Olmacs temple and Ill punch
every temple guard in the face
and still come out with the
prize.
nnn
LeTTer GuideLines
Send letters to kansanopdesk@gmail.
com. Write LeTTerTOTHe ediTOr in
the e-mail subject line.
Length: 300 words
The submission should include the
authors name, grade and hometown.
Find our full letter to the editor policy
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how to submit A LEttER to thE EDitoR
Alex Garrison, editor
864-4810 or agarrison@kansan.com
nick Gerik, managing editor
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THe ediTOriAL BOArd
Members of The Kansan Editorial Board are
Alex Garrison, Nick Gerik, Erin Brown, David
Cawthon, Jonathan Shorman and Shauna
Blackmon.
contAct us
CArTOOn
Opinion
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
www.kAnsAn.com PAGE 5A
United States First Amendment
The University Daily Kansan
thuRsDAy, octobER 21, 2010
Follow Opinion on Twitter.
@kansanopinion
Government waste indicates
inability to solve problems
COnservATisM
T
he University of Kansas
has placed the Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity on
probation for two years following
the recent hazing investigation.
However, the current hazing code
implemented by the University
remains somewhat vague. If
the University expects these
regulations to be helpful, there
needs to be a more specifed
explanation of what constitutes
hazing.
University ofcials determined
that through August and
September, FIJI was in violation
with the hazing code and there
were several forms of hazing that
took place. Ofcials concluded that
FIJI endangered the physical health
of pledges, bestowed extreme
embarrassment or ridicule, and
enacted personal servitude.
Te code as it stands now is
rather ambiguous and does not
specifcally establish what is a
violation of the hazing code. A
portion of the University of Kansas
policy currently states:
Hazing includes, but is not
limited to, any action, activity
or situation which recklessly,
negligently or intentionally
endangers the mental or physical
health, welfare or safety of a
person
More details should be added
to this code to help decipher what
actually violates this hazing policy.
Te strong initiative the
University took on the recent FIJI
case should not go unnoticed
and this type of call-to-action
enforcement should be displayed
across the greek community. Tis
is not the frst time an incident like
this has happened on our campus.
Ofcials need to be more
consistent when it comes to
administrating the hazing policy at
the University.
In March 2009, Jason Wren,
19-year-old freshman from
Littleton, Colo., was found dead at
his fraternity house, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon. Te fnalized autopsy
found that Wren had four times
the legal limit of alcohol in his
system and that he died of alcohol
poisoning.
When this happened, the
University did not take action
against the Sigma Alpha Epsilon
fraternity for any violation. Alcohol
policies were changed, but the
University took no other action
toward the fraternity. While it was
assumed there was not any hazing
involved, the University should
still conduct investigations for
all matters, even if they are just
speculation.
It is important to continue the
robust enforcement of hazing
and to expand on the defnition.
Unfortunately, more situations
may arise where investigations by
University ofcials must be had,
but they all should be handled in
the same manner and the rules
should be equally enforced.
Stefanie Penn for the Kansan
Editorial Board
niCK SAmbUlAK
Hazing code needs clarity,
recent enforcement welcome
ediTOriAL BOArd
Perhaps it was because of the misleading title (and I realize
those arent usually picked out by the actual authors), but your
article certainly sounded like advocating belief in evolution is
the sole source of electability. Your focus on that issue may have
been what confused many readers (such as myself.)
In any case, I can sympathize with the incredulity of some of the
candidates running this election season. Apparently, public dis-
course has been reduced to unfaceted populism and invocations
of the 1950s red scare. At least people arent being blacklisted this
time around... that I know of..
Xz007 in response to Defending evolution litmus test on
Oct. 20.
I find it horrifying to think that there are people out there that
actually think the government can or ever could run efficiently.
No, instead we should just give up our control and allow the
government to regulate. When was the last time the government
came out with a balanced budget? Its been nearly a decade since
our last year in the black. If the United States were a business (to
which Mr. Scott would surely demonize) it would have failed and
gone bankrupt long ago.
It is a sad day when we have people actually attempting to defend
the governments continual inefficiency and ineptitude. When
the United State Postal Service needs a bailout just to survive,
you know that there is no way the government could ever actu-
ally control or what Mr. Scott calls regulate any type of private
business.
Roonhawk008 in response to Society continues to stereo-
type government on Oct. 20.
Chatterbox
Responses to the news of the week on Kansan.com
I
f you happened to pick up
the paper a couple of weeks
ago when my last column was
published, you may recall that it
was about the recent epidemic
of gay youth suicides across the
country and a couple of resources
that exist to help LGBTQ
youth, Te Trevor Project and
the It Gets Better Project.
When I went to the online
version of the column to see
if there were any comments,
there was one a commentor
suggesting another pathway
to consider for troubled gay
or questioning teenagers. Te
alternative posed was Exodus
International.
I was appalled. For those of you
not familiar, Exodus International
is, in their own words, nonproft,
interdenominational Christian
organization promoting the
message of Freedom from
homosexuality through the
power of Jesus Christ (emphasis
theirs). It is one of several ex-gay
organizations that claim to turn
gay attraction straight.
Most of these groups are based
on religion and/or the junk
science of conversion therapy
that says same-sex attraction can
be changed. Tese groups have
predictably poor success rates and
ofen count celibacy as success.
(One wonders at the humanity of
those who call others living a life
devoid of the joys of emotional
and physical intimacy a success.)
Most mainstream mental
health professionals dismiss
attempts to eradicate homosexual
desires or to change someones
sexual orientation as quackery that
is potentially harmful, says the
New York Times.
Tis harm can be damaged
self-esteem, even higher guilt and
anxiety, depression, and suicide.
I was shocked by the
suggestion, but even more so by
the last line of the comment: And
remember, there are people who
are concerned for the elimination
of bullying and promoting safe
environments in school, on ALL
sides.
We live in a culture of
homophobia gays and lesbians,
not to mention all the people of
various other sexual orientations,
are still widely regarded as
abnormal, wrong and deviant.
Tey are still not allowed to live
lives of dignity and basic respect
for they are discriminated against
in schools and places of work, and
they are not allowed to formalize
their love and commitment in
marriage.
Publicly and privately, explicitly
and implicitly, they are told that
they are not normal and they are
not worthy of the basic human
rights aforded to everyone else.
Do we really wonder why so
many are driven to the extreme
of suicide? Can we really expect
someone who is continually
told by society that they are
unacceptable to keep his/her/hir
head up and endure it, day afer
day?
Tis comment reminded me
of what National Organization
for Marriage (one of the pro-
family groups that campaigns
vigorously against gay marriage)
Chairwoman Maggie Gallagher
said about one of the recent
suicides: I do not think the
absence of gay marriage is the
cause of these tragedies or its
presence will resolve them My
heart goes out to the family of the
young man. God bless him and
them.
Te two statements refect a
harmful ignorance. No doubt the
commentor had good intentions,
as did Gallagher. But that is
precisely where the problem lies
sometimes, intentions dont
matter.
Everything that acts against
legitimizing non-straight sexual
orientations, every single person
and organization that operates
under the assumption that
being gay is a choice, everyone
who advocates that religious
doctrine so contradictory to the
realities of life should be held as
the immutable standard, shares
responsibility for these deaths.
Everyone who refuses to speak
out when they see discrimination,
everyone who stays out of political
or social movements for change,
shares responsibility for these
deaths.
Do something. In the face of
beautiful, innocent kids taking
their own lives, we cant aford
to be passive. We cannot stand
by and watch. We must all work
to create a more open, tolerant
society in which sexual orientation
of an individual matters no more
than eye color, because it doesnt.
Free is a sophomore from
Blue springs, Mo., in womens
studies.
Tose working against equality
share responsibility for deaths
LGBT issues
Progressive
Perspective
by Ali Free
afree@kansan.com
H
ypothetically, if a teach-
er said that attendance
to class every day was a
requirement to get a grade in the
course, mostly everyone would
attend class.
Lets pretend that on the last
day of class, the teacher decided
to revoke this rule due to too
many people not attending
class. Some students would be
relieved by this rule because
theyve missed classes and can
get a grade. Te other students
would be angry because they put
in extra efort and time to attend
class.
Essentially, their time and
efort were wasted because they
could have missed a few classes
here and there.
Tis idea about wasted time
is something that came to mind
when I read a recent article
claiming that stimulus money
was given to dead people. In the
article, a report by the Social
Security Administrations inspec-
tor general claimed that about
$18 million went to nearly
72,000 people who were dead.
To me, this is extremely insulting
because this money represents
peoples long hours of working.
It represents wasted time that
can never be returned to them.
Te government simply can-
not be trusted or relied upon
by anyone because it has bad
discretion. If the government
really wanted to take care of
people, the money should have
been handled better and spent
for better use.
Consider what happened dur-
ing Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
For many years, there has
been a lack of funds for infra-
structure such as bridges, roads,
and dams. Its surprising that
with years worth of tax money
that infrastructure is still un-
derfunded. Te fooding in New
Orleans didnt happen because of
the rain; it happened because of
faulty infrastructure.
According to Te Washington
Post, the fooding also happened
because Congress authorized
the Corps to protect New Or-
leans against a storm only up to
Category 3. Katrina of course,
was higher than a category 3. In
this situation, the government
should have stepped aside and
let private engineering compa-
nies do their jobs building safer
infrastructure.
Te government also used
poor discretion bailing out Gen-
eral Motors. Te bailout elimi-
nates competition in business.
To be fair, every business in this
country should get taxpayer
money when they go out of busi-
ness. Its the same idea as giving
your favorite basketball team fve
extra minutes to win the game
without the other team guarding.
Everybody in business needs to
have a level playing feld.
With Medicare, Medicaid and
Social Security facing fnancial
trouble, the government really
has failed to show it can handle
your hard-earned money
efectively.
robinson is a civil engineer-
ing major from Houston,
Texas.
Seths Scoop
by seth robinson
srobinson@kansan.com
6A / NEWS / tHURSDAY, OCtOBER 21, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnSAn.COm
BY CARLO RAMIREZ
editor@kansan.com
Robert Eaton, a KU alumnus
and former Chrysler CEO, will
speak to engineering students,
faculty and staff today at 3 p.m.
in the Spahr classroom in Eaton
Hall.
Eaton, a Kappa Sigma
Fraternity alumnus, graduated
from the University in 1963
with a mechanical engineering
degree. Since then, he has been
a leader in the U.S. auto industry
for nearly 40 years. Eaton will
be in Lawrence serving as the
grand marshal of the Universitys
homecoming festivities.
He is returning to the University
as part of Homecoming Week and
will share his experiences and
advice with students.
Eaton will
briefly speak
about his suc-
cessful career
path, but wants
the lecture to be
an open forum.
Its going
to be a con-
v e r s a t i o n ,
Eaton said in a
University press release. Ill give
a little background about myself,
then open it up. Im going to try
to convince them that Im not any
different than they are, and they
can do whatever they want to do
in life.
Eaton donated $5 million to
the School of Engineering to help
complete the 80,000-square-foot
building that is named in his honor.
The building houses classrooms,
computer labs and offices for the
school as well as the Department
of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science.
In his 30 years with General
Motors, Eaton rose to president
of GM Europe. He then left GM
in 1992 to become chairman and
chief executive officer of Chrysler
Corporation. In 1998 he was in
charge of overseeing a $76 bil-
lion merger between Chrysler and
Daimler-Benz. He then spent the
next two years as chairman of the
newly formed DaimlerChrysler
before retiring in 2000.
Absolutely unpretentious and
unaffected by his success youd
never know his history by meeting
and interacting with him, said
David Steen, 1971 KU graduate
and Kappa Sigma alumnus. He
is very loyal, worked only for GM
then Chrysler, same wife who was
his KU sweetheart, comes by to
see the guys every chance he gets
to be in Lawrence, and is very
generous to offer advice and com-
ments to them.
Eaton was awarded the
Distinguished Service Citation
in 1994 by the KU Alumni
Association, a life trustee with
KU Endowment and was honored
by the School of Engineering with
its Distinguished Engineering
Service Award.
The lecture is open to all KU
students. Jill Hummels, director
of Public Relations for the School
of Engineering, said everyone has
something to learn from Eaton.
A person like Bob Eaton
doesnt rise to the top of a major
corporation just by being good at
one thing, such as engineering,
Hummels said. Leaders are multi-
faceted and they have a broad
understanding of activities inside
and outside their organization.
Edited by Kelsey Nill
cAmpUS
Robert Eaton hopes his lecture will inspire students
Eaton
RobERT EAToN
LEcTURE
WHEN: today, 3 p.m.
WHERE: Spahr classroom in
Eaton Hall
HEALTH
Energy drinks,
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MCCLAtChY-tRIBunE
HACKENSACK, N.J. Binge
drinking among adolescents
and young adults is not new, but
authorities are warning about
a dangerous new twist with an
increased use of spiked energy
drinks that deliver a potent mix of
stimulants and booze.
The fruity drinks, such as Four
Loko, lead to a quick and intense
high that has been dubbed black-
out in a can.
Ramapo College this month
banned the caffeinated alcoholic
beverages, tightened restrictions
on guests and increased penalties
for underage drinking after a rau-
cous start to the fall semester in
which 23 people were hospitalized
for alcohol intoxication, school
officials said.
Four Loko was involved in some
of the incidents at the Mahwah,
N.J., campus, and the townships
police chief is warning that the
drink is being used by even younger
students.
Complaints were brought against
three juveniles from Mahwah High
School last week after they were
found to be in possession of or
intoxicated by Four Loko, Chief
James Batelli said.
The bottom line on the product
is it gets you very drunk, very quick,
Batelli said. To me, Four Loko is
just a dangerous substance.
The drink comes in 23.5-ounce
cans and has an alcohol content of
12 percent the equivalent of four
beers. Four Loko is cheap gen-
erally selling for less than $3 per
can. Its carbonated and comes in a
variety of fruity flavors making
it popular with underage drinkers,
experts say.
I think its clear they are market-
ing to young people, said David
Schardt, of the Center for Science in
the Public Interest in Washington.
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BY NICOLAS ROESLER
nroesler@kansan.com

Youre taking off on a hot air
balloon ... 10. Lifting off high into
the sky ... 9,8,7. Flying to the other
side of the world ... 6,5,4,3. To a
land youve never seen before ... 2,1.
PHWOOM ... Youre out.
A show that lasted almost two
hours passes in your mind like a
five minute nap. All of the insane
dancing, becoming different ani-
mals, and even egg laying become
just a blur of half-formed memories.
Three of the students who experi-
enced it last night said that is what
hypnosis felt like.
William Blair, a freshman from
Shawnee, was one of those students
who entered this dream world. He
said he actually recalled laying an
egg.
It hurt, Blair said.
Of the 18 students, 15 were ran-
domly chosen to go on stage. The
other three were hypnotized in the
crowd. Brought to the University by
Student Union Activities, Frederick
Winters, a certified hypnotist, play-
fully controlled the actions of these
dreamers like he had with over
155,000 in the past.
It was like when youre dream-
ing, but you know youre dreaming,
Blair said as he tried to explain the
sensation.
Winters was voted Campus
Entertainer of the Year in 2006,
and was voted the Best Male Artist
Award in 2010 by Campus Activities
Magazine. He has performed almost
3,000 times, but said the audience
last night was unique. He said he
had never seen so many people who
had never witnessed or experienced
hypnosis before, but were so eager
to dive into it.
When Winters asked the audi-
ence if they wanted to be hypno-
tized, the crowd erupted with will-
ing volunteers. One even jumped
on stage. When he had selected
18 random students, a completely
full Woodruff Auditorium turned
into a hypnotherapists office. The
lights dimmed, a slow drum beat
started playing, and one-by-one the
volunteers slumped over into a deep
sleep.
Angela Sutton, a sophomore from
Marysville, said she had never expe-
rienced anything like it. She said she
can only recall certain things from
the show.
I remember seeing kangaroos or
something, Sutton said.
That was because Winters had
convinced one of the males that he
was a mother kangaroo, and con-
vinced the guy next to him that he
was a baby kangaroo. Once Winters
snapped them out of their sleep,
they both started hopping on all
fours, and the baby got in its moth-
ers pouch and they both started
hopping around together.
These are the things that can
happen when hypnotized: you can
become president of the University
of Kansas and outlaw laughing
(that goes over real well), you can
turn into a pony, you can have
a little man stuck in your watch
(even if youre not wearing one),
and then, you can get stuck in that
same watch.
Some of the dreamers remem-
ber nothing. Kyle Nelson, a fresh-
man from Leawood, had seen one
hypnotist show before but never
believed it. After almost two hours
erased from his memory, he now
believes. He just thought he had
taken a power nap.
I feel ready to go, Nelson said,
as if he had just had an energy
drink.
Nelson, Sutton and Blair all said
they would get hypnotized again.
Sutton even said it was relaxing.
To see what hypnosis looks like,
go to FrederickWinters.com
Editedby TimDwyer
cAmpUS
Hypnotist entertains a packed Woodruf Auditorium
Chris Bronson/KANSAN
Frederick Winters, 2010 Campus Activities Magazines best male artist, hypnotizes a group of
KU students onWednesday night at Woodruf Auditorium. An event sponsored by SUA allowed
volunteers to be put under hypnosis, an altered state of consciousness, causing the hypnotized
student to become less aware and performentertaining acts in front of the audience.
Popular campus performer Frederick Winters hypnotized 18 students in his show
By Ian CummIngs
icummings@kansan.com

Junior outside hitter Allison
Mayfield led the Jayhawks with 12
kills in Wednesday nights 0-3 loss
to Texas in Lawrence. The match
was, in many ways, reminiscent
of Kansas sweep at the hands of
Oklahoma on Saturday night.
Sophomore middle blocker
Tayler Tolefree said the team suc-
ceeded in serving an area that
has been a focus for the team in
recent weeks.
We definitely served a couple
that we were targeting, she said.
But in other areas, the Jayhawks
werent able to counter the Texas
offense.
They have hard hitters. They
have hitters that can mix things
up, Tolefree said. Theyre not
going to keep hammering at a shot
that didnt work. Theyre smart
players, I guess.
Kansas started strong in the first
set. Senior outside hitters Karina
Ga r l i n g t o n
and Jenna
Kaiser led
the Jayhawk
offense with
8 and 5 kills,
respect i vel y,
helping the
team to an
early 8-3 lead.
But Texas
forced the
game into a one-point shoot-out
in the end, taking a 29-27 victory.
Kansas had difficulty with block
attempts that sent the ball out of
bounds for a Texas point or let
the ball drop straight down on the
Kansas side of the net.
As in each set on Wednesday,
the Jayhawks seemed to get a little
rattled toward the end. Senior
libero Melissa Manda dug a ball
out from in front of freshman
defensive specialist Brianne Riley,
and Mayfield misfired into the
net. A hard Texas shot knocked
Riley backward, after which the
Longhorns stayed within one
point of Kansas. Garlington led
an impressive late offensive effort,
scoring four more kills before
the set was over and helped by
kills from Tolefree, Mayfield and
Kaiser. But after
a tie at 27-27, a
successful Texas
block followed
by a Kansas
block that went
out of bounds
ended the set
29-27.
The Jayhawks
scored the first
point of the next
set, but the Longhorns answered
right back. That set a pattern the
teams repeated for the first half
of the game, until Texas broke the
deadlock by taking a slender lead
and holding it until the end of the
match.
From one game to the next,
Texas numbers improved as
the Jayhawks declined. The
Longhorns hit for an efficiency
of .400 in the first set, which was
already more than twice as good
as the average Kansas opponent.
But they improved that to .441 and
.444 in the second and third sets.
Meanwhile, Kansas shot a respect-
able .333 in the first set, which
dropped to .237 and .100 over
the next two sets. The Longhorns
out-blocked the Jayhawks more
than nine to three and achieved an
unusual side out percentage of 77
at the end of the third set.
Kansas fell behind Texas 2-7
early in the third game and never
caught up. Texas senior outside
hitter Amber Roberson had 19
kills by the end of the match. At
21-15, Jayhawks showed the pres-
sure they were under. A mistimed
serve hit Tolefree in the back of the
head. Riley caved in under a Texas
shot and even Garlington tripped
and fell in the course of sending a
hit over the net. The game ended
with Riley and freshman defensive
specialist Jaime Mathieu tumbling
to the floor in the back court while
chasing a Texas hit that landed
just in bounds and ended the set
25-17. Through it all, junior setter
Nicole Tate showed a determined
attitude, contributing seven digs
and six kills as well as assisting in
By mIKE VERnOn
mvernon@kansan.com
It happens again. The whole
crowd groans. The Kansas offense
then moves five, 10 or 15 yards in
the wrong direction. The Jayhawks
have shot themselves in the foot
once again.
Six games into the season,
Kansas has been penalized 38
times for a total of 336 yards. Last
Saturday against Kansas State, the
Jayhawks were penalized seven
times for 76 yards.
Some of these penalties have
come when the Jayhawks were
gaining some offensive momen-
tum.
Our first drive we were on a
roll, we had a couple of penalties
that set us back, senior Johnathan
Wilson said about the Kansas
State game.
Two of the first three pos-
sessions for the Jayhawks last
Saturday had drive-killing penal-
ties. The players emphatically state
that these recurring blunders are
the fault of themselves as opposed
to the coaching staff.
You should know as a player,
no one needs to yell at you, or
scream, senior Angus Quigley
said.
The offense has shown flashes
of good play, but it has not had
the ability to consistently put
drives together. Kansas had 331
yards of offense against Kansas
State. The Jayhawks only scored
7 points. Against Baylor they put
up 270 yards of total offense, but
only crossed into the opponents
SportS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
W
hen I was in high
school, I like to think
I qualified as a half-
decent athlete. I probably couldnt
boast too much, but lets just say I
had a few trophies up on the wall.
Most of them were from grade
school soccer leagues where kids
receive awards for stepping on the
field, but they still look impres-
sive.
But just like nearly every young
athlete who ever picks up a ball,
racket, club, or puck, I had to suf-
fer through being on the wrong
end of a few blowouts.
Getting embarrassed on a
sports field is no fun, obviously.
Its usually painful, demoralizing,
and if parents are in attendance,
they might just yank funding for
their kids athletic endeavors.
Thus, being an emotion-
ally fragile young soccer/tennis/
baseball player, I had to figure
out a way to ease the pain of
being dominated by a superior
athlete (on the rare occasion that
it would happen, of course). My
solution: every time I realized I
was going to be utterly outplayed
in any sport, Id simply spend the
rest of the game or match listing
off, in my head, all the things that
I was most likely better at than
my opponent.
If some arrogant forward
dribbled through my legs on the
soccer field, Id simply tell myself
I could probably destroy the kid
in tennis. If some future Division
I tennis player was blistering shots
past me on the tennis court, I was
comforted by the fact that there
was no way he had the grades
that I did because he spent all his
time playing tennis.
Mature? Probably not.
Effective? Definitely. It takes some
of the sting away to remember
that, although your opponent
absolutely picked apart every
facet of your game, if you just got
the chance to play him in Trivial
Pursuit or Boggle, he or she
would know the true meaning of
humiliation.
This method of maintaining
self-dignity could be extremely
useful at Kansas for the remainder
of the football season. Judging
by the past two games, there may
be a few more opportunities for
moping and self-pity while other
schools light up the Memorial
Stadium scoreboard.
But if Texas A&M starts run-
ning away with Saturdays game
like Baylor and Kansas State did,
its not necessary to drown in
sorrow immediately. Rather, con-
stantly remind yourself of these
few ways that Kansas is still supe-
rior to Texas A&M:
1. BasketBall
This is the obvious go-to in
embarrassing football situations.
Its easy, but very overused, so go
for some more creative forms of
self-reassurance.
2. Jock atmosphere
The University of Kansas ranks
No. 5 on Princeton Reviews
list of top Jock Schools while
Texas A&M isnt on the list. This
list takes into account all varsity
sports, intramural participation,
and greek system popularity. So
all self-proclaimed jocks can take
comfort knowing they have a
much better home in Lawrence
than College Station.
3. class Discussion
Texas A&M is on Princeton
Reviews list of Class Discussion
Rare schools where lecture is
apparently more common than
discussions, unlike Kansas. So
take that, Aggies! Kansas may not
be scoring many touchdowns, but
at least we know how to partici-
pate in class!
4. college town
Lawrence was dubbed the ninth
best college in America by the
American Institute for Economic
Research, three spots above
College Station. Its not a huge
edge, but still probably deserving
of a few crowd signs like At least
our town is slightly more interest-
ing!
Its possible that this coping
mechanism wont be necessary
on Saturday. But if the game does
turn into a blowout, remember
this list.
Edited by TimDwyer
By JOEl pEttERsOn
jpetterson@kansan.com
kansas vs.
no. 10 texas
0 - 3
A young but experienced womens team is ready to take to the court in a competitive Big 12
conference. The frst game is Oct. 31 against Fort Hays State at Allen Fieldhouse.
Young players bring excitement
womenS baSketball | 5b
Ofense picking up yards,
but penalties still hurting
mike Gunnoe/kanSan
Junior tight endTimBiere streches out in an attempt to catch an overthrown pass Thursday against Kansas State. Kansas players say they, not
the coaches, are to blame for missed ofensive opportunities.
FootBall
See FOOTBALL on paGe 3b
Players take the blame for the momentum-killing mistakes
commentary
Take heart, Jayhawk fans: Kansas
still has plenty going in its favor
THURSDAY, ocTobeR 21, 2010 www.kAnSAn.com PAGe 1b
hawk heartBreak
Jayhawks lose 3-0 in second straight defeat
mike Gunnoe/kanSan
Senior libero Melissa Manda bumps the ball Wednesday against No. 10 Texas. The Jayhawks
played the Longhorns close in the frst two sets but lost the match 3-0.
mike Gunnoe/kanSan
Junior middle blocker Allison Mayfeld hits the ball over the net against Texas Wednesday.
Mayfeld led the Jayhawks with 12 kills in the match.
They have hard hitters.
They have hitters that can
mix things up.
Tayler Tolefree
Sophomore middle blocker
Texas hitters pummeled defenders
with exceptional hitting efficiency
See vOLLeyBALL on paGe 3b
2B / SPORTS / ThursDAY, OcTOBer 21, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnsAn.cOm
Tennis
ITA regionals
All day
Fayetteville, Ark.
Fantasy basketball best of all
MORNINg BREw
QUOTE OF THE DAY
sure, luck means a lot in football.
not having a good quarterback is
bad luck.
Don Shula
FACT OF THE DAY
kansas has lost seven straight
games to Big 12 south teams in
football.
KU Athletics
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: Who was the last Big 12
south team kansas beat?
A: Texas A&m
KU Athletics
THIS wEEK IN
kAnsAs AThLeTIcs
FRIDAY
Soccer
nebraska
3:30 p.m.
Lincoln, neb.
Tennis
ITA regionals
All Day
Fayetteville, Ark.
Tennis
ITA regionals
All Day
Fayetteville, Ark.
SATURDAY
Football
Texas A&m
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Volleyball
Iowa state
6:30 p.m.
Ames, Iowa
Tennis
ku Tournament
All Day
Lawrence
Tennis
ITA regionals
All Day
Fayetteville, Ark.
SUNDAY
Tennis
ku Tournament
All Day
Lawrence
MONDAY
womens Soccer
colorado
2:30 p.m.
Boulder, colo.
Mens golf
herb Wimberly Inter-
collegiate
All Day
Las cruces, n.m.
womens golf
edwin Watts/ Palmetto
Intercollegiate
All Day
kiawah Island, s.c.
TODAY
By corey thiBodeaux
cthibodeaux@kansan.com
T
he NFL owns everything sports. It is
the best without question.
The Madden video games are the
best selling video games by a long shot. The
NFL owns TV ratings and the Super Bowl
is unmatched in appeal and sponsorship.
And a huge chunk of the population
actively engages in fantasy football. Weve
had a Brew or two about it. But NFL foot-
ball is not the best when it comes to fantasy
sports.
A new season is about to begin and it is
the best in the realm of fantasy: the NBA
season.
I acknowledge this is a publication in the
state of Kansas and not a lot of people care
about professional basketball. Whatever.
Maybe having the opportunity to get
Cole Aldrich or Xavier Henry will get you
involved. While youre at it, try to get Paul
Pierce, Brandon Rush and Mario Chalmers.
But how is the NBA better than the NFL
in a fantasy perspective? The daily grind.
If you care enough about your craft, you
can have fun every day of the week. You
dont have to wait all week until Sunday.
When you think youre too good to watch
Glee on Tuesdays, you have guys playing
somewhere.
During the week, your football appetite
is quenched with the weekly performances
of the worlds elite basketball starts. If you
pay close enough attention, you get to stay
in the loop when that random guy starts
gloating about the awesomeness of David
Lee.
Now I can feel the fantasy baseball crit-
ics pulling away from me. Again, the NBA
is better.
A good hitter on a baseball team is hit-
ting .300, which is less than a third of his
at-bats. Most days, you log on to your team
and see a bunch of hitless players and its
just deflating. Theres absolutely no stat to
hang your hat on sometimes.
Basketball has more going on. Assists,
rebounds, steals, points, etc. You have to
be a terrible fantasy player to get a guy that
goes goose-egg on you.
A bad night for LeBron is 15 points with
other stat categories sprinkled in. You still
get something out of it.
A bad night for Albert Pujols is 0-for-4.
Ugh. It hurts your average and you dont
have steals and most likely no runs or RBIs.
Bad day all around.
Fantasy football is great, but sometimes I
need something during the week. The NBA
is perfect and it isnt as depressing as base-
ball. The trick is getting people who live in
Kansas to believe it.
THURSDAY YOUTUBE SESH
Jared Leto is a pretty man. Youd have to
be to have a girl be able to look EXACTLY
like you.
YouTube search Jared Leto girl and
watch as an attractive girl transforms her-
self into the 30 Seconds to Mars front man
right before your eyes.
Its a little creepy with the Nine Inch
Nails Closer playing in the background,
but the visual is fascinating. In a sped-up,
six-minute video, you can learn a lot about
the uses of makeup.
And realize you think a girl who looks
exactly like a dude is attractive.
Edited by TimDwyer
BIg 12 FOOTBALL
Texas A&M faces must win game
associated Press
COLLEGE STATION, Texas
Texas A&M has dropped three
straight games and faces a must-
win trip to Kansas with schedule
that still includes No. 3 Oklahoma,
14th-ranked Nebraska and rival
No. 22 Texas.
The Aggies (3-3, 0-2 Big 12
Conference) insist their con-
fidence hasnt been shaken by
the skid, but theyll need to turn
around things soon to reach their
goal of taking a step forward
from last seasons disappointing
6-7 finish.
Texas A&M followed close
losses to Oklahoma State and
Arkansas with a lopsided 30-9
defeat to No. 18 Missouri on
Saturday that has fans restless and
some wondering if a coaching
change should come soon. The
headline on the front page of the
campus newspaper, the Battalion,
read Time for change? over a
picture of coach Mike Sherman,
with a smaller headline that read
Mike Sherman doesnt have it
earlier this week.
After going 4-8 in Shermans
first season and 6-7 in the second,
expectations were high for at least
a winning record this year. Now
even that could be a stretch.
Sherman, the former Green
Bay Packers coach, understands
the unease.
The frustration Im sure is
very intense, and thats part of
it, he said. I want to coach at a
place where people expect you to
win. I wouldnt want it any other
way. If they werent passionate, I
wouldnt be here.
Its been a long wait for those
hoping to see A&M return to
prominence after a run of seven
conference championships from
1985-1998. The Aggies have fall-
en on hard times since then and
havent had a winning conference
record since 2006.
Texas A&Ms first two losses
on the road were difficult, but
Sherman said disappointing the
home crowd of more than 80,000
with the loss to the Tigers on
Saturday was worse.
I feel that disappointment
when I walk off that field, he
said. And our players feel that.
They know they let the fans
down. They are bound and
determined to get back on
track. They are good kids, and
they work hard ... our backs are
against the wall and we have to
put it all together.
Els claims title with
a run of late birdies
sOuThAmPTOn, Bermuda
ernie els ran of three straight bird-
ies on the back nine Wednesday
and turned a three-shot defcit
into a one-shot victory over David
Toms in the PGA Grand slam of
Golf.
els, an alternate who was fll-
ing in for masters champion Phil
mickelson, closed with a 2-under
69 and earned $600,000. It was
his second victory in the 36-hole
event for the years four major
champions. els also won in 1997
when it was at Poipu Bay.
The turning point came on the
15th, when els made birdie and
Toms bogeyed for a share of the
lead.
Associated Press
PgA
YOUR #1
HIBACHI
SPOT
IN
LAWRENCE
785.838.3399
acrossfromDillions
on6th
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / ThurSdAy, OCTOber 21, 2010 / SPORTS / 3b
endzone once as well. The amount
of yards the Kansas offense has
accumulated compared to the
number of points is astounding
601 yards and only 14 points
to show for it. The lack of scoring
starts with the smaller mistakes,
including penalties.
Once we cut the little mis-
takes, the mental errors, and some
physical errors, were going to be
just fine on offense, freshman
Jordan Webb said.
When the little mistakes, like a
delay of game or false start penal-
ty, start to add up, they can crush
any offensive rhythm. The reason
penalties have such a grand effect
on a game is simple.
You lose 10 yards, and now
youve got 2nd and 20 or 3rd and
15, and thats very hard to con-
vert, Quigley said.
Theres an opportunity here
with six games left to finish
strong, coach Turner Gill said.
The team and coaches know
that limiting the penalties could
be a huge help to accomplishing
that goal. One of Gills goals for
this weeks game against Texas
A&M is to eliminate the unforced
penalties.
Edited by Clark Goble
two blocks. At one point, as she
stepped away from a melee at the
net, Tate whacked the ball with
her fist without seeming to look,
and it hit the floor on the Texas
side for a point.
Coach Ray Bechard said his
biggest concern was Texas hit-
ting efficiency. Texas leads the
league in that category.
But we cannot give up some-
body hitting over .400 and expect
to be successful, he said. They
seemed to get a little stronger
and we seemed to not.
Bechard said he saw similari-
ties between this match and the
loss to Oklahoma on Saturday.
So the last two matches
theres been a trend where the
opponents hitting efficiencys
higher than what weve been giv-
ing up on the year, he said.
Were in the top three or four in
the league for opponents hitting
efficiency, and we havent lived
up to those standards the last
couple of games.
The Jayhawks travel to Ames,
Iowa, Saturday for a rematch
with Iowa State.
Edited by Lisa Curran
BY SARA KRUGER
skruger@kansan.com
Freshman Brianne Riley
returned to the court yesterday
against No. 10 Texas after a pro-
longed game absence. The defen-
sive specialist showed no signs
of injury, but was not as active as
before. Coach Ray Ray Bechard
says it will take some time for her
game play to be at full capacity.
She gives good energy and
effort. I know she would like to
serve better and dig better, but she
will work herself up to where she
was at, he said.
While out of game play Riley
focused on recovering, only start-
ing full practice last week. She is
back to her vocal self, however,
and her teammates appreciate the
familiar sound.
You can hear her across the
gym its good to have that voice
back, Tayler Tolefree said.
Statistically, Riley has some
work to do to return to the high
level she reached before she was
injured. She had no digs in the
first set and three in the second
numbers vastly different from
the earlier numbers put up by
the freshman. Starting the third
set after two losses, Riley seemed
to become a little more upbeat.
Falling behind 1-5, Riley stepped
up and made some difficult plays,
running to the front row to dig a
few shanked balls.
In set four, Riley and the rest
of the team seemed out of sync
as they came up short and lost to
Texas, 25-17.
We let down tonight, we need-
ed to dig more balls, Bechard
said. But our back row players
have created a strength for our
team.
Riley ended the game with five
digs and one assist. She said the
Jayhawks didnt play how they
normally do, adding that her own
biggest challenge against Texas
was digging after missed blocks.
With such a big setback in the
middle of the season, Riley is
focusing on what she needs to do
to become successful again.
After being out for awhile you
kind of loose your rhythm, Riley
said, Im just getting my rhythm
back, and thats all.

Edited by Kelsey Nill
Football (continued from 1b)
volleyball (continued from 1b)
Mike Gunnoe/KaNSaN
Junior setter Nicole Tate sets the ball to a teammate Wednesday against No. 10 Texas. Tate led
the teamwith 36 assists in the 3-0 loss.
mLb
Win puts Giants one game
away from World Series
ASSociAtEd PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Juan
Uribe hit a game-ending sacrifice
fly off reliever Roy Oswalt with
one out in the ninth inning and
the San Francisco Giants moved
within one win of the World
Series, beating the Philadelphia
Phillies 6-5 Wednesday night for
a 3-1 lead in the NL champion-
ship series.
Aubrey Huff singled with one
out in the ninth and took third
when Buster Posey singled for
his fourth hit of the game. Uribe
hit a medium-deep fly, leaving
left fielder Ben Francisco with no
chance to get the sliding Huff.
The Phillies, the two-time
defending NL champions with
the best record in the majors this
year, are suddenly on the brink
of elimination. Theyll send Roy
Halladay against Tim Lincecum
in Game 5 Thursday night its
a rematch of aces that Lincecum
won in the opener.
Going to Oswalt to begin the
ninth backed manager Charlie
Manuels words this was his clubs
biggest game yet this year. Oswalt
is one of the majors top start-
ers and beat the Giants in Game
2. Hes made only a few relief
appearances in the last several
years, including a stint in the 2004
NLCS for Houston.
evan Palmer/KaNSaN
Brianne Riley, a freshman defensive specialist fromNaperville, Ill., sets the ball as Taylor Tolefree, a sophomore middle blocker fromLawrence, looks
onWednesday night at the Horejsi Family Athletics Center. The Jayhawks (13-8 overall and 4-6 in the Big 12) lost in three sets to No. 10 Texas.
Riley returns to the court
with high energy, efort
VOLLEYbALL
The freshman struggled to dig missed blocks against Texas
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TEXTBOOKS ANNOUNCEMENTS JOBS HOUSING
HOUSING
FOR SALE
HOUSING
By Blake SchuSter
bschuster@kansan.com
On Dec. 14, 2009, newly-hired
coach Turner Gill stepped in front
of a room of eager reporters and
told them his main goal.
I did not come here to use [KU]
as a stepping stone to a football
dynasty, but rather to create a foot-
ball dynasty here at KU. Gill said.
Now halfway through his first
season, and sporting a 2-4 record,
Gill is still working out the kinks
of building his dynamic Kansas
squad.
Its still a work in progress, Gill
said Wednesday after practice, Its a
journey both ways. The players are
still getting to know the coaches
and the coaches are still getting to
know the players.
Despite the teams struggles, Gill
is relaxed and is confident that
building a college team takes time
and practice.
Its a constant way of trying to
get the best players to fit into our
system and then to execute, and
thats an ongoing deal, Gill said.
Gill seems to be received well
by his players, and all of them,
including sophomore Daymond
Patterson, are confident in Gills
skills as the team leader.
Hes been putting us in position
to make plays and win, Patterson
said.
Gills coaching has also been
getting praise from some of the
more experienced players like
senior wide receiver Johnathan
Wilson.
With him being a former play-
er, he has some good knowledge,
Wilson said.
Clearly a 2-4 record is not
what any new coach wants, and
while some might point to the
coaching changes for the cause of
the Jayhawks problems, Wilson
doesnt see that as a main cause.
Its a little different feel [from
Manginos coaching style] but at
the end of the day its all on the
players. The coaches cant help you
when youre on the field. They cant
catch the ball for you or throw the
ball for you. The coaches make
a difference, but the responsibility
falls on the players. Wilson said.
Despite the fact that the teams
record is sub-par, some students
around campus dont seem too
worried about how Gill has started
out his tenure.
The football team is off to a
rough start, but half a year is not
enough time to judge him as a
coach, sophomore Tyler Heeney
said.
Turn-arounds are nothing new
for Gill, and neither are two-win
seasons.
In his first season after taking the
reins over from previous coach Jim
Hofher, who had gone 8-49 in his
tenure, Gill coached a 2-10 season
with Buffalo.
Two years later Gill marched his
team on the field for the MAC
Championship Game against then
undefeated and No. 12 ranked Ball
State.
Gill and the Bulls took down
Ball State 42-24 to seal the teams
first MAC championship. Whether
or not history will repeat itself at
Kansas is yet to be seen.
For Gill, as far as coaching at
Kansas goes, he sees no difference
from coaching at Buffalo.
Coaching is teaching and devel-
oping players, youre just changing
the name of the school, Gill said.
Football is football.
Editedby Clark Goble
4B / SPORTS / Thursday, OcTOBer 21, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kansan.cOm
Team supports Gills new approach
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
CoachTurner Gill made it clear fromhis frst day on the job that he wanted to create a football dynasty. A poor start hasnt afected his greater goals.
fOOTbALL NHL
Nash nets two in
Columbus 3-1 win
cOLumBus, Ohio rick
nash scored two goals and
steve mason stopped 31
shots to lead columbus to a
3-1 victory over the anaheim
ducks on Wednesday night
before 9,802 fans the small-
est crowd ever to see a Blue
Jackets home game.
derek mackenzie also
scored for the Blue Jackets,
who had been pushed around
in a 5-2 loss to stanley cup
champion chicago last week in
their home opener.
Teemu selanne notched his
609th career goal for anaheim.
Associated Press
Orlando continues
preseason streak
OrLandO, Fla. dwight
howard had 20 points and 13
rebounds to help the Orlando
magic roll to their 21st straight
preseason victory, 101-76 over
the undermanned dallas mav-
ericks on Wednesday night.
howard was a perfect 7 for
7 shooting and added four
blocks, and Vince carter had
20 points to keep Orlandos
incredible but otherwise
meaningless preseason
streak alive. The magic (7-0)
havent lost a preseason game
since the 2008 opener against
atlanta.
Associated Press
NbA
HOMECOMING Oct. 18-24
Today
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Mural Contest
Wescoe Beach
Noon-1 p.m.
Free pizza by Pizza Hut
Wescoe Beach
6-8 p.m.
Homecoming Food Fest
featuring Jayhawk Jingles
Adams Alumni Center
Tomorrow
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Crimson and Blue Day
Wescoe Beach
5:30-7 p.m.
Homecoming Reception
Adams Alumni Center
(invitation required)
www.homecoming.ku.edu
Scavenger Hunt Hint
There was once was a man named
William
I say once because he has since died
But back when he was living
He won a Pulitzer prize!
A KU grad, of course he was
He wrote a few books and several plays
And now he has a place named after
him
Why dont you visit today?
Good luck!
T-shirts on sale!
Weekdays from 10 a.m.2 p.m.
on Wescoe Beach, now through
Homecoming Week. $10, $15
Anderson Chandler Lecture Series
The University of Kansas School of Business
presents
Thomas M. Hoenig
President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
The Economic Outlook and
Challenges Facing Monetary
Policymakers
Monday, October 25, 2010 7 p.m.
The Lied Center of Kansas
FREE TO THE PUBLIC
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / thurSDAY, OCtOber 21, 2010 / SPORTS / 5b
wOmENS bASKETbALL
Womens team ready for season
By HannaH Wise
hwise@kansan.com
The womens basketball season
will begin soon and with the begin-
ning of the season came media
day in Kansas City. Coach Bonnie
Henrickson met with reporters to
discuss the upcoming season.
On our end, Im very, very
excited for a couple of different
reasons. Weve gotten ourselves
healthy over the offseason. Angel
Goodrich is cleared and competing
in practice, said
Henrickson.
Sophomore
guard Angel
G o o d r i c h
returns after
r e c o v e r i n g
from a tear to
her ACL during
the Oklahoma
State match up on Jan. 12. With
Goodrich back out on the floor, the
Jayhawks are set to be faster and
able to play in transition.
Angel plays how we play because
of how we play in transition. It
allows us to make plays off the
dribble. She is the quickest player
to 100 assists in the programs his-
tory in 15 games. And she allows
us to get uncontested shots, which
these young kids are going to need,
Henrickson said.
Fellow sophomores Carolyn
Davis and Monica Engelman have
plans to carry momentum from
their freshmen seasons into the
2010-2011 season.
The experience that those two
gained in situations we put them
in at the end of the year, to take
shots and make shots to win games,
makes them more confident and
more experienced sophomores,
said Henrickson.
The sophomore class is bringing
a great deal of the experience to
the floor this season. The team is
young there are four freshmen
and three sophomores on this years
roster. With the youthful nature of
the team there is vigor and excite-
ment that freshmen Daria Moore,
Keena Mays, Brooke Jelniker and
Charlicia Haper bring to the court.
I love their energy. I love their
competitiveness. We get bet-
ter every single day and they are
a fun group to be around, said
Henrickson.
The freshmen will need upper-
classmen leaders for tough times
during Big 12 play. One such lead-
er is junior Aishah Sutherland who
worked in the offseason to grow
stronger.
She has always been very,
very athletic. She finishes stron-
ger right now than she has, said
Henrickson.
The mix of old and new talent
gives the coaching staff an oppor-
tunity to put out competitive line-
ups based on the different oppo-
nents they will face this season.
Putting senior Krysten Boogaard
and sophomore Carolyn Davis
together on the floor will be key.
It will be important for us to
look at how we can play Krysten
and Carolyn together. Carolyn is
very talented and Krysten is very,
very talented. Right now when
one plays, the other one doesnt.
It doesnt make sense for quality
post players in our league, said
Henrickson.
The Jayhawks will be getting
right back into a very competitive
Big 12 season. The upperclass-
mens leadership will handle the
ups and downs of the season that
are sure to come in such a com-
petitive atmosphere.
You have to be able to bounce
back and have resiliency and
thats where your upperclass-
men can help you with that, said
Henrickson.
The Jayhawks will play their
season opener at home against
Fort Hays State on Oct. 31.
Edited by David Cawthon
Jerry Wang/KANSAN
Kansas coach Bonnie Henrickson thanks Kansas fans for their support of the womens basketball teamduring a speech at Late Night in the Phog last Friday. Kansas will kick of the 2010-2011 season
on Oct. 31 with a home game against Fort Hays State. She said she hopes fans will continue to provide a home court advantage by attending games this season.
Goodrich
Jerry Wang/KANSAN
Senior center Krysten Boogaard drives over senior practice squad player Jeremy Vitt for a layup.
Boogaard fnished with a team-high six points as the womens teamdefeated the practice squad
22-14 during Late Night in the Phog.
PREmIER LEAgUE
Manchester United
may lose forward
LONDON Manchester City,
one of the clubs linked with a
move for Manchester united
striker Wayne rooney, said
on Wednesday it has not had
any contact with the england
forward.
united confrmed on tuesday
that rooney had told it he wants
to leave the club but if City are
his eventual destination, the
rival club was playing down
rumors.
there has been no contact,
City manager roberto Mancini
said. hes a great player but its
not my problem. Im concen-
trating on tomorrows match
(against Lech Poznan).
Mancini also said he was not
sure rooney, whose contract ex-
pires at the end of next season,
would actually leave united.
he is an important player for
united and I think he will stay,
the Italian said. I have respect
for him, for (united manager
Sir Alex) Ferguson, for united.
I want to speak only about my
players.
real Madrid, managed by
former Chelsea manager Jose
Mourinho, and barcelona,
have also been linked with the
24-year-old.
McClatchy-Tribune
Wednesdays
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N O W A C C E P T I N G B E A K E M B U C K S
Who needs a
f lu vaccine?
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b) Your friends
c) Your teachers
d) All of the above
Thursday, October 21
Strong Hall, 10 am 2 pm
Tuesday, October 26
Burge Union, 10 am 2 pm
Wednesday, October 27
School of Pharmacy, Noon 2 pm
Thursday, October 28
The Underground, 10 am 2 pm
UPCOMING FLU CLINICS
* Payable by cash, check or credit card at the time of
service. Only students are eligible to be billed for services.
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6B / SPORTS / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnSAn.COm
AssociAted Press
NEW YORK CC Sabathia
pitched like a champion, and the
New York Yankees are heading
for Texas. A whole lot better than
heading home.
Nick Swisher and Robinson
Cano hit consecutive homers to
build an early cushion, Sabathia
made the lead stand up and the
Yankees avoided elimination, beat-
ing the Rangers 7-2 Wednesday
and closing within 3-2 in the AL
championship series.
Were right where we need to
be, Swisher said.
A late-arriving crowd for the
late-afternoon game wondered
whether this would be it for the
defending World Series champs
after Texas outscored them 25-5
while winning three in a row.
But Sabathia bounced back
from an erratic opener, staying
away from too much trouble
against Josh Hamilton and Texas
big bats. Rangers slugger Nelson
Cruz made an early exit with ham-
string trouble, a day after Yankees
star Mark Teixeira was lost for
the postseason with a hamstring
injury. Curtis Granderson added
an eighth-inning homer for New
York, his second RBI of the game.
There was a determination,
Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.
We have not played extreme-
ly well in this series, to say the
least.
Now the teams will go deep
in the heart of Texas to decide
the pennant in the best-of-seven
series.
When they resume Friday night
in Arlington for Game 6, Phil
Hughes starts for the Yankees
against Colby Lewis in a rematch
of Game 2, won by the Rangers
7-2.
Its not disappointing, Rangers
manager Ron Washington said.
Its a seven-game series.
In the 50th anniversary of a
franchise that has never reached
the World Series, Texas remains
one win away. To get past the
Rangers, the Yankees will eventu-
ally have to solve postseason star
Cliff Lee, who would start a Game
7 against Andy Pettitte.
Crazier things have happened,
Swisher said.
New York is trying to over-
come its first 3-1 postseason defi-
cit 1958. Since the LCS went to a
best-of-seven format, 24 of the 30
previous teams to take 3-1 series
leads have won pennants.
No matter what, the season
is over for Teixeira. The All-
Star first baseman was removed
from the postseason roster and
replaced by Eduardo Nunez, and
Teixeira would not be eligible for
the World Series. Lance Berkman
took over at first base and had
a scare when he slipped chas-
ing Ian Kinslers foul pop, causing
his head and back to snap back.
Berkman stayed in the game and
later caught a foul pop-up for the
final out.
I imagine hes going to be pret-
ty sore tomorrow, Girardi said.
He gutted it out today for us.
The Yankees took a 3-0 lead in
the second as C.J. Wilson seemed
to have trouble with a muddy
mound and created a hole with
a pair of four-pitch walks. Jorge
Posada and Granderson had run-
scoring singles.
MLB
Yankees win Game 5 in NYC, send series back to Texas
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ANSAN
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