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Te University of Kansas is

the only institution in both


the Kansas Board of Regents
and Big 12 that does not ofer
a Spanish minor. However,
Student Senate and the
Department of Spanish and
Portuguese are working to
change that.
Te proposed Spanish minor
for Fall 2015 is currently set
to be heard by the Committee
on Undergraduate Studies &
Advising [CUSA]. A decision
should be made this fall, and
if approved, an announcement
will be made early next
year, said Robert Bayliss,
undergraduate studies chair
for the department of Spanish
and Portuguese.
Afer many students voiced
their desire for a Spanish
minor, previous student body
president Hannah Bolton
and previous vice-president
Brandon Woodard researched
and met with many groups and
administrators before putting
an ofcial resolution on the
Student Senate foor.
We started the minor
because Hannah Bolton and
Brandon Woodard approached
me to let the department
know how important the issue
was to students, said Stuart
Day, associate professor in
the Department of Spanish
and Portuguese. Tis is a
great example of student
government in action, Day
said.
Bayliss said theres been a
student demand for a Spanish
minor for as long as he can
remember, and hes been with
the University for more than
10 years.
Te minor could give
students the ability to become
linguistically confdent and
learn more about a diferent
culture without conficting
with their other academic
commitments, such as a major
would, Bayliss said.
Macie Rohr, a freshman from
Ellsworth, is a student who
said she would beneft from a
Spanish minor.
I havent declared a major
yet, but no matter what career
I choose, I would automatically
get a boost in pay for being
bilingual, especially in
Spanish, Rohr said. I have no
idea why the minor wouldnt
be approved. Im really
looking forward to it hopefully
passing.
Despite the minor being
more condensed than the
major, there are plenty of
similarities between the two,
Day said.
Students minoring in
Spanish will have the same
great opportunities to study
abroad our programs in
Barcelona, Buenos Aires and
Salamanca will all ofer courses
to the minor, Day said.
Te main distinction
between the two is the amount
of hours required for each.
While a Spanish major requires
a minimum of 32 hours, the
minor would require about 20
hours, depending on what the
College Academic Council and
the University decide.
Day said the department
wants to make sure current
students have the opportunity
to minor if they want to.
To accomplish this, the
department will allow students
to enroll for the minor upon
completing one Spanish class.
Although the minor has
always been an interest among
both professors and students,
no substantial efort was made
to propose the idea up until
about two years ago.
President Hannah Bolton
and I were the chief authors
of the resolution and were
fortunate to have over 40 of the
student senators and executive
staf members as sponsors to
the resolution, Woodard said
when writing and passing the
resolution back in 2012.
Te resolution ended up
passing with a vote of 68-3.
Bolton and Woodard then
compiled all of the months
worth of information and
began the lengthy process of
making formal proposals to
the Department of Spanish
and Portuguese, the sssociate
dean of Humanities, the dean
of the College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences, the provost and
the chancellor.
Upon the completion of
the formal proposals, the
Department of Spanish and
Portuguese took over the
process of moving the potential
minor forward.
Te ball is now in their
[Department of Spanish
and Portuguese] court with
structuring, designing and
implementing the minor,
Woodard said.
Afer months of diligent
work, they are fnally preparing
the proposal to be heard by
CUSA.
Edited by Drew Parks
Volume 128 Issue 9 Monday, September 8, 2014
All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2014 The University Daily Kansan
CLASSIFIEDS 7
CROSSWORD 6
CRYPTOQUIPS 6
OPINION 4
SPORTS 8
SUDOKU 6
Mostly sunny with zero
percent chance of rain.
Wind SE at 5 mph.
Its just another
manic Monday.
Index Dont
Forget
Todays
Weather
Sunny.
HI: 87
LO: 71
FOOTBALL
PAGE 8 Kansas defeatesSoutheast Missouri 34-28 Saturday
Kansan.com | The student voice since 1904
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
DEDICATED DONORS
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Former student body president Hannah Bolton and former student body vice president Brandon Woodard introduced in 2012 a resolution that would
offer a Spanish minor to students on campus. The resolution awaits passage from the Committee on Undergraduate Studies & Advertising.
Teachers, students await OK on Spanish minor
On Tuesday, KU Endowment
announced a record-breaking
level of fundraising in fscal
year 2014, with private donors
raising $253.2 million for the
University and the University
of Kansas Hospital, 45 percent
more than last years total of
$174.2 million.
Gifs given in fscal year
2014 count toward Far Above:
Te Campaign for Kansas,
which began in July 2008.
Donors are responding
to the Universitys goals
and aspirations, said Dale
Seuferling, the president of
Endowment. All of it is an
increase that provides new
resources for KU to achieve
its goals.
Projects made possible by
donor gifs in 2014 include
seven new professorships,
which increase salaries
for current professors and
create new positions, 91 new
scholarships and fellowships,
and a number of new
facilities, such as Capitol
Federal Hall; the DeBruce
Center; the Earth, Energy
and Environment Center;
and the hospitals Cambridge
North Project.
Seuferling said he credits
Endowments success in part
to the emphasis that is put
on the long-term process of
cultivating relationships with
donors.
We are taking the
Universitys needs, aspirations
and goals, and were sharing
them with donors in a way that
donors are being responsive,
Seuferling said. Donors are
saying, I believe in this, I
want to support this.
Student callers who work
at Endowment are tasked
with contacting alumni
for donations, and make it
possible for alumni to give
back to their alma mater, said
Cooper Christensen, a junior
from Medicine Lodge.
When alumni give gifs to
us, theyre excited to hear from
us, Christensen said. You
can just hear their passion for
KU. Teyre still excited about
the University afer being
away for 10, 20 years.
Christensen said he enjoys
connecting with alumni on a
personal level, and said hes
had a number of memorable
conversations with donors
that went beyond the topic of
the donation itself.
Ive taken a donation from
a woman that graduated from
KU in the 1940s, Christensen
said. She had no idea when
the last time shed even been
to KU was, but she was still
just incredibly excited about
it. People like that are great to
hear from.
Seuferling takes pride in
the fact that Endowments
eforts are a crucial part of the
Universitys growth.
It makes myself and the
team at KU Endowment
proud of our success and
proud that we can provide
this level of support for the
University, Seuferling said.
Knowing what the University
of Kansas is all about, relating
that to prospective donors,
and making that match.
Edited by Casey Hutchins
DALTON KINGERY
@dontonkingnews

When alumni give gifts to


us theyre excited to hear
from us. You can just hear
their passion for KU.
COOPER CHRISTENSEN
Student worker at Endowment
ALLISON CRIST
@AllisonCristUDK

I have no idea why the mi-


nor wouldnt be approved.
Im really looking forward
to it hopefully passing.
MACIE ROHR
Freshman from Ellsworth
PRIVATE DONATIONS
$253.2
MILLION
2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
$
1
7
4
.
2
$
1
5
6
.
5
$
1
5
3
.
2
$
1
2
2
.
4
$
1
1
6
$
1
0
5
.
1
FUNDRAISING IN MILLIONS
KU Endowment
Dale Seuferling, president
of Endowment, credits
Endowments success to its
focus on the long term.
KU Endowment receives record-breaking $253.2 million in gifts in 2014
A $350 million gif
pledged to Harvard Uni-
versitys School of Public
Health is the largest single
donation in the universitys
long history, ofcials said,
and will help bolster re-
search in several key areas
including global pandem-
ics.
Te donation, to be for-
mally announced today,
comes from a philanthropic
foundation established by
the family of T.H. Chan, a
Hong Kong real estate de-
veloper who died in 1986.
In a rarity for Harvard, the
school will be renamed the
Harvard T.H. Chan School
of Public Health. Te only
other school within the uni-
versity to bear an individ-
uals name is the Harvard
Kennedy School, named for
John F. Kennedy.
I think he would have
been very pleased ... that
the school would be part of
his legacy, said Dr. Gerald
Chan, describing his father
as a staunch supporter of
education who ofen helped
family friends pay for
schooling or study abroad.
It was very much in keep-
ing with how he lived his
life and what he held to be
important, said Chan, who
earned his own masters de-
gree from the public health
school in 1979.
Julio Frenk, the schools
dean, called the $350 mil-
lion endowment from Te
Morningside Foundation
a transformational gif,
one that will help students
and faculty working to stop
pandemics such as Ebola,
malaria, cancer, obesity,
and address global health
threats stemming from war,
poverty, environmental
hazards, and failing health
care systems.
We can apply it to the
priorities of the moment
and those priorities that
are likely to evolve because
public health is a very dy-
namic feld, Frenk said.
A researcher was already
involved in trying to trace
the origin of the current Eb-
ola outbreak in western Af-
rica, he said, while another
was examining how mobile
technology can be used to
track Ebola patients.
Proceeds from the gif
also will be used to expand
student fnancial aid and
provide loan forgiveness
to graduates who decide to
work in underserved U.S.
communities or poor coun-
tries. Te oldest continu-
ously operating school of
public health in the world,
it celebrated its centennial
anniversary last year.
Te largest previous single
gif to Harvard University
was $150 million for fnan-
cial aid given in February
by Kenneth Grifn, founder
of the Citadel hedge fund
management company.
Billionaire philanthropist
Hansjorg Wyss has made a
pair of $125 million gifs in
recent years to a bioengi-
neering institute.
What: Is This Real Life?
When: 5:30-7 p.m.
Where: Spencer Museum of Art
About: A KU Common Book Event.
What: Moonlight Movie: Grease
and Remember the Titans
When: 8 p.m. to midnight
Where: Potter Lake, Pavilion
About: A free double-feature show-
ing of two classic movies.
What: Study Abroad Fair
When: 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Where: Fourth Level, Kansas Union
About: Students can learn about
worldwide study abroad opportuni-
ties.
What: Dealing With Stress
When: 9-11 a.m.
Where: Joseph R. Pearson Hall
About: A free Human Resources
workshop open to the public.
What: Lawrence Farmers Market
When: 4-6 p.m.
Where: Downtown Lawrence
About: Open air market to select
fresh produce and baked goods from
the area.
What: New Employee Orientation
When: 8-10 a.m.
Where: Room 204 Joseph R. Pear-
son Hall
About: Information about the
Universitys mission, structure and
staff benets and opportunities.
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief
Emma LeGault
Managing editor
Madison Schultz
Digital editor
Hannah Barling
Production editor
Paige Lytle
Associate digital editors
Stephanie Bickel
Brent Burford
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
Advertising director
Christina Carreira
Sales manager
Tom Wittler
Digital media manager
Scott Weidner
NEWS SECTION EDITORS
News editor
Amelia Arvesen
Associate news editor
Ashley Booker
Arts & features editor
Lyndsey Havens
Sports editor
Brian Hillix
Associate sports editor
Blair Sheade
Special sections editor
Kate Miller
Copy chiefs
Casey Hutchins
Sarah Kramer
Art director
Cole Anneberg
Associate art director
Hayden Parks
Designers
Hallie Wilson
Clayton Rohlman
Opinion editor
Cecilia Cho
Multimedia editor
Tara Bryant
Associate multimedia editors
George Mullinix
James Hoyt
ADVISERS
Media director and
content strategist
Brett Akagi
Sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014 PAGE 2
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 rst copy is paid
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Additional copies of The Kansan
are 50 cents. Subscriptions can
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business ofce, 2051A Dole Human
Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside
Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN
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Check out KUJH-TV on Wow! 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.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
news
Wednesday, Sept. 10 Thursday, Sept. 11
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Thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 70s
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Sunny. Highs in the low 70s and lows
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Partly cloudy. Highs in the high 50s
and lows in the low 40s.
The
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TUESDAY
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LO: 73
PM thunderstorms. Highs in the low
90s and lows in the low 70s.
weather.com
Monday, Sept. 8 Tuesday, Sept. 9
Due to a change in the
United Healthcare Student
Resources health insurance
plan mandated by the federal
Afordable Care Act, many
students missed the deadline
to enroll for the insurance plan
ofered by Watkins Health
Center. However, an extended
deadline is now being ofered.
Te insurance company
changed the open enrollment
period so that it ended with the
frst day of school, said Diana
Malott, associate director
of Student Health Services.
However, this information
did not get out to students
before they arrived on campus,
making the enrollment period
much too tight. Because of
this, United has agreed to
extend the enrollment period
until Sept. 15.
While students may be
hesitant to get on a health
insurance plan due to the
cost, medical expenses are
one of the leading factors for
students not completing their
education, Malott said.
Health insurance can mean
the diference between being
successful in college or failing
due to an unexpected medical
expense, Malott said. Te
Kansas Board of Regents
determined many years ago
that sponsoring a health
education plan helps students
be successful.
Te Kansas Board of Regents
has sponsored this student
health insurance plan for
many years through United
Healthcare Student Resources.
Te student insurance covers
routine care at the campus
health centers, inpatient
hospital care and coverage
anywhere United health
insurance is accepted.
Te plans coverage began in
August and ends in July 2015,
and costs $1,489 for the year or
$124 per month, Malott said.
[Our plans cost] is much less
than health plans that can be
found on the federal exchanges
on the Internet or through
many employer groups, and
the benefts are equal since
our plan is ACA compliant,
Malott said. Weve also found
it may be signifcantly less than
parents are paying to keep
their students on their health
plans.
While the deadline may have
been extended, students are
asked to act quickly if they
want to get on Watkins health
insurance plan.
Students wishing to enroll
in the plan should contact
the Business Ofce at Student
Health Services, either in
person or at 785-864-9520,
to request the necessary
enrollment paperwork.
Edited by Yu Kyung Lee
ALLISON CRIST
@AllisonCristUDK
Watkins extends deadline for students
to sign up for health insurance plan
The Student Senate Court of
Appeals met Sunday night to
hear a complaint brought forth
by a group of freshmen who were
disqualied from the freshman
elections. The court denied
the appeal of the freshmen,
who asked to be allowed to
participate in the election.
Freshmen who choose to
run in the elections, which are
held every year at the start
of the school year to give the
freshman class representation,
have to get 25 signatures by
members of the freshman
class and a stamp from the
ofce of the Dean of their
college. This stamp certies
that the student is within
that school and a freshman.
Three freshmen who did not
get the stamp led were then
disqualied from the upcoming
election. The three freshmen
Brandon True, Corbin
Painter and McKenzie Ortiz
then led an appeal against
the Elections Commission
to the Court of Appeals.
The chair of the Court of
Appeals, Dylan Fehl, a senior
from Hutchinson, said the
Elections Commission did
not violate any rules and
they did everything correctly.
Fehl also encouraged the
disqualied senators to
nd a way to be involved
on campus, outside of
the freshman elections.
Only ve freshmen remain
in the freshman elections,
and there are only ve
freshman Senate spots so
everyone on the ballot will
receive a spot in Senate.
Miranda Davis
Harvards health school
to get record $350M gift
ASSOCIATED PRESS
9/11 museum shows SEALs
shirt from bin Laden raid
Te shirt a Navy SEAL wore
in the raid that killed Osama
bin Laden and a special coin
given to a CIA ofcer who
played a key role in fnding
him are being displayed at the
Sept. 11 museum, adding po-
tent symbols of the terrorist
attacks afermath days before
their anniversary.
Te items are going on view
Sunday at the ground zero
museum, where leaders see
them as an important and
moving addition to a collec-
tion that ofen uses personal
artifacts to explore the events
and impact of 9/11.
Te death of Osama bin
Laden is a huge part of the
history, and we have an abso-
lute obligation to tell it, said
Joe Daniels, National Sept.
11 Memorial Museum pres-
ident. Te display, he said,
allows millions of visitors
the chance to recognize the
extraordinary bravery of the
men and women who sacri-
fce so much for this country
at home and abroad.
Te shirt and coin will join
an existing display with a
brick from the compound in
Abbottabad, Pakistan, where
the terrorist at the helm of the
attacks was killed.
Te uniform shirt, tan with
camoufage sleeves and an
American fag patch on the
right shoulder stars for-
ward to invoke the historical
role of a fag-bearer leading a
charge into battle belonged
to a now-retired member of
SEAL Team Six, which put
an end to the long manhunt
for the worlds most wanted
terrorist.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
3 disqualied from
freshman elections
A week from today is your
last chance to drop a class
without a W appearing on
your transcript.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014 PAGE 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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On Tursday the 2014-15
KU Women of Distinction
were honored before their
families, friends and previous
winners at the Kansas Union.
Te calendar with all 27 wom-
en featured was also available
at the reception.
Women of Distinction are
defned as women who are
making a diference through
their accomplishments, their
involvement, their role as
a mentor and a role model,
and their overall excellence
in their careers, said Kathy
Rose-Mockry, executive di-
rector of the Emily Taylor
Center for Women & Gender
Equity.
Te Women of Distinction
calendar was created almost
11 years ago afer a few wom-
en expressed their distaste for
the Women of KU calendars
presentation of women in
swimsuits.
Women felt it was demean-
ing to women and in thinking
about it, we felt like there was a
better way to portray women,
to communicate women from
a point of strength to chal-
lenge some of the inequities
that actually exist for women
by using this particular medi-
um, Rose-Mockry said.
Rachel Mae Bullock, a senior
from Overland Park, was se-
lected as one of the Women
of Distinction this year for her
involvement with her sorority
Delta Delta Delta and GaDu-
Gi, an organization that ofers
services for victims of sexual
assault.
Te values of friendship,
self-sacrifce and truth I hold
really close to my heart and
those are at the core of [Delta
Delta Delta], Bullock said. I
think just fnding an outlet for
your passion to be ignited and
to have people around you
who support you has led me
to being in this room.
Another woman of distinc-
tion, Cynthia Marta from
Rantoul, Ill., graduated from
the University last spring and
was chosen for her work with
disability and accessibility.
Its probably one of the big-
gest honors Ive ever gotten
in my life, Marta said. Its
defnitely something I never
thought would happen, and I
feel really honored to have the
Women of Distinction title.
I think that its nice to raise
awareness for accessibility and
disability-related stuf, which
is what I was awarded for with
my two co-awarders. So, Im
just really excited to have the
awareness for that too. Not
even just me but the topic it-
self.
Although Marta said being
selected as a woman of dis-
tinction raises awareness for
issues the women advocate,
Bullock also said the honor of
being selected comes with a
responsibility.
I think it means where much
is given, much is expected,
Bullock said. So while were
celebrating today, its a call to
action more than anything. If
people see you and they know
you have a stance on certain
global, national issues, its
your job to continue to strive
to get your community to
where it needs to be.
Mary Fry, associate professor
in the Department of Health,
Sport and Exercise Science,
and director of the KU Sport
and Exercise Psychology Lab,
was also selected as one of the
Women of Distinction. Fry
was selected for her work with
physical activity and sports
psychology.
Fry said she thinks the Wom-
en of Distinction calendar is
much more encouraging.
I think its a cool thing that
[what] Kathy and everyone
thats involved in that is do-
ing to just promote a really
positive image of women as
being strong and being able to
make a positive diference in
the world in just so many, so
many ways, Fry said.
Fry also said the calendar is a
testament of women working
for change.
I think when we look
around in the U.S., and we
look around the globe, theres
still a lot of girls and women
that dont have equal rights,
and theyre not in good situa-
tions, Fry said. Te calendar
is one small way of highlight-
ing women who are trying to
make a diference on the front
and trying to mentor women
and recognize mentors that
have been so key in their life.
Looking back, Rose-Mock-
ry said the intention was
not to create the calendar
for this long.
I dont know that we knew
when we began wed be able
to continue doing it year afer
year, Rose-Mockry said. But
based on the feedback we got
and peoples belief that this
really does matter, it really
makes a diference to portray
women in empowered ways,
we felt it was important to
continue.
Edited by Emily Brown
Women of Distinction calendar honors achievements
MARIA SANCHEZ
@MariaSanchezKU
MARIA SANCHEZ/KANSAN
Kathy Rose-Mockry, executive director of the Emily Taylor Center for Women & Gender Equity, says a few words before the calendar reception for KU
Women of Distinction begins. The four women on stage with her are Women of Distinction from previous years. From left to right: Ronda Levaldo (2010),
Ann Nzuki (2009), Catherine Bell (2004) and Elise Dickens (2004).
Topeka police ofcer shot,
killed at routine car stop
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Topeka police officer was
shot and killed Sunday while
making a car stop, authorities
said.
Shawnee County Sheriff
Herman Jones said at a news
conference that the officer
had stopped a car in east To-
peka, and in the middle of
the stop the officer was shot.
Authorities said the driver
then fled.
The sheriff s department
said authorities got the call
about 4:45 p.m. and re-
sponders found the critically
wounded officer, who was
taken to a hospital. Jones said
the officer was pronounced
dead there about 15 minutes
later.
Jones identified the officer
as Cpl. Jason Harwood, 40,
a decorated 15-year veteran
who leaves behind a wife and
two children. He served in its
hit-and-run and canine units
before being promoted to
corporal in May 2012.
He loved his job, said in-
terim Police Chief Tony Kirk.
He was a dedicated law en-
forcement officer. Were go-
ing to miss him.
Kansas Attorney Gener-
al Derek Schmidt issued a
statement calling the officers
death an unspeakable loss.
The sheriff s office said a
30-year-old male suspect was
taken into custody without
incident around 8 p.m. in
Lawrence, about 20 miles to
the east. Jones said author-
ities are still investigating
whether there were more
people in the car.
The sheriff s office typically
investigates killings of Tope-
ka police officers. In Decem-
ber 2012, two Topeka offi-
cers were fatally shot as they
investigated reported drug
activity in the parking lot of
a Topeka grocery store. The
suspect was later shot and
killed after a standoff with
authorities.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014 PAGE 4
Wescoe Beach is a crimson and
blue ocean lled with Jayhawks
wearing yoga pants and drinking
pumpkin spice lattes.
My roommate sounds like
Gilbert Gottfried :/
I feel unsafe knowing that I go to
school with admitted rapists who
went unpunished. #NOmeansNO
Disappointed in the all the Jay-
hawks that call it fog and
not phog. The opportunity
is right there!!
Stop sending me FarmVille invites!
No one plays it anymore! Its over.
It died with all your virtual crops.
I didnt know Master Chief
worked for the LPD!
I thought mosquito bites couldnt
get any worse. Until one bit
me on my toe.
Walking up a hill with a backpack
that probably weighs half as much
as I do. I need to rethink this...
FFA: the original Yik Yak
No better way to start an 8 a.m.
class than being ridiculed by the
professor for being tired.
Was trying to save an overturned
cicada with the newspaper on the
sidewalk and it clipped my ear...
Can I be Van Gogh now?
Non-consensual sex IS rape. You
wouldnt say non-breathing
swimming, youd say drowning.
Call it what it is.
I love the Daily Kansan! Confes-
sion time...the rst thing I
always turn to: the FFA.
I like to make it obnoxiously
evident that I hate when people
smoke on campus #Gross
Seventeen Magazine is on
campus. I think were a little
too old for that...
PA: Getting FFA of the Day on my
rst post!? You can call me FFA
BALLER for now on... that is all.
Buses, you know I love you,
but we need to talk...
Students who dont feel safe walk-
ing to the dorms should download
SafeTrek app which alerts
police of your GPS location
if something happens
To the guy with the supernatural
tattoo on his chest.. you dont
know me, but Im in love with you.
Super Seniors have earned respect
for sticking it out and nishing
their degree, even if it takes
longer then the unrealistic
4-year timeline.
Dear UDK, thank you.
Text your FFA
submissions to
(785) 289-8351 or
at kansan.com
HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR CONTACT US
LETTER GUIDELINES
Send letters to opinion@kansan.com. Write LET-
TER TO THE EDITOR in the email 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.
Should there be more
women hosts for late
night talk shows?
FFA OF THE DAY

The Wi-Fi isnt working again, and the bus I was on broke down,
but Im walking on sunshine today because I just
found out Im cancer free!
O
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
opinion
Follow us on Twitter @KansanOpinion.
Tweet us your opinions, and we just
might publish them.
Emma LeGault, editor-in-chief
elegault@kansan.com
Madison Schultz, managing editor
mschultz@kansan.com
Hannah Barling, digital editor
hbarling@kansan.com
Cecilia Cho, opinion editor
ccho@kansan.com
Christina Carreria, advertising director
ccarreria@kansan.com
Tom Wittler, print sales manager
twittler@kansan.com
Scott Weidner, digital media manager
sweidneri@kansan.com
Jon Schlitt, sales and marketing adviser
jschlitt@kansan.com
THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Members of the Kansan Editorial Board
are Emma Legault, Madison Schultz,
Cecilia Cho, Hannah Barling and Christina
Carreria.
I
n the wake of the sexual
assault controversy at KU,
the chancellor emailed
students Thursday afternoon
with a request: educate and
participate.
In the news release sent by
KU Chancellor Bernadette
Gray-Little, the topics
covered were: educating the
community on preventable
measures, the confidentiality
of sexual assault cases
and the measures taken to
conduct investigations.
We cannot have police
officers in every room or
at every party, and you
wouldnt want us to, read
the chancellors email. So
we also expect you each
one of you to look out for
each other and to be willing
to take action when you
know something is wrong,
or to report to the proper
authorities so they can take
action.
There were no answers to
why the student who raped
the girl got away with writing
an essay no expulsion
nor community service in
the least. But there was a
definitive announcement
urging students to participate
in Sexual Awareness Week
and learn what constitutes
consent scheduled this fall.
The chancellors
insensitivity to the reopened
and highly publicized case
via the Huffington Post is
baffling.
Highlights point to student
responsibility, participation
and education, but nowhere
in the letter does it mention
action to address the
victims concerns. Instead
of directing action toward
correcting the officers
unprofessional handling of
the case, KU leaders handed
students a stale letter: an
email sent throughout
the student body KUs
core without reassuring
them their safety will be
proactively supported.
Effort is starkly different
from action, which is lacking
in the administration.
Vicky Diaz-Camacho is from
San Pedro, Calif., majoring
in journalism and works as a
journalist and photographer for
Center for Remote Sensing of Ice
Sheets (CReSIS)
Chancellors response to rape case insensitive

@SChasenKU
@KansanOpinion I dont know if
theres a correct answer, but its in-
teresting that there are so few. I can
think of just 1 (Chelsea Handler)
KANSAN CARTOON
INTERESTED IN SUBMITTING
YOUR OWN CARTOON?
EMAIL EDITOR@KANSAN.COM
News as of Late
by Jake Kaufmann
@dallegre
@KansanOpinion Sure
O
n Aug. 26, I wrapped
myself in a blanket,
plopped on the
couch and prepared myself
for the Chelsea Lately
finale. As a dedicated
Chelsea Handler fan, I was
upset to see the show come
to a close. Handler is a
hilarious, vulgar comedian,
and she was also the only
female late-night host. The
late-night scene has always
been dominated by male
hosts Jimmy Fallon, Seth
Meyers, David Letterman,
Conan OBrien and Jimmy
Kimmel. While watching
the finale, I wondered who,
and if, there would be a
replacement for Handler as
the woman of late night.
Women like Ellen
DeGeneres, Oprah Winfrey
and Tyra Banks run the
daytime talk show positions,
but late-night television slots
are saved for men. Handler
was the first woman to
change the status quo, and
unlike other female talk
show hosts, she had a crude,
almost masculine sense of
humor.
I found it strange that the
only female host on late
night had a personality that
would seem masculine. If
Handler had acted as a more
feminine host, would she
have been as successful?
For her finale, Handler
pulled out all the chops. She
made it clear that Chelsea
Lately was going to go out
with a bang. The show was
flooded with celebrities
like Dave Grohl, Gerard
Butler, Gwen Stefani,
Selena Gomez and many
more all there to support
Handlers final show.
Ellen DeGeneres opened
with a hilarious sketch,
while Miley Cyrus and 50
Cent performed. Jennifer
Aniston, Sandra Bullock
and Mary McCormack
hosted a hilarious reverse
intervention for Handler,
and almost all of her
comedic staff made an
appearance.
When the show came to
an end, I was left thinking
about how boring the late-
night scene will be without
her and her trusty sidekick,
Chuy Bravo. I will miss
cracking up to Handlers
inappropriate and politically
incorrect jokes. Chelsea
Lately was not just popular
because she pushed the
boundaries; the show was
popular because it featured
a strong female character
in a male-dominated time
slot. Say what you will about
how Handler was too rude
or provocative for television,
but she is a role model for
women and proof you dont
need to be male to host a
late-night talk show.
Madeline Umali is a
sophomore from St. Louis
studying journalism
Chelsea Handler a late-night TV role model
By Madeline Umali
@madelineumali
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014
A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
arts & features
HOROSCOPES
Because the stars
know things we dont.
PAGE 5
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 5
Put a dream into writing
under the Full Moon in Pisces. A
turning point arises backstage.
Peaceful introspection reaps re-
sults today and tomorrow. Others
want your attention. Calm and
clarify. Inspire with simplicity.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6
A new direction presents itself
regarding group participation
with the Pisces Full Moon.
Complete previous efforts grace-
fully, and prepare. Working in
teamwork gets you much farther
today and tomorrow.
Watch for hidden pitfalls.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 6
Use social grace, especially
in an uncomfortable moment.
An opportunity to increase your
inuence and fulll a fantasy
arises with the Full Moon in
Pisces. You get more than
expected. Explain and
schedule carefully.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7
Chores interfere with romantic
fantasies. Pay bills and save
up. A new adventure calls to you
under the Pisces Full Moon. Con-
sider the unlikely when planning.
Focus on the main objective.
Study for a test.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6
Seek a win-win solution
regarding shared nances under
the Full Moon in Pisces. What at
rst seems strange turns out to
work well. Encourage another
to put a dream in the budget.
Compromise.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7
Clear up confusion before
proceeding. A Full Moon turning
point arises in a partnership.
Change things around. Check
out a vacation destination.
Renovate your workspace. Tight
scheduling is key. Set the pace.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8
Embrace a new career direction
under this Pisces Full Moon.
Share your dreams and spec-
ulate on fantasies. Find what
you need far away. Dont step on
sensitive toes. Turn your ideas
into scheduled tasks.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6
Rest and play under the Full
Moon in Pisces. Begin a new
game. Physical activity gets
your passion out. Relax in as
much luxury as you can muster,
without maxing out funds.
Invite family.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 5
The Full Moon in Pisces illumi-
nates a new phase at home.
Youre in tune with a distant
loved one. Opposites attract.
Checks and balances are need-
ed. Youre gaining spirituality.
Investigate the unknowable.
Play in the water.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6
Present a balanced report. Open
a new communications door
under the Full Moon. Its better
to save than to spend now.
Count your winnings. Scoop up
both gold and straw. Shop
carefully for a family event.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
A new nancial opportunity
arises with the Pisces Full Moon.
Dont tell anyone yet. Re-afrm
a commitment. A female points
out an inconsistency. Keep
the goal in mind. Make a
decision you can live with.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is an 8
Youre in a state of ux. Begin a
new phase in personal develop-
ment with this Full Moon in your
sign. Follow a hunch. Write down
your dreams. Find someone youd
like to play with. Make magic.
GEORGE MULLINIX /KANSAN
AARON GROENE/KANSAN
Andrew Mitchell, a lifelong woodworker from Lecompton, displays his work at the Lawrence Arts Festival on
Sunday at South Park.
QUICK QUESTION
WHATS YOUR FAVORITE THING ABOUT EACH OTHER?
?
?
Arts festival features KU graduate
Lawrence held its 35th An-
nual Fall Arts and Crafs
Festival in South Park on
Sunday. An estimated 6,000
to 8,000 people attended the
event this weekend, either
showcasing or visiting more
than 140 exhibits including
arts and crafs vendors, live
music, food and activities for
children.
All of the art being dis-
played is handmade and in-
cludes quilts, doll furniture,
pottery, jewelry, bags and
purses, photography, wood
furniture, birdhouses, and
much more, said Duane Pe-
terson, the Lawrence Parks
and Recreation departments
Special Events supervisor.
KU graduate Jessica Stue-
ver proudly showed of her
collection of handmade chil-
drens hair bows.
Stuever was born and raised
in Lawrence and now lives in
Bonner Springs. A proud Jay-
hawk, Stuevers favorite part
about Lawrence has always
been Massachusetts Street
and the Universitys beauti-
ful campus. She majored in
applied behavioral science,
minored in psychology and
became a preschool teacher
afer graduation.
She said the girls she taught
were the inspiration behind
her business. She had one girl
in class with long hair that
she wanted to help keep out
of her face. Stuevers business
has now been running for
about six months.
Tis festival really was my
frst show, Stuever said. I
mainly promote the bows by
posting pictures on Facebook
along with having the girls in
my class wear them.
Te festival also included a
variety of activities for chil-
dren, from a moon bounce to
a miniature pony ride. For the
older crowd, live music was
held every few hours. Artists
like Te Beer Bellies, Lonnie
Ray Blues Band, Te Good
Ole Boys, Sideways Glance,
Billy Ebeling, Te Late for
Dinner Band and Te Law-
rence City Band performed at
the Arts and Crafs Festival.
Edited by Benjamin Carroll
DELANEY REYBURN
@DelaneyReyburn
Emma and Bailey are sisters from Olathe. Theyre also sorority sisters in Alpha Delta Pi.

Bailey is so much
more outgoing than
I am. Which is pretty
nice considering Im
kind of quiet; I have
a tight little group
of friends but shes
friends with all of
these people.
EMMA BARNHART
Junior
Emma always has
good insight; I hav-
ent been through all
of the stuff she has,
but I know shes
always there and
I can always go to
her.
BAILEY BARNHART
Freshman
Colorado town becomes beer commercial set
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CRESTED BUTTE, Colo.
Up for whatever? For some in
the tiny and tony Colorado
resort town of Crested Butte,
that would be a no.
Tey aren't too thrilled with
a virtual takeover by Anheus-
er-Busch this weekend to flm
an over-the-top commercial
for Bud Light beer and its "Up
for Whatever" ad campaign.
Some didn't take too kind-
ly to the secretive event,
arranged between Anheus-
er-Busch and town leaders.
Others embraced it.
Te beer giant agreed to pay
$500,000 to Crested Butte
to paint several blocks of a
central street blue. Dozens
of workers installed a sand
volleyball court, a multistory
cowboy boot statue, a goril-
la and a director's chair that
comfortably seats six people.
Some 1,000 revelers were to be
fown in for the event and
outsiders were banned for the
duration.
For two days, Crested Butte
was becoming Whatever,
USA. All painted in "Bud
Light Blue."
"It's been a very divisive
thing in town, for sure," said
Shaun Horne, owner of the
Oh-be-Joyful Gallery. "Some
people are not into putting a
corporate label on the town."
Further upsetting some: Te
whole plan was secret until
about two weeks ago. Business
owners worried about losing
customers over the weekend,
and their town's character,
even if for only two days.
Crested Butte, population
1,500, is more of a craf beer
town, home to art galleries,
artists and second-home own-
ers. It can be reached by one
paved highway or two dirt
roads over mountain passes.
Tere are no fast food restau-
rants or chain stores.
Anheuser-Busch scrambled
to build support for "What-
ever."
"Tere was a level of fear
around the uncertainty of
what we were trying to do, and
we completely understand
that," company spokesman
Nick Kelly said. "We worked
closely with the town, and we
also worked closely with a lot
of individuals on a one-to-one
basis to make sure we can an-
swer those questions and con-
cerns."
Te commercial is a sequel
to a Bud Light "Up for What-
ever" Super Bowl ad that fea-
tured Don Cheadle, Arnold
Schwarzenegger and OneRe-
public.
A steady stream of resi-
dents lined up Tursday to
get a bracelet to join the par-
ty. Several noted that Crested
Butte has hosted the Winter X
Games and survived.
"It's a once in a lifetime
thing. Te community is ev-
erything you would want for
a party town," said Christine
Lyerly, a part-time resident.
And as for Bud Light Blue,
"it's not an actual color like
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Workers on Wednesday install a Welcome to Whatever, USA sign across Elk Avenue, in Crested Butte, Colo. Anheuser-Busch agreed to pay $500,000 to
convert the town into a set for a Bud Light commercial, a sequel to the companys Up for Whatever Super Bowl ad.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 6
SUDOKU
CRYPTOQUIP
KANSAN PUZZLES
SPONSORED BY
Follow
@KansanNews
on Twitter
Joan Rivers remembered at
star-studded funeral Sunday
http://goo.gl/ANhPT7
CHECK OUT
THE ANSWERS
KANSAN.COM
NEW YORK Howard
Stern delivered the eulogy,
Broadway singer-actress Au-
dra McDonald sang "Smile"
and bagpipers played "New
York, New York" at Joan
Rivers' funeral Sunday, a
star-studded send-of that
like the late comedian her-
self brought together the
worlds of Hollywood, theater,
fashion and media.
At a funeral beftting a su-
perstar, the New York City
Gay Men's Chorus sang
Broadway hits including "Hey
Big Spender" before six-time
Tony Award-winner McDon-
ald sang her tribute to Rivers,
a champion of theater for de-
cades.
Tributes and reminiscences
were delivered by TV anchor
Deborah Norville, close friend
Margie Stern, columnist Cin-
dy Adams and Rivers' daugh-
ter, Melissa, who spoke about
how she respected her mother,
who died Tursday at 81, and
appreciated everyone's sup-
port.
Hugh Jackman sang "Qui-
et Please, Tere's a Lady On
Stage" at the end of the memo-
rial, and bagpipers from the
New York City Police Depart-
ment played on the streets as
mourners fled out of Temple
Emanu-El, many dabbing
their eyes.
"She would love this. We've
all said this so many times:
Te one person who would
really think this is the greatest
thing ever is the lady who it's
all about, and she's not here,"
said Norville aferward, amid
the throngs of well-wishers
and sound of bagpipes.
A legion of notables turned
out to remember Rivers: co-
medians Kathy Grifn, Rosie
O'Donnell and Whoopi Gold-
berg; E! network "Fashion
Police" colleague and friend
Kelly Osbourne; Sarah Jessica
Parker and Matthew Broder-
ick; and celebrity doctor Meh-
met Oz.
Teater stars Bernadette
Peters, Alan Cumming and
Tommy Tune were there. Re-
cord producer Clive Davis
was, too. Fashion designers
Carolina Herrera, Dennis
Basso and Michael Kors were
in attendance. Stars from TV
such as Barbara Walters, Ger-
aldo Rivera, Diane Sawyer,
Kathie Lee Giford, Hoda Kotb
and Andy Cohen. Late night
band leader Paul Shafer. And
moguls Barry Diller, Donald
Trump and Steve Forbes.
"It was uplifing. We were
celebrating her life," Basso
said.
Mourners had lined up out-
side the Fifh Avenue syna-
gogue and waited for their
names to be checked against
a list before entering. A crowd
of media stood watch behind
barriers, and fans from as far
away as Australia and England
lined the streets.
Actress Susan Claassen, who
met Rivers in London in 2008
when both had one-woman
shows, came from Tucson,
Ariz., to honor her friend.
"I always like to say that in a
world of knockofs, Joan was
an original," she said.
Te comedian detailed in
her 2012 book "I Hate Every-
one ... Starting With Me" that
she hoped for "a huge show-
biz afair with lights, camer-
as, action" and "Hollywood
all the way." Instead of a rab-
bi talking, Rivers asked for
"Meryl Streep crying, in fve
diferent accents" and "a wind
machine so that even in the
casket my hair is blowing just
like Beyoncs." Indeed, her
wishes were so important they
were printed in the funeral
program.
Te funeral program also in-
cluded a page with three clas-
sic Rivers' lines printed out:
"Can we talk?" ''Who are you
wearing?" and "Because I'm a
funny person."
Rivers was a trailblazer for
all comics, but especially for
women. Te raspy-voiced
blonde with the brash New
York accent was a TV talk
show host, stage, flm and TV
actress, fashion critic, and she
sold a line of jewelry.
Te cause of death is be-
ing investigated. Rivers was
hospitalized on Aug. 28 afer
she went into cardiac arrest
during a routine procedure
at a doctor's ofce. Te New
York state health department
is investigating the circum-
stances, and the New York
City medical examiner said
tests to determine the cause of
death were inconclusive.
Her publicist said that in
lieu of fowers, donations can
be made to God's Love, We
Deliver; Guide Dogs for the
Blind; or Our House.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Melissa Rivers and her son Cooper Endicott walk to a waiting car after the funeral service for comedian Joan
Rivers at Temple Emanu-El in New York on Sunday. Rivers died Thursday at 81.
Oprahs tour kicks off in Atlanta
ATLANTA Oprah Win-
frey and a team of guests on
Saturday completed the frst
stop of an eight-city U.S.
tour of "Oprah's Te Life You
Want Weekend," rocking an
Atlanta arena where thou-
sands danced, applauded and
sought inspiration for trans-
forming their lives.
Atlanta was the opening city
and featured Oprah and such
guests as authors Deepak
Chopra and Elizabeth Gilbert,
inspirational speaker Iyanla
Vanzant and pastor Rob Bell.
A statement released by or-
ganizers said the arena tour
was intended as a catalyst for
a wider movement to engage,
encourage and empower
women.
Winfrey spoke about iden-
tifying one's life purpose
and led exercises on taking
actions to reach those goals.
At times there were funny
refections on life while other
soul-searching moments led
to crying as people consid-
ered areas in their lives they
wished to change.
Tronged by thousands in
a mostly female crowd, the
Atlanta event that opened Fri-
day was styled as somewhat
of an intimate gathering with
Oprah. She joked about how
friends found it interesting
that so many would attend
her tour when she can't sing
or dance. Her comments drew
laughter from the crowd.
Organizers said that the tour
is planning upcoming stops
in Auburn Hills, Michigan;
Washington, D.C.; Newark,
N.J.; Houston; Miami; Seattle
and a fnal date Nov. 15 in San
Jose, Calif.
At the end of two days in
Atlanta, Oprah teared up as
she thanked the audience for
trusting that "this was worthy
of you spending your hard-
earned money to be here" and
by telling the audience at the
end: "Together we rise."
Dr. Joe Bianco, an emergen-
cy room doctor from Isles
of Palm, S.C., brought his
wife Melissa to the event as a
birthday present. He said he
thought it touched many and
people would be increasingly
talking about the tour on so-
cial media.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oprah Winfrey speaks on stage
at the Oprahs The Life You Want
Weekend in Atlanta.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2014 PAGE 7 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SEEKING PART-TIME STUDENT
Fast-paced outpatient orthopedic clinic is currently
looking for a student to assist a physician. Respon-
sibilities include researching medical projects and
case studies, organizing files as well as occasion-
ally assisting in clinic with patient care.
Must have excellent written and verbal communica-
tion skills and proficient computer skills in both
Microsoft and with a Mac. Candidate must be
detail-oriented and maintain a high level of accu-
racy, dependability and organizational skills.
Student in junior year of college or younger with
healthcare experience preferred.
Application Deadline: September 12th
Please send cover letter and resume to:
Attn: Administrator/ Dena Johnston
1112 W. 6th Street, Ste 124
Lawrence, KS 66044
Or Via Fax: 785-843-3259
Email: djohnston@orthokansasllc.com
Direct: 785-838-7846
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DAILY DEBATE RESULTS: SEPT. 4, 2014
Will Charlie Weis be on the hot seat after this season?
60 PEOPLE POLLED
VOTE FOR THE MOST CONVINCING
ARGUMENT AT KANSAN.COM
BEN LIPOWITZ/KANSAN
Senior outside hitter Chelsea Albers prepares for a new play during Kansas game against Creighton on Aug. 30.
This weekend at the Pioneer Classic tournament in Denver, Albers was named the Most Valuable Player, giving
her the rst MVP honor of her collegiate career.
Volleyball wins second consecutive invitational
Kansas volleyball won its
second invitational of the year
in the second week of its season,
defeating Denver in four sets
Saturday night to clinch the
Pioneer Classic.
Te Jayhawks won all three
matches only losing one set
in the entire tournament and
improved their season record to
5-1.
Ofensively, Kansas was led
by senior outside hitter Chelsea
Albers, who ended each match
with double-digit kills; she was
the only player on the team to
do so.
Albers was named the Pioneer
Classic Most Valuable Player,
which was the frst MVP honor
of her collegiate career.
It feels great, Albers said.
I think several people in the
tournament, let alone our team,
deserved it, but it feels like a
good accomplishment. So Im
very honored to receive it.
Joining Albers on the
All-Tournament team was
freshman setter Ainise Havili.
Havili has made her second
All-Tournament team afer
doing so last weekend. She set a
new career high with 55 assists
against Denver, ending the
tournament with 129 overall.
Im just a setter, so the only
way I can get All-Tournament
team is if the rest of the team
performs, Havili said. So I
think that shows a lot on their
part as well.
Afer sweeping both Bradley
and Sam Houston State, the
Jayhawks faced Denver on
Saturday night to determine the
winner of the invitational.
Kansas once again started the
match in blazing fashion, taking
the frst set 25-15.
Unlike Bradley and Sam
Houston State, Denver did not
go down quietly.
Te Pioneers went point for
point with Kansas the next two
sets, falling 24-26 in the second
set before winning the third set
by the same score.
In the fourth set, both teams
tried to gain the lead, but the set
stayed close throughout.
Down 21-22 and threatened
with a daunting ffh set, coach
Ray Bechard called a timeout to
regroup his squad. Te timeout
did the trick as the Jayhawks
rallied four points straight to
win the set 25-22 and win the
invitational.
Its going to be tight in the
end, Bechard said. And we
stepped up and got a service ace
at a key time and got some huge
blocks from Chelsea Albers to
end it.
Senior outside hitter Sara
McClinton had a special
moment in the tournament as
well, reaching the 1,000-kill
milestone during the Jayhawks
frst match against Bradley.
Now McClinton needs just
118 more kills on the season to
move into the top 10 of Kansas
career kills list.
Ever since I came in as a
freshman, I really wanted to
make my mark on the Kansas
volleyball program, McClinton
said. So I think that would help
me leave my thumbprint on the
volleyball program. And thats
one of the goals, to keep moving
up.
Edited by Yu Kyung Lee
MATT CORTE
@corte_udk

... we stepped up and got a


service ace at a key time and
got some huge blocks from
Chelsea Albers to end it.
RAY BECHARD
Volleyball coach
Mens golf earns top-3 tourney nish
Kansas mens golf fnished in
third place in the Wolverine
Intercollegiate over the
weekend in an 11-team feld in
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Te team didnt fnish in the
top-three in any tournament
last year and was just one
stroke away from tying for
second, shooting four over
par for the tournament and an
even-par 281 in the fnal round
on Sunday.
Kansas had three players
fnish in the top-10 juniors
Connor Peck and Ben Welle
and senior Bryce Brown. Peck
led the Jayhawks with the
best round of the weekend,
fnishing in a tie for seventh
with one under par. He had the
third-best single round Sunday
with 68 strokes, including six
birdies.
Welle and Brown were in
a three-way tie for ninth
place, shooting an even par.
Brown led the Jayhawks in the
individual portion with a score
of 213 and even par.
We played good today, but
not quite good enough to fnish
second, coach Jamie Bermel
said. Connor Peck and Ben
Welle played well. Bryce Brown
played as an individual and
also played real solid.
Kansas sat at third place
afer Saturdays two rounds
and sustained its position
afer Sundays fnal round had
ended.
Te other golfers who
helped pull out a victory
included senior Logan Philley,
sophomore Chase Hanna and
freshman Brock Drogosch.
Philley fnished tied for 23rd
with a score of 217 (+4), Hanna
tied for 32nd shooting 220 (+7)
and Drogosch tied for 42nd
with a 222 (+9).
Kansas will go on to play in
the Ram Masters Invitational
in Fort Collins, Colo., on Sept.
16-17. Te team fnished eighth
in the event last season.
I hope we can tighten up
a few things this week before
we head to Colorado, Bermel
said.
Edited by Yu Kyung Lee

We played good today, but


not quite good enough to
nish second.
JAMIE BERMEL
Mens golf coach
CONNOR OBERKROM
@coberkro
Follow
@KansanSports
on Twitter
WANT SPORTS UPDATES ALL DAY LONG?
Volume 128 Issue 9 kansan.com Monday, September 8, 2014
By Blair Sheade
@RealBlairSheady
COMMENTARY
Kansas football
cant handle
the lead
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
S
T
he past couple seasons
under coach Charlie
Weis, scoring has been
a problem, especially in the
frst quarter. Te pro-style
ofense that Weis ran wasnt
working, and thats why Kansas
hired John Reagan as ofensive
coordinator to run his spread
ofense.
Te change was proven early
as the Jayhawks sped out to a
24-0 lead afer the frst quarter,
but proved they cant handle
the lead in a 34-28 Kansas win
against the Southeast Missouri
State Redhawks.
One of our biggest point of
emphasis was a fast start, Weis
said. Once we got into the
second half, it seemed like we
didnt have the same juice.
We can talk about the three
touchdowns in the frst quarter,
but the main focus is the
Jayhawks were stomped in the
second half 28-3 by a Division
1-AA program.
We came out great, going up
24-0, but afer halfime we came
out fat, quarterback Montell
Cozart said. Props to SEMO.
Tey started to pick it up, and
you can see they had a lot more
emotion than us.
Te Jayhawks must have
thought they had the game in
the bag because they played
like it in the second half. When
Weis was asked why the team
played poorly in the second
half, Weis said he didnt have an
answer.
I can tell you my conjecture,
Weis said. My conjecture is
they were so antsy and anxious
to get going, I think they might
not be used to success, to be
playing on top. Too many times
the games are close and all of
the sudden its 24-0 and I dont
think you ever stop playing hard
and go into a comfort zone,
but I think that youre fnally
feeling good about yourself for
a change. So many times youre
playing from behind rather than
playing ahead, it might have
even caught them of guard that
things were going so well.
Wait, what? Weis basically said
the team cant handle winning.
Tis team hasnt seen many
wins over the past couple years,
but youre trying to tell me
none of these players have had
success before, and dont know
how to handle success? Tat
statement by Weis should mean
that these guys are going to have
trouble keeping a lead because
none of them understand what
it takes to be winners. Weis said
that winning comes difcult
when it doesnt happen much.
Whens the last time theyre
up 24-0 in the frst quarter?
Weis said. Sometimes, just like
you have a tough time handling
failure, sometimes when you
have success you get shocked,
too.
Weis was right. Te last time
Kansas was up 24-0 on a team
was back in 2011 against New
Mexico State. Even though
Kansas will walk away with the
victory against SEMO, this will
be its easiest task this season,
and things didnt look right in
the second half.
We have a lot of tired pup-
pies, Weis said.
Edited by Benjamin Carroll
DAN HARMSEN
@udk_dan
It was a tale of two halves for
the Kansas football team and
its sophomore quarterback
Montell Cozart on Saturday.
Te frst half was a good one
for both; the second-half was
a good one for neither.
Afer cruising to a 24-0
frst quarter lead the most
points a Kansas ofense has
scored in a quarter since the
35 scored in the fourth quarter
of a come-from-behind win
against Colorado in 2010
Kansas was outscored 28-10
the rest of the night by visiting
Southeast Missouri State.
Although the lead would
hold up in a 34-28 victory
against the Redhawks,
the Jayhawks second-half
performance lef a lot to be
desired.
Senior linebacker Ben
Heeney, who fnished the
evening with 11 tackles, was
quick to cast the blame for
the weak fnish away from the
team and onto other things.
Te frst quarter was a
completely diferent team
than it had been, Heeney
said. We came out in the
second half with no juice.
Half the stadiums empty like
it always is. Fans leaving at
halfime. Teres no juice in
the stadium, and I think thats
part of it.
In the frst half, Cozarts
numbers were a sparkly 8-of-
11, 103 yards, two touchdowns
and zero interceptions. While
he would fnish the evening
with a 67-yard touchdown
pass to Tony Pierson and
no giveaways, Cozarts
completion percentage fell
to 57 percent, as he went just
4-of-10 in the second half for
93 yards, and missed senior
wide receiver Nick Harwell in
the end zone twice on errant
passes.
Harwell took some of the
responsibility for the missed
opportunities that could
have given Kansas a more
convincing win over the FCS
opponent.
Tose were my fault,
Harwell said of the deep
passes that grazed his hands.
Bad judgment on my part,
thinking I was fast enough to
get it.
Without allowing a single
frst down through the frst
15 minutes on defense, the
Jayhawks scored on their frst
four possessions of the game,
including touchdown passes
of 6 and 10 yards from Cozart
to Harwell. Te duo appeared
to be gelling early in the game,
but the connection cooled
as Harwell fnished the night
with just four receptions.
I think that in the second
half, it seems like we were
a step of on a lot of those
throws, coach Charlie Weis
said. Tey were up on us
so much that a lot of those
throws ended up being deeper
throws instead of short throws
and a lot of close reads.
While the second half lef
a bitter taste in the mouths
of many around the Kansas
football program, the frst half
served as a reminder as to why
so many Kansas coaches and
players praise Cozarts ability.
Te signal-caller evaded
several pass-rushers in the
frst half and was efective on
the speed-option, pitching to
running backs Corey Avery
and DeAndre Mann, helping
Kansas convert four of its frst
seven third downs.
His athleticism will put
us in position in the passing
game to make plays, Weis
said. Because he bailed out
there sometimes and put
himself in position where he
can go and make the throw.
Kansas did not get the
resounding victory it
wanted, in large part to the
21 unanswered points it
allowed SEMO in the fourth
quarter. But, the Jayhawks
accomplished their main goal.
I thought we went out there
and did what we needed to
do to win, senior ofensive
lineman Pat Lewandowski
said. I dont think it was a
complete game. We came out
in the frst quarter just playing
really good football. Now we
just need to do that for a full
game.
Edited by Emily Brown
VISIT KANSAN.COM
TO SEE A VIDEO OF
PLAYER AND COACH
REACTIONS
TARA BRYANT/KANSAN
Junior running back DeAndre Mann jumps over a defender during Kansas season opener against Southeast Missouri State on Sept. 6 at Memorial Stadium. Mann ran for a net of 121
yards in Kansas 34-28 win.
N
O
T

E
N
O
U
G
H
J
U
I
C
E
After hot start,
Kansas cools off but
holds on for the win
Kansas soccer 6-0 for rst time in 10 years
LIZ KUHLMANN
@LizKuhlmannUDK
JAMES HOYT/KANSAN
Sophomore Rock Chalk Dancer Mary Kate Baker cheers as junior re-
ceiver Nick Harwell runs out of the endzone after a touchdown catch.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN
Quarterback Montel Cozart looks for Tony Pierson downeld. Pierson scored on the play.
A pair of early goals in
the frst half against Denver
University on Sunday al-
lowed the Kansas womens
soccer team to hang onto its
undefeated season. Te 2-1
victory against the Pioneers
improved the Jayhawks re-
cord to 6-0 their best start
to the season since 2004.
Despite coach Mark Fran-
cis claiming the game was a
struggle, the Jayhawks came
away with a 2-0 win to se-
cure their undefeated sea-
son.
Te mentality of this team
is very good, Francis said.
Nothing fazes them at all.
Teyre on the same page
and want to win.
While Denver started of
the game by controlling the
ball for the majority of the
time, it was sophomore de-
fender Morgan Williams
who scored the Jayhawks
frst goal of the afernoon in
the ffeenth minute the
frst goal of
her career.
It was
a m a z i n g ,
Williams said.
As a defender
I dont score
ofen. I cher-
ish the mo-
ment when I
can.
Junior mid-
felder Liana Salazar contin-
ually tried to make her own
contribution to the score-
board, tallying three shots
in the frst 30 minutes, but
nothing fell. Kansas went up
2-0 only afer an own goal
by Denver senior forward
Haley Yearout fred a corner
kick toward the net and a Pi-
oneer defensive player head-
ed it in.
Afer the active frst half,
the Jay-
hawks led
in shots,
9-5. Hit-
ting the
turf af-
ter half-
time, the
J a y h a w k
o f f e n s e
started of
i nt ens el y,
putting a couple well-placed
shots in the vicinity of the
goal to keep a Pioneer de-
fense on its toes. Despite the
continuous attack, the Jay-
hawks had no luck fnding
the back of the net.
With the clock counting
down, Denver fought hard
to get back into the game,
but the Jayhawk defense held
fast. Senior goalkeeper Kait-
lyn Stroud tallied three saves
on the afernoon, and by the
time the fnal buzzer sound-
ed, the Pioneers were unable
to breach the net.
Two days before facing
Denver, the Jayhawks de-
feated Colorado 2-1 in a
thrilling game that went into
extra time. Te highlight of
the weekend undoubtedly
came when Salazar scored
the game-winning goal in
the 102nd minute.
Lianas a goal-scorer and
when she gets put in those
situations, shes not going to
miss, Francis said. It was a
good performance from the
team.
Williams said the team
learned a lot about itself this
weekend, in which the team
played its frst two road
games of the season. Af-
ter two hard-fought games,
Williams said leaving Colo-
rado with two wins says a lot
about the Jayhawks.
Our mental toughness
is way stronger than it has
been in the past, Morgan
said. Tis team can do
some really great things. We
all have in the back of our
minds a trip to the NCAA
tournament at the end of the
season.
Te Jayhawks will return
to Lawrence to take on Cal
State Northridge on Friday
at 5 p.m.
Edited by Alex Lamb

The mentality of this team


is very good. Nothing fazes
them at all. Theyre on the
same page and want to win.
MARK FRANCIS
Soccer coach

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