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football | 2b

Sophomore backup quarter-


back Kale Pick injured his leg at
the end of Kansaswin against
New Mexico State on Saturday.
Pick gets
play time
and injury
football | 1b
The Jayhawks are 2-2 with
the 42-16 win against the
New Mexico State Aggies.
Sophomore D.J. Beshears led
the team to victory.
Beshears
shines on
ofense
Saturday
Rewind | 4b
Check out
the football
recap inside
Catch all the stats and analysis
from the Jayhawksvictory
against New Mexico State.
Monday, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010 www.kanSan.coM voluME 123 iSSuE 28
D
AILY
K
ANSAN
T
HE
U
NIVERSITY
The student voice since 1904
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
2010 The University Daily Kansan
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Cryptoquips . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
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fIJI suspended after party injury
AdministRAtion
BY GARTH SEARS
gsears@kansan.com
The partys over.
The University has placed the
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity under
interim suspension the first
University suspension in six years
pending a hazing investigation
after a party where a student was
life-flighted to the University of
Kansas Hospital for head trauma.
the injuRy
Matthew Fritzie, a freshman
from Stilwell, was life-flighted
around 8 p.m. Sept. 17 after diving
into a temporary pool at the fra-
ternity, also known as FIJI, 1540
Louisiana St.
Lexie Engleman, the Lawrence
battalion chief, made the deci-
sion to fly the student to Kansas
City. She couldnt comment on
his condition, but said the inju-
ries were severe enough to require
sending him to a level-one trauma
hospital.
Michael Cray and Ted Peters,
sophomores in neighboring Phi
Delta Theta, 1621 Edgehill Road,
said a group of women was at the
FIJI house during the accident
but came over to Phi Delta Theta
after.
Cray and Peters said they
learned from the women that
Fritzie came up from the pool
struggling and convulsing. They
said people helped him out of
the water and stabilized his neck
before paramedics arrived.
Cray and Peters said Fritizie
couldnt feel his lower body and
arms.
Throughout the night, we heard
progressively better statuses, Cray
said of Fritzies condition.
Representatives at the University
of Kansas Hospital confirmed
Fritzies presence there but were
unable to comment on his current
condition.
Fritzies father, who was at the
hospital, also declined to com-
ment.
the pARty
Lawrence paramedics arrived
at FIJI about 8 p.m. and airlifted
Fritzie soon after.
But that didnt stop the frater-
nity from partying.
Kelsey Fairbanks, a freshman
from Olathe, said she got to the
fraternity house about 9:30 p.m.
but stayed only a short time.
She said she was carded when
she arrived and overheard at the
party that people were being
carded because
the police had
arrived.
She said no
one at the party
was talking
about what hap-
pened to Fritzie.
Ramona
Yoder, a fresh-
man from
Newton, said
she was there
from 11 p.m. to
1 a.m. She said no one was dis-
cussing Fritzies injury.
Yoder said the party appeared
to be over when she walked by the
FIJI house again at 1:30 a.m.
The most recent Phi Gamma
Delta newsletter, which was from
the spring 2010 semester and is
available on
kufiji.org, dis-
cussed some
of the par-
ties it hosts,
including FIJI
Island.
The
Universitys
Interfraternity
Council didnt
return calls
and e-mails
regarding
whether FIJI had submitted a
Such violations of human
dignity are always taken
seriously and confronted
immediately by this
University.
Marlesa roney
Vice provost for student success
gReen gARbAge
Students perform audit at brewery
BY MICHAEL HOLTZ
mholtz@kansan.com
Lydia Gibson likens recycling
habits to smoking habits.
She calls it a classic paradigm
shift when what was once wide-
ly accepted in American society
became culturally shunned.
Its the attitude, said Gibson,
president of the student chapter
of the Air and Waste Management
Association, or AWMA. You used
to smoke inside and around your
kids. Now youd never do that.
She sees a similar shift happen-
ing in the way people perceive
recycling, although she admits a
change in attitude doesnt neces-
sarily dictate a change in behavior.
To accomplish that, Gibson said,
the focus must be on reshaping
recycling culture.
In other words, Gibson would
like to see the same level of social
pressure put on smokers applied
to those who dont recycle. If indi-
viduals were forced to think more
about recycling by increasing
the number of recycling bins on
campus, for example Gibson
said theyd be more likely to do so.
Gibson, a graduate student from
Prairie Village, had the chance to
test her hypothesis at Boulevard
Brewing Company on Friday after-
noon. With plans to go zero land-
fill by the end of the year, the
Kansas City, Mo., brewing com-
pany requested AWMA to per-
form a waste audit of its facilities.
To achieve zero landfill, Boulevard
must send minimal to no trash
to the landfill. More than 20 vol-
unteers, including seven KU stu-
dents, sorted two and a half days
worth of trash collected from every
department at the brewery. The
volunteers divided the 226 pounds
of trash into 17 purple bins labeled
as different recyclable and non-
recyclable materials.
Gibson then recorded the weight
and volume of trash in each bin. She
recorded that 187.55 pounds, or 83
percent, was food waste and com-
postable materials, such as napkins
and paper plates, from Boulevards
hospitality rooms alone.
Gibson, who spent most of the
two-hour audit frantically writing
notes on her clipboard, will present
Boulevard with a final report in
October. Laurie Williams, logistics
manager for Boulevard, will use the
report to determine where to place
additional recycling bins and how
much non-recyclable waste will be
diverted to Lafarge North America,
a construction materials company.
Gibson and Williams agreed
that creating a more conscientious
recycling culture at the brewery
would be one of the most chal-
lenging obstacles to achieving zero
landfill. Employees will no longer
be allowed to simply throw every-
thing into a trash can.
The ideal thing is to have
everybody get on board with it,
Williams said. Its just a learning
process.
Instead of hauling it to a landfill,
Boulevard will ship it to Lafarges
cement plant in Sugar Creek,
Mo., located 10 miles northeast
of Kansas City. Because cement is
made at extremely high tempera-
tures, the plant can burn almost
anything as alternative fuel.
Kurt Gerdes, education chair-
man for AWMAs Midwest section,
said about half of the plants fuel
comes from alternative fuels such
as the non-recyclable waste col-
lected at Boulevard.
Youll get to the point where
nobody working here sees trash,
Gibson said. Theyll only see
energy.
Edited by Anna Nordling
evan Palmer/KaNsaN
Nick Benson (left), a sophomore fromOrlando, Fla., Lydia Gibson, a graduate student fromPrarie Village, and Matt Geier (right), a senior fromGarden City, sort through trash for an environmental
audit Friday afternoon at Boulevard Brewing Company. Boulevard has teamed with LaFarge to in an attempt to become zero landfll.
cAmpus
Salon Nouveau to host program on porn industry
Students get chance
to hear experts and
discuss taboo topic
BY JUSTINE PATTON
jpatton@kansan.com
Ever wondered how much porn
stars make? You can find out
tonight at Salon Nouveaus first
program of the school year, XXX
The Porn Industry, which is spon-
sored by the Commission on the
Status of Women. Salon Nouveau
is the commissions new program
that includes interactive presen-
tations and discussions every
Monday night.
I chose this topic because I
find it fascinating how pornified
American culture has become,
said Kaylyn Wright, Salon Nouveau
coordinator.
Wright will be the primary speak-
er at the event, but her voice wont
be the only one heard. Discussions
will happen throughout the pre-
sentation when students can voice
their own opinions. Wright said
the goal of the program wasnt to
tell people what they should think
about porn.
It is my hope to present the
topic in a neutral way and to allow
people to draw their own conclu-
sions about whether they are pro-
or anti-porn, Wright said.
Not all students feel comfortable
or have an interest in discussing
porn.
Erin Fauss, a freshman from
Lenexa, said even though she
wasnt opposed to the event, she
wouldnt be going either.
Im not interested in learning
about porn, Fauss said.
Salon Nouveau will cover a few
topics, including a brief history
of pornography, how performers
salaries are determined, what types
of pornography exist, reasons why
individuals get into porn industry,
and a brief overview of feminist
theories of pornography. There will
also be a discussion on HIV testing
in the world of pornography.
Kristen Vermeire, a junior from
Lenexa, said she thought the pro-
gram sounded refreshing.
I think its a neat experience to
be around people who arent afraid
to say what they think about taboo
topics, Vermeire said.
Edited by Anna Nordling
the poRn
industRy
when: Tonight, 8 to 9 p.m.
wheRe: Kansas Union,
Walnut room (6th foor)
entrance is free.
see fiji oN Page 5a
2A / NEWS / MondAy, SepteMber 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnSAn.coM
QUOTE OF THE DAY
do not dwell in the past, do not
dream of the future, concentrate the
mind on the present moment.
African proverb, qi.com
FACT OF THE DAY
More money is printed for Monopoly
than for the U.S. treasury every day.
humour.200ok.com.au/facts.htm
Monday, September 27, 2010
Featured
content
kansan.com
Football photo gallery
kansas ranks third in the
nation for avian species
diversity, According to the
Audubon Societys bird-a-
thon, kansas ornithologists
have counted at least 225
diferent species of birds in
the state.
Military Journalist Experience
Follow reporter kelly Stroda as she blogs
from Fort Leavenworth all week.
See all the images from the Jayhawks vic-
tory against new Mexico State.
nben eggleston, professor of philosophy, will lead
a Lunch and conversationsession on managing
grade expectations, which will focus on helping
students appreciate the realities of grade distribu-
tions in large classes from noon to 1 p.m. in room
135 at budig Hall.
nkU Libraries Instructional Services will host a
workshop for desktop conferencing with adobe
connect pro from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the budig
pc Lab.
Whats going on?
MONDAY
September 27
THURSDAY
September 30
FRIDAY
October 1
nSUA to show toy Story 3 at Woodruf Auditorium
in the kansas Union from 8 to 10 p.m. tickets are free
with Student Saver card, $2 with valid kU Id and $3
for the general public.
nkU Hillel will sponsor a Shabbat dinner from 6 p.m.
to 8 p.m. at the burge Union.
SATURDAY
Octorber 2
nSUA to show toy Story 3 at Woodruf Auditorium in
the kansas Union from 8 to 10 p.m. tickets are free with
Student Saver card, $2 with valid kU Id and $3 for the
general public.
nthe School of Music to host kU opera: cosi Fan
tutte from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at robert baustian
theatre
nSUA to show toy Story 3 at Woodruf Auditorium in
the kansas Union from 8 to 10 p.m. tickets are free with
Student Saver card, $2 with valid kU Id and $3 for the
general public.
n the kU Law Federalist Society will sponsor a panel
discussion on health care reform from 12:30 p.m. to
1:30 p.m. in Green Hall, Stinson Morrison Hecker Lec-
ture Hall, room 104.
nkU Army rotc and the School of engineering will
host race day at the burge! from 10 a.m.. to 2 p.m. in
the burge Union parking lot.
TUESDAY
September 28
WEDNESDAY
September 29
http://www.facebook.com/doleinstitute
SUNDAY
October 3
ndr. berghout will perform from 5:00 p.m. to 5:30
p.m. at the World War II Memorial campanile.
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
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center
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(785) 864-4810
kJHkis the student voice
inradio. eachday there is
news, music, sports, talk
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MEDIA PARTNERS
check out kansan.com or kUJH-tV
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STAYING CONNECTED
WITH THE KANSAN
Get the latest news and give us
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kansan on twitter @thekan-
san_news, or become a fan of
the University daily kansan on
Facebook.
Ex-KU employee
faces porn charges
A former University
employee pled guilty on
Monday to charges of sexual
exploitation of a child. Sev-
eral hundred images of child
pornography were found on
his work computer in 2007,
said charles branson, doug-
las county district attorney.
John G. Wallis, 62, topeka,
was an electronics tech-
nologist in the physics and
astronomy department. Wal-
lis was hired at the University
on March 14, 1988 and was
terminated on Sept. 13,
2007, said Jill Jess, the Uni-
versitys associate director of
public relations.
branson said although the
police discovered the images
in 2007, charges were not
fled until March 2009 be-
cause of the investigation.
Wallis could receive proba-
tion or up to 11 years in pris-
on and he might be required
to register as a sex ofender.
Sentencing is scheduled for
nov. 23. He remains out of
jail at this time.
Allyson Shaw
What do you think?
by geoffrey calvert
JAMES LEROY
Overland Park freshman
biology 150 because its a 600-
person class and Im not used to
large classes.
JOEY BROWN
Shawnee junior
Sociology 104 because I dont go.
DYLAN DERRYBERRY
Dallas junior
Latin, because its a dead lan-
guage and Im having trouble
understanding why I even signed
up for it.
JESSICA BENSON
Overland Park sophomore
Anatomy lab. Its a lot of memori-
zation.
Whats been your hardest class, and why?
LOCAL
www.testprep.ku.edu 785-864-5823
GRE

LSAT

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TEST PREPARATION

100097
YOUR #1
HIBACHI
SPOT
IN
LAWRENCE
785.838.3399
acrossfromDillions
on6th
KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, SepteMber 27, 2010 / NEWS / 3A
fiji (continued from 1A)
Drumroll, please
jessica janasz/KANSAN
Percussion Ensemble (left to right) DavidVernon, second year Masters student, Eric Sidebottom, junior, Shane Nickels, second year Masters student, and Miguel Rivera Ramierez, third year Masters give a seven minute performance at the Lied Center on
Friday night. The hour long concert included other musical performances by student groups such as the Marching Jayhawks.
Party Notification Form for its
party. Fraternities are required
to turn in a PNF for all of their
functions, regardless of whether
they involve alcohol. The PNF is
supposed to include a guest list
and account for a sober member
who constantly monitors the
front door as well as other secu-
rity measures.
If the party involves alcohol,
the fraternity is required to turn
in the PNF four business days in
advance. The guest list and chap-
ter roster are due 48 hours before
the event.
THE fRATERNITY
REAcTS
On Monday, Sept. 20, three
days after Fritzies injury, the FIJI
house issued a statement.
Our thoughts and prayers go
out to Matthew Fritzie and his
family. We are all praying for a full
and speedy recovery, it said. We
are investigating the events of the
evening and will take appropriate
disciplinary action if any of the
Fraternitys rules or policies were
violated.
The international Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity released a state-
ment Sept. 25, saying it was also
investigating its Kansas chapter.
Phi Gamma Delta
International Fraternity shares
the Universitys concerns regard-
ing the allegations of hazing that
have been brought forward, the
statement said. The Fraternity
has suspended the activities of
the chapter pending investigation
of the allegations and a deci-
sion on any disciplinary action.
The Fraternity and involved Phi
Gamma Delta alumni have been
in regular communication with
University representatives and
will continue to cooperate with
the University.
THE SUSpENSIoN
Thursday, Sept. 24, six days
after the injury, the University
suspended the FIJI house pend-
ing an investigation to determine
whether hazing was involved.
Marlesa Roney, vice provost
for Student Success, suspended
the fraternity based on University
code, according to a press
release.
The University absolutely will
not tolerate hazing of any kind,
Roney said in the release. Such
violations of human dignity
are always taken seriously and
confronted immediately by this
University.
Officials from the Office of
Student Success will conduct the
investigation.
After the accident, we were
made aware of allegations of
activities that could be construed
as hazing, said Jill Jess, spokes-
woman for University Relations.
Jess declined to comment about
how the University was tipped off
to the allegations of hazing.
A student found guilty of haz-
ing can face up to two years of
suspension or at least two years of
expulsion. An organization found
guilty of hazing can be suspended
for up to two years or face remov-
al of organizational registration
for at least two years, according
to the Code of Student Rights and
Responsibilities.
Meanwhile, Jess said the sus-
pension meant the fraternity
would not be able to participate
in any events such as intramurals
as an organization during the
investigation.
Other benefits that the fra-
ternity will not have during the
investigation include the ability
to request funding from the stu-
dent activity fee through Student
Senate and the official use of
University facilities, according to
the Universitys policy on student
group registration information.
THE pREcEDENT
The last time the University
suspended a fraternity was in
October 2004 when it suspended
Kappa Alpha Psi for almost two
years after its international fra-
ternity investigated allegations of
hazing.
A University hearing panel,
composed of University staff and a
student, determined the fraternity
had violated the Code of Student
Rights and Responsibilities.
The University allowed the fra-
ternity to reapply for the status
of a registered organization after
those two years, but under several
conditions.
For example, no current mem-
bers of Kappa Alpha Psi at the
time would be allowed to partici-
pate again in the fraternity, even
as alumni.
It wasnt the most severe pen-
alty the University could have
given for Kappa Alpha Psi or for
Phi Gamma Delta now the fra-
ternitys total expulsion from the
University is also on the table.
Edited by Joel Petterson
Drug cartel ofcer
caught in Mexico
MeXICO CIty Mexican
soldiers detained the Zetas
drug cartels alleged opera-
tions chief for the resort city of
Cancun, the army said Sunday.
A defense department
statement said Jose Angel
Fernandez is suspected in last
months fre-bombing of a bar
that killed eight people.
Fernandez, also known as
el pelon, or baldy, allegedly
ran an extortion ring for the
Zetas and ordered the bar
attacked with gasoline bombs
because its owner refused to
pay protection money.
the victims six women
and two men included em-
ployees of the Castillo del Mar,
which had a rough reputation
and was located far from the
hotel zone.
Associated Press
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4A / ENTERTAINMENT / mondAy, September 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kAnSAn.com
10 is the easiest day, 0 the most
challenging.
HoRoScopES
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 5
Unless you agree on details with
someone close, you both end up
fussing with neither one of you
happy. you may have to go more
than halfway.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 5
A male in your environment is
anxious to provide for you. Let him
supply food and drink while you
continue to work. dont interrupt
the idea fow.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 5
you need to take care of practical
matters before taking on any team
activities. that way theres no stress
buildup. clean something.
cANcER (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 5
you could spend the entire day
considering a gift for someone
special. or you could join the
group, get down to business and
get the job done.
LEo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 5
A female associate inspires your
passions through an invitation.
make sure you understand the ap-
propriate dress code. then you can
relax and enjoy the company.
VIRGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6
Invite people over for some serious
fun. you choose the game. Give
someone else the opportunity to
plan the menu. Use paper plates.
LIbRA (Sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is an 7
Instead of frantically sorting
through possibilities, take direct
action. physical movement reduces
stress and allows you to reach a
conclusion.
ScoRpIo (oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
A female tells you how to achieve
greater comfort in a relationship.
dont fuss about the facts. Just fol-
low her advice for best results.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 5
youve entered the home stretch,
and can see the fnish line. Some-
thing happens out of the blue that
forces you to spend more money. It
all works out.
cApRIcoRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6
your need for creative expression
gets fulflled through a group ac-
tivity. At frst you doubt this could
be possible, but give it a chance.
AqUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
plan a romantic moment. keep all
the details secret until youre sure
about the venue and the guest list.
trust someone with experience
to help.
pIScES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
A couple you havent seen in a
long time issues an invitation for
quite soon. Shufe your schedule
and make reservations immedi-
All puzzles King Features
bEYoND THE GRAVE
Nicholas Sambaluk
Ian Vern Tan
THE NExT pANEL
MUSIc
Catfsh delivers sadder side
of social-media deceptions
Mcclatchy tribune
LOS ANGELES What if you
met someone online and later found
she wasnt whom she appeared to
be? And what if the person she
didnt appear to be turned out to be
someone else entirely?
That situation with its atten-
dant moral questions, narrative
challenges, and headache-inducing
implications is at the heart of
Catfish, a social-media medita-
tion and mystery from first-time
filmmakers Henry Joost and Ariel
Schulman.
The movie, which caused a sen-
sation at this years Sundance Film
Festival and is being released by
the genre label Rogue Pictures,
could become a touchstone for the
Facebook age. And it seems cer-
tain to stir passionate discussion
about the line between fact and
fiction: Although its makers have
strenuously defended the film as
a documentary, skeptics question
whether events so remarkable can
also be truthful.
On the surface, Catfish follows
a familiar arc, that of an infatuated
young man and his crush. New
York photographer Nev Schulman
a charismatic, slightly goofy
24-year-old who is also the brother
of director Ariel is contacted
out of the blue by a woman from
Michigan. Her daughter, an 8-year-
old art prodigy named Abby, saw a
picture that Nev had taken for the
New York Sun and was inspired
to paint a portrait based on the
photo. Intrigued and impressed
with her painting, the wide-eyed
Nev responds appreciatively.
Soon more artwork begins to
arrive in the mail, and Nev starts
to learn more about Abby. She is a
young girl with artistic chops, but
more important for Nev, she has a
19-year-old sister named Megan.
Before long, Nev gets to know
Megan too and falls for her. For
eight months they communicate
via e-mail, text message, Facebook
and phone (but never meet).
Nev, goaded by his brother and
Joost, decides to track down Megan.
The trio set out for Colorado, where
Megan will be visiting a music
festival. Their journey detours to
Michigan, where Megan and her
family live.
What the young men find when
they arrive is startling not because
it is lurid but because it is raw,
unfiltered humanity. In follow-
ing Megan, Catfish morphs into
something entirely unexpected: a
tearjerker.
For Nirvanas bassist,
politics a lasting note
Mcclatchy tribune
Actors and musicians often use
their celebrity to draw attention
to political or social causes.
Rarely, though, do they relish
the nitty-gritty the way former
Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic
does.
A founding member of one of
the most influential bands in his-
tory, Novoselic also has influenced
politics in his rural community in
Washington state. The one-time
Democratic Party chairman for
Wahkiakum County (popula-
tion 4,000), Novoselic can speak
with authority on such topics as
unassembled caucuses and the
intricacies of Prop. 14, the voter-
approved but legally challenged
call for a "top-two" California pri-
mary.
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Well Rock
Your Chalk.
I would like to provide my
views on the article in the UDK
on Wednesday, Sept. 22 titled
Business School dean an-
nounces June resignation. I
am the Audit Partner in charge
of the Deloitte Missouri Audit
practice and am an alumnus
of KU. I am currently on the
KUEA Board of Trustees, the KU
Alumni Association National
Board and Executive Commit-
tee, the Business School Board
of Advisors including Executive
Committee and Past Chair, the
AIS Area Board Council includ-
ing Executive Committee and
Past Chair, and a member of the
KU Organizing Committee for
our next capital campaign. I also
served as a member of the Busi-
ness School Diferential Tuition
Committee.
I strongly disagree with the
assertions made by certain
MBA students in the article.
As a member of the diferential
tuition committee, our inten-
tion was to combine scholarship
funds with work study programs
which we believed were critical
to student success. It should be
noted that the funding provided
for students through scholar-
ships and work opportunities has
increased at a higher rate than
diferential tuition. It would also
be useful for students to under-
stand that diferential tuition
added fve majors to the school,
allowed tenured faculty to grow
by 30 percent and has resulted
in student enrollment growth
of 20 percent. While it was the
diferential tuition committees
view that there was to be student
oversight of the use of funds, and
I understand that the committee
needs to be functioning again, I
feel it grossly unfair to character-
ize Dean Bill Fuersts tenure as
dean as lacking transparency. As
a member of the Board of Advi-
sors and executive committee
and chair, we have had nothing
other than very transparent and
open communication with the
Dean about the schools activities
and progress. Dean Bill Fuerst
has accomplished a tremen-
dous amount for the School of
Business and will leave some
big shoes to fll. We owe Dean
Fuerst our gratitude for launch-
ing this Business School into
competitiveness with other top
business schools in the country
and for helping make it a school
from which we can recruit top
students who efectively compete
against any business school in
the country. Dean Fuerst has not
only positioned every student
in the business school for future
success, but has enhanced the
value of every KU business
degree granted. I support the
Chancellors remarks in the
article, and hope that all KU
Business School students share
my sense of enthusiasm and
pride in the accomplishments of
this business school. Its a shame
that the eforts of a few are trying
to cloud the tremendous accom-
plishments of many.
Howard Cohen is a School
of Business alumnus.
I
n 1895, a grocer and magnet
therapist in Davenport, Iowa
was approached by a deaf man
with a strange lump on his spine.
Te grocer, named Daniel David
Palmer, felt the lump and asked the
man for permission to rack his
bone back into position.
Te man agreed, and afer a
few manipulations of the bump,
Palmer heard a pop, restoring his
patients hearing.
With that frst adjustment, the
practice of chiropractic was born.
Palmer theorized that the
mans deafness was due to a
misalignment of the spine
known to chiropractors as a
subluxationthat blocked nerves
related to hearing and concluded
that all ailments, from the fu to
mental illness, were related to
subluxations and could be cured
by spinal manipulation.
While few modern
chiropractors adhere closely to
Palmers impossible view, the
theory of subluxations continues
to play a major role in the practice
of most, despite the fact that
only a vague and highly tractable
defnition has been agreed upon by
the profession as to what exactly a
subluxation is, let alone how to go
about treating one.
Stephen Barrett, MD,
webmaster of quackwatch.com and
frequent critic of chiropractics,
states that some chiropractors
change the qualifcation for
what a subluxation is to adapt
to particular cases, while one
of his collaborators, William T.
Jarvis, co-author of Te Health
Robbers, writes that treatments for
subluxations vary almost as much
as the defnition with at least a
dozen diferent notions about how
the spine should be corrected
dividing chiropractors.
Without a frm defnition of
subluxationsthe corner stone
of most chiropracticits not
surprising that the efcacy of the
practice is non-existent for most
conditions.
A 2008 critical review in the
Journal of Pain and System
Management found that the
results of several studies fail
to demonstrate that spinal
manipulation is efective.
Te article concluded
that Chiropractors belief
insubluxation, or spinal
manipulation is not rational.
Te only instance where
chiropractic has been proven to be
as efective as more conventional
methods is in the treatment of
lower back pain.
In the book Trick or
Treatment, the authors research
fnds that Chiropractorsmight
compete with physiotherapists
in terms of treating some back
problems, but all their other claims
are beyond belief and can carry a
range of signifcant risks.
What exactly are these risks?
A systematic review summarized
data and found that up to
November 2001 there had been
around 700 serious complications
and 50 deaths attributed to
chiropractic, with many due to
stroke.
As with much of alternative
medicine, adherents of
chiropractic claim that
conventional healthcare is fawed
due to a fnancial incentive shared
by doctors, hospitals, andmost
ominouslybig pharma that
ofen causes providers to overlook
a patients needs in pursuit of a
quick buck.
But, consider this: according
to Business Wire, in 2006 U.S.
chiropractic was a $7 billion
business and consisted of 30,000
frms.
While this doesnt begin to
compare with the trillion dollar
U.S. healthcare industry, its
still very proftable and leads to
many of the same problems of
conventional medicine.
In fact, in 1983 chiropractic
manipulation came in as the ninth
most frequently billed procedure
on Medicare Part B, which begs
the question, How many of those
were necessary? And, popularity
of the profession has only grown
since then.
Although the mainstream
healthcare industry is by no
means fawless (far from it), the
solution certainly doesnt lie in
turning ones back on efective
techniques and placing faith in
the unsubstantiatedand mostly
disprovenclaims of alternative
medicine like chiropractic.
Holtzen is a junior from
Fayetteville, Ark., in chemistry
and Spanish.
To contribute to Free For
All, visit Kansan.com or
call (785) 864-0500.
nnn
YAY Jayhawks! BOOO allergies!
nnn
You cant be half a gangster.
Not anymore.
nnn
I dont care if I am 20 years old
and in college, I am going to
see Harry Potter 7 at midnight.
nnn
Who thinks i should make my
girlfriend eat a double down
sandwich?

nnn
Its not impossible. I used
to bullsey wamprats in my
T-16 back home and theyre
not much bigger than three
meters!

nnn
Sometimes when I cant sleep,
I watch The Joy of Painting
with Bob Ross, online at night.
nnn
How would you like to be my
new wingman?
nnn
Sometimes I sit on Facebook
waiting for a new status that I
can like.
nnn
I dont care if you have
the same car as me! Dont
yell at me from across the
intersection.
nnn
I just got iTunes for the frst
time. Ever.
editors note: Welcome to 1999.
nnn
Today I failed....It feels weird
getting a B on an exam.
nnn
Dear neighbors, sorry you can
hear my bad guitar playing
through the walls. Eventually it
will be good guitar playing for
you to enjoy.
nnn
I just lost the game.
nnn
First night at the Hawk =
Success.
nnn
Man, girls sure are trashy these
days.
nnn
I literally just pooped all over
myself in lab. Sorry everyone.
nnn
You ate an entire wheel of
cheese? Im not even mad,
thats impressive.
nnn
Make me be good God, but
not yet.
nnn
Bikini shopping is so fun.
nnn
Surprise trips downtown
make my life. IF YOU KNOW
WHAT I MEAN.
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
online at kansan.com/letters.
how to submit A LEttER to thE EDitoR
Alex Garrison, editor
864-4810 or agarrison@kansan.com
nick Gerik, managing editor
864-4810 or ngerik@kansan.com
erin Brown, managing editor
864-4810 or ebrown@kansan.com
david Cawthon, kansan.com managing editor
864-4810 or dcawthon@kansan.com
emily McCoy, Kansan TV assignment editor
864-4810 or emccoy@kansan.com
Jonathan Shorman, opinion editor
864-4924 or jshorman@kansan.com
Shauna Blackmon, associate opinion editor
864-4924 or sblackmon@kansan.com
Joe Garvey, business manager
864-4358 or jgarvey@kansan.com
Amy OBrien, sales manager
864-4477 or aobrien@kansan.com
MalcolmGibson, general manager and news
adviser
864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com
Jon Schlitt, sales and marketing adviser
864-7666 or jschlitt@kansan.com
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
MARIAM SAIFAN
Chiropractors break the
back of honest science
SKepTiCiSM
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
monDAy, sEPtEmbER 27, 2010
Follow Opinion on Twitter.
@kansanopinion
Deans accomplishments
should be the main focus
LeTTer TO THe ediTOr
Theres a very easy way
to avoid any concerns about
what a given animal may have
consumed or been treated
with: Dont eat them. Im not
saying everyone (or even any-
one) should go full on vegan.
However, it is a lot cheaper
than buying all organic meats.
Its also worth noting that, if
youre concerned about ani-
mal welfare, organic doesnt
really mean a damn thing.
But again, I dont want to turn
this into a vegan advocacy
piece. The point is, if youre
concerned about the quality
of your diet (and you should
be), there are many factors
you ought to weigh more
heavily than if a given food
item is organic.
Beech27 in response
to Cutting organic confusion
worth time on Sept. 22.
Chatterbox
Responses to the news of the week on
Kansan.com
Good
Science,
Bad Science
By Andrew Holtzen
aholtzen@kansan.com
Rape is rape. It is not losing in
fantasy football or miserably failing
a science exam. It is not beating
your fraternity brothers in a video
game or tripping on the side-
walk. Rape is the crime of forcing
another person to commit a sexual
act. Rape is a real fear for probably
every female on this campus. It is
not a topic to be taken lightly. Tat
is why it appalls me to open up the
Free For All and fnd the com-
ment, Im getting raped in fantasy
football this week.
Ask a survivor how it felt to
be raped, and I doubt she will
respond with, You know when
you dont know any of the answers
on the chemistry exam? Rape
is a painful, traumatic experience
with real, lifelong consequences.
Survivors are faced with count-
less psychological afictions, not
to mention the everyday fear and
anxiety of living in a world you
no longer trust. It is an ordeal that
takes years of therapy to overcome.
Unless you were literally assaulted
by your fellow groupies, you were
not raped in fantasy football this
week. Perhaps you lost hideously,
but you were not raped. And no,
you were not raped by that chem-
istry exam. Perhaps you should
study more next time, but you were
not raped. You lost. You failed. But
you were not by any means raped.
Words are powerful. Tey
generate real emotions, and can
determine a persons every thought
and action. Words also have the
ability to validate an experience or
to detract from it. To misuse the
word rape is to disrespect and
minimize both the sufering of a
survivor and the strength it took
her to overcome such a horrendous
ordeal. It is a true travesty to live
in a community that would allow
such disrespect.
Jacqueline Hieber is a senior
from Bridgewater, Virginia, in
psychology
Words have power, and rape
should not be in Free for All
LeTTer TO THe ediTOr
Six months ago this week,
Congress passed the federal
health reform law, the Afordable
Care Act. But with all the politi-
cal wrangling, it was sometimes
hard to tell what the law actually
does.
Last Tursday, we began to
experience what is really in this
bill, as the frst set of key reforms
took efect, delivering consum-
ers real protections in the health
insurance marketplace.
Despite the varied rhetoric
coming from Washington, D.C.,
both for and against reform,
Hoosiers can begin to breathe
easier about their health cover-
age. For many, afordable cover-
age is fnally within reach.
Heres a rundown of what
started Tursday:
First of all, young people are
now eligible to stay on their par-
ents health insurance plans until
the age of 26.
Given that young people make
up the largest demographic of
the nations uninsured popula-
tion, this provision is a huge step
toward expanding coverage and
making it afordable for young
people and their families.
Furthermore, insurance com-
panies can no longer drop your
coverage when you get seriously
ill, and you have a right to appeal
any decisions by your insurance
company that could afect the
availability of your coverage.
You can rest easy knowing
your coverage will be there when
you need it most. Starting today,
patients wont have to pay out-of-
pocket for preventive care on all
new health insurance plans.
Now when you want to
protect yourself with preventive
measures like a physical or a fu
shot, you wont experience any
co-pays or deductible costs on
any new plan.
Small business owners will
receive tax credits to help cover
the cost of providing health
insurance to their employees.
Tis is another new provision
that will enable you to count on
your insurance being there when
you need it most.
From this day forward, no
insurance company can deny
coverage to a child because of a
pre-existing condition. Any child
younger than 19 will not sufer
discrimination by insurance
companies on the basis of an
existing illness. And starting in
2014, the same will be true for all
people.
Afer all the wrangling and
rhetoric, national health care
reform is beginning to deliver on
its promise.
Tats something we can all
take a minute to celebrate.
From UWIRE. The Indiana
Daily Student at Indiana
University
New health law provisions
begin making care better
GueST COLuMn
6A / NEWS / MONDAY, SEptEMbEr 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANSAN.cOM
RELIgIoN
Bishop fghts accusations of luring four men
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LITHONIA, Ga. Casting
himself as the Bibles ultimate un-
derdog, Bishop Eddie Long went
before thousands of faithful sup-
porters at his megachurch Sunday
and promised to fght accusations
that he lured four young men into
sexual relationships.
I feel like David against Goliath.
But I got fve rocks, and I havent
thrown one yet, Long said in his
frst public remarks since his accus-
ers fled lawsuits last week claiming
he abused his spiritual author-
ity. He stopped short of denying
the allegations but implied he was
wronged by them.
I have never in my life por-
trayed myself as a perfect man. But
I am not the man thats being por-
trayed on the television. Tats not
me. Tat is not me, he said.
Longs brief addresses to the
congregation at New Birth Mis-
sionary Baptist Church were met
with thunderous applause and an
outpouring of support during ser-
vices that were equal parts part
rock concert and pep rally. Te
sanctuary was nearly flled to its
10,000-seat capacity for both the
8 a.m. and 11 a.m. services. Many
lined up two hours before the doors
of the church opened.
Long became one of the countrys
most powerful independent church
leaders over the last 20 years, turn-
ing a suburban Atlanta congrega-
tion of 150 to a 25,000-member
powerhouse with a $50 million ca-
thedral and a roster of parishioners
that includes athletes, entertainers
and politicians. And there was al-
most no sign Sunday that his fock
wanted to turn him away.
Followers prayed, sang and em-
braced one another as they rallied
around their senior pastor. Wearing
a cream-colored suit as he strode
into the church sanctuary hand-in-
hand with his wife, Vanessa, Long
paused to soak in the adoration.
During the second service, how-
ever, one young man in a blue shirt
stood up and shouted: We want
to know the truth, man! He was
quickly escorted out and did not
return.
Afer the service, many ex-
pressed unwavering support for
their leader.
We know and we love Bishop,
said Annie Cannon, a seven-year
member of New Birth. We love
our place of worship. My son goes
to school here. We do everything
here.
It is unclear whether Long faces
any risk of being removed by his
churchs board, but the allegations
at the very least guarantee months
of scrutiny as the lawsuits move
forward.
Long is a father of four who has
been an outspoken opponent of
gay marriage and whose church
has counseled gay members to
become straight. Two young men
say he groomed them for sexual
relationships when they were en-
rolled in the
churchs Long-
Fellows Youth
Academy, a
program that
taught teens
about sexual
and fnancial
discipline. Two
other young
men one of
whom attend-
ed a satellite
church in Charlotte, N.C. have
made similar claims.
Te men say they were 17 or 18
when the relationships began. Fed-
eral and state authorities have de-
clined to investigate because Geor-
gias age of consent is 16.
Ive been accused. Im under at-
tack. I want you to know, as I said
earlier, I am not a perfect man,
Long said. But this thing, Im go-
ing to fght.
Long did not address the allega-
tions directly but spoke at length
about enduring painful times. He
used the word painful nearly 20
times. Te term difcult came up
seven times.
We are all subject to face dis-
tasteful and painful situations.
Bishop Long, Eddie Long you
can put your name in that blank
will have some bad situations,
he said. Te righteous face painful
situations with a determined ex-
pectancy. We are not exempt from
pain, but (God) promises to deliver
us out of our pain.
Cheryl Barnett, who has attend-
ed New Birth since Long became
senior pastor more than 20 years
ago, said she was very much ful-
flled with what he had to say.
It was simple. It was direct. Hes
standing in the scriptures. Tats
what we would expect from our
minister, she said.
Long addressed the media
briefy during a press conference
between services, but media ac-
cess to the services themselves was
tightly controlled. Reporters were
required to
check in with
church ofcials
and were led to
a separate part
of the church
to view the ser-
vice. Te media
was also told
not to interview
church mem-
bers inside the
sanctuary or on
church property.
Afer Longs remarks during the
8 a.m. service, an Associated Press
reporter was escorted out of the
sanctuary by church ofcials who
said the press were not allowed in
the sanctuary during worship.
Members clapped and swayed in
their seats as the frst service began,
with several people with micro-
phones singing on stage. Later in
the service, hundreds began danc-
ing and chanting, Jesus, Jesus. A
small group of young people held
Apple iPads high over their heads,
with the screens scrolling white
letters against a black background
reading, Its time to praise him.
As Long entered the cathedral, a
group of people shouted, We love
you bishop!
oDD NEWS
Man lashes out at
Elmo performer
WINtEr pArk, Fla. Elmo
was not tickled he was in a
tussle.
police in central Florida say
a man dressed as the Sesame
Street character was attacked
Saturday at a music store in
Winter park, but he was able to
fend of the attacker.
the fght broke out around
3 p.m. the costumed man
had been hired to perform as
Elmo at a childrens event at
Guitar center, but police say
the attacker began throwing
punches at Elmo.
the performer fought back,
even breaking a few fngers on
his attackers hand.
police havent released the
names of either man. Ofcers
broke up the fght and took
the attacker to the hospital,
where he was treated and
detained for a mental health
evaluation. police say Elmo was
unhurt, and that no children
saw the fght.
Woman steals car,
drives handcufed
pOrt ArtHUr, texas A
handcufed woman was ac-
cused of swiping a port Arthur
police car and leading ofcers
on a chase at speeds topping
100 mph. police chief Mark
blanton told kFDM-tV that
nobody was injured in Fridays
chase involving a woman ar-
rested on a trespassing charge
at the port Arthur campus of
Lamar State college.
blanton said a witness
told police that the woman
managed to slide open the
prisoner screen that separates
the front and rear areas of the
patrol car, crawling from the
rear seat into the drivers seat.
the ofcer was outside the
running vehicle, completing
his investigation.
the chase lasted about 10
miles on Highway 69 until the
patrol cars tires were shredded
by spike strips thrown on the
road by other ofcers.
port Arthur is 80 miles east
of Houston.
Sign thieves cost
county thousands
DArIEN, Ga. A rural Geor-
gia county is losing about 550
street signs a years to thieves
and a commissioner says he
has a solution: Make the names
boring.
McIntosh county commis-
sioner Mark Douglas serves a
rural county about 60 miles
south of Savannah. He says
signs marking Green Acres,
boones Farm and Mary Jane
Lane are frequently stolen.
He suspects the thieves are
targeting those signs because
they share names with a popu-
lar tV series, a low-cost wine
or, in the third case, a slang
term for marijuana.
then theres the stolen signs
for Harmony Hill. Douglas
fgures the thieves just like the
alliteration.
Its become a costly prob-
lem. county Manager Luther
Smart says the area is paying
$17,000 a year to replace the
signs.
Man paints body
to prevent tasing
cHEYENNE, Wyo. A chey-
enne man who doused himself
with white latex paint in hopes
of avoiding a police taser was
hit with the stun gun anyway.
On Sept. 16 cheyenne police
went to brian Matterts house
on a domestic violence call.
the Wyoming tribune Eagle re-
ports that when police arrived,
Mattert thought theyd use a
taser on him, so he hastily cov-
ered himself in paint and told
ofcers that if they shot him
with the stun gun, hed die.
According to police, Mattert
scufed with ofcers and was
hit with a taser twice before
ofcers handcufed him.
Associated Press
I feel like David against
Goliath. But I got fve
rocks, and I havent
thrown one yet.
EDDIE LONG
bishop
Monday, September 27
Kansas Union Ballroom,11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Oliver Hall, 2 p.m.-7 p.m.
Kansas Union, Blood Vessel, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesday, September 28
Kansas Union Ballroom, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Hashinger Hall , 2-7 p.m.
Kansas Union, Blood Vessel, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Wednesday, September 29
Kansas Union Ballroom, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Kappa Delta Sorority, 3-8 p.m.
Kansas Union, Blood Vessel, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Thursday, September 30
Kansas Union Ballroom, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
McCollum Hall, 1 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Kansas Union, Donor Coach, 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Student Recreation Center, Blood Vessel, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Friday, October 1
Kansas Union Ballroom, 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
GSP Hall, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Phi Kappa Psi, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Kansas Union, Donor Coach, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Student Recreation Center, Blood Vessel,10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Free KU T-shirt to all presenting donors
Sponsored by Blood Drive Committee
Visit us at www.kublooddrive.com
University of Kansas
Fall 2010 Blood Drive
A Tradition of Saving Lives
SEPT. 27 - OCT. 1
Money for college. Career training.
And an entire team to help you succeed.
These days, it pays to have someone watching your back. Thats what youll get
serving part-time in the Air Guard an entire team of like-minded individuals
who want to help you get ahead. In the Air Guard you can develop the high-tech
skills you need to compete in todays world. You can choose from nearly 200
career specialties, with the chance to work on advanced computers, networks and
electronics even state-of-the-art aircraft and satellites. Youll also serve close
to home. All while receiving a steady paycheck, benets and tuition assistance.
Most important, you will experience the satisfaction that comes from serving
your community and your country. Talk to a recruiter today, and see how the
Air Guard can help you succeed.
BY MIKE LAVIERI
mlavieri@kansan.com
Te soccer team lost both
games in the opening weekend of
conference play.
Te ball bounced the wrong
way in the Border Showdown on
Friday night, as the Jayhawks lost
to Missouri (3-4-2 overall, 1-0 Big
12) 4-1, in a game that was domi-
nated by the Tigers from the very
start.
Senior forward Kaitlyn Cun-
ningham, who was playing in her
last Border Showdown, got the
Jayhawks on the board frst in the
ffh minute when she took a pass
from junior forward Kelsey Clif-
ton and shot it into the bottom
lef corner.
I thought we had the mo-
mentum, but they came back and
scored and we lost the momen-
tum from there, Cunningham
said.
Junior forward Kendra Collins
tied the game up in the 15th min-
ute on a pass from senior mid-
felder Krista Kruse.
Missouris goal came from the
Tigers working the ball around
with six diferent players touch-
ing the ball before Collins put the
ball in a wide-open goal.
Kansas loss in momentum was
to Missouris advantage. Te Ti-
gers outshot the Jayhawks 25-6
and were more physical than
Kansas. Te Tigers had 19 fouls
to the Jayhawks 11.
Tey are very direct, and we
like to keep the ball on the ground
and play, Cunningham said. So,
when the ball in the air for half of
the game, its hard to do that.
Kruse gave Missouri the lead
for good in the 63rd minute on an
assist from junior defender Mal-
lory Stipetich.
Missouris record is not an ac-
curate refection of how good the
team is. Te Tigers started the
season with fve road games, go-
ing 0-3-2. Tree of their losses,
which were on the road, were to
ACC opponents No. 8 Maryland,
No. 14 Duke and No. 1 North
Carolina.
Te Tigers added insurance
goals in the 74th minute when
freshman midfelder Dominique
Richardson tapped in a corner
kick and the 81st minute when
freshman forward Alyssa Diggs
was assisted by freshman mid-
felder Danielle Nottingham.
While this is the last Border
Showdown game for the seniors,
unless the teams meet again in
the Big 12 Tournament, it was the
frst for the freshmen.
Freshman midfelder Madi
Hillis saw her frst action of the
historic rivalry.
We always play them our last
game, so its a little diferent this
time, Hillis said. Since its our
frst, its a littler tougher.
She said that afer the game she
understands more what it means
to play against Missouri.
Te Jayhawks then traveled to
Ames, Iowa to face Iowa State (6-
3-2, 1-0), who was playing its frst
conference game of season.
ISU defeated Kansas 2-0 at ISU
Soccer Complex. Te game was
tied at halfime, but the Cyclones
scored 3:34 into the second half to
take the lead for good. Freshman
defender Jessica Stewart scored
the game winner and 10 minutes
later, in the 59th minute, fresh-
man midfelder Emily Goldstein
added the second goal. Freshman
forward Jennifer Dominguez as-
sisted both goals.
Edited by Anna Nordling
SWIMMING & DIVING | 3B
Assistant coach Danielle Herrmann won one event and placed second in
three others at the inaugural season-opening Alumni Meet.
New assistant reigns at Alumni Meet
SportS
Monday, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010 www.kanSan.coM PaGE 1B
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BY MATT GALLOWAY
mgalloway@kansan.com
twitter.com/themattgalloway
Last season as a converted
defensive backup, sophomore D.J.
Beshears did not even suit up in
the seasons final three games.
Now that hes back on offense,
some of his teammates are com-
paring him to a well-known, unof-
ficial Heisman Trophy winner.
Hes kind of a Reggie Bush type
of guy, said senior wide receiver
Johnathan Wilson. He can catch
the ball out of the backfield, as a
receiver and on special teams.
Beshears earned every bit of
those comparisons on Saturday
against New Mexico State. The
speedy sophomore rushed for two
touchdowns, returned a kickoff for
a score and the Jayhawks routed
the Aggies 42-16 on Saturday night
at Memorial Stadium.
I felt it coming, Beshears said.
I just worked hard every day at
practice and try to do my job. It
pays off in the long run.
Under former coach Mark
Mangino, Beshears was switched
to the defensive side during his
freshman year. Recruited as a wide
receiver, Beshears had to overcome
the shock and disappointment of a
positional switch to step up under
coach Turner Gills new system.
I really dont know the details of
what happened with that, Beshears
said. That was just Manginos
decision; he pulled me. But that
was a good experience playing on
defense my freshman year.
Beshears is flattered by the Bush
comparisons, but he knows he has
a way to go before he can be in the
same stratosphere as one of the
players he idolized in high school.
I definitely looked up to Reggie
Bush when I was younger, but I
really cant model myself as any-
body right now, Beshears said.
Im just me.
While Beshears led the team
with three total touchdowns, fresh-
man running back James Sims
dominated on the ground with 115
yards and two rushing touchdowns
of his own. In all, the running game
accounted for 243 of the Jayhawks
501 total yards of offense.
Coach Turner Gill praised the
individual performances of his
offensive skill players but deferred
credit to a developing offensive
line that allowed no sacks for the
first time this season.
D.J. did a great job, Gill said .
Go d.j., that's my d.j.
Beshears excels on ofense
ryan Waggoner/KANSAN
Sophomore wide receiver D.J. Beshears celebrates with teammates after scoring his third touchdown against NewMexico State on Saturday night at Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks recorded a season-high 501 yards of total ofense in their
42-16 victory against the Aggies. Kansas improved to 2-2 on the season, and will travel to play Baylor this weekend to open Big 12 Conference play.
BY COREY THIBODEAUX
cthibodeaux@kansan.com
CommENtaRy
Ofense
is fnally
paying
dividends
W
hen you feel worse
after practice than
you do after actual
games, its got to amount to
something at some point.
You dont have to tell the
Jayhawks their offense stunk the
first couple weeks of the season.
The result was reps and reps,
followed by more reps. Senior
receiver Johnathan Wilson wasnt
candid about his constant block-
ing and catching drills.
Im not going to lie to you,
he said. Practice has been hard
for the last couple weeks. Its way
harder than the games.
With 501 yards of offense
in the 42-16 romping of New
Mexico State, it seemed to have
worked. The Kansas offense
looked wide open as opposed to
the constricted dink-and-dunk
style it showed earlier this sea-
son.
Freshman quarterback Jordan
Webb stretched the field on mul-
tiple occasions and that helped
open up gaping holes in the run-
ning game. The Jayhawks threw
the ball for 264 yards and ran
the ball for 237 parity coaches
dream of.
We want to have that bal-
ance, coach Turner Gill said,
and I think we are headed in the
right direction.
The Jayhawks gashed the
Aggies on hand-offs, deep passes,
screens and even on kick returns.
They could do no wrong.
The question is if this type of
offense is going to stick. This is
the first weve seen of it and with
Big 12 play coming up, Saturdays
explosion could have been the
outlier.
Then again, the beginning
of the season held a whole new
coaching staff and most of the
position players on offense were
new as well. It takes a few games
to gel, if not more.
Notice how the defense looked
solid even in the first game.
There are plenty of upperclass-
men at the skill positions, so
theyve had an easier transition.
It helped on the offensive side
that New Mexico State wasnt at
the same level as Big 12 teams,
but the Jayhawks should be
enjoying this regardless.
Without looking ahead, the
Kansas offense is right where it
wants to be heading into confer-
ence play.
We were just feeling each
other out, Wilson said. I think
were starting to mesh better
now.
Wilson said he was frus-
trated at times for not having
the opportunity to make plays
because of the contained offen-
sive approach. With the aggres-
sive play calling, Wilson was one
of four receivers with a reception
that went for more than 30 yards
against New Mexico State.
From an offensive standpoint,
Saturday was as exciting as it can
get for the Jayhawks.
Its a different offense, Wilson
said.
Edited by Kelsey Nill
soCCER
Weekend is an upset with two losses
Mike Gunnoe/KANSAN
Junior forward Kortney Clifton dribbles the ball against Missouri on Friday. Clifton led the Jayhawks with three shots for the game.
See football oN pAGe 4B
2B / SPORTS / Monday, SepteMBer 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kanSan.coM
Nuggets still need Carmelo Anthony
MORNINg BREw
QUOTE OF THE DAY
plutos not even a planet no
more, which Im very disturbed
about. I grew up when pluto
was a planet. now, Im 25, I turn
around and plutos no longer a
planet. Im going to elbow that
guy in the nose. I love pluto.
everybody loves pluto. theres a
dog named pluto in the cartoons.
I dont know how we got on that
subject. Weve got to see if we
can get pluto back.
Ron Artest
FACT OF THE DAY
Matt cassel became the frst
chiefs quarterback to throw for 3
touchdowns since tyler thigpen
did it nov. 23, 2008 in a 54-31 loss
to Bufalo.
ESPN
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
Q: Who was the last Jayhawk to
have three non-passing touch-
downs in a game?
A: Jake Sharp had two rushing
and one receiving touchdown
in a 34-7 victory over Utep last
season.
Kansas Athletics
THIS wEEK IN
kanSaS atHLetIcS
TUESDAY
Mens golf
colorado Invitational
all day
erie, colo.
womens golf
2010 Marilynn Smith
Sunfower Invitational
all day
Lawrence, kan.
wEDNESDAY
Softball
Baker
6:00 p.m.
Lawrence, kan.
Volleyball
Missouri
6:30 p.m.
Lawrence, kan.
FRIDAY
Soccer
texas a&M
5 p.m.
Lawrence, kan.
Tennis
notre dame tourna-
ment
all day
South Bend, Ind.
SATURDAY
Football
Baylor
11 a.m.
Waco, texas
Volleyball
texas tech
6:30 p.m.
Lubbock, texas
Cross Country
Wisconsin adidas
Invitational
tBa
Madison, Wis.
Tennis
all-american champi-
onships
all day
pacifc palisades, calif.
Tennis
notre dame tourna-
ment
all day
South Bend, Ind.
TODAY
womens golf
2010 Marilynn Smith
Sunfower Invitational
all day
Lawrence, kan.
D
ont hate me KU, but I love Car-
melo Anthony.
The smooth, small forward
from Baltimore led Syracuse to a National
Championship in 2003 at the hands of the
Jayhawks, and a lot of you cant forgive him
for it. But seeing how hes been the core of
the Denver Nuggets current seven-year
playoff streak, I just cant hold it against
him.
Any basketball fan cant deny his skill
set. Hes a complete scorer who can drive
and shoot as well as anyone in the league.
His ability to draw fouls and make free
throws only makes him more dynamic.
While his commitment to defense is often
questioned, hes proven to be solid when
needed. And hes about to be traded?
The Nuggets have been trying their
hardest to re-sign Anthony in the offsea-
son. Theyve offered an extension to his
current contract, which expires after the
upcoming season, and hes refused it. Now,
that core of the Nuggets is at the core of a
four-team trade that would send Anthony to
New Jersey.
I really dont blame him. The Nuggets
have supplied him with a team that will be
successful to a point more specifically,
the Western Conference finals. Theres no
denying the talent they put on the court,
but theyre not an elite team. The New
Jersey Nets will move to Brooklyn, where
Anthony was born, in a couple years. The
new owner of the Nets, Mikhail Proko-
rov, wont be as shy in shelling out money
to surround Anthony with more top-tier
talent, enough to challenge the NBAs evil
empire in Miami.
For my Nuggets, the compensation is
plentiful. Derrick Favors, Andrei Kirilenko
and multiple first-round draft picks will be
enough to rebuild a Denver squad with a
couple pieces already in place. But just as
Kansas fans will always think of Car-
melo Anthony as LaLa Vasquezs husband
and dont recognize his existence in the
basketball world, Ill always see Melo as a
Nugget.
Edited by Anna Nordling
By CHRISTIAN LUCERO
clucero@kansan.com
Mens golf
colorado Invitational
all day
erie, colo.

ASSOCIATEd PRESS
NEW YORK The only
previous time Nevada was
ranked in the AP Top 25, the
Wolf Pack ended the season
playing in the Harbor Bowl
in San Diego.
That was 1948.
It took 62 years, but Nevada
is back in The Associated
Press poll. The Wolf Pack
were No. 25 in the poll
released Sunday and are off
to a 4-0 start for the first time
since 1991, the year before
they jumped from I-AA to
I-A.
Its very exciting news,
coach Chris Ault told the
AP in a telephone interview
Sunday. Im sure our players
will be fired up.
The first month of the
season closed with the pre-
season top three in the rank-
ings unchanged: Alabama is
No. 1, followed by Ohio State
and Boise State.
The Crimson Tide had
its toughest challenge yet
Saturday, coming from behind
to beat Arkansas 24-20. The
road victory helped the Tide
gain five first-place votes to
57.
Ohio State, which rolled
to a 73-20 victory against
Eastern Michigan, received
two first-place votes and
Boise State, which beat
Oregon State 37-24, received
one.
The USA Today coaches
poll has the same top three
teams.
No. 4 Oregon and No. 5
TCU flip-flopped spots this
week. No. 6 Nebraska held
its position and No. 7 Florida
moved up two heading into
its big game at Alabama on
Saturday.
No. 8 Oklahoma was fol-
lowed by Stanford, which
jumped seven spots to No.
9 and No. 10 Auburn, which
also gained seven spots.
The Cardinals are 4-0 for
the first time since 1986 after
beating Notre Dame 37-14,
and have their best AP rank-
ing since ending the 1992
season No. 9.
No. 21 Texas dropped 14
spots after a stunningly lop-
sided 34-12 home loss to
UCLA.
West Virginia and Oregon
State dropped out of the
rankings. No. 23 North
Carolina State (4-0), off to its
best start since 2002, was the
other Wolfpack to move into
the poll this week. N.C. State
is ranked for the first time
since 2003.
As for the Wolf Pack from
Reno, Ault, who was induct-
ed into the College Football
Hall of Fame in 2002 after
the second time he stepped
down as Nevada coach
is in his third stint leading
his alma mater. The 63-year-
old is 210-96-1 in 26 seasons
with no plans to leave again
anytime soon.
The Wolf Pack have
emerged as Boise States
toughest rival in the Western
Athletic Conference in recent
seasons using an offense Ault
invented in 2005.
He put a new spin on the
shotgun-spread offense and
came up with the pistol. In
the pistol, the quarterback
lines up in a short shotgun, a
few yards behind center, and
a tailback lines up behind the
quarterback.
With dual-threat quar-
terback Colin Kaepernick
directing the pistol, Nevada
has had one of the most
potent offenses in the coun-
try in recent seasons.
Hes been our starter for
3 years and that experience
you cant say enough about
it, especially in our offense,
which is fairly sophisticated,
Ault said.
The Wolf Pack have aver-
aged more than 33 points per
game each of the last five sea-
sons, and are at 44.8 heading
into October. The difference
this season is Nevada is allow-
ing only 18 points per game,
with nonconference victories
at home against California
(52-31) and at BYU (27-13)
on Saturday.
We are playing better
defense, Ault said. These
last two years we were aver-
age at best on defense and
it put so much pressure on
offense to be productive.
Were getting better every
game and giving our offense
more opportunities.
Nevada plays at rival UNLV
on Saturday, then moves into
its WAC schedule. Way down
the road, the Wolf Pack hosts
No. 3 Boise State on Nov. 26
in what could be one of the
biggest WAC games ever.
Both teams are not long for
the WAC, though. Boise State
is leaving for the Mountain
West Conference after this
season. Nevada has also
accepted an invite to the
MWC, though when the Wolf
Pack will make the change is
up in the air. Nevada would
like it to be next season, but
the WAC insists the Pack
cant go until 2012.
As for the rest of the AP
poll this week, Wisconsin
was No. 11, followed by LSU,
Utah, Arizona and Arkansas,
which dropped five spots
to No. 15.The rest of the
top 20 was Miami, Iowa,
SouthernCalifornia, South
Carolina and Michigan.
Joining Texas, N.C. State
and Nevada in the final five
were No. 22 Penn State and
No. 24 Michigan State.
Nevada back in AP poll, ranked 25
COLLEgE FOOTBALL
AP TOP 25
No. 1 alabama
No. 2 ohio State
No. 3 Boise State
No. 4 oregon
No. 5 tcU
No. 6 nebraska
No. 7 Florida
No. 8 oklahoma
No. 9 Stanford
No. 10 auburn
No. 11 Wisconsin
No. 12 LSU
No. 13 Utah
No. 14 arizona
No. 15 arkansas
No. 16 Miami
No. 17 Iowa
No. 18 Southern
california
No. 19 South carolina
No. 20 Michigan
No. 21 texas
No. 22 penn State
No. 23 north carolina
State
No. 24 Michigan State
No. 25 University of
nevada
Pick injures leg in
end game mop-up
Backup quarterback kale pick
fnally got to see the feld on
Saturday against new Mexico
State. But unfortunately for the
speedy sophomore, that will be
the last action he sees for at least
three weeks.
the former starter-turned-
backup sufered a leg injury late
in the fourth quarter during
mop-up duty against the aggies
in the Jayhawks 42-16 win. He is
expected to be out about three
weeks, coach turner Gill said.
after being benched in his frst
start against north dakota State,
pick has seen limited action in
Wildcat-like packages. He is 14-
for-24 with 153 yards passing on
the season.
Matt Galloway
FOOTBALL
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, SeptMber 27, 2010 / SPORTS / 3b
SwImmINg & DIVINg
New assistant leads way
at inaugural Alumni Meet
BY KORY CARPENTER
kcarpenter@kansan.com
The swimming and diving team
opened its season Friday with the
inaugural Alumni Meet. The group
of former Kansas swimmers was
highlighted by new assistant coach
Danielle Herrmann, who finished
first in the 100-yard individual
medley while placing second in the
50-yard backstroke, 50-yard breast-
stroke and 50-yard butterfly.
Senior Iuliia Kuzhil was the only
current swimmer to take first in an
event, winning the 50-yard back-
stroke. Kuzhil also holds Kansas
records in the 100- and 200-yard
backstrokes.
Junior Stephanie Payne said the
Alumni meet was a good way to get
back into form
for the season.
It was fun,
she said. It kind
of hurt though,
because its
our first week
of fully get-
ting back into
things.
As a sopho-
more, Payne
broke the Kansas individual med-
ley record with a time of 4:13.33.
Now a junior, she believes the
Jayhawks can be very good this sea-
son. Continued improvement and a
trip to the NCAA Championships
are the goals for the team.
We have
a lot of really
good freshmen,
and I think well
be better than
last year, Payne
said.
That theory
will be tested
at the annual
I n t r a s q u a d
Meet Oct. 8th
at Robinson Natatorium before
the team heads to Tuscon for the
Arizona Quad Duals Oct. 15th.
Edited by TimDwyer
CHRIS BRONSON/KANSAN
Junior swimmer Sarah Hetterbach accelerates towards the fnish in the 50-yard mixed breaststroke during the KU Alumni swimmeet held at the
Robinson Center on Friday. Hetterbach placed second in her heat. The Jayhawks next meet will be Oct. 8 at 2 p.m.
It was fun. It kind of hurt
though, because its our
frst week of fully getting
back into things.
StephANie pAYNe
Junior swimmer
mLB
Missed chances cost Braves
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Atlanta Braves drive for the NL
wild card spun its wheels again
Sunday, with wild pitchers and
missed opportunities at the plate
contributing to a 4-2 loss to the
last-place Washington Nationals.
Every Nationals player who
scored got on base with a walk,
the last two runs coming on Ian
Desmonds tiebreaking single in
the seventh that followed three
straight free passes from the Braves
bullpen.
The Nationals took two of three
from the Braves, who began the
day tied with San Francisco for the
wild-card lead. The Giants beat
Colorado 4-2 to move into a tie
with San Diego for the NL West
lead, pending the outcome of the
Padres game against Cincinnati
later Sunday.
Atlanta has lost five of six.
The Braves, who lost the season
series 10-8 to the Nationals, now
head home to finish up with a
six-game stand against Florida and
Philadelphia.
The Braves put two runners
on base with fewer than two outs
three times in the first six innings
and failed to score each time. Rick
Ankiel was the only Atlanta batter
to produce runs, leading off the
fifth with a home run and a dou-
bling home Melky Cabrera with no
out to make it 2-all in the seventh.
Ankiel never budged from second
after that hit, watching his team-
mates strike out twice and then
ground out to end the inning.
Brandon Beachy, making his
second career start, struck out nine
over five innings to keep the Braves
in the game. But the right-hander,
who is playing a major role in a
critical part of the season because
Jair Jurrjens has a sore right knee,
also walked three batters and
two of them turned out to be the
only two runs he allowed.
Kyle Farnsworth (0-2) was even
more off course, walking two of the
four batters he faced. He entered in
the seventh and got a pair of quick
outs before walking Willie Harris
and Danny Espinosa. Farnsworth
was relieved by Jonny Venters, who
promptly threw four straight balls
to Nyjer Morgan to load the bases.
Desmond then singled to center to
put the Nationals ahead for good.
NfL
Cowboys win frst of year
against undefeated Texans
mLB
Five-run eighth inning dooms KC
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CLEVELAND Pinch-hitter
Michael Brantleys two-run dou-
ble capped a five-run rally in the
eighth inning that carried the
Cleveland Indians to a 5-3 win
over the Kansas City Royals on
Sunday.
Shelley Duncan tied the game
with a three-run homer off
Robinson Tejeda (3-5). Singles by
Asdrubal Cabrera and Shin-Soo
Choo started the inning before
Duncan hit a 1-2 pitch into the
home run porch in left field.
Andy Marte singled with two
outs and went to third on Luis
Valbuenas ground-rule double.
Brantley, batting for Lou Marson,
hit a 1-2 pitch past first base and
down the line in right field to
give the Indians the lead.
Vinnie Pestano, called up
from Triple-A Columbus on
Friday, worked the ninth for his
first major league save in his sec-
ond career appearance.
Bruce Chen tossed 6 2-3 score-
less innings and was on the verge
of his fourth
win of the sea-
son against the
Indians until
Tejeda gave up
the lead. Chen
held the Indians
to four hits,
struck out three
and walked three.
Mike Aviles
hit a solo homer
with one out in
the fifth, the 5,000th home run in
Royals history. Billy Butler, who
had three hits and a walk, added
an RBI single in the seventh.
Fausto Carmona allowed two
runs in six innings.
Josh Fields RBI single gave
Kansas City the lead in the first.
Carmona retired the first two
b a t t e r s ,
but gave
up three
straight hits.
Butler sin-
gled, went
to third
on Kila
Kaai hues
d o u b l e
and scored
on Fields
single to
center.
The Indians won the season
series 10-8.
Bruce Chen tossed 6 2-3
scoreless innings and was
on the verge of his fourth
win of the season against
the Indians until Tejeda
gave up the lead.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON Jerry Jones can
exhale, at least for now. So can
Wade Phillips.
Tony Romo threw two touch-
down passes to Roy Williams,
Marion Barber ran for another
score, and the Dallas Cowboys
got their first win by beating the
Houston Texans 27-13 on Sunday.
The Cowboys defense got its
first three takeaways of the season
and held Houstons top-ranked
offense to 340 yards. DeMarcus
Ware sacked Matt Schaub three
times, and the Dallas secondary
limited All-Pro receiver Andre
Johnson to four catches for 64
yards.
Romo went 23 for 30 for 284
yards, Williams caught five passes
for 117 yards and the Cowboys
(1-2) finally turned in a dominant
performance after starting 0-2 for
the first time since 2001.
Arian Foster, the NFLs leading
rusher, ran for 106 yards on 17 car-
ries for the Texans (2-1), who were
eager to knock off the Cowboys
for reasons beyond earning the
franchises first 3-0 start.
The announced crowd was
71,456, a record for a Texans game
at Reliant Stadium. But Dallas
supporters were well-represented
and taunted the hometown fans
with Lets Go, Cowboys! chant
in the waning minutes.
Dallas now heads into an early
bye week with a victory to build
on rather than concerns about
what its unpredictable owner
Jones might change after another
embarrassing loss. Coach Phillips
even got a chance to smile on the
sideline late in the game.
Ware set the tone on Houstons
first series, surging past left tackle
Rashad Butler and sacked Schaub.
Butler, a five-year veteran, was
making his first career start in
place of Duane Brown, who began
serving a four-game suspension
for violating the NFLs banned
substance policy. Brown had start-
ed the last 34 games.
On the Texans second series,
Foster converted a third down
with a 20-yard run and Johnson
gained 24 more yards to the Dallas
6. The Cowboys defense stopped
Houston there, and Neil Rackers
kicked a 24-yard field goal for a
3-0 lead.
Romo threw a 32-yard pass to
Felix Jones on the Cowboys next
snap, but it was negated by an
illegal block, exactly the kind of
mistake that plagued Dallas in its
first two games.
But Williams and Dez Bryant
caught third-down passes from
Romo to get Dallas moving. Miles
Austin beat Brice McCain on a
17-yard reception to the Texans
1, and Barber scored on the next
play, the Cowboys first touch-
down rushing this season.
Ware sacked Schaub again
with less than two minutes left
in the half. Buehler put Dallas up
10-3 with a 49-yard field goal; he
missed shorter attempts in each of
the first two games.
Johnson, who sprained his
right ankle in last weeks win over
Washington, aggravated the inju-
ry early in the third quarter. He
caught a short pass from Schaub,
then fell awkwardly after he was
tackled by Orlando Scandrick.
Trainers helped Johnson hob-
ble off the field, but he returned
for Houstons next series. Schaub
threw a deep pass to him that
Mike Jenkins intercepted at the
10-yard line for the Cowboys first
takeaway of the season.
Romo then went to work on the
Texans suspect secondary, which
allowed more than 400 yards
passing in each of the first two
games. Bryant caught a 30-yard
pass down the sideline, and one
play later, Williams pulled down
a 15-yard touchdown catch over
McCain for a 17-3 lead.
Foster went over 100 yards
rushing with a 26-yard run late in
the third quarter. The undrafted
free agent has topped 100 yards
rushing in three of his four career
starts.
Houston looked ready to get
much closer when it reached the
Dallas 1. But the Cowboys twice
stopped Foster at the line, and
Keith Brooking sacked Schaub on
third down, forcing Houston to
settle for another short field goal.
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONdAy, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010 / SPORTS / 5B
7 | 14 | 14 | 7 42 Kansas
0 | 7 | 0 | 9 16
NewMexico
State
Kansas Passing
Kansas Rushing
Player C/AT/INTYards TD Long Sack
Webb, Jordan 17-27-0 249 1 43 0
Pick, Kale 1-1-0 15 0 15 0
Rojas, Alonso 0-1-0 0 0 0 0
Schedule
Date Opponent Result/Time
9/4 vs. North dakota State L, 6-3
9/11 vs. Georgia Tech W, 28-6
09/17 at Southern Miss 7 p.m.
09/25 vs. New Mexico State 6 p.m.
10/02 at Baylor TBA
10/14 vs. Kansas State 6:30 p.m.
10/23 vs. Texas A&M (Homecoming) TBA
10/30 at Iowa State TBA
11/06 vs. Colorado TBA
11/13 at Nebraska TBA
11/20 vs. Oklahoma State TBA
11/27 vs. Missouri TBA
Jayhawk Stat Leaders
Rushing Passing Receiving
Jordan Webb
249 yds
James Sims
115 yds
Johnathan
Wilson
57 yds
Quote of the Game
Its an awesome feeling. Obviously, I wont be very
sore tomorrow. The O-line just played great, communica-
tion was really good, our tempo was good and overall it
was just an execution thing.
Jordan Webb, on not being sacked for the frst time this season
Webb
Game Balls
3. Senior wide receiver JohnathanWilson: If the Jayhawks are to open up
their vertical passing game, they will need to do so throughWilson. Wilson had
a 35 yard reception after a long touchdown catch last week against Southern
Miss. It looks as if Webb is more comfortable with some of the younger receiv-
ers, but Wilson is still the receiving corps biggest down-feld threat.
2. FreshmanrunningbackJames Sims: With his 16 carry, 115 yard perfor-
mance, Sims became the frst freshman running back to gain more than 100
yards on two separate occasions since 2002. Not bad for a guy who was carry-
ing the load for MacArthur High School at this time last year.
1.Sophomore wide receiver/runningbackD.J. Beshears: Call hima run-
ning back, a wide receiver, or a kick returner, but one thing is for sure: ofensive
coordinator will be calling his number much more for the rest of this season.
Beshears had three touchdowns, two on rushes and one on a kickofreturn.
The speedy sophomore looks rejuvenated on ofense and should remind Kan-
sas City Chiefs fans of a more unpolished version of dexter McCluster.
Delay of Games
3. FreshmanrunningbackDeshaunSands: Sands struggled Saturday,
gaining only 38 yards on 11 carries (3.4 average). CoachTurner Gill showed a
lot of faith in the second-generation Jayhawk by making himthe backup over
sixth-year senior captain Angus Quigley.
2. Senior defensive endJake Laptad: you have to feel for the teamcaptain
Laptad who has been double teamed all season. However, he only recorded
three total tackles, one solo, in Saturdays win. He is drawing a lot of attention
fromopposing defenses but he must be more disruptive going forward.
1. Kansas kickofcoverage squad: The special teams group looked lost
once again, allowing four kickofreturns of 40 yards or more. NewMexico State
kick returner Tanner Rust set a school record with 250 total return yards. The
Jayhawks defense looked impressive but surrendered 16 points because of the
short felds the Aggies had to work with.
Play of the Game
The Aggies hadtheir way withthe Kansas defense ontheir secondposses-
sionearly inthe secondquarter, tyingthe game 7-7. It seemedlike the game
was headedfor a shootout before Beshears got the ball inhis hands. But the
former defensive backupmade magic happen, scoringona 96-yardkickof
returnandputtingthe Jayhawks back upseven. It was excellent blockingand
great visionina rare fashof brilliance fromthe Jayhawks special teams unit.
Game Notes
THE GLASS IS HALF FULL
Twosophomores andone freshmanlookedlike ofensive veterans. Sure,
the transitiontoa run-frst ofense hadits bumps inthe road, but it looks tobe
runningonall cylinders as the teamenters Big12play. Wilsonwas right whenhe
comparedBeshears toReggie Bushinhis post-game interviews.
THE GLASS IS HALF EMPTY
It was NewMexicoState, one of the worst teams incollege football. The
Aggies have allowedat least 40points inevery game this seasonandSaturday
was nodiferent. About the only goodunit the Aggies have is their ofensive
line, andwhenthe Kansas defense triedtobringpressure, they couldnot break
them.
BIGGEST ANSWER
With12sacks allowedthroughthree games, all eyes were onthe ofensive line
against anadmittedly poor NewMexicoState defense. Andthankfully for Webb,
they answeredall questions about their cohesiveness. Webbremainedupright
all game andthe Kansas ofense broke the 500-yardmark. It will not meanmuch
whenBig12play begins, but it was a stepinthe right directionfor a seasoned
but unprovenline.
STILL QUESTIONING
Howdoes Quigley ft intothis ofense? Inhis one touchonthe evening, the
elder statesmantook a screenpass 43yards inthe longest receptionfor either
team. Quigley stoodonthe sidelines for most of the remainder of the game. Gill
clearly wants youngbloodinthe backfeld, andrightfully so, but Quigley has
earnedmore touches.
LOOKING AHEAD
The Jayhawks openBig12play onSaturday onthe roadagainst the Baylor
Bears. The Bears have perhaps the best quarterback inthe league insopho-
more Robert Grifn, whosimmeredRice onSaturday on20-for-28passingwith
268yards andthree touchdowns ina 30-13rout. If senior defensive endJake
Laptadandhis front line teammates continue strugglingtoget pressure, it
couldbe a longday for the Jayhawks.
GOOD, BAD OR JUST PLAIN STUPID
Original prediction: Kansas 45, NewMexicoState 10. Final score: Kansas 42,
NewMexicoState 16. Other thana fewgarbage-time feldgoals, our original
predictionwas spot on. Finally, the unpredictable Jayhawks actually conformed
toexpectations andhammeredtheir muchless talentedfoe.
FINAL THOUGHT
Sure, NewMexicoState is a BCS bottom-feeder, but it feels goodtodominate
anopponent for the frst time this season. The ofense seems tobe clicking
behindtheir dynamic, speedy runningbacks, but there are still plenty of ques-
tions goingintoBig12play. The defensive line has got tostart pressuringthe
quarterback. The special teams needtostart carryingtheir weight, especially
onkick andpunt coverage. This teamis still a work inprogress, but against the
Aggies, the Jayhawks got a pick-me-upat just the right time.
Matt Galloway
Player CAR Yards TD Lg Avg.
Sims, James 16 115 2 13 7.2
Beshears, D.J. 8 38 2 10 4.8
Sands, Deshaun 11 37 0 9 3.4
Webb, Jordan 5 33 0 24 6.6
Pick, Kale 1 15 0 15 15.0
Patterson, Daym 1 1 0 1 1.0
Kansas Receiving
Kansas Kick Returns
Player REC Yards TD Lg
Patterson, daym 6 40 0 12
Wilson, Johnath 3 57 0 35
Sims, James 2 49 0 30
Beshears, d.J. 2 6 0 3
Quigley, Angus 1 43 0 43
Matthews, Chris 1 41 0 41
Omigie, Chris 1 15 0 15
Mcdougald, Brad 1 11 0 11
Player No. Yards Long TD
Beshears, d.J. 2 117 96 1
Mcdougald, Brad 2 50 33 0
Kansas Punt Returns
Player NO YDS AVG LG
Patterson, daymond 2 23 11.5 23
Totals 2 23 11.5 23
Kansas Kicking
Player FG PCT XP PTS
Branstetter, Jacob 0 0 7 7
Kansas Punting
Player TOT YDS TB -20 LG
Rojas, Alonso 2 89 0 1 50
New Mexico State Rushing
CAR Yards TD LG AVG
Team 35 128 1 26 3.7
New Mexico State Receiving
REC Yards TD Lg
Team 12 147 1 36
New Mexico State Passing
C/AT/INTYards TD Long Sack
Team 12-20-0 147 1 36 0
New Mexico State Kick Returns
NO Yards Avg Lg
Team 7 239 34.1 54
New Mexico State Punt Returns
NO Yards Avg Lg
Team 0 0 0 0
New Mexico State Kicking
FG PCT Long XP Pts
Team 1/1 100.0 30 1 4
New Mexico State Punting
Tot Yards TB -20 LG
Team 7 237 0 3 48
4B / SPORTS / MONdAy, SEPTEMBER 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM
kansas 42, new Mexico state 16
I take our hats off to him but more impor-
tantly to our offensive line. They did some
great things here today. It is great to see our
guys gel and do some execution.
The Jayhawks (2-2) first score came on a
three play, 88-yard drive in the first quarter
led by two seniors. On their own 12-yard
line, senior wide receiver Johnathan Wilson
pulled in a 36-yard pass from freshman
quarterback Jordan Webb. On the next play,
senior running back Angus Quigley took a
screen pass 43 yards to the Aggies 10-yard
line. Beshears punched it in from there for
his first career touchdown.
The Aggies (0-3) answered back on their
next possession on a one-yard touchdown
run by senior Seth Smith. The scoring drive
was made possible by a Jayhawk kickoff cov-
erage team that allowed four kickoff returns
of forty or more yards, this time a 51-yard
return to the Kansas 49-yard line.
Gill is still concerned about the perfor-
mance of his special teams unit, which strug-
gled mightily last week against Southern
Miss.
I think that is the only phase where we
didnt do very well, Gill said. We had not
done very well the whole football season,
but unfortunately some of it started with our
kicker.
In addition to his two touchdowns on the
ground, Beshears also scored on a kickoff
immediately after the Aggies tied the game
7-7 early in the second quarter. The 96-yard
scamper was the eighth longest in school
history.
I have to give all the credit to my block-
ers on the kickoff return team, Beshears
said. I told them, Go out there and make
good blocks and Im going to take it to the
house.
With the win, the Jayhawks assured them-
selves of an even non-conference schedule
as they head into Big 12 play next week at
Baylor. Freshman quarterback Jordan Webb,
who finished 17-for-27 with 249 yards pass-
ing and a touchdown, is relieved Beshears
broke out of his shell and had the kind of
performance his offensive teammates knew
he had in him.
Weve wanted to all along, Webb said of
getting the ball in Beshears hands. Hes elec-
tric with the ball in his hands. Hes a physical
guy, hes fast and he wants to get to the end
zone every time he touches it.
Edited by Anna Nordling
BY MEGAN RUPP
mrupp@kansan.com
twitter.com/megsrupp
Patrick Dorsey still had his legs in the
fourth of quarter of a well-executed defen-
sive game. He can thank the offense for
that.
The Jayhawk offense had its best drive of
the season in the third quarter when it drove
for 99 yards on 17 plays. The drive took
more than six minutes off the clock, giving
the defense time to recover.
We were happy and thankful for that
drive, said Dorsey, a junior defensive tack-
le.
The Kansas defense put on a show, forc-
ing New Mexico State into three three-and-
outs en route to a 21-7 halftime lead.
Thats one thing Im very proud of
getting the offense back on the field, Dorsey
said.
The offense gained 501 total yards while
the Jayhawk defense held New Mexico State
to only 275. Dorsey, who made three tackles
in Saturdays game, said he was happy with
the performance that earned them a home
victory even though they have yet to make a
sack so far this season.
I know we have not had a sack yet, that
is our goal to get sacks, but other than that
I feel we have played pretty good, Dorsey
said. Especially with conference play com-
ing up, we need to get sacks and pressure on
the quarterback.
Though the defensive line hasnt had
a sack yet this season, New Mexico State
quarterback Matt Christian still felt the lines
pressure.
They were big and could hit, Christian
said. Our scheme was there, we just couldnt
execute to keep ourselves in the game.
Christian hurt his finger midway through
the first quarter on a running play that ended
when he fumbled the ball. The combination
of his injury, the weather and the strong
defensive performance may have affected
Christians 60 percent passing game that
gained 147 yards for the Aggies offense.
Senior linebackers Justin Springer and
Steven Johnson and senior cornerback Chris
Harris were among the Jayhawks top tack-
lers, with 24 tackles among them. Springer
contributed with eight tackles, but empha-
sized the teams effort in successfully tight-
ening the straps on the opposing offense.
We wanted to come out and get a three-
and-out off the bat, Springer said. We
wanted to show them that we were excited
and that they would have to work harder on
the ball with us.
The defensive line achieved that goal, not
allowing the Aggies to find their offensive
rhythm and get significant points on the
board, but Springer said that might not be
enough as the team enters conference play
next week.
Weve come a long way, but at the same
time were still inconsistent, Springer said.
Edited by TimDwyer
Defense solid in 42-16 victory
KANSAS FOOTBALL REWIND
FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL (continueD from 1B)
Ryan Waggoner/KANSAN
Freshman running back James Sims leaps over NewMexico State's George Callender during the second quarter of the Jayhawks' 42-16 victory over the Aggies. Kansas improved to 2-2 on the season, and will travel to Waco, Texas to take on Baylor on Saturday.
Ben Pirotte/KANSAN
Above, freshman quarter-
back Jordan Webb blocks
a New Mexico State
defender Saturday, Sept.
25. Webb had a record
breaking game throwing
for a season-high 249
yards and one touchdown
completing 11 of his 17
attempts. Left, junior
wide receiver Daymond
Patterson avoids a tackle
during the third quarter.
Patterson recorded six
receptions for 40 yards
in the 42-16 victory over
New Mexico State Sat-
urday night at Memorial
Stadium.
Ben Pirotte/KANSAN
By IAN CUMMINGS
icummings@kansan.com
Junior outside hitter Allison
Mayfield reached a season-high on
Saturday night with 20 kills as the
volleyball team pushed a match at
Colorado into a fifth set. But the
Jayhawks still couldnt hold off the
Buffaloes.
Mayfield said that she and junior
setter Nicole Tate have played
together for three years.
I was just getting a lot of good
sets from Nicole, just getting up
there and taking swings, she said.
Shes good at keeping the team
level-headed. She did great.
After dropping both of the first
two sets, Kansas battled back to
tie the match 2-2. Mayfield said
the team did a good job of reduc-
ing errors in the third and fourth
sets, but that Colorado played well
overall.
We just let them get on a run at
times, she said.
In the final set, Colorado slipped
past the Jayhawks making this the
second road game the Jayhawks
have dropped this week, after los-
ing at Nebraska on Wednesday.
Each of their conference losses have
gone to fourth
or fifth sets.
Kansas is now
carrying a 10-5
record overall
and is 1-3 in
conference play.
Colorado broke
even at 5-5
overall and 2-2
in the Big 12.
Coach Ray Bechard said that not
a lot went well in the first two sets,
and that being behind by two sets
on the road is a bad position.
We didnt make enough plays,
he said. Their pass and serve was
more effective than ours.
Kansas defense put up good
numbers from the beginning, but
it wasnt enough to win the match.
In the first set, the Jayhawks had 17
digs compared with the Buffaloes
eight, but still lost the set. Over the
course of the match, freshman libe-
ro Brianne Riley led Kansas with a
career-best of 24 digs. Sophomore
defensive specialist Morgan Boub,
senior defen-
sive special-
ist Melissa
Manda and
junior setter
Nicole Tate
also contrib-
uted 10, 12
and 16 digs,
respectively.
F r e s h ma n
middle blocker Caroline Jarmoc
chipped in seven blocks, and Tate
tied her career-high with five.
Boub said that the Jayhawks
struggled in the first two sets, but
rallied in the third. We came back
in the third game. We came back
and got our energy up, she said.
Kansas took a 9-5 lead in the
third set with a seven point run,
going on to win it 25-13 with the
benefit of 10 Colorado errors. The
fourth set was closer, with Kansas
down one point. The Jayhawks
came out of a timeout and ral-
lied with four straight points as
Mayfield scored two kills together
with one from Jarmoc and the help
of another Colorado error.
Mayfield closed out the set with
her seventh kill of the frame.
But the Buffaloes won the fifth
set by two points. Boub said that
in practice she would focus per-
sonally on paying more attention
to detail.
We just needed to play better,
she said. Im going to think about
what I can do and not take the little
things for granted.
The Jayhawks will be back at
home for a Border Showdown with
Missouri at 6:30 Wedeneday night
at the Horejsi Family Athletics
Center. The match will be tele-
vised on Metro Sports, channel
37, on Sunflower Broadband in
Lawrence.
Edited by Kelsey Nill
6B / SPORTS / MONDAY, SepteMBer 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANSAN.cOM
VOLLEYbALL
Jayhawks lose match after fve sets
tate Mayfeld
NfL
Falcons soar past
Saints to win 27-24
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW ORLEANS A charmed
run by the defending champion
Saints ended with a shanked field
goal by the same specialist who
went down in New Orleans lore
with clutch kicks last season.
Garrett Hartley missed an over-
time chip shot, then was left to
watch the Falcons rush the field
after his counterpart, Matt Bryant,
drilled a 46-yard field goal with
1:55 left in the extra period to lift
the Atlanta Falcons to a 27-24 vic-
tory on Sunday.
The Saints appeared to have
another thrilling victory in hand
when Drew Brees drove New
Orleans to the Atlanta 11-yard
line in overtime. Instead, Hartley
hooked his 29-yard kick to the left
for his third miss this season.
Matt Ryan passed for 228 yards
and touchdowns of 13 yards to
Tony Gonzalez and 22 yards to
Roddy White to give the Falcons
(2-1) their second straight win.
Michael Turner added 30 carries
for 114 yards and a 1-yard touch-
down plunge.
Lance Moore had a pair of
t o u c h d o w n
catches for New
Orleans (2-1),
including a
career-long 80
yarder. He fin-
ished with six
catches for 149
yards and also
had a 72-yard
punt return to
set up Jeremy
Shockeys short
t o u c h d o w n
catch on New
Orleans first
drive.
The game was a back-and-forth
affair that one would expect from
longtime rivals who appear to be
the best teams in the NFC South.
There were bizarre blunders and
big plays, including an unusual
turnover by Atlanta on a Saints
punt in the third quarter.
Thomas Morsteads punt hit
Atlantas Thomas DeCoud on the
heel as it came down near the
sideline and bounced straight up.
Rookie tight end Jimmy Graham
grabbed it and, just before fall-
ing out of bounds, tossed it back
to long-snapper Jason Kyle, who
tapped toes on both feet down like
a receiver just inside the sideline.
New Orleans converted the
turnover into Moores second
touchdown on a 16-yard catch
and run to put New Orleans ahead
21-17 late in the third quarter.
Fortunately for Atlanta, Ryan
rarely made a mistake and rou-
tinely exhibited uncanny instincts,
decisiveness and accuracy in the
clutch.
On the Falcons 80-yard scoring
drive to take the lead in the fourth
quarter, Ryan converted a third-
and-10 with a pass to Gonzalez
and his scoring strike to White
came on third-and-6.
Brees, who was 30 of 38 for
365 yards and three touchdowns,
drove the Saints into game-tying
field goal range late in regulation,
in part by converting a fourth-
and-1 pass to Shockey for a 6-yard
gain. Hartley made that kick, from
32 yards, with four seconds left in
the fourth quarter.
Last season, Hartley sent the
Saints to the franchises first Super
Bowl with an overtime game-win-
ner in the NFC title game, made
three field goals during the Super
Bowl, and also clinched the Saints
Week 2 win at San Francisco last
Monday night with a 37-yard, par-
tially blocked field goal at the end
of regulation.
He just
c o u l d n t
c o m e
t h r o u g h
in OT this
time, and
the critical
miss looked
similar to
two less con-
s e quent i al
misses that
were hooked
left in the
Saints sea-
son opening
win against Minnesota.
While Brees was clutch late, he
made early mistakes that came
back to haunt his team, throwing
an interception on a flea-flicker
and another when he tried to
underhand a pass, Brett Favre-
style, to Graham as he was fall-
ing forward. Brent Grimes made
Atlantas first interception and
DeCoud the second. Brees also
sacked by John Abraham and
Jonathan Babineaux.
Ryan, by contrast, minimized
mistakes, going 19 of 30 with no
interceptions and taking only one
sack by Will Smith.
Ryan was at his determined
best on a 19-play, 72-yard drive
that consumed 10:39 of the sec-
ond quarter and tied the game at
14 shortly before halftime.
NfL
Seahawks make errors, beat Chargers
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE With a metal rod
in his right leg, Leon Washington
was deemed expendable in New
York.
Sunday, he was invaluable in
Seattle.
Washington made up for a Seattle
slew of mistakes and missed chanc-
es, returning second-half kickoffs
101 and 99 yards for touchdowns,
and the Seahawks held off Philip
Rivers and the San Diego Chargers
27-20 on Sunday.
Pete Carrolls crew is now a sur-
prising 2-1 and tied at the top
of the mediocre NFC West. And
Washington looks like a colossal
steal after Seattle grabbed the ver-
satile back from the Jets for a fifth-
round pick during Aprils draft.
Seattle led 10-0 at the half, but
was still smarting from a time
management failure at the end of
the second quarter. Washington
made that a forgotten meltdown.
Washington caught the second-
half kickoff 1-yard deep in the end
zone, and other than a couple of
flailing hands grasping at his shoes,
went untouched for the longest
kickoff return in Seahawks history.
His dash midway through the
fourth quarter was the clincher.
Rivers had just pulled San Diego
(1-2) even with a 12-yard pass to
Antonio Gates and 2-point conver-
sion to Legedu Naanee with 6:39
left.
Fifteen seconds later, Seattle was
back in front. Washington got lost
in a pile, squirted free and raced
99 yards to give Seattle its final
advantage.
From there, Rivers tested Seattles
maligned secondary that allowed
the Chargers QB to throw for a
career-high 455 yards. San Diego
drove to the Seattle 14 before a pair
of false starts backed up Rivers. On
fourth-and-15 at the Seattle 19, his
pass for Gates at the goal line was
knocked away by Roy Lewis.
Rivers got one more chance after
San Diegos defense held. Starting
at his 45, Rivers completed passes
of 16 yards to Buster Davis and
25 yards to Malcom Floyd. Rivers
final chance thrown to the goal line
was intercepted by rookie safety
Earl Thomas with 6 seconds left.
On the Falcons 80-yard
scoring drive to take the
lead in the fourth quarter,
Ryan converted a third-
and-10 with a pass to
Gonzalez and his scoring
strike to White came on
third-and-6.
340 Fraser | 864-4121
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KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / MONDAY, SepteMber 27, 2010 / SPORTS / 7b
BY ETHAN PADWAY
epadway@kansan.com
The mens and womens golf
teams will both be in action
Monday and Tuesday. The women
will host the Marilynn Smith
Sunflower Invitational at Alvamar
Country Club in Lawrence. The
men travel to Erie, Colo. to com-
pete in the Colorado Invitational.
The womens team tied for sec-
ond place in its last event, the
Chip-N Club Invitational in
Lincoln, Neb. The team was led
by seniors Meghna Bal and Grace
Thiry. Both tied for fourth place
by shooting four over par in the
two-round event that was short-
ened from three rounds because of
inclement weather.
Im really excited to play in our
home tournament, especially after
our success in Nebraska, Thiry
said in a release.
Thiry and Bal will be competing
as individuals and will be joined
by juniors Katy Nugent and Maria
Jackson, redshirt freshman Fhong
Boonraksasat, senior Jennifer
Clark, sophomore Audrey Yowell
and freshman Meghan Potee.
The mens team tied for sixth
place last week in the Kansas
Invitational. Senior Jeff Bell will be
making his first appearance of the
year competing in a team event.
Bell competed in eight events last
year.
Senior Nate Barbee will also
compete in Erie. Barbee, who has
been struggling a bit this year, got
off to a rough start. He shot an 80
in his opening round of the Kansas
Invitational, before he came back
in the final two rounds with a 74
and a 70.
This is a big step in hopefully
starting to climb back and get over
that hump, coach Kit Grove said.
Hes been in a slump the last
couple months and hopefully this
is something he can build off of
because at the end of the day hes
very talented. Hes a hard worker.
Sophomore Chris Gilbert led
the Jayhawks last week, tying for
fifteenth place. Sophomore Alex
Gutesha rounds out the Jayhawks
five-man squad. He finished in
31st place at last weeks Kansas
Invitational. Both Gilbert and
Gutesha competed in all twelve
events for the Jayhawks a year ago
as freshmen.
Grove said the mens biggest
problem has been their inability
to finish strong. He compared it
to getting a lead in a basketball or
football game, and then just trying
to hold on for the win instead of
keeping the intensity up the whole
game.
They all kind of need to get
focused from when they take the
bag on the first tee to when they
hole out on the 18th, Grove said.
The reality of the 54th hole is
you just have to stay engaged,
and I think that is where we are
lacking.
Edited by Abby Davenport
gOLf
Both teams to play this week
NfL
49ers fall to undefeated Chiefs
AP Photo/Ed Zurga
Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Dexter McCluster (22) dives for a touchdown past San Francisco 49ers safety Dashon Goldson (38), and safety
Michael Lewis (32) during the frst half of an NFL football game in Arrowhead Stadiumin Kansas City, Mo., Sunday, Sept. 26, 2010.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Matt
Cassels three touchdown passes
included a trick play that caught
San Francisco completely flat-foot-
ed and the surprising Kansas City
Chiefs remained unbeaten Sunday
with a 31-10 rout of the hapless,
winless 49ers.
After starting 0-4 a year ago and
winning only 10 games the previous
three seasons combined, the Chiefs
are 3-0 for the first time since 2003.
The offense of the 49ers (0-3),
which rolled up 417 yards Monday
night against New Orleans, man-
aged only a field goal until the final
play from scrimmage.
Cassel was 16 for 27 for 250
yards. He connected with Dexter
McCluster on a 31-yard run-and-
catch and fired a perfect 45-yard
strike to a wide-open Dwayne Bowe
off a fake end-around.
Rookie tight end Tony Moeaki
put Kansas City on top 24-3 late
in the third with a great falling
down, one-handed catch of Cassels
18-yard toss.
Its the second time in three games
San Francisco has been dominated,
and is sure to cause unrest in the
Bay Area where many expected the
49ers to contend.
Jamaal Charles and Thomas
Jones, who have become the cen-
ter of a running back controversy
among Chiefs fans, helped K.C.
rush for 207 yards. Charles, whose
breakaway speed has made him a
fan favorite, had 97 yards on 12
carries while Jones had 95 on 19,
including a 3-yard scoring run that
made it 31-3 with 3:27 left on the
bright, sunny afternoon.
The 49ers wound up with 251
total yards, and that included 53
yards on their final two plays. They
did not allow the Saints even one
sack six days earlier. But the Chiefs
rejuvenated defense under first-
year coordinator Romeo Crennel
harried Alex Smith all day and held
Frank Gore to just 43 yards on 15
carries. Gore did have 102 yards on
nine catches.
In three games, the Chiefs have
allowed only 14 second-half points.
Kansas City coach Todd Haleys
gambling instincts were evident all
day. The Chiefs tried an onside kick
after their first touchdown, convert-
ed a fourth-and-1 from midfield
and scored on a trick play in the
third period.
Leading 10-3, the Chiefs in a
wildcat formation snapped the
ball to Jones. He handed the ball
to McCluster, who appeared to
be taking off on an end-around.
But McCluster turned around and
tossed the ball back to Cassel.
The quarterback then pulled up
and lofted a perfect strike to Bowe,
who was all by himself in the end
zone as safety Dashon Goldson
frantically tried to get back.
The 49ers were plagued by bad
field position all game, starting
drives at their own 13, 10, 22, 24
and twice at their own 12. They
began only two drives beyond their
own 28, including once when a
Kansas City kickoff went out of
bounds. Smith was 23 for 42 for 232
yards. His 41-yarder to Gore on the
next-to-last play from scrimmage
set up a 12-yard TD strike to Josh
Morgan as the final second ticked
off the clock.
Brandon Flowers interception
return last week gave the Chiefs
their only touchdown in a victory
at Cleveland.
Joe Nedney had a 51-yard field
goal for the 49ers in the second
quarter.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. LOUIS Steven Jackson
watched from the sideline as the
St. Louis Rams ended a 14-game
home losing streak. Somehow they
did not seem to miss their offensive
star.
Backup running back Kenneth
Darby scored the go-ahead touch-
down in the third quarter and rook-
ie quarterback Sam Bradford got
his first NFL victory as the Rams
overcame an injury to Jackson in
a 30-16 win over the Washington
Redskins on Sunday.
The Rams (1-2) won for only the
second time in 29 games overall
behind a strong start and even
stronger finish, with the biggest
offensive showing under second-
year coach Steve Spagnuolo.
Bradford, the No. 1 overall pick in
April, was 23 for 37 for 235 yards
and one touchdown and one inter-
ception for the Rams, spreading the
ball to nine receivers.
St. Louis, which lost its first
two games by a total of six points,
topped its previous best of 23 points
under Spagnuolo in a five-point
loss to the Saints last November.
The Rams led 14-0 after their first
two scores in the first quarter this
season, weathered a 13-point surge
by the Redskins plus a blocked
field goal at the end of the half, and
played keep-away after the break.
They stymied the Redskins defen-
sively despite going with a pair of
backup safeties much of the game,
and got impressive work from the
reserve running backs after Jackson
was sidelined with a groin injury in
the second quarter.
Darby had 49 yards on 14 carries
and Keith Toston had 22 yards on
11 carries. Jackson finished with
58 yards on 10 carries including a
42-yard score for the games first
touchdown.
Santana Moss had six recep-
tions for 124 yards and a score
for Washington (1-2), but also
lost a fumble in the first half that
led to a touchdown for St. Louis.
Donovan McNabb, who gets his
homecoming game at Philadelphia
next week, was 19 for 32 for 236
yards with one touchdown and an
interception.
The pick by Bradley Fletcher at
the Washington 41 with 3:39 to
play helped the Rams finish it off
with Josh Browns third field goal
of the second half.
Safety Oshiomoghe Atogwe
injured his thigh in the second
quarter and the other safety, Craig
Dahl, was inactive with a con-
cussion. There was no letup with
James Butler and Darian Stewart in
the lineup.
Darby, who entered the game
with 2 yards on three carries, gave
the Rams the lead for good at 21-16
on a 12-yard run midway through
the third quarter. He gained 24
yards on four straight carries to
open the fourth quarter, helping set
up a field goal.
Bradford leads Rams to victory
NfL
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TEXTBOOKS
FOR SALE ANNOUNCEMENTS
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8B / SPORTS / MONDAY, SepteMBer 27, 2010 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / kANSAN.cOM
Red from head to toe
Ryan Waggoner/KANSAN
Dressed in red body suits, Patrick Helmick, a freshman fromMilford, Del., and Alex Bishop, a freshman fromPhoenix, Ariz., celebrate a Kansas
touchdown Saturday at Memorial Stadium. We call ourselves The Red Men,Helmick said.
NfL
Raiders mistakes costly
ASSOCIATED PRESS
GLENDALE, Ariz. Fittingly,
Arizonas 24-23 victory over
Oakland on Sunday ended with a
big mistake.
The game was littered with
them.
Sebastian Janwikowskis errant
32-yard field goal as the game
ended allowed the Cardinals to
escape in their home opener, a
game Oakland had repeated chanc-
es to win in the final minutes.
The kick, after a 39-yard pass
interference call against Arizonas
Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie,
was wide left. Janikowski missed
two others in the game, a 41-yarder
and a 58-yarder. Both were wide
right.
LaRod, Stephens-Howl ing
returned the opening kickoff 102
yards for a touchdown for Arizona
(2-1) and Derek Anderson threw
two touchdown passes, including
an 8-yarder to Larry Fitzgerald
with 1:01 left in the third quarter
that proved to be the game
winner.
Oakland (1-2) committed 11
penalties for 123 yards, Arizona
seven for 104.
New Raiders starting quarter-
back Bruce Gradkowski was 17 of
34 for 255 yards and a touchdown
with one interception. He threw
12 yards to Darrius Heyward-Bey
on fourth-and-10 from his own 36
to keep the final drive alive. But he
also was the main culprit in a delay-
of-game penalty after another pass
interference call this one against
Arizonas Greg Toler gave the
Raiders the ball first-and-goal at
the Arizona 1-yard line midway
through the fourth quarter.
The penalty pushed the ball
back to the 6 and Arizonas defense
held, forcing Oakland to settle for
Janikowskis 23-yard field goal that
cut the lead to 24-23 with 7:59 to
play.
Later, Gradkowskis 35-yard pass
to Louis Murphy helped Oakland
advance to the Arizona 35, where
Janikowski who has a career-
long 61-yarder and had booted
a 54-yarder earlier in the game
set up for a 53-yard try. But a
false start against left tackle Mario
Henderson pushed the ball back
5 yards for a much more difficult
58-yarder attempt. Janikowski had
the distance, but was just wide
right.
Two of Oaklands field goals
came after Raiders punts bounced
off the legs of an Arizona player
first Matt Ware, then Rodgers-
Cromartie.
Oaklands Darren McFadden
gained 105 yards in 25 attempts..
Anderson completed just 12 of
26 for 122 yards and was intercept-
ed once but was 3 for 3 for 41 yards
on the drive to the deciding touch-
down. Beanie Wells, in his first
game of the season after sitting out
two games following arthroscopic
knee surgery, gained 24 yards on
his first carry and finished with 75
yards and 14 attempts. Teammate
Tim Hightower had 40 in 11 car-
ries, including a 13-yarder in the
final touchdown drive.
Andersons 2-yard touchdown
pass to Steve Breaston put the
Cardinals up 17-13.
The Raiders took a 20-17 half-
time lead with a 7-play, 69-yard
touchdown drive, culminating
with McFaddens two-yard scor-
ing run with 10 seconds left in
the half.
PGA
Furyk earns $10M,
wins FedEx Cup
AtLANtA Jim Furyk capped
of a wild day in the rain with a
bunker shot worth $10 million.
In a Fedex cup that came down
to the fnal hole Sunday in the
tour championship, Furyk nearly
holed a bunker shot and knocked
in the 2-foot par putt to close
with an even-par 70 and a one-
shot victory over Luke Donald to
capture the biggest payof in golf.
Donald, who chipped in from
100 feet for birdie on the 17th
hole, was waiting in the scoring
trailer when Furyk stood in a
bunker.
When he tapped in his par
with cap turned backward, Furyk
plucked the ball out of the hole
and fred it over the grandstands
behind the 18th green at east
Lake.
He earned $1.35 million for
winning the tournament, and $10
million from the Fedex cup.
Associated Press
Be seen wearing your shirt.
Win $50 this Tuesday .
For your chance to win, pick up your t-shirt
at our campus branch at 23rd & Naismith.
A Better Way to Bank
www.kucu.org
3400 W 6th St 1300 W 23rd St 2221 W 31st St 785.749.2224
Check out last
Tuesdays winners:
Jaci Thiel and Ken Grothman






For more information about business abroad programs, contact the


Institute for International Business at crose@ku.edu or (785) 864-4583.
business
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