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OCT.

6
With a potential government
shutdown 11 days off, the
Republican-run House ignores
a White House veto threat and
approves legislation denying money
for much of President Barack
Obamas health care law while
keeping the government open
through Dec. 15.
Tea party
Sen. Ted
Cruz,
R-Texas,
and other
conservatives
speak on the
Senate foor for
more than 21 consecutive hours
against the health care law. They
do not delay or prevent votes, but
they help intensify conservative
fervor for using the shutdown bill
to try forcing Democrats to limit or
block the health care law.
The Democratic-led Senate votes to
end conservative efforts to derail
the bill preventing a shutdown,
with even most Republicans
opposing the conservatives.
The Senate sends a bill keeping
agencies open through Nov. 15
back to the House, after removing
House-approved provision
defunding the health care law.
The House shifts its demands for
restricting the health care law.
It votes to delay implementation
of the health care overhaul by a
year and to repeal a tax on many
medical devices that helps pay
for the law. Separately, the House
votes to pay active duty troops, and
some Defense Department civilian
workers and defense contractors, in
case of a shutdown. The next day,
the Senate approves the bill and
Obama signs it into law.
2:20 p.m. EDT: The Senate removes
House provisions postponing the
health care law and erasing the
medical device tax.
8:41 p.m. The House approves a
new shutdown bill with different
demands. It delays for a year the
health care laws requirement that
individuals buy health insurance,
and requires members of Congress
and their staff to pay the full
expense of health insurance,
without the government paying part
of the costs.
9:37 p.m. The Senate strips the
House provisions on individual
health insurance and federal health
coverage subsidies for Congress.
12:01 a.m. EDT: Governments new
fscal year begins, partial federal
shutdown starts.
1:11 a.m. The House stands by
its language delaying required
individual health coverage and
blocking federal health insurance
subsidies for Congress, and
requests formal negotiations with
the Senate.
8 a.m. Federal health care
exchanges open.
10 a.m. The Senate rejects House
effort for formal bargaining.
Embarking on a strategy of voting
to restart popular programs,
Republicans push bills through the
House reopening national parks
and the National Institutes of
Health and letting the District of
Columbia municipal government
spend money. House Democrats
mostly vote no and Senate
leaders ignore the measures,
saying the entire government must
reopen. Obama discusses the
impasse with congressional leaders
at the White House but participants
report no progress.
The House votes to pay members of
the National Guard and Reserves
and fnance veterans programs.
The House votes to fnance
federal disaster aid programs and
feeding programs for infants and
pregnant women. The shutdown
fght is increasingly tied to the
need for Congress to renew
federal borrowing authority by Oct.
17 or risk an economy-rattling
government default. GOP leaders
increasingly shift their conditions
for passage of the shutdown and
debt limit bills to
defcit reduction.
The House votes to pay furloughed
federal workers when the shutdown
ends. Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel says he is bringing most
of his departments 350,000
furloughed workers back to work
immediately.
House
Speaker
John
Boehner
says House
wont pass bills
ending shutdown or raising debt
limit without negotiations on GOP
demands.
House votes to fund Food and Drug
House votes to fnance Head Start,
pay civil servants working during
the shutdown and create a panel of
lawmakers to negotiate on defcit
reduction. Obama and Boehner
suggest they might consider short-
term bills ending the shutdown
and extending the debt limit to give
them time to negotiate.
House votes to pay halted death
benefts to families of fallen troops
and to fnance the Federal Aviation
Administration. Obama invites GOP
senators and House members to
White House for talks.
Volume 126 Issue 29 kansan.com Thursday, October 10, 2013
All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2013 The University Daily Kansan
CLASSIFIEDS 2B
CROSSWORD 5A
CRYPTOQUIPS 5A
OPINION 4A
SPORTS 1B
SUDOKU 5A
Sunny. Zero percent
chance of rain. Wind SSE
at 15 mph.
Fall break. No class Monday and Tuesday.
Index Dont
forget
Todays
Weather
Where is fall?
HI: 83
LO: 56
UDK
the student voice since 1904
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEEKEND
WHATS HAPPENING
WITH THE GOVERNMENT?
A TIMELINE OF EVENTS ASSOCIATED PRESS
The battle in Congress tying the Affordable Care Act to the re-opening of the federal
government winds down a dizzying path of procedure and protocol within the
House of Representatives and Senate. Although this impasse is born of a long-held
polarization in Congress, the short-term maneuvering is anything but simple.
SEPT. 20
SEPT. 20
SEPT. 20
OCT. 4
OCT. 8
SEPT. 30
SEPT. 24-25
SEPT. 29
OCT. 1
OCT. 3
OCT. 5
OCT. 7
OCT. 8
Cruz
Boehner
Obama
O
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
PAGE 2A
PAGE 6A
UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT
PANIC DISORDER
Check out opinion
PAGE 4A
PAGE 2B
THE MORNING BREW
Keep questions
about others
sexuality to yourself
Endowment Call Center brings in
donations from Kansas alumni
Cover band travels to Kansas to
play with locals at The Jazzhaus
Which general
managers have
the hardest job in
professional sports?
Administration programs.
Tis year KU Endowment provid-
ed nearly $120 million in funding
for the University.
Tis funding provided scholar-
ships to more than 6,000 students,
which totaled an estimated $29.5
million.
It is easy to see that the thousands
of donors who contribute nearly 60
percent of the Universitys funding
each year are the true heroes of the
University, but what you cant see is
the people behind the scenes who
garner these donations every day.
In the basement of the Endow-
ment building, between 5 and 9
p.m., 24 student callers sit in lines
at computers making the import-
ant calls that bring in between
$6,000 and $12,000 every night. Its
a relaxed scene; there are games,
snacks, Snuggies and coloring
books, but everyone is hard at work
making about 250 calls in just four
hours.
We try to keep it light and fun,
said Ethan Rempel, the call center
coordinator. If theyre having fun
while theyre here we get a lot more
done and it keeps the spirit up.
Rempel said it can be intimidating
to call a complete stranger and ask
for money, which is why he wants
to keep the callers comfortable
and engaged. According to Rem-
pel, having relaxed callers helps
to foster better conversations with
donors, which is helpful for both
students and alumni.
When calling alumni, students
have the opportu-
nity to talk to great
people and share
their experiences
from the Universi-
ty. Rempel said this
connection helps
both parties feel
more comfortable
and tends to collect
more donations.
Alumni enjoy
conversations with
students who can
share new and exciting happenings
on campus, Rempel said.
Not only is it an opportunity to
have a great conversation, but stu-
dent callers also get the opportuni-
ty to talk to professionals working
in their feld and make lasting con-
nections.
Its really great to ask them about
their careers and advice they have
for students like me, said Jade Hall,
a junior from Derby who is a stu-
dent caller at the call center.
Along with getting to talk to a va-
riety of alumni, the callers can see
a direct impact that their work has
on the University.
Te Endowment provided more
than $3.7 million in 2013 to help
bring profes-
sors to the
Uni vers i t y.
Tis money
has helped
bring and
retain top
pr of e s s or s
from around
the world to
enrich aca-
demics for
students.
In addition,
the Endowment supplies fund-
ing for building projects across
campus. Currently, Endowment is
helping to provide 200 trees for the
construction project on Jayhawk
Boulevard.
Every student working on our
campaign can say they feel and see
the impact of their work every time
they walk across campus, Rempel
said.
For Hall, directly raising money
for the University has been a re-
warding opportunity.
As a student that has received a
scholarship from the University,
knowing that I am giving other
students that opportunity is really
awesome, Hall said. It makes the
job worth it.
Tough the student callers arent
the sole reason for the Endow-
ments success, they play a major
role in their eforts. In 2013 the call
center raised $1.2 million with do-
nations that were mostly made in
increments between $10 and $150.
Rempel attributes all the success
from the call center to the students
who work there.
It helps immensely that we have
an engaged group of alumni and
a passionate group of student
fundraisers to reach out to them,
Rempel said. Teir hard work and
dedication to building relationships
with our alumni are the foundation
for all the success our campaign
enjoys.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
What: Merienda Brown Bag Lecture with
Artist Diego Teo
When: Noon to 1 p.m.
Where: Spencer Museum of Art Audi-
torium
About: Public presentation open to
English and Spanish speakers with
artist-in-residence Diego Teo and lunch
What: Haim concert
When: 8 p.m.
Where: The Granada Theater
About: Concert presented by Student
Union Activities and KJHK
Cost: $7 advance KU student, $10 KU
student at door
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief
Trevor Graff
Managing editors
Allison Kohn
Dylan Lysen
Art Director
Katie Kutsko
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
Business manager
Mollie Pointer
Sales manager
Sean Powers
NEWS SECTION EDITORS
News editor
Tara Bryant
Associate news editor
Emily Donovan
Sports editor
Mike Vernon
Associate sports editor
Blake Schuster
Entertainment editor
Hannah Barling
Copy chiefs
Lauren Armendariz
Hayley Jozwiak
Elise Reuter
Madison Schultz
Design chief
Trey Conrad
Designers
Cole Anneberg
Allyson Maturey
Opinion editor
Will Webber
Photo editor
George Mullinix
Special sections editor
Emma LeGault
Web editor
Wil Kenney
ADVISERS
Media director and
content strategist
Brett Akagi
Sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt
N
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
news
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 PAGE 2A
CONTACT US
editor@kansan.com
www.kansan.com
Newsroom: (785)-766-1491
Advertising: (785) 864-4358
Twitter: KansanNews
Facebook: facebook.com/thekansan
The University Daily Kansan is the student
newspaper of the University of Kansas. The
frst copy is paid through the student activity
fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are
50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased
at the Kansan business offce, 2051A Dole
Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside
Avenue, Lawrence, KS., 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-
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year except Friday, Saturday, Sunday, fall
break, spring break and exams and weekly
during the summer session excluding
holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are
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The University Daily Kansan, 2051A Dole
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KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS
Check out
KUJH-TV
on Knology
of Kansas
Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what
youve read in todays Kansan and other
news. Also see KUJHs website at tv.ku.edu.
KJHK is the student voice
in radio. Whether its rock
n roll or reggae, sports or
special events, KJHK 90.7
is for you.
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue
Lawrence, Kan., 66045
weather,
Jay?
Whats the
Friday Saturday Sunday
HI: 83
HI: 73 HI: 76
LO: 57
LO: 48 LO: 54
weather.com
Party cloudy.
Windy. 20 percent
chance of rain.
Wind S at 23 mph.
T-storms. 30
percent chance of
rain. Wind NNE at
8 mph.
Sunny. Zero
percent chance of
rain. Wind E at 9
mph.
No umbrella required. Dress in layers. Enjoy the sunshine.
Calendar
Thursday, Oct. 10 Friday, Oct. 11 Saturday, Oct. 12 Sunday, Oct. 13
WHERE HAIR GOES TO MAN UP
$9.95 with
Student ID
2500 Iowa St
Lawrence, KS 66046 (785) 841-6640
M - F 9 8 Sat 9 6:00pm
Welcome home ne membe!
MACKENZIE ARNOLD
HOLLY BRANDT
ANNA CAFFREY
NATALIE CARTER
PAIGE COOK
JAMIE DEXTER
HAYLEY DISNEY
ERICA DODSON
EMMA DOUGHERTY
CHRISTIE FANGMAN
ABIGAIL FIELDS
SARAH FLATTERY
ADDISON FUNKE
CORINNE GEEKIE
CASEY HANKS
KENNEDY HENRICH
DEMORE HOFFMAN-BATEY
MEAGAN HUENERGARDT
MORGAN HUGHES
ALYSSA HUNTINGTON
ELLE JAVIER
EMILY KAPLAN
KALI KOHLHOF
MAGGIE KORTE
ERICA LANG
ALLIE LEATH
ASHLEY LINAWEAVER
CHELSEA MCCALL
KRISTEN MCKENZIE
LAUREN MIZE
SIERRA MORGAN
MARIAH MORLEY
JAIME MOSKOWITZ
MAGGIE ORTH
CAIT PARTIN
RACHEL PUCCETTI
MACLAINE PURDY
SAMANTHA RICCI WELLER
MALLORY SCHMIDTLEIN
LIZZY SETZKE
MORGAN SHEPHERD
KAYLA SINCLAIR
TAYLOR SMITH
DANI SORENSON
STEVY STAUFFER
ABBY STREIT
LUCY WAITE
MORGAN WEBB
LAUREN WOLF
EMMA ZINK
FARRAH ZONOOZI
Welcome home ne membe!
CAMPUS
What: Wrapped Words
When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: Spencer Museum of Art
About: Public art project inspired by
Leslie Dills Thread Man for the Art Cart
series
What: Cosmic Bowling
When: 10 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Where: Jaybowl, Kansas Union
About: Free bowling for KU students
presented by Student Union Activities
What: Elizabeth Berghout
When: 5:30 to 6 p.m.
Where: Memorial Campanile
About: Performance using the 53 bells in the
World War II Memorial Campanile
What: Diego Teo Artist Residency
When: All day
Where: Spencer Museum of Art
About: International artist-in-residence
Diego Teo will use the public gallery as a
studio space
What: Bengali Fall Festival
When: All day
Where: Big 12 Room, Kansas Union
About: Idols, artistry and performance
by Bollywood singer
What: Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors
When: 7 to 9 p.m.
Where: 318 Bailey Hall
About: Film night and snacks hosted by
Center for Russian, East European and
Eurasian studies
Student callers help secure Endowment funds
ASHLEIGH TIDWELL
atidwell@kansan.com

Every student working on


our campaign can say they
feel and see the impact of
their work every time they
walk across campus.
ETHAN REMPEL
Call center coordinator
BY THE NUMBERS
6,000 students received
scholarships from KU Endowment
funds this year.
79 new scholarship funds were
established through Endowment
in 2013
44,500 donors gave in 2013
$119.4 million provided to KU in
2013
Since its founding in 1891, they
have provided more than $2 billion
to KU
Provided $17.3 million to the
University for construction,
furnishing, equipment and supplies
in 2013
The KU call center raised $1.2
million in 2013
The call center make 6,000 calls
each night
Donations made range from $10 to
$1,000
Warm weather increases
risk of West Nile Virus
With fall weather slow to arrive in
Kansas, the threat of West Nile Virus
continues past its usual June through
September season.
According to the CDC, West Nile Vi-
rus is a virus spread most commonly
through infected mosquitoes. Anyone
who is bitten by an infected mosquito
risks contracting the virus.
This year, 23 cases of West Nile
Virus have been reported in Kansas,
including two deaths. No cases have
been reported in Douglas County yet,
but the Kansas Department of Health
and Environment still warns people to
be cautious.
Cases are on the rise in Kansas.
We want to bring this to everyones
attention as we expect an increase
in this disease before winter is here,
and we strongly encourage the use
of methods that prevent mosquito
bites, Robert Moser, M.D., KDHE
Secretary and State Health Offcer
said in a press release.
Some prevention methods include
wearing bug spray on skin and
clothes, especially in the morning
and evening when there are more
mosquitoes out. Students should also
check that window and door screens
are secure to prevent the bugs from
getting indoors. Most people show
no symptoms, but in some cases the
virus can be fatal. Symptoms usually
begin to show up 2 to 6 days after
being bitten.
For more information on the virus
and the best types of bug spray to use
visit: cdc.gov/westnile
Kaitlyn Klein
HEALTH
Symptoms of West Nile
Many people do not show symp-
toms, but some include:
Slight headache
Slight fever
Swelling of brain or brain tissue
Sometimes fatal (less than 1%)
In most cases symptoms go away
on their own, but can last for
several weeks. Virus is NOT conta-
gious.no vaccine or treatment

Source: cdc.gov
Edited by Sarah Kramer
CAMPUS
Student Senate approves
accessible entrance
Student Senate approved a resolution
to ask University administration to add
an accessible entrance to Strong Hall at
its meeting last night.
Authored by Erin Howard, AbleHawks
and Allies senator, and Drew Harger,
assistant treasurer, the resolution
passed with a vote of 55 in favor with
one abstention. It was amended to state
that Student Senate should not be asked
to pay the costs of construction.
The only accessible entrance to Strong
Hall is located in the back of the build-
ing, Howard said.
The Senate also passed a resolution
asking the University administration
to switch over to double-sided printing
campus wide with a vote of 40-16-2.
It also asks that should some printing
costs be deferred with this change, those
savings be passed along to students.
Harger said he did not think the reso-
lution was ready to be passed on to the
administration and that more research
needs to be done before deciding.
One of the more heated debates was
over a bill that would no longer require
the executive secretary to make three
scrapbooks archiving the full year of the
Senate. Tyler Childress, chief of staff,
said a scrapbook was not made for the
previous year, nor had one been started
this year. The bill failed with a vote of
39-22-0.
Mackenzie Clark
Shelving creepy baby dolls and
wiping down tables may not be
what students envision as the typ-
ical honors experience.
But for sophomore Sophia Maz-
zetti from Kansas City, Kan., that
was exactly what she found herself
doing with her honors seminar.
Tey were volunteering for the
Rose Brooks Center, a domestic vi-
olence shelter in Kansas City, Mo.,
through the Alternative Breaks
weekend program.
Its part of the Universitys Honors
Program requirement. All frst-year
honors students have to complete
a couple of hours of volunteering
during their frst semester, either
individually or with their seminar
group.
Te idea is that freshmen dont
necessarily know about the Al-
ternative Breaks or any other vol-
unteer activities around campus
or Lawrence, said Anne Dotter,
associate director of curricular,
co-curricular and engaged learning
in the Honors Program. We want
to introduce them to these oppor-
tunities.
Te seminar volunteering expe-
riences are set up by the student
seminar assistants. Senior honors
seminar assistant Alyssa Ong, from
Malaysia, takes the opportunity to
introduce her frst-year students to
fun and new experiences. Afer she
took her students to the Festival of
Cultures, which celebrates diversity
in Lawrence, three of her students
applied to go on a winter Alterna-
tive Break.
It shows that they are really inter-
ested, Ong said. Tey are open to
new experiences and they are really
going for it.
It also helps the Honors Program
make the campus a bit smaller and
friendlier.
When you have this small,
12-person class and you go to vol-
unteer with them, you come back
knowing them a lot better, Ong
said. You bond and you will end
up with friends who will support
you regardless of your journey at
KU.
During the hour-long drive to and
from volunteering and the time
spent at the shelter, Mazzetti found
out more about her classmates than
she had in the past seven weeks in
class.
As we were washing the tables,
we really got to chat about what
majors we were, because we didnt
even know that sort of information
about each other and why we were
interested in what we were interest-
ed in, Mazzetti said.
While most students in the Hon-
ors Program have previous vol-
unteer experiences, they need a
reminder to start getting involved
again on campus.
If the trip wasnt planned, I dont
think many of us would have gone
on a lot of these volunteer experi-
ences, said freshman honors stu-
dent To Nguyen, from Overland
Park. Tey are good at preparing
us and helping us step in the right
direction.
Afer a volunteer service with her
honors seminar, Nguyen took the
initiative to fnd other volunteer
opportunities, such as the Center
for Community Outreach.
Ultimately, the goal of the pro-
gram is to make volunteering a
habit for honors students.
We want our students to be lead-
ers in the community, so we do
want a majority of them to take the
initiative to volunteer, Dotter said.
What we are doing is starting to
defne our honors students as fu-
ture active leaders, good citizens.
Edited by Hannah Barling
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 3A
POLICE REPORTS
A 24-year-old man was
arrested yesterday on the
1600 block of 6th Street on
suspicion of operating while
under the infuence. A $500
bond was posted.
A 28-year-old woman was
arrested Tuesday on the 4600
block of 6th Street on suspicion
of driving with a suspended,
revoked, or canceled license
and no insurance. A $200 bond
was paid.
A 29-year-old man was
arrested Tuesday on the
2400 block of Ousdahl Road
on suspicion of driving
while under the infuence,
possession of an open
container, obstructing the
legal process, and feeing or
attempting to elude. No bond
was posted.
An 18-year-old man was
arrested Tuesday on the
1500 block of Willow Cove on
suspicion of domestic battery
and criminal damage to
property. No bond was posted.
Katie McBride
Information based on the
Douglas County Sheriffs
Offce booking recap.

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CAMPUS
Volunteers gain experience through program
YU KYUNG LEE
ylee@kansan.com
CAMPUS
Departmental changes offer
hybrid classes, extra track
Te Humanities and Western Civ-
ilization department has created
hybrid classes and updated classes
curricula to keep the department
relevant under the KU Core.
Last week, the department won the
Christopher H. Haufer KU Innova-
tion Award for its work in adapting
the curriculum.
We were thrilled to learn that our
eforts of the past several years were
being so recognized, said Sandra
Zimdars-Swartz, professor and di-
rector of Humanities and Western
Civilization.
Te award, which recognizes cre-
ative approaches to the new Univer-
sity-wide Core curriculum, comes
with $5,000 to be used to enhance
Core oferings.
Te new curriculum aims to meet
specifc goals and learning out-
comes under those goals.
Te idea is that by fulflling a se-
ries of courses, were fulflling a se-
ries of goals, said Ann Cudd, vice
provost and dean for Undergradu-
ate Studies.
One of the biggest updates to the
curriculum is to allow for the West-
ern Civilization sequence to be tak-
en earlier. Prior to the Core, some
students didnt take Western Civili-
zation until their senior year.
Our redesigned sequence is fresh-
man-friendly and open to incoming
students, Cudd said.
Te program also added an extra
track to the Humanities major. Now,
in addition to World Literature and
Civilizations In a Global Context,
students can take the Peace and
Confict Studies route. Also, new
introductory courses Introduction
to Humanities and Introduction
to Peace and Confict Studies were
added, with some current classes
being redesigned to emphasize the
Cores learning outcomes.
Teyve adapted some great class-
es to the Core learning outcomes so
they can continue to teach these re-
ally interesting, intellectual courses
and allow students to fulfll the KU
Core through them, Cudd said.
Te changes to Humanities and
Western Civilization under the KU
Core curriculum have also stressed
the importance of the subjects be-
ing taught as well. According to
Zimdars-Swartz, Humanities and
Western Civilization classes provide
foundation for various careers, from
retail to education to medicine.
We recognize that to function in
an increasingly complex world, stu-
dents need to be able to move com-
fortably among disciplines and their
distinct approaches to the variety
of human experiences and human
conditions, she said.
Dustin Wolfe, junior from Sealy,
Texas, also recognizes the impor-
tance of the program and its value
to students.
Western Civilization is import-
ant because it teaches you how you
think, he said. Without any of
the authors and thinkers you learn
about, you arent able to understand
that.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
TIM DODDERIDGE
tdodderidge@kansan.com
Jenkins takes heat in
shutdown negotiations
TOPEKA Democrats and liberal
activists in Kansas are criticizing
Republican Congresswoman
Lynn Jenkins over the federal
governments partial shutdown.
But Jenkins and other members of
the states all-GOP congressional
delegation said Wednesday theyre
looking for President Barack Obama
and fellow Democrats to negotiate
on budget issues.
They also said they wont support
increasing the federal debt ceiling
without reductions in federal
spending.
Two dozen activists rallied
outside Jenkins offce in Topeka,
demanding she work for a House
vote on budget and debt ceiling
legislation without conditions.
Jenkins represents the 2nd District
of eastern Kansas but is a member
of the House GOP leadership team.
She said shes working to resolve
fnancial issues in Washington.
The Kansas delegation has voted
for multiple measures to fund
individual programs.
Associated Press
STATE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, right, and House GOP leaders partici-
pate in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on Sept. 26.
Recycle
this
paper
O
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
opinion
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 PAGE 4A
H
ow much are tickets?
Tis is usually the frst
question my friends will
ask before they allow me to drag
them to see a band theyve never
heard of before. Ticket prices
ofen do raise some concern,
especially if you happen to fall
victim to the broke college
student stereotype. Afer all, we
have cover fees and alcohol to
keep in mind.
As consumers, its natural to be
cautious about what we spend
our money on. But as of late,
artists are growing concerned
with what we spend our money
on too, in fear that it might not be
on them. When word about the
government shutdown spread, the
music industry faced two options:
dig themselves in an even deeper
fnancial hole, or do something
about it. Luckily for us music fans,
they chose the latter.
9:30 Club, a-state-of-the-art
concert venue and local promot-
er in Washington, D.C., came
up with the concept of ofering
an Afordable Ticket Act, a
spin-of of the formal name for
Obamacare. Te premise is far
less complicated than trying to
register for health care, thats for
sure. With the Afordable Ticket
Act, tickets for nine upcoming
October shows were sold as buy
one get one free. Te only require-
ments were that a promo code
provided by 9:30 Club be used to
access the ofer, and that all tickets
be purchased by a given deadline.
Te nine acts were not just
limited to 9:30 Clubs shows, but
to various venues with performers
such as: Te Flaming Lips with
Tame Impala, Steve Aoki with
Pharrell Williams, Marky Ramone
(of Te Ramones), Clap Your
Hands Say Yeah, Fountains of
Wayne, and BOY, among others.
Aside from ofering basic facts
about what the Afordable Ticket
Act entails, I have to say Im
rather surprised that there hasnt
been more commentary or press
regarding the idea. When I frst
heard about it, I personally felt as
though it was the greatest thing to
come along since the Keurig.
I believe that the Afordable
Ticket Act has such strong po-
tential because it stems from the
already successful medium of live
performance. Artists have contin-
ually struggled to make a decent
proft from their music since
digitalization took over, and live
performance has grown to be the
primary stream of revenue over
the years. With fnancial worries
on the rise, particularly with the
current state of our government,
the music industry chose to revi-
talize the reliable resource of live
performance, rather than leave
the artists stuck in the studios and
the fans stuck at home.
Live Nation, the worlds largest
promoter of live-events, has
already reported a proft of $58.1
million in ticket sales within the
frst half of 2013 alone, according
to Pollstar. Tis amount clearly
illustrates the large impact that
live performance has on the music
industry.
So why would a two-for-one deal
on tickets be necessary with a dol-
lar amount like that? Well, let me
ask you, when was the last time
you attended a concert alone?
Most of us wouldnt even want
to grab dinner on Massachusetts
Street without some company.
Unity is at the core of music.
Music is meant to bring people
together, and what better way to
do so than selling tickets in a pair?
Neil Young once enlightened us
all to keep on rocking in the free
world, and with the government
out of commission, it seems as
though the music industry has
every intention of doing just that.
Lyndsey Havens is a sophomore ma-
joring in journalism from Chicago, IL.
Affordable Ticket Act keeps music alive in hard times
Student abroad observes
stereotypes internationally
Sexuality clarifcation
unfair and distasteful
CONCERTS
INTERNATIONAL PRIVACY
N
anjing is the capital of
Jiangsu province and a
former capital of China
itself. Roughly 200 miles inland
from the coastal city of Shanghai,
this city has four distinct sea-
sons. Established along the Yang-
tze River and nestled between
two mountain ranges, Nanjing
is noticeably more humid than
Kansas City, perhaps even more
so with its cozy population of
around 10 million.
Despite the large size, the
public transit is very good. Te
subway has two lines currently
in use, and additional ones are
under construction. Five compa-
nies run a bussing network that
is composed of over 370 routes.
Additionally, there are cab driv-
ers in abundance, but word has it
that as a westerner, they are not
always the easiest to acquire. I
wont blame the cabbies, though.
Its likely that most of them have
at one point or another picked
up a westerner, asked politely in
Chinese where they would like
to go, and had a single line of
directions shoved in their face.
Zhege! shouts the passenger
with bulging helpless eyes. So I
wont blame that balding Chinese
man who passed me by last week
only to pick up a Chinese couple
not more than twenty meters
down the road.
Naturally, we are kept separate
from the Chinese undergraduate
students for fear that we will
pollute their impressionable
minds with our western ideals
inspired by academically inept,
socially provocative and sexually
perverse idols. For example, Bill
Gates: college dropout.
We instead study at Nanjing
Universities Gulou campus,
roughly a mile away from the
main campus, and as an extra
precaution, our classes are held
in the same building that we live
in. Never before has xenophobia
led to such convenient living
arrangements, I suppose.
Tus, I frequently mix with an
international crowd including
those who are polite enough to
avoid rightfully criticizing my
home country, those who are
quick to hold me accountable
for all the evils my country has
committed ignoring their own
respective national histories
those who study things they are
not interested in simply to ac-
quire visas, keeping them out of
undesirable situations, and of
course those who are feverishly
studying business Chinese so
they too can get their slice of the
ever dwindling pie. Jiayou!
Ten there is myself: a product
of the Nike generation, one who
simply does things to do them.
Its too easy to expand the
stories and impressions given by
a select few people to represent a
larger whole. Tis is a common
problem life confronts us with,
and it is of particular danger to a
temporary such as myself. I pop
into a place for a short span of
time. Hear stories. Tell them to
friends back home. Slowly, the
person in the story loses their
name and it is replaced by the
name of a whole group of people
East Coasters, Spaniards,
Africans. I try to avoid making
generalizations, but if I falter, it
wouldnt have been be the frst
time and certainly wont be the
last.
Generalization seems to be
one of those natural evils in life,
though. Tere is too much infor-
mation, and our minds need to
simplify it, but this inevitable is
a close cousin of bigotry, among
a slew of other illustrious family
members. Yes, one can reduce
Bill Gates to a college dropout,
and this is correct, but whether
you like him or not, how many
people would agree that this
completely-accurate character-
ization of the man truly sums
him up?
I suppose Ive sat through too
many conversations of kids
returning from some foreign
country commenting: but you
know how the French are, but
do I really know? Do You? Who
knows? Its probably just in my
head. Te living arrangements
were probably just a thoughtful
notion by the University and that
balding Chinese man probably
just didnt notice me calling for
his cab.
Scott Rainen is a senior studying
geography and East Asian language
and culture from Overland Park.
He is currently studying in Nanjing,
China.
T
hink back to Disneys
sports-movie classic,
Remember Te Titans.
Teres a scene in which Petey
Jones cryptically asks Ronnie
Sunshine Bass if hes gay (in ref-
erence to Sunshines locker room
kiss-stunt on Gerry Bertier). Like
a good sport, Sunshine humors
Jones by pretending not to un-
derstand the question, ultimately
deciding not to answer it, but this
upsets Jones. In that scene, fol-
lowing Sunshines refusal to tell,
Jones demands, I have to know.
Heres my question: why did he
need to know?
Although that interaction is
already emblematic in that Petey
is outwardly asking Sunshine
whether or not hes gay, what I
fnd seemingly interesting and
relevant in todays culture is the
publics obsession with need-
ing to know a persons sexual
orientation.
Take the recent hubbub sur-
rounding Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
In the September issue of Out
magazine, Levitt addressed an
ongoing public debate over his
sexual orientation by simply stat-
ing it would be really tacky if he
had to clarify because that would
mean they would win, referring
to an incident in which paparazzi
were hired to shoot Levitt and a
friend to insinuate that the two
were romantically involved. Lev-
itts refusal to clarify reminded
me of a similar situation.
Last year Grammy-award-win-
ning artist Frank Ocean made
waves in the LGBTQ community,
as well as the rap community,
for an Internet letter revealing
he had once fell in love with a
man. Although he was praised
for his bravery in his coming-out,
journalists began writing Ocean
down as gay or bisexual, even
though the letter never indicated
either. Later in an interview, GQ
would address the letter, asking
Ocean if he considered [himself]
bisexual. Oceans response:
You can move to the next ques-
tion Im not here to sell you
sex. People should pay attention
to that in the letter: I didnt need
to label it for it to have impact
As a writer, as a creator, Im
giving you my experiences. But
just take what I give you. You aint
got to pry beyond that. Im giving
you what I feel like you can feel.
Te other [things], you cant feel.
You cant feel a box.
Whats interesting about these
cultural fgures is their refusal to
acknowledge their sexuality due
to a belief that it relays no impor-
tance to their professional image.
In my own experience, there
will be moments in conversation
when someone will speculate
or pry as to whether I know if
someone is gay or not, and my
reaction always tends to be: Why
does it matter? Defensively he or
she will respond with it doesnt
matter; Im just curious. But if it
doesnt matter, then dont pry.
In no way do I advocate for a
Dont Ask, Dont Tell mental-
ity on sexuality. DADT silences
the right to reveal freely, and by
that defnition, the right to keep
private as well.
My problem is with people
demanding answers on others
sexuality, not because it matters,
but because theyre interested in
satisfying their curiosity without
respecting an individuals right
to remain ambiguous. Tats
problematic, seeing as sexuality
can prove to be a very sensitive
indicator of whom someone is.
Some people prefer to come out
on their own terms, and others
prefer friends and family to ask.
Its not always easy determin-
ing how someone would like to
acknowledge their sexuality if at
all but the curiosity of know-
ing and the frustration of not
knowing should never warrant an
answer, especially if its relevancy
wont qualify a persons opinions,
views or life perspectives.
Evan Shinn is a sophomore majoring
in journalism from Lenexa.
All of us communications majors are
at the bars, because we do NOTHING
in class.
Im a senior, but...freshmen are
looking good this year. I get older,
they stay the same age.
Love the sidewalk etiquette editori-
al! Next editorial: Street-crossing for
Dummies?
To the girl wearing a Michigan shirt
on campus....its still too soon.
Hinga Dinga Durgen! Happy Leif
Erikson day!
Patsy Cline Vinyl = awesomely
creepy background music for cappin
zombies on COD black ops. Youre
welcome.
This will be the last day of the FFA
before Pokemon X and Y come out.
Train long and prosper, trainers.
Ironically, communications majors
dont seem to communicate their
major too well.
Will twerk for cough drops or Vicks.
Its really hard to dress like a home-
less person when the weather contin-
ues to be so nice. Hurry up, fall!
This girl behind me loves playing
footsies with my chair.
Dude, you pooped, wash your hands.
Oh, and use soap.
Just as K-State doesnt have a
national title in basketball, so does
Battenfeld not have a schol hall
olympics title #getonourlevel
Not much is better than walking to
the beat of the KU Drum Line in front
of lit up Allen Fieldhouse at 9pm.
I should be paying attention to
lecture, but Im trying to remember
the last time I showered.
When its Chick-fl-a night anything
goes. -Pearson FBM
This guy just blatantly admitted to
this girl that hes been facebook
stalking her. Rookie mistake.
If I were pregnant, I could stop
sucking in and let my food baby out
freely. It would be cute rather than
terrifying.
Beer doesnt make you fat... Beer
makes you lean... On tables, walls,
chairs, couches, etc.
Mama Kitty, who hangs out behind
Dole, had her kittens!
I just took a test in printed in Comic
Sans.
Pumpkin spice cough drops for fall
allergies.
Text your FFA
submissions to
7852898351 or
at kansan.com
HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR CONTACT US
LETTER GUIDELINES
Send letters to kansanopdesk@gmail.com. Write
LETTER TO THE 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.
Trevor Graff, editor-in-chief
editor@kansan.com
Allison Kohn, managing editor
akohn@kansan.com
Dylan Lysen, managing editor
dlysen@kansan.com
Will Webber, opinion editor
wwebber@kansan.com
Mollie Pointer, business manager
mpointer@kansan.com
Sean Powers, sales manager
spowers@kansan.com
Brett Akagi, media director & content strategest
bakagi@kansan.com
Jon Schlitt, sales and marketing adviser
jschlitt@kansan.com
THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Members of the Kansan Editorial Board are Trevor
Graff, Allison Kohn, Dylan Lysen, Will Webber,
Mollie Pointer and Sean Powers.
By Evan Shinn
eshinn@kansan.com
By Scott Rainen
scottrainen@gmail.com
By Lyndsey Havens
lhavens@kansan.com
What are your plans for
Fall Break?
Follow us on Twitter @KansanOpinion.
Tweet us your opinions, and we just
might publish them.
@Fake1923Jayhawk
@KansanOpinion sit in my nest and do bird
stuff.
@Dunkfaced
@KansanOpinion Dream about the upcoming
basketball season.
@BadBuddhist4
@KansanOpinion One day of drunkenness.
Three days of overwhelming productivity.
FFA OF
THE DAY

Dang it KU,
Im just an
environmental
studies major
to be a hippie
with a degree!
Not to take
hard classes.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013
E
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
entertainment
HOROSCOPES
CROSSWORD
Because the stars
know things we dont.
SUDOKU
CRYPTOQUIP
CHECK OUT
THE ANSWERS
http://bit.ly/1g0xatO
PAGE 5A
Union.KU.edu
A CAMPUS GEM:
Take a class in Bowling? Who Knew?
Ever wander around campus look-
ing for something to do?
e Jaybowl, located on the rst
oor of the Kansas Union, oers the
perfect solution. e bowling alley
has been a part of the KU campus
since 1953. If you havent been there
lately, consider checking it out this
weekend.
Twelve 60-foot bowling lanes are
the centerpiece of the Jaybowl, which
also oers plenty of comfortable
seating for friends to gather in a ret-
ro-style dcor. e snack bar features
some of the best eats on campus
including chicken ngers, hot dogs
and fried mac and cheese wedges.
Bowling rates for KU students are
$2.50 per game plus a $2.00 shoe
rental fee. Avid bowlers can purchase
a Weekend Pass for $25 in January
and take advantage of free, unlimited
bowling ursday through Sunday all
Spring semester. For those who are
less predictable with regard to their
bowling habit, theres always a daily
special:
-Monday: Fiee shoe ientals.
-Wed: Bowl two games with
shoes for just $6.00.
-uis: Penny Day-the cost
to play is just a penny for every
pin bowlers knock down.
-Fiiday: Fih Quaitei Day, with
$1.25 games, shoes, hot dogs,
nachos, small drinks and slushes.
But on Friday and Saturday nights,
the Jaybowl goes a little wild. Student
Union Activities (SUA) sponsors Free
Cosmic Bowling from 10:00 pm to
1:00 am! ats when they turn the
regular lights o and the black lights
on, with disco balls and fun music.
KU students only, so be sure to bring
your KU Card with you when you
stop by.
One last suipiise. Did you know
you can take a bowling class at the
Jaybowl? Its a one-credit hour class
where students learn the general ele-
ments of bowling and how to operate a
league. HSES 108-sign me up!
Finally, birthday parties are a blast at
the Jaybowl. For just $5.50 per bowler,
guests enjoy a two-hour bowling party.
Need a gi engiaved foi the biithday
honoree? e Jaybowl oers an
engraving service and can engrave on
most metal, plastic and acrylic items.
e Jaybowl is open Monday
through ursday 10am9pm, Friday
10am1am, Saturday noon1am,
and Sunday 12pm5pm. You can
reach manager Lane Stallbaumer at
785.864.4249. For more information
and some great photos, visit
jaybowl.com.
You really dont have to leave
campus to nd something to do, you
know. Join us at the Jaybowl on Friday
or Saturday night to bowl a few games
amid those wild disco lights!
News from the U
FOOD
Alumni offer tasty twist
on college diet staple
DANI BRADY
dbrady@kansan.com
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7
Apply beautiful creativity for concrete
goals this month, with Venus square
Neptune. Proceed with caution.
Travel or study with a solid plan. Dont
fund a fantasy. Crazy dreams seem
possible, but fall outside your budget.
Imagine harmony. Make an important
connection.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6
New opportunities present themselves
to follow a dream. Take the lead.
Believe you can prosper. Find the
weakness in the plan. Charm your
way through a diffcult situation. Love
enters the equation. Plan a getaway
to relax.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 7
Success today favors strategists.
Share your dreams. Friends help you
reach your goal. Count funds and pay
bills. A shortage threatens your plans.
Work interferes with travel. Stay put
and earn extra.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8
Push yourself forward. Put in extra
effort with collaboration. Dress it up.
Keep practical and realistic. Worries
about money could stress. Stick to
your budget. Dont be afraid if you
dont know how. A hidden beneft gets
unveiled.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6
Let your partner handle household
matters, with grace and gratitude.
This week, churn out steady work
results. Its busy time! No more pro-
crastination. Someone may try to fool
you. Imagine perfection. Water sports
get your attention. Go play later.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 5
A job doesnt go as planned. Try
recycling, literally or metaphorically.
Creative work is required. Others look
to you for practical advice. Dont try
a new trick yet. Postpone travel. This
phase could be luxuriously lovely.
Dont overextend.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 6
Stay close to home as much as you
can. Beautify the kitchen or bathroom.
Something you try doesnt work.
Family comes frst. Communication
comes easier. Take advantage.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8
Read and research from home. Itll be
easier to learn. Proceed with caution
around a disagreement over priorities.
Something goes bump in the night.
Listen carefully, and shine a light.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Make a stand for beauty. Tap another
revenue source. Share dreams. Try
some of them out. Say what you
mean. Make sure everybodys on the
same page. Dont fall for a trick. Your
imagination soars.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7
Turn down an expensive proposition.
Life seems easier for the next few
days. Increase your familys comfort.
Balance your checkbook before
spending. Inspire participation from
your team, rather than demanding.
Guard a valuable secret. Enjoy time
together.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
Discipline is required. Dont worry
ineffectively, or let yourself get too far
off on a tangent. Its emotion versus
reason. Keep in action. Youre gaining
confdence. Grow your compassion.
Youre inspiring.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7
Mull over your plans. Youll be more
analytical, with help from a technical
friend. Imagination works when all
else fails. If youre not prepared, do
what needs to be done frst.
WANT
ENTERTAINMENT
UPDATES ALL
DAY LONG?
Follow
@KansanEntertain
on Twitter
All college students have found
themselves heating up a bowl of
water and tossing in a 65-cent
package of salty powder and a dry
slab of noodles at some point or
another. We may not be proud
of it, but ramen noodles taste
delicious because were lazy, broke
college students.
Alumni Tim and Shantel Grace
are attempting to change the way
Lawrence views these Asian noo-
dles with Ramen Bowls, located at
125 E. 10th St.
Why would we want to pay more
for ramen when we can make it
in our dorm or small apartment
kitchen? Its essentially the same
reason we are willing to pay a
little extra at an authentic Italian
restaurant instead of eating a can
of Chef Boyardee.
Tim and Shantel met at the
University, fell in love, got married
and moved to Hawaii shortly
afer graduation. Living there for
almost fve years, they became
immersed in the culture, food,
language and tradition of the
island. Afer having their frst
child, they returned to Kansas and
decided to introduce what they
learned about island cuisine to the
rest of the Lawrence community.
We wanted to open a restaurant
with a playful atmosphere that
doesnt take food too seriously,
Shantel said.
Te couple, with no previous
restaurant experience, was trained
by a ramen consultant from
Singapore and has hired profes-
sionally qualifed ramen chefs.
Te noodles date back to imperial
China and require many hours of
preparation.
What most people dont realize
is that we make our broths from
scratch and begin roasting our
pork bones as early as 5 a.m.,
Shantel said.
Te restaurant is currently in
their sof opening, only ofering
a portion of the menu in order to
get a feel for what will work and
what wont.
I was pleasantly surprised afer
eating at Ramen Bowls. At frst
I couldnt imagine why I would
pay for a package of ramen that
I could make at home in three
minutes, but the restaurant ofers
so much more than stringy, sodi-
um-enriched noodles. Incorpo-
rating Asian and island cuisine,
they serve dishes besides ramen,
including egg rolls, dumplings
and fried rice.
I ordered gyza, which are pork-
flled dumplings, fresh noodles
with pieces of chicken in a creamy
chicken broth called haole ramen,
and fried rice tossed with egg,
carrots and peas all for under
$20. Te waiters wear uniforms
resembling kimonos, lanterns
hang from the ceiling, and island
music plays throughout the small
and intimate location providing
an authentic atmosphere.
Shantel and Tim are ready for
the quirks and common mishaps
that come with opening a new
restaurant. Tey are happy to hear
that more people actually know or
have heard of a ramen bar before
and they have been pleased with
the positive response from their
customers, Shantel said.
Ramen Bowls plans to introduce
their full menu this weekend as
part of their grand opening.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
University alumni Tim and Shantel Grace hope to change the way college students view ramen with their new restaurant
Ramen Bowls, located at 125 E. 10th St. The restaurants grand opening is this weekend.
Panic Disorder is not your
ordinary cover band. Hailing from
Florida, they have a setlist of over
175 songs, and theyre making
their way to Kansas to show of just
how many genres they have under
their belt.
Te bands covers range from a
selection of artists including classic
rock bands, such as Creedence
Clearwater Revival, Bufalo
Springfeld and Tom Petty, to
more contemporary artists, like
Blink-182, Kings of Leon and
Weezer. Tey also maintain a
collection of artists from the past
50 years including Johnny Cash,
Simon & Garfunkel, Te Cure,
Men Without Hats, Sublime and
Operation Ivy. Tey have played
all over the state of Florida for the
past decade, from the FanFest at
Sun Life Stadium, to a pre-game
performance at the BCS Orange
Bowl.
Ben Adelberg, the bands
manager, said that Panic Disorders
vast setlist allows them to play a
whole weekend worth of shows
and never once repeat a song.
I can put them in a dark, punk
rock bar one night and the next
night they can turn around and
play the tiki bar, Adelberg said.
Tey know how to read a crowd
really well and they can appeal to a
large audience.
Adelberg said that what sets the
band apart from the other bands
in the Florida music scene is that
they have the ability to cover songs
in a very unique way. Tis includes
their eforts to put forth covers of
songs from pop artists including
Te Spice Girls, Lady Gaga and Cee
Lo Green.
Danny Guerrieri, the bands
frontman and guitar player, said
that he was infuenced by guitarists
like Eddie Van Halen and Steve Vai
from a young age, but as he got
older he became more interested
in punk rock. Bands like Social
Distortion and Rancid tended
to catch his ear more and helped
him to bring his music to a level of
higher energy. Tat energy is what
he tries to bring to the stage and
the crowd as he plays a setlist that
he improvises and develops based
on the crowds reaction as the night
goes on.
What I do when I set up is I
taste the room, Guerrieri said. I
see the patrons to see whose there
and how I feel, and thenstarting
with that observationI go into
what song Im going to lead with.
I might start with some Blink-182,
or I might start with some Rolling
Stones. It all depends on the age of
the crowd.
Despite having almost 200 songs
to choose from, Guerrieri says
his favorite song to play live is
Soundsystem by Operation Ivy.
Te best part about it is that it
is really upbeat. As a punk-rock
song, its pretty standard, but to
people who have never heard it, it
gets them feeling.
Come see Panic Disorder tonight
at Te Jazzhaus, located at 926.5
Massachusetts St., with local bands
Nodding Lizard and TCB. Tere
will be $5 cover charge to get in.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6A

Mural Contest
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Alpha Chi Omega/Alpha Tau Omega
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Passport: Jayhawks Around Campus
Beta Upsilon Chi
Parade: Non-Moving Parts Floats
Chi Omega/Delta Chi
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Student Parade
Volunteers
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Whit Collins
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Michaela Dougherty
Jessica Kauman
Charlie King
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John Stringer
Allie Travis
Rachel Volk
Chris Watkins
Morgan Webb
Keith Williams
Thank you
for celebrating
2013 KU Homecoming!
www. kual umni . or g
Grand Marshal
Brian McClendon
Congratulations and a special thank you to the following
individuals and groups who helped make the week a success:
Homecoming Supporters
Richard and Judy Billings
Billings 1912 Spirit of KU Award
2013 Award RecipientLawrence
and Topeka Corvette Club
Jennifer Alderdice Award Winner
Miranda Wagner
Homecoming Steering
Committee
Paige Hofer, Co-Advisor
Jacey Krehbiel, Co-Advisor
Erica Witty, Director
Abbey Buchanan
Annie Drape
Rylie Durham
Chloe Fischgrund
Holly Laerty
Esteban Marquez
Elle Rose
Danny Sanchez
Natalie Scott
Ex.C.E.L. Finalists
Preston Barr
Will Dale
Bryne Gonzales, Winner
Addison Keegan Harris
Esteban Marquez
Nicole Nunes
Alexandra Null
Danny Sanchez
Natalie Scott, Winner
Jill Wenderott
Participants
Grand Marshal
Brian McClendon
2013 Womens Track and Field
National Champions:
Natalia Bartnovskya
Diamond Dixon
Andrea Geubelle
Lindsay Vollmer
Alpha Chi Omega/Alpha Tau Omega
Alpha Delta Pi/Sigma Pi
Alpha Gamma Delta/Alpha Epsilon Pi
Alternative Breaks
Association of University Residence
Halls
Beta Upsilon Chi
Black Student Union
Chi Omega/Delta Chi
Delta Delta Delta/Kappa Sigma
Delta Gamma/Sigma Nu
Delta Epsilon Mu
International Student Services
Jayhawk Motorsports
Kappa Alpha Theta/Sigma Phi Epsilon
Kappa Delta/Sigma Chi
Kappa Kappa Gamma/Pi Kappa Phi
KU Army ROTC
KU Dance Marathon
KU Marching Jayhawks
KU Spirit Squad
KU STAC (Students Together Against
Cancer)
KU Water Ski Club
KU Women of Distinction and
Men of Merit
KZOO
National Pan Hellenic Council
Rock Chalk Revue
School of Engineering
Sigma Delta Tau/Alpha Kappa Lambda
Student Alumni Association
Student Athlete Advisory Committee
Student Union Activities
University Daily Kansan
Overall Winners
Greek Life: Alpha Chi Omega/Alpha
Tau Omega
Student Life: School of Engineering
Daily Event Winners
Awareness for Wellness
Alpha Chi Omega/Alpha Tau Omega
Chalk n Rock
Alpha Gamma Delta/Alpha Epsilon Pi
(Greek Life)
Black Student Union (Student Life)
3 vs. 3 Basketball
Alpha Tau Omega (men)
Chi Omega (women)
Alpha Chi Omega/Alpha Tau Omega
(co-rec)
Glow KU
Sigma Kappa/Phi Gamma Delta
Jayhawk Jingles
Kappa Alpha Theta/Sigma Phi
Epsilon
MUSIC
Florida cover band brings
extensive set list to Lawrence
TOM DEHART
tdehart@kansan.com
PANICDISORDERROCKS.COM
Danny Guerrieri, Jr., Julian Cerecedo-Macfarlene and Sebastian de la Calle form the cover band Panic Disorder. The band will
play tonight at The Jazzhaus with local bands Nodding Lizard and TCB.
MUSIC
SUA presents indie pop band
Haim tonight at the Granada
PAIGE STINGLEY
pstingley@kansan.com
COLUMBIA RECORDS
Sisters Alanna, Danielle and Este Haim perform together as California indie pop band Haim. SUA partnered with KJHK to bring
Haim to Lawrence for a performance tonight at the Granada.
Fall break is almost here, and
what better way to kick it of than
by going out and listening to one of
the countrys more recent up-and-
coming performers. Haim, an indie
pop band from Los Angeles, will
be playing at the Granada tonight,
Oct. 10. Te band, made up of
three sisters, is quickly becoming
a popular success, touring with
artists including Rihanna and
Mumford & Sons.
Tey have a fresh sound, said
Melissa Hebberd, a senior from
Parsippany, N.J. Its a diferent
kind of combination. You can hear
infuences of classic rock and some
R&B. Tey are a young band, you
can tell they grew up listening
to many of the same bands we
listened to.
Teir most recent album, Days
are Gone, is a full-length album
that debuted on Sept. 30. It reached
No. 1 on KJHK just one week
afer its release. Teyve also been
featured in Rolling Stone, and on
Te Wire on Buzz. Currently they
are the number one band in the
U.K., ranking higher than Justin
Timberlake.
Teir current tour began on Oct.
8 in Dallas and will conclude on
Oct. 27 in Las Vegas. Following
their North American tour, they
will travel to Europe with the band
Phoenix, where they will play in
the U.K., Ireland, and Japan, among
other places. Teir international
tour does not conclude until Mar.
12, 2014.
Te event is being put on by SUA
and KJHK radio. SUAs live music
coordinator, Subha Upadhyayula,
said this is their frst time
partnering with KJHK radio and so
far it has been a success.
Its been great working with
KJHK, Upadhyayula said. Tey
actually helped us pick this band.
It is a huge process we go through
with contacting the agents of these
bands and coordinating the events.
We are really excited to have Haim
here.
Students can get a special discount
on tickets since the concert is an
SUA-sponsored event. Tickets are
$10 for students with a KU ID, and
$15 for the general public. Students
who purchase a student ticket will
be required to present their KU ID
at purchase of tickets and at the
door of the show. Everyone with a
Student Saver Card ticket will also
be required to present both their
KU ID and their Student Saver
Card both at purchase and at the
door of the show.
Te show is open to all ages.
Doors will open at 8 p.m. and the
show will begin at 9 p.m. with
opening band IO Echo.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 , 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 7A
October prep courses and
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(east of 11th & Haskell Ave., over railroad tracks)
Thursday - Saturday, October 10, 11, 12
8 am to 3 pm
Rain or shine.
City will load trucks and trailers.
Bring tarp to secure woodchips
and prevent littering the roadway.
No dump truck quantities and no
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(approx. 2 cubic yards).
CASH only.
COMPOST & WOODCHIP SALE
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www.facebook.com/LawrenceRecycles
Harold Finchs job history is a
coat of many colors. Te Univer-
sity alumnus has been involved in
almost everything, from serving as
an ofcer in the Air Force to help-
ing found Johnson County Com-
munity College. Now, Finchs life
as a proprietor of an orphanage in
India is being brought to the silver
screen. Tis Friday, Unlimited
hits theaters, with a special preview
Tursday, allowing audiences a clos-
er look into the life of this extraordi-
nary man.
Q: You attended KU for your bach-
elors then lef. What made you re-
turn for your doctorate, and what
made you choose a doctorate that
was so diferent from your previous
degrees?

A: As a young boy growing up
in Kansas City during the Great
Depression, I had a fascination
for space and could ofen be seen
doodling rocket ships in school. I
received my Bachelor of Science in
Mechanical Engineering degree in
1956 and was in the ROTC at KU,
which earned me a commission
as an Air Force ofcer. I moved to
Ohio during the peak of the Cold
War and worked at Wright-Patter-
son Air Force Base in Intelligence.
Later, in 1961, as a civil servant still
in the employ of the Air Force, I
earned my Mechanical Engineering
Master's Degree from Ohio State by
night majoring in thermodynamics.
I returned to Kansas and worked at
Midwest Research Institute (MRI)
inventing the "barbecue roll," which
distributes the extreme heat and
cold of space evenly across the lunar
craf by executing slow rolls on its
longitudinal axis, and then served as
the Director of the Apollo Heating
Program for NASA.
My wife, Peggy, of 58 years tells me
I change careers every 7 or 8 years,
and she is right. In the midst of my
work with NASA through MRI, I
was asked if I would consider be-
ing the founding Academic Dean
of Johnson County Community
College. It was a radical change, but
they were seeking someone analyti-
cal and organized in planning, like
an engineer. I accepted the position
and the challenge, and returned
to KU for my doctorate in Educa-
tion in 1971. I am a loyal Jayhawk
through and through. KU will al-
ways have my heart.

Q: You don't normally see engi-
neers making movies. What pushed
you to take the leap into flm pro-
duction?

A: Four years ago, an international
organization with movie-making
connections asked if I would be
interested in having a movie made
inspired loosely on my life. It was an
honor to be asked something like
this out of the blue and humbling all
at once. I thought about it for quite
some time. My family encouraged
me to do it, and I decided it was an-
other way of leaving a legacy for my
family as well as a means of continu-
ing the principles I teach around the
world on honesty and integrity. Te
movie is mixed with a lot of fction
to add drama and action.
Chad Gundersen, the producer,
wanted to create a character in the
movie with my name, and we were
excited Fred Tompson (In the
Line of Fire, Die Hard 2, Law &
Order) agreed to take the role. I
became executive producer so that I
could be involved every step of the
way from reading the 25 diferent
scripts and having input on the writ-
ing and storyline award-winning
author Davis Bunn wrote the movie
then the accompanying novel to
bringing together the Unlimited
team, including the producer, writ-
ers, marketing team and PR frm.
Q: What were some challenges you
faced in making Unlimited?

A: Tere were non-stop challenges
learning the ropes of movie making,
and one must be very persistent.
Tere's a 1:600,000 chance of an
independent flm making it into
theaters. When someone says, "you
can't do that," I am motivated to
prove them wrong, and I encourage
everyone to do the same. Don't let
those around you dictate what you
do with your life.
Q: What came easily to you, and
how did your previous careers help
you in producing the movie?
A: Te planning, analyzing and or-
ganizing of details in an arena
I had no previous experience
came easy and had been developed
through past careers. Te hardest
thing was the large learning curve
and waiting a long time between
each action item. However, the best
part is having a team of excellence.
I could turn to experienced movie
makers around me for direction and
guidance every step of the way.

Q: Why did you decide to premiere
your movie in Kansas City?

A: Te market demand for the pre-
miere was in Kansas City, and we
certainly hope to see other cities in-
vite us to their theaters afer our pre-
miere debut. Kansas City is where I
was born and raised, and I am proud
to be from here. Tis is where this
exciting adventure in movie mak-
ing began, and it all fell into place to
premiere Unlimited here.

Q: What infuences from your life
especially your time in Indiaare
present in Unlimited?

A: Afer my work with JCCC, I
founded and later sold two busi-
nesses. When I retired 28 years ago,
I took a trip to India, worked for a
short time in an orphanage with
other family members and friends,
and even had the honor of naming a
baby. I named her Sarah. At the end
of the two weeks, as we tearfully told
the kids goodbye, a little girl named
Provowady wrapped her arms
around my neck and whispered in
my ear, "My daddy." Tat moment
changed my life forever, and I have
devoted the last 28 years teaching
honesty, integrity, excellence and
the pursuit of one's unlimited po-
tential all around the world even
if you are born in the lowest caste in
India. One of the orphans I met on
that frst trip to India is now run-
ning the orphanage, and I still have
regular contact with him and oth-
ers. Tese 28 years have served as a
springboard to the movie.
Since my ministry began in an
orphanage ministering to orphans,
the movie centers in an orphanage
in Mexico which represents my ex-
periences in India. Fred Tompson
plays the retired me, NASA rocket
scientist and inventor (the rocket
ship on Fred's desk travels with me
all over the world when I speak),
who encourages those around him
to resist corruption. Te elephant
story (you'll know it when you see
it) is directly from my talks, and my
book is referenced to. Tere's some
fction, action, a little romance and a
murder, and the story line moves at
a fast pace. Te twist on this is that
the character of Simon was inspired
by a young me- ornery, disrespect-
ed, always chasing the impossible
but beating the skeptics. But that is
another story.
My wife and I and other family
and friends have cameo appear-
ances in the movie, and one of my
family members worked on set for a
week. It was flmed in El Paso, Texas,
which was subbing as Mexico.

Q: You have such a varied rsum,
how did you make the jump from
NASA to Shell to founding JCCC?

A: Since I change careers every 7 or
8 years, I can now see how my var-
ied resume opened doors for me to
speak to a wide range of audiences
around the world and even reach
more people through Unlimited,
which will be released in theaters
Oct. 11. In looking back, I believe
this is why I made many career
jumps. It started my ministry and
now helps continue it.
Be sure to catch the premiere of
Unlimited, at Cinemark Palace at
the Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., this
Tursday. It will be screened in select
theaters around the country starting
Friday before being shown nation-
wide throughout spring.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
MADDY MIKINSKI
mmikiniski@kansan.com
Kansas alum produces flm based on own life
FILM
Celebrate fall break with
television show marathons
Fall break is a time for relaxation
and rejuvenation. Is there really
any other way to spend it other
than in front of your computer,
mid-marathon? Here are some
recommendations for the best
television shows to watch while
trying to forget the heavy load of
school work and stress.
The West Wing
In light of the government
shutdown, there has never been
a better time to watch Te West
Wing, and really, you can never
go wrong with an Aaron Sorkin
show. If it was not already evident
from the four Emmys for Out-
standing Drama Series, this show
is everything you could ever want
and more. Tere is drama, humor,
and an amazing cast, which all
come together to take viewers on
an unforgettable ride. What really
sticks out in this show is that no
matter what the issue, they always
make sure to present and ofen
argue both sides. Tey are also
able to fx their problems, which,
perhaps, is what we should really
focus on.
Downton Abbey
I hope that I am not alone when
I say that sometimes school makes
me want to cry. Especially with
midterms coming up, the urge
is stronger than ever. Te only
issue is that sometimes I feel as
though I should not be crying over
something so small. So instead, I
watch shows where it is excusable
for me to cry. Downton Abbey
is exactly the perfect show to cry
and laugh during, but mostly cry.
Get ready for a roller coaster ride
of emotions that last exactly three
seasons complete with amazing
costumes and extremely attractive
actors and actresses.
Better Off Ted
Now, if you are looking for some-
thing a bit more light-hearted, this
show is the one for you. Better
Of Ted is a workplace satire
that ran back in 2009. Te show
only has two seasons with each
episode only lasting 30 minutes.
It will be easy to just whiz right
though. It focuses around Ted
Crisp, the moral development
chief of the unethical company of
Veridan Dynamics. However, the
thing that really sticks out in this
show is Portia de Rossis character
Veronica Palmer. She has a quick
wit, is a strong woman and always
looks amazing; she truly is a role
model. So even if you arent trying
to learn anything over Fall Break,
you could take a few tips from her.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
KAITLYN HILGERS
khilgers@kansan.com
MUSIC ART
Warner Bros Television
Carnival Films
Fox Television
Follow
@KansanEntertain
on Twitter
Recycle
this
paper
TIRANA, Albania Albanian
police have seized more than 1,000
religious and secular pieces of art
dating from the 15th to the mid-
20th century that were stolen from
churches and cultural centers in
Albania and neighboring Mace-
donia.
Prime Minister Edi Rama, who
began his career as an artist, in-
spected the works and praised po-
lice for recovering them.
Te thefs involved 1,077 icons,
frescoes and other pieces, and two
men suspected of planning to sell
them abroad were arrested, a po-
lice statement said Wednesday.
Afer a four-month investigation,
the works were found in two hous-
es in the capital, Tirana, where the
arrests took place late Tuesday. Of-
fcials did not provide an estimate
of the items' value.
Culture Ministry spokeswoman
Milena Selimi said the looted art
was probably headed for sale in
other Balkan countries or in West-
ern Europe.
Te recovered works were being
kept at the National Gallery of Arts
in Tirana, where experts will ex-
amine them and restore damaged
ones.
Cultural authorities say much
of the country's religious heritage
remains at risk due to limited re-
sources in a country where religion
was banned for decades under
communism.
Rama urged Albanians to help
stop the plundering of religious
icons.
"If we lose this wealth, our history
will vanish with it, Rama said.
Albanian police arrest two men
suspected of selling stolen art
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama views stolen art objects seized by police in the biggest operation of the kind on Oct. 9.
Albanian police have seized more than 1,000 stolen religious and secular pieces of art dating from the 15th to the mid-20th
century, and arrested two men suspected of planning to sell them abroad.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 8A
The Universily of Kansas School of usiness

J.A. VICKERS SR. AND


ROBERT F. VICKERS SR.
MEMORIAL LECTURE SERIES
DAVID AZERRAD
Herilage Ioundalion
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804 Massachusetts St.
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Recent trends in architecture will
be highlighted tomorrow morning
during a lecture at the Spencer
Museum of Art.
Te School of Architecture and
Urban Planning has paired with
the Spencer Museum of Art to
host a guest lecture geared to-
wards architecture students. Ar-
chitect Marshall Strabala will be
giving the lecture this Friday at
11:30 a.m.
Strabala is a prolifc member of
the architectural community with
ofces in Chicago, Shanghai and
Seoul. He is a partner in the frm
2DEFINE Architecture, which
specializes in complex and high
profle projects. Strabala was in-
volved in a few of the biggest ar-
chitectural achievements in recent
memory, including the Shanghai
Tower and the Burj Khalifa. Stra-
bala said he believes that these
projects represent far more than
just very tall buildings.
Tese buildings become iden-
tifers for their respective cities
when they show up in post cards
and the like. For instance, when
you think of Chicago, you picture
the Sears Tower and the Hancock
Center, said Strabala.
Students will be able to hear
frsthand what goes into the de-
sign and planning process for
these structures from one of the
most knowledgeable sources on
the planet. Strabala said there are
maybe 13 such buildings in the
world, and he helped design three
of them. Tis is an opportunity
that Dominic Sosinski, a senior
from Kansas City, Kan., said he
plans to take full advantage of.
It will be interesting to hear
from an architect that was in-
volved in some of the most well
known and famous building being
constructed today, Sosinski said.
Strabala plans on profling some
of his major projects in hopes
that students will gain perspec-
tive for their future careers. Erin
McFarland, a senior from Lenexa,
hopes to gain this very perspective
through her attendance.
Im excited to hear Strabala talk
about high rise buildings because
it is a topic that is important to
understand for the future of archi-
tecture, McFarland said.
With advances in technology
and design, architects are able to
push the envelope when it comes
to designing these large-scale
buildings, so creativity is key.
Te forces of nature frequently
dictate what can and cant be done
when it comes to buildings of this
size, so ofen times creative solu-
tions to these problems decide the
success of a project, Strabala said.
Strabala said he hopes that stu-
dents take more away from his
lecture than simply how to build
really tall buildings. Specialization
is something that he believes is in-
dispensable in his feld.
Tis lecture is an opportunity for
students studying architecture and
design to learn what it takes to be-
come successful in their feld. Te
lecture will be held at 11:30 a.m. at
the Spencer Museum of Art and it
is open to the public.
Edited by Hannah Barling
CALEB SISK
csisk@kansan.com
Spencer Museum of Art to
host architecture lecture
DESIGN
ECONOMY
MILWAUKEE Te federal
government shutdown could leave
America's craf brewers with a seri-
ous hangover.
Stores will still ofer plenty of
suds. But the shutdown has closed
an obscure agency that quietly ap-
proves new breweries, recipes and
labels, which could create huge de-
lays throughout the rapidly grow-
ing craf industry, whose customers
expect a constant supply of inven-
tive and seasonal beers.
Mike Brenner is trying to open a
craf brewery in Milwaukee by De-
cember. His application to include
a tasting room is now on hold, as
are his plans to fle paperwork for
four labels over the next few weeks.
He expects to lose about $8,000
for every month his opening is de-
layed.
"My dream, this is six years in the
making, is to open this brewery,"
Brenner said. "I've been working
so hard, and I fnd all these great
investors. And now I can't get start-
ed because people are fghting over
this or that in Washington. ... Tis
is something people don't mess
around with. Even in a bad econo-
my, people drink beer."
Te Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau, or TTB, is a
little-known arm of the Treasury
Department. Te agency will con-
tinue to process taxes from existing
permit holders, but applications for
anything new are in limbo.
"One could think of this shut-
down as basically stopping busi-
ness indefnitely for anyone who
didn't have certain paperwork in
place back in mid-August," said
Paul Gatza, director of the Brew-
ers Association, which represents
more than 1,900 U.S. breweries.
A woman who answered the
phone Oct. 2 at TTB's headquar-
ters in Washington abruptly hung
up afer explaining that the gov-
ernment was shut down. Assistant
Administrator Cheri Mitchell did
not respond to telephone or email
messages.
Te shutdown began Oct. 1 afer
a group of House Republican law-
makers blocked a budget deal in a
last-ditch efort to stop funding for
President Barack Obama's health
care law.
Te closing isn't expected to have
much efect on industry giants such
as MillerCoors or Anheuser-Bus-
ch. Tey can continue to produce
existing products as usual. But the
shutdown poses a huge problem for
craf brewers, who build their busi-
nesses by producing quirky, ofeat
favors and introducing new sea-
sonal beers, sometimes as ofen as
every quarter.
Craf brewers around the country
say TTB was taking as long as 75
days to approve applications before
the shutdown. Now they're bracing
for even longer waits. And tempers
are faring.
Tony Magee, owner of Lagunitas
Brewing Co. in Petaluma, Calif.,
posted messages on his Twitter
account this week ripping the shut-
down.
"(Expletive) Feds are gonna shut
down the already incompetent
.Gov while hundreds of small
breweries, including us, have labels
pending. Nice." Tat was followed
with "Wanna regulate? Perform or
get out of the way."
Lagunitas Chief Operating Of-
fcer Todd Stevenson called the
TTB shutdown a "headache." He
said the company was planning to
submit an application to package
its autumn seasonal Hairy Eye-
ball in 22-ounce bottles instead of
12-ounce bottles but can't move
forward.
"It's just aggravating," Stevenson
said. "It is frustrating that govern-
ment can't do its job. Doing what
they're doing now is unprecedent-
ed."
Bryan Simpson, a spokesman
for New Belgium Brewing in Fort
Collins, Colo., said his brewery
has three recipes and fve new la-
bels awaiting approval. Te com-
pany is especially worried that
the release of its new spring label,
Spring Blonde, could get pushed
back. More delays might force New
Belgium to shell out extra money
to speed up the label printing and
rush the beer to market, he said.
"Everybody is frustrated in gener-
al," Simpson said. "Te whole way
this has played out has been disap-
pointing for the entire country."
Lakefront Brewery in Milwaukee
has applications pending for new
packaging of its IBA dark ale and
for permission to ofer a sour cher-
ry dark lager called John, a brewery
employee's own concoction.
Te brewery hopes to launch the
IBA packaging in November and
John in December, but nothing is
certain now. If the shutdown caus-
es delays, the brewery will probably
have to rush the beers to market,
said brewery spokesman Matt Kra-
jnak.
"If we lose that frst month, we
lose out on a good chunk of mon-
ey," Krajnak said. "Right now, it's
only been a week so it's not too bad.
Two weeks, three weeks is when
we're really going to start sweating
here."
Brenner said politicians don't
seem to care how much damage
they're causing.
"For them it's just another day," he
said. "Tey are still getting paid, but
I'm losing $8,000 a month."
Government shutdown causes holdups for craft beer industry
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dylan Maz pours beer during a tour on Oct. 3 at Lakefront Brewery in Milwaukee. The shutdown has closed an obscure agency that quietly approves new breweries, recipes and labels, which could create huge delays throughout the rapidly growing craft indus-
try, whose customers expect a constant supply of inventive and seasonal beers. Brewery offcials are frustrated that some of their new labels and a new recipe might be held up with the federal government shutdown.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NASA
LOS ANGELES NASA's Ju-
piter-bound spacecraf hit a snag
Wednesday soon afer it used
Earth as a gravity slingshot to hur-
tle toward the outer solar system,
but mission managers said it's on
course to arrive at the giant planet
in 2016.
Juno emerged from Earth's shad-
ow in safe mode, a state that space-
craf are programmed to go into
when there's some trouble.
Despite the problem, "we believe
we are on track as planned to Ju-
piter," said project manager Rick
Nybakken of the NASA Jet Propul-
sion Laboratory, which manages
the $1.1 billion mission.
Engineers continued to diagnose
the issue, which occurred afer
Juno whipped around Earth in a
momentum-gathering fyby. Up
until Wednesday, Juno had been
in excellent health. While in safe
mode, it can communicate with
ground controllers, but its activi-
ties are limited.
Previous missions to the outer so-
lar system have used Earth as a ce-
lestial springboard since there's no
rocket powerful enough to make
a direct fight. Te Galileo space-
craf buzzed by Earth twice in the
1990s en route to Jupiter, the solar
system's largest planet located 484
million miles from the sun.
Launched in 2011, Juno few be-
yond the orbit of Mars, Earth's
closest planetary neighbor, before
looping back toward our home
planet for a quick visit. Wednes-
day's rendezvous boosted Juno's
speed from 78,000 mph relative to
the sun to 87,000 mph enough
momentum to cruise past the
asteroid belt to Jupiter, where it
should arrive in 2016.
By space mission standards, Ju-
no's Earth rendezvous was low-key.
Juno on track despite snag
ASSOCIATED PRESS
An artists rendering depicts NASAs Juno spacecraft with Jupiter in the background. Juno is set to arrive at Jupiter in 2016.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
1
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 9A
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WASHINGTON Te United
States on Wednesday cut hundreds
of millions of dollars in aid to its
Mideast ally Egypt, responding to
the military ouster last summer
of the nation's frst democratically
elected president and the crack-
down on protesters that has sunk
the country into violent turmoil.
While the State Department did
not provide a dollar amount of
what was being withheld, most of
it is linked to military aid. In all,
the U.S. provides $1.5 billion in aid
each year to Egypt.
Ofcials said the aid being with-
held included 10 Apache helicop-
ters at a cost of more than $500
million, M1A1 tank kits and Har-
poon anti-ship missiles. Te U.S.
also is withholding $260 million in
cash assistance to the government
until "credible progress" is made
toward an inclusive government set
up through free and fair elections.
Te U.S. had already suspended
the delivery of four F-16 fghter jets
and canceled biennial U.S.-Egyp-
tian military exercises.
In Cairo, military spokesman Col.
Ahmed Mohammed Ali declined
immediate comment. Before the
announcement, Gen. Abdel-Fat-
tah el-Sissi, the Egyptian military
leader, described his country's re-
lations with the United States as
"strategic" and founded on mutual
interests. But he told the Cairo dai-
ly, Al-Masry al-Youm, in an inter-
view published on Wednesday that
Egypt would not tolerate pressure,
"whether through actions or hints."
Neighboring Israel also has in-
dicated concern. Te Israelis con-
sider the U.S. aid to Egypt to be
important support for the peace
agreement between Egypt and Is-
rael.
Te State Department stressed
that the long-standing U.S. part-
nership with Egypt would continue
and U.S. ofcials made it clear that
the decisions are not permanent,
adding that there is no intent by
the Obama administration to end
any specifc programs. Still, the
decision puts ties between the U.S.
and Egypt at their rockiest point in
more than three decades.
"Te United States continues to
support a democratic transition
and oppose violence as a means of
resolving diferences within Egypt,"
State Department spokeswoman
Jen Psaki said. "We will continue
to review the decisions regarding
our assistance periodically and will
continue to work with the interim
government to help it move toward
our shared goals in an atmosphere
free of violence and intimidation."
Te U.S. will continue to provide
support for health and education
and counterterrorism, spare mil-
itary parts, military training and
education, border security and se-
curity assistance in the Sinai Pen-
insula where near-daily attacks
against security forces and soldiers
have increasingly resembled a full-
fedged insurgency.
Te U.S. ofcials providing the
details did so only on condition of
anonymity because they were not
authorized to comment by name.
Other details about what military
assistance is being cut were not
immediately known, and the State
Department declined to give an in-
dication of how severe the impact
of the cuts in assistance might be in
Egypt.
Based on cost estimates, however,
the M1A1 tank kits are about $10
million each, and Egypt was slated
to get about four per month, of-
cials said. Te Harpoon contract
was for 20 missiles, at a total cost of
$145 million. It was not clear if any
of those had already been delivered.
F-16 fghter jets can cost more than
$30 million each, but that amount
could fuctuate depending on the
equipment and weapons systems
included.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who
chairs the Senate Appropriations
panel that funds U.S. assistance to
Egypt, criticized the Obama ad-
ministration's action as too little.
"Our law is clear. When there is a
military coup, U.S. aid to the gov-
ernment is cut of," Leahy said in a
statement. "Rather than encourage
reconciliation and restore democ-
racy as it promised, the Egyptian
military has reinstituted martial
law and cracked down on the Is-
lamic opposition, which has also
used violence."
Others, including some sharp
political opponents of Obama on
other subjects, supported the presi-
dent's decision.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., whose bill
to halt aid to Egypt was roundly
defeated in the Senate in July, said
he was happy to see the administra-
tion "fnally thinking about follow-
ing the law."
US cutting hundreds of millions in aid to Egypt
INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this April 24 fle photo, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, second left, stands with an Egyptian army offcial before laying a wreath at the tomb of late President Anwar
al-Sadat in Cairo. U.S. offcials said on Oct. 9 that the Obama administration is poised to slash hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance to Egypt.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Volume 126 Issue 29 kansan.com Thursday, October 10, 2013
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
By Kory Carpenter
kcarpenter@kansan.com
COMMENTARY
Self improves
recruiting game
B
ill Self began his career
at Kansas hot on the
recruiting trail, landing six
5-star recruits in his frst three
classes. Five of those players
Russell Robinson, Brandon
Rush, Mario Chalmers, Sherron
Collins, and Darrell Arthur
formed the nucleus on the 2008
National Championship team,
hammering home the point
that coaching can get you to the
brink, but talent takes you over
the top.
Recruiting never fell of
completely for Self, but he had
been in a lull recently, signing
classes that weren't up to
previous Kansas standards, or at
least up to the expectations Self
had set for himself.
Despite this, Kansas continued
to win because Self is a future
hall-of-fame coach, and he didn't
need a team full of high school
All-Americans to win 30 games
and contend for a No. 1 seed
in the NCAA Tournament. He
could roll out of bed and do that.
But maybe coaching a team full
of over-achievers to the NCAA
Championship game in 2012
fipped a switch for Self. Te frst
player of the bench for that team
was Conner Teahan, a former
walk-on who had no business
playing signifcant minutes on a
Final Four team.
Since being overwhelmed by
Kentucky in that game, Self has
taken his recruiting talents to
another level. He secured the
nation's second best recruiting
class last year before adding
Andrew Wiggins, the No. 1
overall recruit and one of the
most heralded high school
players in years, who will also
don the newest cover of Sports
Illustrated.
Self then hired Jerrance
Howard to his staf in May, a
young coach who is considered
one of the best recruiters in the
country.
On Tuesday, a month before
Self 's highly touted freshman
class plays its frst game,
he began working his next
masterpiece. Five-star shooting
guard Kelly Oubre committed
to the Jayhawks a few days afer
visiting Lawrence for Late
Night in the Phog. Te 12th
ranked player in the class of
2014 according to Rivals.com is
the frst player to commit to the
Jayhawks for next season, but
he won't be the last. And when
the smoke clears, he could be
the third best player to sign with
Kansas.
Five-star recruits Myles Turner
(sixth overall), Tyus Jones (ffh),
Clif Alexander (fourth), and
Jahlil Okafor (frst), have visited
or plan to visit Lawrence this
month. Ten there is Jaquan
Lyle, another 5-star recruit (22nd
overall) who decommitted from
Louisville and told ESPN that
Kansas might be the one school
he couldnt turn down.
But Lyle doesn't have a
scholarship ofer from Self,
who must think he is in good
enough shape with the players
mentioned above that he is
turning down a 5-star recruit
because he can do better.
Maybe Kelly Oubre was right.
KU is a family, he told Rivals.
com on Tuesday. And Bill Self is
the Godfather.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
GAMEDAY PREVIEW
VOLLEYBALL RECAP
PAGE
7B
PAGES
4-5B
FILE PHOTO/KANSAN
ERIN BREMER/KANSAN

O
ne of the most difcult jobs in the
world of professional sports is be-
ing a general manager in the MLB.
Its not quite like being a general manager
of any other sport. Major League Baseball
is so much more than just the teams in the
league. Each one of the 30 MLB teams in
the league have an expansive farm system
with hundreds of players trying to make
their way to the top. One right move and
you could be headed to the World Series;
one wrong move and you could send your
team into a downward spiral for years to
come.
In organizations like the NFL and the
NBA, a general manager is usually expect-
ed to produce a winning team immediately.
In baseball, they can buy themselves time
producing a strong, deep farm system. Te
trading of prospects in baseball is far more
prevalent than in other sports. When pros-
pects are drafed, they immediately report
to the minor leagues for at least a season or
two. For some players, it can take more than
fve years to reach the pinnacle of their pro-
fession. Prospects are ofen the kingpins of
extensive player trades.
General managers in baseball always
have to be thinking at least two years ahead.
A major strategy amongst general manag-
ers is to trade old, aging, and hopefully de-
clining talent for fresh, young talent. Playof
contenders are ofen one player away from
making a run. In 2011, the San Francisco
Giants had a record of 60-44 going into
the trading deadline. Te Giants had al-
ways been known for having a dominant
pitching staf and a rather weak ofense.
Te New York Mets had just the player that
the Giants needed to solidify their ofense.
On July 28, 2011, the Mets sent 34-year-old
outfelder Carlos Beltran to San Francisco
for Zack Wheeler, a 21-year-old pitching
prospect ranked number one in the Giants
organization. Te Giants wound up going
25-32 down the stretch and lost Beltran to
free agency the next ofseason. Te Mets
now have a young, healthy and powerful
arm to go along with Matt Harvey at the top
of the rotation.
In this case, the Mets came out on top.
Tey now have an amazing prospect to start
rebuilding around. Tere are also cases in
which the team acquires the veteran and
comes out on top. In 2008, CC Sabathia
was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers for
four prospects. Sabathia spent half a season
in Milwaukee. CC managed to pitch 130.2
innings, recorded an ERA of 1.65 and a
record of 11-2. He helped the Brewers get
back to the playofs.
In 2013, the trading deadline was not as
hectic as it usually is. Tree starting pitch-
ers were traded to diferent teams: Jake
Peavy was sent to the Red Sox, Bud Norris
to the Orioles and Ian Kennedy to the Pa-
dres. Tese were the lone blockbuster deals
of the deadline this year. However, afer the
trading deadline the Mets and Pirates were
able to get a deal done sending two veterans
to Pittsburgh in return for three prospects.
Te Mets sent Marlon Byrd and John Buck
to the Pirates. Marlon Byrd is having a ca-
reer season and has added a tremendous
amount to the Pirates lineup.
Tere are some teams that just seem
to be able to do it right. Te Boston Red
Sox are the main team that comes to mind
when talking about consistency and smart
general managing, making the playofs sev-
en times in the last 10 years. Te Red Sox
are always in the thick of things on the free
agent market, but its on the trade market
where they really do their damage.
In 2003, the Sox traded four prospects to
the Diamondbacks for Curt Schilling. At the
time, this was thought to be way too high of
a price for the aging right-hander. What did
Schilling go on to do? He went 21-6 in his
frst season in Boston, helped the Sox win
two World Series and gave one of the most
memorable postseason performances in
history, Te Bloody Sock Game.
Afer the Sox won it all in 04 (their frst
World Series win in 86 years), the 2005 sea-
son came around and it was time to make
another move. Te Sox sent prospect Han-
ley Ramirez and two other prospects to
the Marlins for Josh Beckett, Mike Lowell
and journeyman,
Guillermo Mota. Yes, Han-
ley went on to become an elite power-hit-
ting shortstop, but Beckett and Lowell gave
the Sox the immediate stability they needed
at the time. Beckett went 20-7 while Lowell
hit .320/21/120 in 2007 and helped lead the
Sox to another Fall Classic victory.
Te Red Sox are a team to be modeled
(Bobby Valentine notwithstanding). Tey
get the job done year in and year out. Tey
make the right moves for the right players
at the right times. Its no wonder that teams
like the New York Mets are taking plays
from the hypothetical Red Sox general
manager playbook. Te Mets have made a
number of moves recently starting with the
Wheeler deal attempting to build a young
core around veterans the likes of David
Wright and John Niese. Te art of trading
veterans for prospects has been going on
for years and years, and its a gamble that
general managers have to make sometimes.
If theyre on the winning side of that gam-
ble, their organization might only be one
trade away from winning it all.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
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FACT OF THE DAY
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
THE MORNING BREW
Q:Who did the Rangers receive in 2000
for Esteban Loaiza
A: Michael Young
ESPN
Seven former New York Mets have
thrown no-hitters after being traded
away from the Mets. The Mets had zero
no hitters in their existence until Johan
Santana threw the frst last season.
ESPN
MLB managers always one step ahead
[Giants general manager Brian Sabean]
got the result that he wanted, not the
year I got traded, obviously, but the next
year. And thats the game of baseball. You
trade people away and try to make deals
happen so you can win. No hard feelings
or anything. Its probably going to happen
again sometime. Like I said, its the game
of baseball.
Zack Wheeler
QUOTE OF THE DAY
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 2B
This week in athletics
Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
Mens Golf
Crooked Stick
Intercollegiate
All Day
Carmel, Ind.
Mens Golf
Crooked Stick
Intercollegiate
All Day
Carmel, Ind.
Soccer
TCU
4 p.m.
Lawrence
Football
TCU
11 a.m.
Fort Worth, Texas
Womens Golf
Diane Thomason Invitational
All Day
Iowa City, Iowa
Softball
Iowa
1 p.m.
Iowa City, Iowa
Volleyball
Texas
6:30 p.m.
Lawrence
Volleyball
Texas Tech
6 p.m.
Lubbock, Texas
Softball
Avila
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Womens Golf
Diance Thomason Invitational
All Day
Iowa City, Iowa
Womens Swimming
Air Force
1 p.m.
Colorado Springs, Colo.
By Ben Felderstein
bfelderstein@kansan.com
Te season has been like a roller
coaster for the Kansas soccer team.
As soon as it seems like the Jayhawks
have become more consistent or
have momentum on their side, they
cant seem to fnd a way to score.
Tis streak has continued on to the
conference play, as the Jayhawks
have remained scoreless through
their frst two Big 12 matches. Te
result is a 0-1-1 conference record,
with a loss to Texas and a tie with
Iowa State.
Friday, Kansas will host the Texas
Christian University Horned Frogs
at home for a chance to earn its frst
conference victory. Kansas is cur-
rently in sixth place, while TCU is
tied for seventh. Coach Mark Fran-
cis stressed the importance of win-
ning home conference games, and
said earning a victory Friday, Kansas
only game this weekend, is essential.
Weve put all our energy into the
one game, Francis said. I thought
we played really well on Sunday. We
just have to be a little more efcient
in the attacking third.
TCU (4-6-3, 0-2-1) is also winless,
and scoreless, in the conference sea-
son. TCU tied with Oklahoma State
afer two overtime periods during
their last match. Te Horned Frogs
had 20 shots in that game, with four
on goal. Junior goalkeeper Vittoria
Arnold had fve saves in the game
and has an overall save percentage of
72.5 percent.
Te Horned Frogs have been shut
out in six matches this season. Teir
scoring leader is freshman forward
Michelle Prokof, with six goals this
season. She has taken 26 shots,
which is 23 percent of the teams to-
tal. In TCUs last victory, which was
on Sept. 22 against Central Arkan-
sas, Prokof scored three times.
I think its a good matchup, Fran-
cis said. Tey are defnitely more
athletic than they were last year.
Teyre very organized, extreme-
ly feisty. We have to come out and
compete.
Kansas last victory was also on
Sept. 22, against Illinois State. Te
teams last goal came against Santa
Clara on Sept. 27. With 16 minutes
lef in the match, sophomore mid-
felder Liana Salazar scored the goal
of a free kick. Salazar is second on
the team with three goals, and senior
forward Caroline Kastor is frst with
four.
Despite being shut out the last two
matches, the Jayhawks have had
opportunities to score. In the last
match against Texas, one of the best
opportunities was of the head of
sophomore midfelder Hanna Kall-
maier. During a corner kick, Kall-
maier sent a header that hit the lef
goal post.
Kansas is not lacking in shots. Ju-
nior midfelder Jamie Fletcher has
had 40 shots so far, Salazar has 35
and Kastor has 34. Each of these
players are in the top 10 in the Big 12
in number of shots taken.
Tis Friday is going to come down
to being more technical, more clini-
cal, Kastor said. I think just playing
with our heart and wanting it more
than TCU. Especially in the Big 12,
thats the diference between each
team, who wants it more. We def-
nitely have the ability to do it, we just
need to execute.
Kansas will match up against TCU
at 4 p.m. on Friday at home.
Edited by Hannah Barling
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 3B
SOCCER
Jayhawks look for frst Big 12
victory against Horned Frogs
STELLA LIANG
sliang@kansan.com
FILE PHOTO/KANSAN
Kansas faces off against San Diego in the USD Tournament in California on Aug. 28, 2011. The Jayhawks won 2-1.
Bears, Giants prepare to
face off amid recent losses
NFL
Te Chicago Bears have two rea-
sons to be in a nasty mood con-
secutive losses to Detroit and New
Orleans.
Te Giants have fve reasons to be
ornery defeats in every game so
far this season.
New York is 0-5 for the frst time
since the 1987 strike-interrupted
season, and on merit. Te Giants
cant protect Eli Manning, who has
been looking around for where the
rush is coming almost as much as
hes been concentrating on receiv-
ers downfeld. New York already
has 20 turnovers, on pace to set
a humiliating league record, and
Manning has been picked 12 times.
Plus, the Giants cant run the ball,
and their only real threat at run-
ning back, David Wilson, wont
play Tursday night because of a
neck problem.
On defense, the Giants rank 26th
and cant manufacture a pass rush.
Te secondary has been a mess and
is ravaged by injuries.
Not a pretty picture.
You just keep working and keep
trying to improve and fnd out the
mistakes Im making and correct
those, Manning said. If there are
mistakes within the ofense that
are mental, if there are things we
can do better, get everybody on the
same page and how do you fx
those mistakes? Just have a positive
attitude and keep working, know-
ing that we can get to play at a bet-
ter level.
Chicagos level hasnt been very
high since winning its frst three
games. It cant have helped the
Bears mindset that top receiver
Brandon Marshall complained
about not seeing the ball enough
afer teammate Alshon Jefery set
a Bears record with 218 yards re-
ceiving.
Two weeks ago in Detroit, we
didnt take care of the football,
frst-year coach Marc Trestman
said. We moved the football, but
didnt take care of the football. Our
defense turned it over for us and
we didnt take advantage of that.
Last week, we had a poor start.
We werent consistent throughout
the game.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

You just keep working


and keep trying to improve
and fnd out the mistakes
Im making and correct
those.
ELI MANNING
Giants quarterback
NHL
Steens late goal lifts Blues
over Chicago Blackhawks
ST. LOUIS Alexander Steens
slap shot with 21.1 seconds
remaining beat Chicago goalie
Corey Crawford and gave the St.
Louis Blues a 3-2 win over the
Blackhawks on Wednesday night.
Steen broke down the lef side
as part of a 3-on-1 rush. He kept
the puck and let go a drive from
just inside the circle that trickled
through Crawford.
Te Blues (3-0) matched their
best start to a season, also done
in the 1969-70 and 1993-94
campaigns. Jaroslav Halak made
26 saves in his third straight win.
Vladimir Tarasenko and David
Backes also scored for St. Louis.
Patrick Kane scored for the third
straight game for the Blackhawks,
and Jonathan Toews had the other
Chicago goal. Crawford made 31
saves.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis Blues David Backes scores against the Blackhawks on Oct. 9
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 4B
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GAMEDAY
PREVIEW
F
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STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE
TCU is young on the offensive side of the ball. Coach Gary Patterson told
the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that the offense is still adjusting to the speed
of the game. Senior quarterback Casey Pachall has been out for most
of the season after having surgery on his injured left arm. Sophomore
quarterback Trevone Boykin is a quarterback that can scramble out of the
pocket, but he has to improve his vision downfeld in the passing game.
SPECIAL TEAMS
TCU has some outstanding returners with B.J. Catalon and Brandon
Carter. The Horned Frogs ran in the top fve nationally in kickoff return
yards and top 20 in punt return yards. The kicking game is also solid for
TCU, as Jaden Oberkrom has made 11 of his last 13 feld goal attempts
and 59 straight point-after attempts dating back to last season.
PLAYER TO WATCH
Cornerback Jason Verrett is the active leader in tackles (143) and
interceptions (7) for TCU, and leads one of the top secondaries in the
nation. Since the start of the 2012 season, Verrett leads the nation in
most passes defended.
AT A GLANCE
Schematically the Horned Frogs are pretty straightforward. They dont
run many trick plays, or line up in different formations on either side
of the ball. But expect to see a talented and physical team, especially
on defense, take the feld against Kansas on Saturday.
COACHING
Gary Patterson has 118 wins at TCU, which ranks fourth in the Big 12
in coaches at their current school and seventh nationally. Patterson
coaches a team built around toughness and strong defense.
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
QB Trevone Boykin 2 So.
TE Stephen Bryant 49 Jr.
WR Josh Doctson 9 So.
WR Brandon Carter 3 Jr.
WR Cam White 88 Jr.
RB Waymon James 32 Sr.
LT James Dunbar 56 Sr.
LG Jamelle Naff 77 So.
C Joey Hunt 55 So.
RG Eric Tausch 73 Sr.
RT Halapoulivaati Vaitai 71 Sr.
BY THE NUMBERS
15
101
18
Number of rushing yards Trevone Boykin had
against Texas Tech
TCU players with a reception this season
Sacks by the TCU defense this season
Edited by Sarah Kramer
MAX GOODWIN
mgoodwin@kansan.com
LE Jon Koontx 97 Sr.
DT Chucky Hunter 96 Jr.
DT Davion Pierson 57 So.
RE Terrell Lathan 90 So.
MLB Jonathan Anderson 41 Jr.
OLB Marcus Mallet 54 Jr.
CB Jason Verrett 2 Sr.
WS Chris Hacklett 1 So.
FS Elisha Olabode 6 Sr.
SS Sam Carter 17 Jr.
CB Kevin White 25 Jr.
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
The defense is the foundation of the TCU team, and they likely will
not do anything to surprise the Kansas coaches. The Horned Frogs
defense is just a tough, solid unit. In fve games TCU is tied for
fourth in the nation with 18 sacks, and seventh in the nation with
nine interceptions.
DEFENSE
MOMENTUM
Right now, the Horned Frogs dont have much momentum coming off
of a three-point loss to Oklahoma. TCU has a 2-3 record and will be
looking to get the offense rolling. Trevone Boykin has shown his running
ability, but will be looking to gain some chemistry with his receivers. BABY JAY WILL WEEP IF
TCUs defense overwhelms Kansas offensive line and puts pressure
on Jake Heaps. The secondary of TCU will force Heaps to be as accu-
rate as possible, and if he is having to run out of the pocket at the
same time then the Jayhawks will not have much chance to move the
ball with any consistency.
QUESTION MARKS
Can TCU get a passing game going? Like Kansas, TCU will need to
move the ball and give its defense some rest on the sidelines. There
are no questions concerning the TCU defense, besides whether or not
star lineman Devonte Fields will be healthy enough to play.
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GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Junior quarterback Jake Heaps calls out signals before a play during the game
against Texas Tech at Memorial Stadium on Oct. 5. The Jayhawks lost 54-16.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Junior running back Connor Embree runs the ball during the Oct. 5 game against
Texas Tech.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Junior quarterback Jake Heaps gets sacked during the Oct. 5 game against Texas
Tech.
TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 5B
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PREVIEW
F
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KANSAS
KANSAS
PREDICTION FOR
4220
TCU KANSAS
CONNOR OBERKROM
coberkrom@kansan.com
STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE
Kansas offense sputtered after the frst quarter against Texas Tech.
Kansas ranks 107th in the country in yards per game and is still confg-
uring things at the wide receiver position as senior Josh Ford and junior
Andrew Turzilli are the new starters this week. There were also some
shakeups in the offensive line as it looks to buy junior quarterback Jake
Heaps more time and receivers to fnd more space. With Tony Pierson
out, the running game, which was nonexistent against Texas Tech,
should be a bigger priority this week.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Junior kicker Trevor Pardula blasts punts like its an ordinary thing and probably will see the same
amount of action come Saturday. Field position could play a crucial role and special teams, while it
hasnt been terrible this year, needs to capitalize on opportunities to squeeze every yard of feld position
possible.
The Jayhawks defense has had its fair share of up and downs this
season and endured a rough three quarters last week against Tech
after shutting them out in the frst quarter. While junior linebacker
Ben Heeney is having a colossal season, the secondary was tested
last week and didnt perform favorably, giving up more than 500
yards. The defense will have to keep the TCU offense in front of them,
as their only chance of winning is to gut out a low-scoring, gritty
about.
DEFENSE
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
X Josh Ford Sr. 8
LT Pat Lewandowski Jr. 61
LG Ngalu Fusimalohi Jr. 63
C Gavin Howard Sr. 70
RG Mike Smithburg Jr. 65
RT Aslam Sterling Sr. 77
TE Jimmay Mundine Jr. 41
H James Simms Sr. 29
QB Jake Heaps Jr. 9
F Brandon Bourbon Jr. 25
Z Andrew Turzilli Jr. 82
LC JaCorey Shepherd Jr. 24
NB Victor Simmons Jr. 27
LE Kevin Young Sr. 90
N Keon Stowers Jr. 98
RE/T Keba Agostinho Jr. 96
BUCK Ben Goodman So. 93
RC Dexter McDonald Jr. 12
SS Isaiah Johnson So. 5
MLB Ben Heeney Jr. 31
WLB Jake Love So. 57
FS Cassius Sendish Jr. 33
POSITION NAME NO. YEAR
QUESTION MARKS
Can Kansas stay in the rhythm of the game? When your team is in the learning stages of how to fnish
a game and just stay even-keeled, little things such as staying in the game the whole time without too
many errors can be encouraging.
BY THE NUMBERS
13
54.3
5.1
Combined number of passes broken up by
JaCorey Shepherd and Dexter McDonald.
Yards per punt by Trevor Pardula.
Sacks by TCU, which is the best in the Big 12.
Edited by Madison Schultz
BABY JAY WILL CHEER IF
Kansas can keep it close. TCU is nowhere near a powerhouse, but its still a respectable team. Saying
TCUs offense wont do anything just doesnt hold any weight after Kansas defensive performance last
week. If the Jayhawks can grind it out without everything turning against them, whether in a win or loss,
they should be proud of that on the road.
COACHING
Charlie Weis is coming off a demoralizing loss and needs to have some close games to warrant another
year, at least in some Kansas fans minds. Weis had some mishaps, including a disastrous fake punt.
The easy mistakes cant happen for a team thats already digging deep with their lack of frepower.
Weis opportunity to win a Big 12 game and to break the 20-game road losing streak presents itself
once again. Not an easy task, but things have to start changing soon for Weis to get everyone to start
buying in.
PLAYER TO WATCH
Andrew Turzilli has taken over the Z receiver spot in place of sophomore Tre Parmalee and junior
Rodriguez Coleman. Kansas has yet to see breakaway speed from their receiving corps and no one has
consistently been able to get past the frst line of defense. Turzilli displays some speed and physicality,
something Kansas receivers have trouble with. If Turzilli cant do much, then this Kansas offense is
probably never going to take a step forward into a capable offense.
AT A GLANCE
TCU coach Gary Patterson looks to get his frst win of the Big 12 season and get back on track after a
tough loss against Oklahoma. Kansas hasnt played TCU on the road since 1996 and also looks to get its
frst conference win. TCU has won 30 of 35 last home games and is 60-11 under Gary Patterson.
MOMENTUM
After getting walloped last week, Kansas is still trying to get their frst conference win, and winning on
the road versus TCU would make things go a little bit smoother in Lawrence.
ST. LOUIS Adam Wainwright
went all the way and the St. Lou-
is Cardinals got two-run homers
from David Freese and Matt Ad-
ams to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates
6-1 on Wednesday night, advanc-
ing to the NL championship series.
Wainwright scattered eight hits
in his second dominant win of the
division series, coming through for
the Cardinals in a winner-take-all
Game 5.
St. Louis gets to stay at home
to open the NLCS against the
well-rested Los Angeles Dodgers
on Friday night.
Te last three seasons, the Car-
dinals are 8-1 when facing elimi-
nation. Tey also won Game 5 of
the NL division series at Washing-
ton last year and at Philadelphia in
2011.
Freese homered in the second
inning of rookie Gerrit Cole and
Adams connected in the eighth
against reliever Mark Melancon to
make it 5-1. Pete Kozma added an
RBI infeld single, and Wainwright
fnished it of by striking out Pedro
Alvarez with two on.
Alvarez became the frst player
with an RBI in his frst six postsea-
son games on a fuke hit that car-
omed of frst base in the seventh.
But the Pirates were held to one
run in each of the fnal two games
in their frst playof appearance in
21 years. Tey haven't won a post-
season series since the 1979 World
Series.
Te 23-year-old Cole beat the
Cardinals with an impressive efort
in Game 2. Tey got to him early
this time even though his fastball
hit 100 mph in the frst inning
against Matt Holliday.
Freese made the kid pay for a full-
count walk to Jon Jay with two outs
in the second, lining a 1-2 pitch
into the visitors' bullpen in lef.
Te Pirates had the bullpen up
in the fourth afer Yadier Molina's
infeld hit and a throwing error
put runners on second and third.
Cole gave up just three hits over
fve innings, but was lifed for a
pinch-hitter in the sixth.
Freese struggled this season to
overcome a back injury in spring
training and had nine homers and
60 RBIs. But just like teammate
Carlos Beltran, he's an October star
with seven homers, 29 RBIs and a
.325 average in 36 career postsea-
son games.
Adams' power hitting helped the
Cardinals overcame a mid-foot
sprain to cleanup man Allen Craig
in early September and he ham-
mered a frst-pitch fastball from
Melancon well over the right-feld
wall for his frst RBIs of the series.
Te Pirates scratched out their
lone run on two infeld hits and the
single by Alvarez that looked to be
a harmless inning-ending ground-
out before it hit the bag.
Freese was a hometown hero in
2011, both the NLCS and World
Series MVP. He singlehandedly
got the Cardinals to Game 7 of that
World Series with a two-run triple
with two outs and two strikes in the
ninth and then ended Game 6 with
a leadof homer in the 11th.
Te snapshot moment from the
title run came when Freese joyous-
ly fung his helmet between the legs
a few steps from the celebration
waiting at the plate.
At 23 years, 31 days, Cole was
the youngest NL pitcher to start
Game 5 of a division series and the
ffh-youngest NL pitcher to start a
winner-take-all postseason game,
according to STATS.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6B
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FOOTBALL
MLB
James Sims stays positive
despite conference losses
CHRIS HYBL
chybl@kansan.com
ASHLEIGH LEE/KANSAN
Junior kicker Trevor Pardula runs the ball after a trick play during the game against Texas Tech where the Jayhawks lost 54-16.
Of the teams currently in the Big
12, senior running back James Sims
hasnt beaten any of them.
And its almost hard to place any
blame for that on him. Sims has
been Mr. Consistency for Kansas
from his frst appearance in the
red and blue. In his frst three
years, Sims averaged 4.4, 4.0 and
4.6 yards, respectively, all while
averaging over 14 carries per game
in each year. Hes had nine touch-
downs in each of his three years.
Te only problem? Sims play
hasnt been refective of his teams.
At all. He can count the total num-
ber of wins hes participated in at
Kansas with his fngers.
And now Sims is in a situation
hes relatively familiar with: getting
beat in the teams frst conference
game of the season. In the last three
years, Kansas has lost its frst game
by an average just over 31 points. In
those same three years, Kansas has
lost the second conference game by
an average of 32 points.
Tings have been ugly for the
Jayhawks early in conference play.
And with fans already beginning to
associate this years season with the
last, Sims is dealing with another
consistency: a doubtful fan base.
We are just 2-2 and everybody
who doubts us can doubt us all they
want, but we have a lot of football
lef to play, Sims said. I just want
to leave this program on a positive
note. On the winning side. Tats
my goal.
But its more than a few speed
bumps for Sims to get what he
wants. Its an obstacle course. In an
ofense that has struggled to fnd an
identity, behind a shaky ofensive
line, for a team with a dwindling
fanbase, Sims has as much hope as
ever.
Weve been leaving no doubt in
each others mind that we can win
this game and its just about going
out and executing, Sims said.
Hes positive about the shaky of-
fensive line.
Tey havent been playing the
greatest but I know they can get
the job done, Sims said. But I
think this is going to be a dramatic
change for them upfront and theyll
get the job done.
Hes positive about an unproven
passing game.
I think the teams are still com-
ing in, looking to stop the run and
having us beat them with the pass,
Sims said. If we get the running
and passing game going, were go-
ing to be hard to stop.
Sims is a frm believer of having
positive energy.
You just have to keep a pos-
itive energy for the team, Sims
said. Obviously this last weekend
against Texas Tech wasnt the out-
come we wanted. We just didnt fn-
ish the game as a team. Were 2-2 so
I basically feel like were 0-0.
If theres one thing Sims has
learned in his career, its that wor-
rying about the past will do noth-
ing for you. Its about whats ahead,
and whats ahead for this week is
2-3 Texas Christian University
squad. A squad that has shown it
can be susceptible to the run.
TCU has allowed over 195 rush-
ing yards in three separate games
this season. Teyve held the other
two opponents to under 50.
Sims will being playing in front
of his family who will make the
35-minute drive from Irving, Tex-
as, to TCUs Amon G. Carter Stadi-
um on Saturday.
Sims is optimistic for Saturday,
for the season and for his team. He
doesnt believe in pessimism.
Edited by Hannah Barling

... everybody who doubts


us can doubt us all they
want, but we have a lot of
football left to play.
JAMES SIMS
Senior running back
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright celebrates after striking out Pittsburgh Pirates Pedro Alvarez for the fnal out of
Game 5 of a National League baseball division series Wednesday in St. Louis. The Cardinals won 6-1, and advanced to the NL
championship series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
St. Louis Cardinals beat
Pittsburgh Pirates 6-1
Kansas (14-3) increased its win-
ning streak to 10 matches as it
defeated the Oklahoma Sooners
(14-4) 25-23, 25-15, 25-23 on
Wednesday in Lawrence at the
Horejsi Family Athletics Center.
Junior outside hitter Sara Mc-
Clinton backed up her stellar
play at Baylor to knock down a
game-high 16 kills with a .438
hitting percentage. She continues
to climb the conference leader-
board in the kills department as
she now stands at ffh with 3.45
kills per set.
Its always been a goal of mine
to lead the Big
12, McClinton
said. I know
my personal
goals can help
the team, but the
team goals come
frst.
Tose goals in-
clude excelling
in a highly com-
petitive confer-
ence that features Texas (11-2),
the defending national champion
who the Jayhawks face on Satur-
day. Both teams are 4-0 as each
team has only lost one set in con-
ference play this season.
Weve set some pretty high
goals for the conference, coach
Ray Bechard said.
Tis marks the frst time since
2001 that a winning streak has
reached double-digits. Junior
outside hitter Chelsea Albers
isnt taking the streak for grant-
ed.
Its a big accomplishment to
have 10 straight wins, and to go
a month without losing is a lot
of hard work, Albers said. Es-
pecially in the league that were
in and how many competitive
teams were playing.
Te Sooners built an early fve-
point lead in the frst set as they
led 12-7 and forced a Kansas
timeout. Oklahoma stretched
the lead to six later as it pushed
ahead 17-11. Behind two kills
each from redshirt senior mid-
dle blocker Caroline Jarmoc,
McClinton and sophomore out-
side hitter Tiana Dockery, the
Jayhawks chipped away to force
an Oklahoma timeout. Down 20-
23, the Jayhawks roared back and
took the last fve points of the set
to claim the set 25-23, highlight-
ed by a Jarmoc
block on set
point. Strong
serving from
redshirt fresh-
man Maggie
Anderson aid-
ed the run.
Kansas out-
side hitters
Dockery, Mc-
Clinton and
Alberscombined for 14 kills in
the set led by Dockerys six on a
.417 hitting percentage.
A dominant performance on
both ofense and defense pow-
ered the Jayhawks in the second
set. With momentum from the
frst set, the Jayhawks built a 13-5
lead behind four kills and two
blocks from Jarmoc and strong
serving from freshman defensive
specialist Cassie Wait. Four kills
by McClinton and three blocks
by Soucie increased the lead to
ten as the Jayhawks led 21-11. A
service ace by Anderson clinched
the set 25-15. McClintons seven
kills in the set led both teams
and libero Brianne Riley again
reached double-digit digs in a
match with 15 afer the second
set.
Tere wasnt much going right
[at the beginning of the match],
Bechard said. But you could
feel us building momentum late
in the frst set. Little by little we
started making better plays.
Te Sooners came out of the
break to win the frst three points
of the third set and take a 9-3
lead. Four Jarmoc kills and two
by McClinton erased the lead as
the Jayhawks went on a 7-0 run
to take a 13-10 lead. Oklahoma
fought back to tie the match as
the teams went back and forth
the rest of the way. Tied at 23-23,
an Albers tip shot and an attack
error by Oklahoma gave Kansas
the set 25-23.
Oklahoma leads the conference
in digs this season, but that didnt
stop the Jayhawks from hitting a
solid .347 for the match. Te Jay-
hawks outhit the Sooners and
fnished with 52 kills compared
to Oklahomas 38. Te 52 kills are
the second most this season for
Kansas in a three-set match.
Senior setter Erin McNorton
tallied 48 assists, which is the
highest total in a three-set match
in the conference this season. Al-
bers and Jarmoc chipped in with
11 kills each, and Riley fnished
with 17 digs.
Kansas and Texas will put their
undefeated conference records
on the line on Saturday at Hore-
jsi Family Athletics Center at
6:30 p.m. Te Longhorns come
in with a winning streak of their
own having won their last seven
matches.
Edited by Sarah Kramer
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 7B
VOLLEYBALL
Jayhawks look to continue winning streak against Texas
The Universily of Kansas School of usiness

J.A. VICKERS SR. AND


ROBERT F. VICKERS SR.
MEMORIAL LECTURE SERIES
DAVID AZERRAD
Herilage Ioundalion
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ALITY
As of Wednesday morning,
only two Big 12 teams remain
undefeated in conference play.
Tat will change Saturday as the
Jayhawks (13-3, 3-0) take on the
defending national champion
Texas Longhorns (10-2, 3-0) at
Horejsi Family Athletics Center
at 6:30 p.m.
Currently ranked No. 3 in the
nation, the Longhorns handed
the Jayhawks their lone regular
season home loss last season.
Texas defeated Kansas in fve
sets, 20-25, 25-15, 22-25, 25-16,
15-12, to sweep the season se-
ries. Te Longhorns went on to
fnish frst in the conference and
were picked by coaches in the
preseason to repeat this season.
Kansas will ride a ten-match
winning streak into Saturdays
contest. Te Jayhawks currently
lead the Big 12 in hitting per-
centage, assists, blocks and kills.
Te Jayhawks continue to re-
ceive weekly awards from the
Big 12. Tis week, junior out-
side hitter Sara McClinton was
named the Ofensive Player of
the Week and freshman middle
blocker Tayler Soucie earned the
Defensive Player of the Week
honor.
McClinton delivered one of the
best performances of the season
against Baylor afer recording
23 kills and zero errors. In two
matches last week, she totaled a
conference-leading 5.14 kills per
set while leading the Jayhawks
in kills in both matches. Souc-
ie, who now leads the Big 12 in
blocks per set with 1.40, earned
16 blocks in two matches. Her
nine blocks against Baylor ties
for fourth most in a conference
match this season.
Te Longhorns have a talented
freshman middle blocker of their
own. Chiaka Ogbogu has been
named the Big 12 Rookie of the
Week for the second consecutive
week afer reaching double-digit
kills in her last two matches.
Kansas defense will have to
fnd a way to stop preseason Big
12 Player of the Year Haley Eck-
erman, a junior outside hitter.
She currently ranks fourth in the
conference with 3.49 kills per set
while teammate Bailey Webster,
a senior outside hitter, ranks
eighth with 3.17 kills per set.
Texas comes into to the match
with a .26 hitting percentage, the
second highest mark in the con-
ference behind Kansas .266.
Both teams will be battle-test-
ed coming into the match. Texas
has played fve teams current-
ly ranked in the Top 12 of the
American Coaches Volleyball
Association poll and has gone
4-1 in those matches. Kansas
defeated Wisconsin, now ranked
No. 19, on the road in fve sets
and will have played three teams
receiving votes.
Kansas continues to receive
votes in the AVCA poll. Te Jay-
hawks defeated Baylor in four
sets on Saturday to remain per-
fect in the Big 12.
Texas hosts last-place Texas
Tech on Wednesday night in
Austin, Texas.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
BRIAN HILLIX
bhillix@kansan.com
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Senior outside hitter Sara McClinton hits the ball against Notre Dame at a home game on Sept. 22. Kansas won 3-1.
VOLLEYBALL
McClinton leads Jayhawks to victory against Oklahoma
Recycle this paper
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Its a big accomplishment


to have 10 straight wins,
and to go a month without
losing is a lot of hard work.
CHELSEA ALBERS
Junior outside hitter
BRIAN HILLIX
bhillix@kansan.com
FILE PHOTO/KANSAN
After their victory against Oklahoma on Wednesday, the Jayhawks now boast a 10-game winning streak. Kansas plays Texas this Saturday at home at 6:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 8B
www.HomesForLease.org www.HomesForLease.org
Te Kansas swim team will head
to Colorado Springs, Colo., this
weekend to compete against the
Air Force Academy swim team.
Tis will be the frst ofcial meet
for the Kansas team. On Oct. 3, the
team competed in an intrasquad to
kick of the season and get back in
the water.
Te team will compete at 1 p.m.
this Saturday. Standout perform-
ers from last week include senior
co-captain Morgan Sharp, fresh-
men Allison Merecka, Leah Pftzer
and Lindsay Manning, and sopho-
more Bryce Hinde.
Hinde, from Fulton, performed
well at last Tursdays intrasquad
with a frst place fnish in the 50-
yard breaststroke with a time of
29.82 and a frst place fnish in the
150-yard breaststroke with 1:42.79.
Tis weekend, she would like a
repeat.
I would like to do the same, win
both of my breaststroke events and
if Im swimming the IM [individu-
al medley] place high in that event
as well, Hinde said. And hope-
fully take on the title for the meet
against the Air Force Academy.
One of the goals for coach Clark
Campbell is to get Hinde and sev-
eral other swimmers to the NCAA
championships this February.
I know that its going to take
dedication and 120 percent every
single day to get there, Hinde said.
Te team goes into this meet
with a disadvantage because of the
altitude diferences between Kan-
sas and Colorado.
Tis will be the frst meet against
another school for the large fresh-
man class of swimmers.
Tis Tuesday was the last of the
regular land workouts the team
has been doing. As the season pro-
gresses, the workouts will move
almost entirely to the pool, but at
the beginning the focus is getting
in shape.
Afer the meet this weekend, the
next one will be at Texas Chris-
tian University on Oct. 17 in Fort
Worth, Texas. Te next home meet
is Nov. 2 at Robinson Natatori-
um against Nebraska-Omaha and
North Dakota at 1 p.m.
Edited by Hannah Barling
Swim team faces Air Force
Academy in frst meet of year
EMILY WITTLER/KANSAN
Caroline Patterson, a sophomore on the Kansas swim team, swims at a Feb. 2 meet against Arkansas inside Robinson Natato-
rium. This was frst heat of the 200-yard backstroke.
SWIMMING MLB
MIRANDA DAVIS
mdavis@kansan.com
MLS
Sporting KC, Dynamo fnish in draw
DETROIT Justin Verlander is
again standing between the Oak-
land Athletics and the AL champi-
onship series.
But only afer Max Scherzer
the man who supplanted Verland-
er as Detroit's top starter this year
kept the Tigers' season alive
with a relief outing to remember.
Scherzer escaped a major jam one
inning afer two fans reached out
to try to reel in Victor Martinez's
disputed home run, and the Tigers
rallied past the Oakland Athletics
8-6 Tuesday to force a decisive ffh
game in their AL division series.
Verlander will start at Oakland
on Tursday night, almost a year to
the day afer he shut out the A's at
the Coliseum in Game 5 of the di-
vision series last season. Scherzer
was in line to start Game 5, but the
21-game winner came on Tuesday
instead for his frst relief appear-
ance since the 2011 postseason.
He wriggled out of a bases-loaded,
none-out jam in the eighth inning
and got the win.
"Tat was amazing," Verlander
said. "He got himself in trouble
and got himself out of it. Tat was
pretty intense. I think all Tigers
fans and Tigers players would have
rather it be three up, three down,
but it made for a great story, didn't
it?"
Oakland hasn't announced a
starter for Tursday. It is Barto-
lo Colon's turn in the postseason
rotation, but rookie Sonny Gray
could also come back on normal
rest afer a brilliant performance in
Game 2.
"We haven't decided anything
yet," manager Bob Melvin said.
Playing catch-up most of the way
in Game 4, the Tigers tied it frst
with Jhonny Peralta's three-run
homer in the ffh and then on
Martinez's solo shot in the sev-
enth. A couple of fans attempted
to catch Martinez's drive, and at
least one of them bobbled the ball
while reaching for it over the rail-
ing above the wall.
Tat prevented right felder Josh
Reddick from having any chance
at a leaping grab. Reddick and
center felder Coco Crisp immedi-
ately protested, pointing up at the
stands in the hope of a fan-inter-
ference call. But umpires upheld
the home run afer a replay review.
"I have no doubt I was going to
catch that ball. When I looked at
the replay, that's what I thought,"
Reddick said. "It's totally frustrat-
ing that a fan can infuence the
game."
Gary Darling, the crew chief, was
umpiring in right feld. He dis-
agreed, even afer the replay.
"It was clear he was not going
to catch the ball, so it was clearly
going to be a home run," Darling
said. "Tere wasn't any other evi-
dence on replay to turn it another
way."
Detroit manager Jim Leyland
wasn't about to wait on a report
from the clubhouse for a replay of
this magnitude.
"I usually wait for the guys to
come out of the video room and let
me know, but in this case, I went
down there to look at it," Leyland
said. "I was actually pretty relaxed
because I saw the frst replay they
showed and I knew it was defnite-
ly a home run."
Scherzer came out of the bullpen
in the seventh and gave up a run,
then ran into trouble again in the
eighth. With the Tigers ahead 5-4,
he allowed a walk and a double to
start the inning. An intentional
walk to load the bases followed,
and Leyland opted to leave his ace
on the mound.
Scherzer struck out Reddick, who
swung and missed at what would
have been ball four on a low, inside
pitch. Stephen Vogt struck out too,
but pinch-hitter Alberto Callaspo's
line drive to lef nearly fell in be-
fore landing foul.
Callaspo eventually lined out to
center.
"My number was called. I was
ready," Scherzer said. "I was trying
to warm up the same way, try to do
everything the same way and think
of it as a start."
Detroit, held hitless through
four innings in a game of twists
and turns, added three runs in the
eighth on a wild pitch and a two-
run double by Omar Infante that
made it 8-4.
Yoenis Cespedes hit a two-run
single in the ninth, bringing the
potential tying run to the plate,
but Joaquin Benoit struck out Seth
Smith to end it.
Tigers rally past Oakland As,
Verlander set for Game 5
ASSOCAITED PRESS
Oakland Athletics right felder Josh Reddick stretches but is unable to catch a solo
home run by Detroit Tigers Victor Martinez during the seventh inning of Game 4 of
baseballs American League division series in Detroit on Oct. 8. The Tigers won 8-6.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON Jimmy Nielsen had
fve saves, while Tally Hall had one
stop and Sporting Kansas City and
the Houston Dynamo played to a 0-0
tie Wednesday night.
Te draw extends Houston's unbeat-
en streak to fve games, but the Dyna-
mo (13-10-9, 48 points) were unable
to close the gap on Kansas City (15-
10-7, 52 points), which remained four
points ahead of the Dynamo in sec-
ond place in the Eastern Conference.
Nielsen was tested early by the Dy-
namo.
Will Bruin had a shot from the right
box stopped by a sliding Nielsen in
the second minute, and Nielsen got
a foot on a Bruin shot from outside
the right goalkeeper's box in the sixth
minute.
Corey Ashe let loose a shot from 30
yards in the middle of the feld in the
seventh minute that Nielsen had to
jump up and bat over the crossbar.
Aurelien Collin kept the game
scoreless at the half, clearing a Brad
Davis free kick from outside the up-
per right box of the end line.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sporting Kansas City defender/midfelder Chance Myers, left, and Houston Dynamo forward Will Bruin, right, battle for the
ball during the frst half of MLS soccer game action at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston on Oct. 9.
1
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 9B
How about a little quick trivia:
what is the oldest intercollegiate
sport in the history of the world?
Baseball? Not quite. Basketball?
Nice try. Football? Not even close.
Ill give you a hint: it was the frst
and only sport to derive from cor-
poral punishment. Tink Vikings.
If that didnt give it away, then Im
not sure what will.
Yes, rowing is the oldest intercol-
legiate sport in the history of the
world, dating back to the Egyp-
tians. I didnt know that until I
looked it up. I also didnt know that
the University had a rowing team
until I looked that up as well. And I
also didnt know that Kansas mens
rowing team will be competing for
a national championship this com-
ing May.
Te Kansas mens rowing team
had a successful few days on the
water this past weekend, and now
has its sights set on a national
championship.
Just a few days ago, Kansas Crew
traveled to Oklahoma City to com-
pete in the Head of the Oklahoma
Event. Tis Regatta, rowing race,
included a variety of events and
many Midwest teams including the
Mens Collegiate 4+, which consists
of four-man boats, and the Mens
Collegiate 8+, which consists of
eight-man boats.
Tird-year rowers Brad Wiltfong,
Matthew George, Jon Gragg, Sam
Rider and coxswain Dylan Shmal-
berg took home frst four, the Mens
Varsity Four. It was the frst time
the Kansas men had placed frst at
the Head of the Oklahoma.
It was unbelievable to compete at
a collegiate level with crews across
the nation and to be that success-
ful, freshman Garrett Farlow said.
Head coach Jeremy Struemph was
very pleased with the performance
he got out of all boats, but especial-
ly the Mens Varsity Four.
Several of our boats had solid
showings, Streumph said. Espe-
cially the Mens Varsity 4+, which
won its event, beating out teams
from OCU, Texas, K-State, Wichita
State and others.
Junior Jon Gragg stressed the
importance of the big win for the
team looking forward.
Te win is big for our program
and a great start to our season,
Gragg said. Tis only brings us
closer to our goal of a national
championship.
Kansas looks to carry the momen-
tum of this weekend into future
races, and you can be a part of it.
Rowing has been a huge infu-
ence in my life, senior coxswain
Dylan Shmalberg said. I have
met a lot of great people, and ev-
ery win is done as a team.
But it isnt for everybody. Row-
ing takes a special kind of person.
Rowing is a unique balance of
technique, teamwork and power,
Brad Wiltfong said. To succeed
your body movements must be in
harmony with everyone elses in
the boat. It is not about comfort.
It is about sacrifce and persever-
ance.
Since 1977, Kansas Crew has been
a program ofered at the University
of Kansas for students interested
in competitive rowing. Tere are
no tryouts; however, there are club
dues. If you are interested in row-
ing with the team, contact Trea-
surer Matthew George by phone at
(913) 530-2006, or by email at
kansascrew@gmail.com.
Edited by Jessica Mitchell
Mens rowing sets sights
on national championship
CLUB SPORTS MLB
DANIEL HARMSEN
dharmsen@kansan.com
FALL RIVER, Mass. Prose-
cutors in the murder case against
former New England Patriot Aar-
on Hernandez want the judge to
recuse herself because, they said
Wednesday, she and the lead
prosecutor have a public history
of antagonism and she has shown
bias.
Bristol County Assistant Dis-
trict Attorney William McCau-
ley wants Judge Susan Garsh to
remove herself from the case, he
said during a hearing in Fall River
Superior Court.
McCauley did not detail his
reasons in court, but a new fling
cited a "well-known and publicly
documented history of antago-
nism" between him and Garsh,
stemming from a 2010 murder
trial he argued before her.
Tough McCauley won a con-
viction in that case, he was quoted
in the media as criticizing Garsh,
saying she had unfairly limited or
excluded evidence and exhibited
hostility.
Te fling said the friction would
likely be exploited and sensa-
tionalized by the media in the
high-profle case and could im-
pair the ability of McCauley and
Garsh to perform their sworn
duties.
"Tis isn't a matter the Com-
monwealth takes lightly," McCau-
ley told the judge.
Hernandez, 23, was indicted in
August in the killing of 27-year-
old Odin Lloyd, a semi-profes-
sional football player who was
dating the sister of Hernandez's
girlfriend. He pleaded not guilty
to frst-degree murder and fve
weapons-related charges last
month and is being held without
bail at a county jail.
Hernandez attorney James Sul-
tan said in court that the defense
would strenuously object to the
recusal request when arguments
are heard Oct. 21.
Outside court, another of his at-
torneys, Charles Rankin, declined
to comment further. "We are very,
very much looking forward to
Aaron's day in court," he said.
Te defense has said previously
that prosecutors' case won't hold
up during a jury trial and they
are confdent Hernandez will be
exonerated.
Prosecutors allege Hernandez
orchestrated Lloyd's killing be-
cause he was upset with him for
talking to some people at a night-
club with whom Hernandez had
problems.
Garsh declined to comment, cit-
ing judicial ethics. She didn't ad-
dress their history in the hearing.
McCauley has previously sought
Garsh's recusal in a case. In a
2011 court fling, resubmitted
Wednesday in support of the new
request, he wrote that she had
"exhibited antagonism and bias
toward the prosecution through-
out the (2010) case" and that he
didn't believe she could be free of
bias.
During Wednesday's hour-long
hearing, Hernandez briefy took
the witness stand to answer a
string of questions from the judge
about a possible confict of inter-
est in the case by another of his
attorneys, Michael Fee. Te wife
of one of the prosecutors is a part-
ner at the frm where Fee is also a
partner.
Te questioning was to ensure
Hernandez knew of the potential
confict and still wished to be rep-
resented by Fee. He said he did.
Four others face charges in the
case. Ernest Wallace and Carlos
Ortiz, who are said to have been
with Hernandez and Lloyd in a
car on the night Lloyd was killed,
have been charged with being an
accessory to murder afer the fact.
According to prosecutors, Or-
tiz told authorities he did not see
who shot Lloyd, but that Hernan-
dez was alone with him before it
happened. He initially told po-
lice a diferent story, saying both
Hernandez and Wallace got out
of the car at the industrial park
in North Attleborough, Mass.,
where Lloyd's bullet-riddled body
was found.
Wallace has pleaded not guilty.
Ortiz has not yet been arraigned
on the accessory charge but
has pleaded not guilty to a gun
charge.
Hernandez's girlfriend, Shayan-
na Jenkins, has been indicted on
a perjury charge but not yet been
arraigned.
Hernandez's cousin, Tanya
Singleton, has been indicted on
charges including conspiracy to
commit accessory afer the fact
and criminal contempt. Prose-
cutors say she refused to testify
before the grand jury hearing
evidence in the case even though
she was ofered immunity. Single-
ton has pleaded not guilty to both
charges.
Hernandez has also been linked
to an investigation into a dou-
ble homicide in Boston in 2012.
While investigating Lloyd's death,
police found a sport utility vehi-
cle rented in Hernandez's name at
the home of Hernandez's uncle in
Bristol, Conn., that they had been
wanted in connection with those
killings.
Prosecutors in Hernandez
case seek judges recusal
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former New England Patriots NFL football player Aaron Hernandez attends a pretrial court hearing in Fall River, Mass., on
Wednesday, Oct. 9. Hernandez was indicted in August in the killing of 27-year-old Odin Lloyd, a semi-professional football
player from Boston who was dating the sister of Hernandezs girlfriend. He has pleaded not guilty.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The win is big for our


program and a great start
to our season. This only
brings us closer to our
goal of a national
championship.
JON GRAGG
Junior rower
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Kansas rowers train at the Boathouse, located in Burcham Park on the banks of the Kansas River. The mens rowing team did
well over the weekend at Head of the Oklahoma.
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