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Volume 128 Issue 42

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY

KANSAN
Kansan.com | The student voice since 1904

SILENT ASSASSIN

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Perry Ellis embraces a new type of leadership for KU basketball | PAGE 10

BROWNBACK WINS RE-ELECTION


Davis concedes after narrow race for Kansas governor

TED

LEC
RE-E

SAM BROWNBACK (R)

UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: 50 percent of the votes


(416,120)
REACTION: Voters stood with Brownback signs chanting, We want Sam, awaiting a victory speech from
the governor. Jazz music that played over speakers
in the ballroom shifted to the Rocky theme. After the
governors speech, attendees opened champagne bottles while listening to Pharrells Happy. The governor
walked out to uproarious applause, thanked them and
congratulated his opponent Paul Davis on a good race.
BUZZ: We have much to do, but tonight lets celebrate, Brownback said.
By Allison Kite

PAUL DAVIS (D)


UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: 46 percent of the votes

(386,728)
REACTION: The crowd applauded as they heard conceding speeches at the watch party at Abe & Jakes Landing
in Lawrence. More than 800 people crowded to cheer on
the Democrats. Guests of all ages mingled throughout
the evening keeping a close eye on the TVs, but as the
numbers shifted away from Davis favor, spectators
trickled out.
GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN

Sam Brownback celebrates his re-election Tuesday night at the Capitol Plaza Hotel in Topeka. Brownback won 50 percent of the votes.

GREG ORMAN (I)

TED

LEC
RE-E

PAT ROBERTS (R)

BUZZ: Campaigning across the state over the past two


years has absolutely been one of the greatest experienc By Riley Mortensen
es of my entire life, Davis said.

DOUGLAS COUNTY RESULTS:

UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: 43 percent of the votes


(335,692)

UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: 53 percent of the votes


(441,970)

Congressional District 2: Lynn Jenkins (R)


House District 46: Dennis Boog Highberger (D)

REACTION; Orman said he wants his campaign to


stand as a message of encouragement to future
independent candidates. As the speech ended, the enthusiasm in the room was almost as palpable as when
Orman left the stage to mingle with his guests. His
watch party was held at the Overland Park Convention
Center.

REACTION; The Sunflower Ballroom at the Capitol


Plaza Hotel in Topeka erupted in applause when the
GOP incumbent senator was re-elected. Before Nov. 4,
Roberts had been caught in a tie with Orman. Roberts
thanked his supporters, family and fellow Kansans and
left the audience with a promise that he and others
would get things done in Washington.

Lawrence Police Facility


52 percent voted no (14,136)
48 percent voted yes (13,221)

BUZZ: Roberts may have won tonight, but we didnt


lose, Orman said. What we have done tonight is the
start of something great for this country. By Alex Keenan

BUZZ: The tide is turning, and the era of the


Obama-Reid gridlock is over, Roberts said.

By Allison Kite

Kansas Charitable Raffles (state totals)


75 percent voted yes (535,247)
25 percent voted no (181,110)

All results unofficial until Nov. 13 canvass by county


commissioners.
Visit Kansan.com for the full results.

86 cars ticketed during basketball game


MIRANDA DAVIS
@MirandaDavisUDK

The Parking and Transit department issued 86 citations


Monday night during the first
basketball game of the season.
Donna Hultine, director of
Parking and Transit, said that
number is pretty typical for
the first game of the season.
One of the lots that is
blocked off for games is lot
90 by the Ambler Student
Recreation and Fitness Center, which is majorly a yellow
parking pass lot where many
students park. Hultine said
since its a mostly student
lot, if tickets are issued there,
it will be a majority of them
who receive tickets.
Of the citations issued, 62
of them were students, eight
were faculty and the other
16 were either unidentified,
visitor or non-university. Out
of the 86 citations issued, 72
were in lot 90, 11 in the Allen
Fieldhouse Garage and three

Index

CLASSIFIEDS 9
CROSSWORD 6

in lot 71, located between


Hoglund Ballpark and Allen Fieldhouse. Parking and
Transit issued a total of 226
tickets overall Monday, according to Hultine.
The parking department puts
up signs 48 hours in advance
of all games and its important
for students to be aware of the
schedule and the signage in
the lot, Hultine said.
Students who park in lot 90,
and have to be on campus for
other activities during basketball games should move
their car to another yellow
lot, Hultine said. Lots 61, 62
and 34, located next to the
computer science building
on Sunnyside Avenue are all
available after 5 p.m. for those
who have valid permits. Lots
300 and 302 on West Campus
are available to yellow permit holders, where there is a
shuttle to bring students to
campus.
Edited by Ashley Peralta

CRYPTOQUIPS 6
OPINION 4

Judge rules against Kansas


same-sex marriage ban

Federal judge Daniel Crabtree ruled


in favor of same-sex marriage for
Kansas today, when he granted a
preliminary injunction to the plaintiffs in the case, Marie v. Moser. The
injunction is a court order that says
court clerks cant deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Kansas.
Crabtree also put a temporary stay
on the injunction, which gives the
defense until Nov. 11 to appeal the
decision, according to a memorandum and order signed by Crabtree
today.
On Fridays hearing of the case, the
plaintiffs had requested the preliminary injunction, and the defense had
said they would appeal the decision
if Crabtree decided to grant it, but
Johnson said he has not heard the
defenses response since Crabtrees
decision came out today.
If the state says it wont appeal,
the injunction would go into effect
immediately, which means samesex couples in Kansas could possibly
start getting marriage licenses.
Kelsie Jennings

FILE PHOTO/KANSAN

During the first basketball game Monday, 86 people, including 62 students, were ticketed for parking violations.

SPORTS 10
SUDOKU 6

All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2014 The University Daily Kansan

Dont
Forget

Cold pizza is the best pizza.

Todays
Weather

Mostly sunny with a 0


percent chance of rain.
Wind SW at 15 mph.

VISIT KANSAN.COM FOR


UPDATES ON THIS STORY

HI: 69
LO: 40

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

The
Weekly

Weather
Forecast
weather.com

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Mostly sunny with a 0 percent chance


of rain. Wind SW at 15 mph.

Sunny with a 0 percent chance of


rain. Wind NNW at 16 mph.

news

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

Wednesday, Nov. 5
What: Lunch N Learn
When: Noon to 1 p.m.
Where: Ambler Student Recreation

Fitness Center, Room 202


About: A workshop about the benefits of massage therapy.
What: Pause 4 Pups
When: 8-9 p.m.
Where: Ellsworth Hall
About: Hang out with the therapy

Thursday, Nov. 6

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
Design Chiefs
Clayton Rohlman
Hallie Wilson
Opinion editor
Cecilia Cho
Multimedia editor
George Mullinix
Associate multimedia editors
Ben Lipowitz
ADVISERS
Media director and
content strategist
Brett Akagi
Sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt

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 first copy is paid
through the student activity fee.
Additional copies of The Kansan
are 50 cents. Subscriptions can
be purchased at the Kansan
business office, 2051A Dole Human
Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside
Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (ISSN
0746-4967) is published daily
during the school year except Friday,
Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring
break and exams and weekly during
the summer session excluding
holidays. Annual subscriptions
by mail are $250 plus tax. Send
address changes to The University
Daily Kansan, 2051A Dole Human
Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside
Avenue.

KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS


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.
2000 Dole Human Development Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue
Lawrence, Kan., 66045

Mostly sunny with a 0 percent chance


of rain. Wind S at 17 mph.

Friday, Nov. 7

What: Tea @ Three


When: 3-4 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union
About: Drink tea and meet up with

What: International Coffee Hour


When: 3 p.m.
Where: Ecumenical Campus Minis-

friends between classes.

About: A social event open to interna-

What: Student Night


When: 5:30-7 p.m.
Where: Spencer Museum of Art
About: A casual event based off the

themes of Holding Pattern.

dogs provided by Loving Paws.

Sales manager
Tom Wittler
Digital media manager
Scott Weidner

HI: 49
LO: 32

HI: 62
LO: 45

Sunny with a 0 percent chance of


rain. Wind NNW at 20 mph.

Calendar

NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief
Emma LeGault

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

HI: 56
LO: 33

HI: 69
LO: 40

PAGE 2

tries

Saturday, Nov. 8
What: Electronic Recycling Event
When: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Where: KU Park & Ride parking lot
About: Items accepted include

tional students.

televisions, printers, microwaves


and cell phones.

What: Slavic Folk Dance Workshop


When: 4-5:30 p.m.
Where: Burge Union, Gridiron Room
About: A workshop hosted by the

What: Tea, Love, War and Detention


When: 1:30-4 p.m.
Where: Lawrence Arts Center
About: An art exhibit including

Department of Slavic Languages &


Literatures.

stories and poetry.

Bar takes unusual approach to fake IDs


DALTON KINGERY
@DaltonKingNews

Theyve been doing it for


as long as Bretta Mick can
remember.
At Louises, a bar located
at 1009 Massachusetts St.,
they take a hard stance on
fake IDs, with a sign posted
outside the entrance warning
patrons the bar will confiscate
IDs that they suspect are fake.
This warning doesnt deter
the bravest among underage
drinkers from making the
attempt anyway. Those that
do are usually caught, and
become immortalized by
having their ID stapled to the
wall of the bar. As of today,
there are 1,036 fake IDs lining
the walls of Louises.
Other bars confiscate fake
IDs the Bottleneck turns
away underage drinkers at
the door and throws the IDs
away, while Johnnys Tavern
North takes the IDs and seals
them away in a drawer. But
only Louises incorporates
comedic public shaming into
the process.
Once taken, they are
stapled to our wall of fame, or
shame, however youd like to
look at it, said Mick, who has
been a bartender at Louises
for three and a half years and
was an employee when the
bar hit the 1,000 ID mark in
February of 2014. No one
really gets in trouble, theyre
not turned over to the police.
The police really respect us
for not allowing underage
drinking in our bar.
Mick said the tradition of
stapling IDs to the wall has
been around since long before
she began working there.
When their IDs are taken,
most people are embarrassed
and dont try to argue.
However, some get mad or

FILE PHOTO/KANSAN

A wall at Cork and Barrel, 2000 W. 23rd St., shows students the consequences of using a fake ID when trying to buy alcohol. Louises has a similar wall.
try to argue that the ID is, in
fact, theirs.
Brock Sheldon, a doorman at
Louises, said these arguments
are usually short-circuited
by the doormen offering to
call the police to come and
verify the legitimacy of the
identification.
People freak out about
how the ID is really theirs,
and we usually just tell them
that they can call the cops if
they want to, and if they dont,
then it was obviously fake,
said Sheldon, a senior from
Emporia who has worked
at Louises since last April.
If it really is their ID and
they want to call the cops to
come and scan it, then thats
fine. The cops know were just
trying to do our jobs.
People have tried unusual
tactics to get their IDs back
when confiscated. One man
went so far as to offer the
doorman more than $300
cash to give his ID back.
Part of the reason for the
emphasis on not allowing
underage
drinkers
into
Louises is the bars need to
protect itself. The Kansas
Department of Revenues
Alcohol Beverage Control

division is tasked with


enforcing alcohol laws, and
will send agents posing as
regular bar patrons using fake
IDs into bars to determine
if an establishment is doing
its due diligence in keeping
out underage drinkers, Mick
said. If an agent is able to
enter the establishment and
is served alcohol, it will
typically result in a monetary
fine of $100-$250 for the
establishment, according to
the ABCs website.
You know, as long as Ive
been here, we havent really
had problems with underage
people, Mick said. Weve
actually never gotten fined to
my knowledge.
Mick also said the bars
well-known way of handling
fake IDs results in an older
and more mature crowd of
patrons, a sentiment echoed
by Sheldon.
Theres so many bars here
that you can get into no
matter how old you are. I
mean, we dont have the little
kids coming in and getting
way too drunk and acting
stupid, Sheldon said.
Although the employees
admit
that
preventing

WHAT A DOORMAN LOOKS FOR:


Brock Sheldon, a doorman at Louises, said there are a number of
different things he looks for when trying to determine the authenticity
of an ID.
The first is the corners and edges of the card itself; typically,
IDs that are not authentic will have noticeably worn edges and
peeling in corners.
Another giveaway is blurred lettering in parts of the ID, which
isnt seen in authentic IDs.
Sheldon doesnt rely solely on the IDs appearance either. Paying
attention to potential customers body language is important.
If they wont look up or try to keep their face from being
looked at, that usually tells Sheldon something is off.
Other tactics include trying to slip in with groups of patrons
that are of age, with some in front and some behind the
underage person.

underage
people
from
patronizing
their
establishment is in their best
interests, they say the biggest
reason they handle IDs the
way they do is out of concern
for the underage drinkers.
We want kids to be safe,
thats our No. 1 thing. Youre
not supposed to be drinking

underage, and there are cops


all over down here, Mick
said. If you get caught or
get a DUI, thats really going
to mess things up for you, so
just wait until youre 21.

Edited by Ashley Peralta

Hawks Helping Hawks releases applications


MIRANDA DAVIS
@MirandaDavisUDK

Hawks Helping Hawks, a


student organization that
raises money to aid students
who have fallen on hard
times financially, released its
first application this week.
Hawks Helping Hawks started
last year with fundraising
efforts that raised around
$6,000. The organization
plans to distribute the money
once it receives and reviews
applications.
The group states on the
application that it plans to
give out aid between $250 and
$2,000. It will start reviewing
applications Monday.
The financial award packets,
which the group calls Hawk
Aid, is need-based. Those
applying are required to fill out
a financial need form as well as

a detailed request explaining


what they would use the
money for and what their
current financial situation is.
Cal Bayer, a senior from
Kansas City, Mo., and
president of Hawks Helping
Hawks, said the organization
fosters the idea of a KU family
that helps each other out when
in need.
We believe that when you
come to KU, you become part
of the Jayhawk family and any
good family looks after each
other and makes sure that
everyone is doing OK, Bayer
said.
Bayer said one in four
Jayhawks dont make it to their
sophomore year, and while
there are many reasons they
leave, Hawks Helping Hawks
wants to prevent financial
burdens from being a reason.
If you come into a

community and you already


know that people are looking
out for each other and care
about you, and you can care
about other people, we think
thats going to be beneficial to
any student that comes to KU,
Bayer said.
Dalton Willey, a sophomore
from Salina and vice president
of the organization, said his
passion for Hawks Helping
Hawks comes from his desire
to help other first generation
college students and help all
students realize they are a part
of a community.
I think that we help kids
realize that were not each
single individuals going about
our day-to-day lives with our
own independent struggles,
but our struggles can always
be helped by the University as
a whole and that if everybodys
there for each other, every day

can be a lot easier for each


student here, Willey said.
The group has done several
events this year to help raise
funds. The group held puppy
parties to get donations and
spread the groups message.
The majority of the money for
the aid is donated from other
University students.
Hawks Helping Hawks is
holding another fundraising
event Thursday at Sigma Nu
fraternity where participants
who donate can either smash a
pumpkin or hit a car for stress
relief.
The
applications
are
accepted on a rolling basis and
students can apply at any time
of the year. The committee
of students that reviews the
applications will look over
applications whenever needed.
For Bayer and others who
participate in Hawks Helping

Hawks, the choice to get


involved stems from a love of
the University.
If I couldnt go to KU, that
would be devastating for me,
and I wouldnt want that to
happen to anybody, Bayer
said.

Edited by Kelsey Phillips

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

PAGE 3

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

US government lightens
PLUS loan qualifications
KELSIE JENNINGS
@kelcjen

Next year, it may be easier


for students to pay for college with help from the U.S.
Department of Education,
which is making it easier for
parents to qualify for PLUS
loans, especially those with
bad financial credit. Changes
to PLUS loan regulations were
published in the Federal Register on Oct. 23, but will go
into effect July 1, 2015.
PLUS loans are federal loans
that require a parent to be the
co-signer for an undergraduate student, since students
usually dont have enough
credit history to qualify for
loans on their own. The PLUS
loan is used to cover the leftover cost if students still come
up short after other financial
aid has been applied to their
bills. PLUS loan interest rates
are currently fixed at 7.21
percent until June 30, 2015,
and parents cant borrow any
amount past what is needed,
according to a video from the
financial aid office.
To get the loan, parents must
pass a credit check, and if they
dont pass, the PLUS loan is
one less option students have
to pay for college. Students
with little to no credit history and whose parents dont
have good enough credit are

at a disadvantage when it
comes to paying for college
and graduating, so the department decided to redefine
what is considered adverse
credit history.
According to a press release from the education
department, the definition
of adverse credit history
had not been changed since
1994 when the Direct Loan
program started, so the department has redefined it to
match the current economy,
since economic changes over
the last 20 years have affected
many families.
Matt Melvin, vice provost
of Enrollment Management,
said the changes with the
loans shouldnt have much
of an impact on enrollment.
For academic year 2013-14,
2,580 PLUS loans were processed for undergraduate
students, according to Brenda Maigaard, assistant vice
provost for Financial Aid
and Scholarships. Maigaard
said their department already
provides online loan counseling through its website, but
students and parents can also
come to the office and speak
with someone.
If parents dont pass the
credit check for a PLUS loan,
they can either apply with an
endorser, which would be
a co-signer who would also

This Saturday, KU ROTC will offer


a 24-hour vigil at the campus war
memorials in honor of Veterans
Day. The vigil will begin at 10 a.m.
with Taps being played at the top
of the Campanile.

have to pass a credit check, or


they can appeal the credit decision, according to Maigaard.
I dont think that students
are necessarily a reflection of
their parents, said Hannah
Sroor, a junior from Lees
Summit, Mo. I think were
adults and its shifting the responsibility, so if the student
needs a loan, I think that they
should be able to get that.
Mearyn Aramovich, a junior
from Overland Park, uses
other federal loans and an academic scholarship to pay for
college and said those have
been enough to cover what
she needs.
Aramovich said she thinks
the cost of going to the University is pretty average, but
said its definitely not the
cheapest. She said the changes made to the PLUS loans
will be good for students who
need extra financial help.
I think that if its more accessible and its going to make
it easier for more people to
go to college, then I think its
great, she said.
If students have questions
about financial aid, they can
visit affordability.ku.edu, or
if they want to know the difference between different
loans, they can find out at
ku.financialaidtv.com.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jozee Johnson of West Virginia waits to enter Kemper Arena during the
United Professional Horsemans Association National Championship in
Kansas City, Mo. A developer withdrew plans to renovate Kemper Arena
after the American Royal Association threatened a lawsuit, a letter
obtained by The Kansas City Star shows.

Group threatens
developer with lawsuit
over Kemper Arena
KANSAS CITY, Mo. A developer
withdrew plans to renovate Kemper
Arena after the American Royal Association threatened a lawsuit, a
letter obtained by The Kansas City
Star shows.
An attorney for American Royal,
which hosts livestock exhibitions
and professional rodeos, told
Foutch Brothers in the Oct. 17
letter to quit its efforts to have
Kemper Arena declared a historic
structure, the newspaper reported.
The designation would have helped
with financing for Foutchs proposal to turn the arena into a youth
sports facility.
Foutch and American Royal have
spent months pitching plans for
the future of the arena. While
Foutchs proposal would preserve
the arena, plans by American Royal
call for tearing it down and replacing it with a multipurpose building.
The letter claims a historic designation would negatively affect
American Royals long-term lease
with the city, which continues
through 2045, for the American
Royal Complex that includes the
arena.

Edited by Alyssa Scott

We demand you cease your efforts with respect to the historic


designation applications you filed
over the citys objection, states
the letter to Foutchs lawyer, John
Fairfield. While we have high confidence you will not be successful,
those applications impair and
impact property which my clients
helped to finance and which we
have under lease for the next several decades.
When Foutch announced it was
dropping its Kemper Arena proposal, representatives of the development firm declined to give
more detail about why, only saying
the decision was prompted by circumstances beyond their control.
City Manager Troy Schulte said
he was shown the letter by Steve
Foutch and that it was the reason
the firm backed out.
Kemper Arena has lost nearly
all of its events to the downtown
Sprint Center in recent years and is
currently idle.
Though the arena is only about
40 years old it could still qualify
for a historic designation because
it has hosted the 1976 Republican
National Convention and many
championship sports competitions,
said Elizabeth Rosin, a Kansas City
historic preservation consultant.

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PAGE 4

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

EDITORIAL

Limited gameday parking rips off students

pparently, students,
faculty and staff
may park in the
spots they paid more than
$200 for only when its convenient for KU Athletics.
According to KU Parking
& Transit director Donna
Hultine, 62 tickets were
given to students who parked
in yellow lots 90 (outside the
Ambler Student Recreation
and Fitness Center) and 71
(beside Allen Fieldhouse)
and the Allen Fieldhouse
garage last night alone
the first night of the KU
basketball season. Additional
tickets (faculty, visitor and
unidentified vehicles)
tacked on an additional 24
tickets to bring the total to
86. At $25 each, thats $2,150
that KU Parking will pocket

in one night.
Granted, the signs that said
the lot was restricted past
5:30 p.m. were posted outside the lots, but why should
students move their cars
from spots they paid to park
in? Especially when students
often dont have a spare 45
minutes between class and
other commitments to walk
to their car, drive around and
find a decent place to park
and walk back to campus.
Its about as much of a hassle
to walk 10 minutes to the
car, drive 10 minutes to Park
& Ride and bus 15 minutes
back to campus.
Students pay $225 more
than half of some paychecks
to park in yellow lots.
Some have class or work past
5:30 p.m. They shouldnt

have to avoid parking in


spots they pay for just because of KU basketball.
Athletics pre-sells these
spots to Williams Fund

86

cars were ticketed Nov.


3 in lots 90 and 71 and
the Allen Fieldhouse
Garage. Sixty-two of
those tickets were
issued to students.

donors, so unless you donate


a minimum $100 to Athletics
and are an active Williams
Fund member, youre out
of luck parking in lot 90
on gamedays.

The larger picture, it seems,


is: Athletics has made it
clear it does not value KU
students, only donors who
empty their pockets for
prime basketball seating
(section U, for example) and
parking spots.
At what point will it
become clear to Athletics
and Parking that students
who are paying thousands
of dollars to attend KU,
much less an extra $200 to
pay for a parking permit
should come first instead of
deep-pocketed donors?
There are at least six other
lots Williams Fund donors
can park in for games, three
of which are not yellow lots.
While closing more than
half of the lots for donors
wouldnt be fair, lot 90, at

KANSAN CARTOON:

the very least, should still


be open on gamedays for
students who pay for the
spots. It has the most capacity and is where a majority
of off-campus students park
for class and work. Another alternative would be to
allow those with permits
who parked in yellow lots to
stay without consequence
and close off yellow lots to
new cars after the restriction
time.
Until Athletics and Parking
tell us dollars dont overrule
students, well park in the
spots we paid to park in.
Members of the Editorial
Board are Cecilia Cho, Emma
LeGault, Christina Carreira,
Madison Schultz
and Hannah Barling

Financial anxieties can


be alleviated through
personal finance course

Greatest thing about the end


of Halloween is the discounted
Halloween candy.
I'm bringing braids back.
(*queue background singers*)

By Helena Buchmann
@helenabee

Unlike other students, I actually


like going to lottery.

hen I accepted my federal


student loans for
the first time, I was required
to sign a promissory note, as
well as complete an activity
making sure I understood
the terms of accepting
student loans. I completed
the requirements, but if
Im being honest, as a high
school senior, I had no clue
what it meant. Today, I still
dont know what it means.
I barely know the difference
between a subsidized and
unsubsidized loan. Students
are not required to pay back
their loans until theyre done
with school, but what about
compound interest? When
do I need to start establishing credit? Should I start
saving for retirement now?
How does one go about
doing that? What are stocks
and should I get some?
These are all questions that
everyone has asked, or will
ask, and the answers can be
complicated and frazzling.
My parents have tried to explain all of this to me, but it
is a daunting subject. Luckily,
theres a course offered at the

No one understands how big of


a struggle my day is when I go
without coffee. I dont feel like
a normal person.
I keep wearing my House Targaryen shirt in hopes of meeting a cute Game of Thrones
fanboy. Hasn't worked yet.....
Ive noticed that complaining
about not making the FFAs
gets people in the FFAs...does
this count?
Got my polka dot socks on and
a snuggly hoodie...gonna be a
great day.
Freshmen on the bus complaining about being late for class
while not moving back to let
people on the bus. Who's really
making you late?
Is it Thanksgiving break yet?
You can add one more to that
Backstreet Boys party guest
list. I'm in!
Regardless of what party wins
today we need to all do a better
job supporting the leaders of
our country!

University called FIN 101


Personal Finance. According
to the course description,
students should be able to
answer all of those questions,
and more, by the end of the
semester. Youll even know
how to do things like take
out a mortgage.
Students at KU, regardless
of their major, should be
required to take personal
finance. According to the
Project on Student Debt, an
initiative of the Institute for
College Access & Success,
51 percent of KU graduates
in 2012 had student debt,
and the average debt was
$23,468.
In my experience, most
people start making financial
decisions as late as college
and stop making them
when you die. We should
be prepared to tackle these
decisions and problems
head-on, and by simply taking an introductory personal
finance course, we would
ensure that we at least have
a fundamental grasp of what
were dealing with and what
lies ahead.

Helena Buchmann is a sophomore from Kansas City studying


global and international studies

@lauwrenorder

@KansanOpinion Leaves. Cold weather.


CHRISTMAS STUFF EVERYWHERE

My roommate makes some


damn good food & you all
should be jealous.

@Geegs30

@KansanOpinion That its finally getting


cold! As a Minnesotan this Fall has
been a joke

Everyone go download the Tilt


app so we can bring Snoop
Dogg to KU!
Ive never been surrounded
by so many old people in my
life#votingday
Can we have an IKEA in Lawrence? Would save me the trip
down to Merriam!

What do you love most


about the month of
November?

3 men charged for feeding


a homeless man?!? What is
wrong with people?? Let people
do something good for this
crappy world for once!

Did you wake up this morning?


Because you look beautiful.

FFA OF THE DAY:


I love having basketball updates in my morning paper again.
Basketball is back and life is good.
CONTACT US

HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR


Send letters to opinion@kansan.com. Write LETTER
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.

Emma LeGault, editor-in-chief


elegault@kansan.com

Cecilia Cho, opinion editor


ccho@kansan.com

Tom Wittler, print sales manager


twittler@kansan.com

Madison Schultz, managing editor


mschultz@kansan.com

Cole Anneberg, art director


canneberg@kansan.com

Scott Weidner, digital media manager


sweidner@kansan.com

Hannah Barling, digital editor


hbarling@kansan.com

Christina Carreira, advertising director


ccarreira@kansan.com

Jon Schlitt, sales and marketing adviser


jschlitt@kansan.com

BigJay and BabyJays handlers


remind me of those parents
who are beyond ready to go
home but their child keeps
saying 5 more minutes.

Follow us on Twitter @KansanOpinion. Tweet us


your opinions, and we just might publish them.

THE KANSAN
EDITORIAL BOARD
Members of the Kansan
Editorial Board are Emma
LeGault, Madison Schultz,
Cecilia Cho, Hannah Barling
and Christina Carreira.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

PAGE 5

MORE THAN
MEETS THE EYE

arts & features

HOROSCOPES

Alumni launch sunglasses


business with a global vision

Because the stars


know things we dont.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9
A career window opens. This
could cause changes and
complications. Actions get
farther than words. Theres
abundant money available
today and tomorrow (if you work
for it). Balance emotional with
pragmatic factors.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7
Work in partnership, and be
willing to take the lead today
and tomorrow. Dont get caught
up in the words (miscommunications happen). Gossip leaves
a bitter taste... avoid it. Sort out
the common aim, and go for it.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8
Get introspective, and find what
youre looking for. Retreat from
the world today and tomorrow.
Sometimes if you get quiet
enough, the answer arises
unbidden. Nurture health with
rest, exercise and good food.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8
Today and tomorrow favor
fun with friends. Put a family
event on the schedule. Play in
a group or community project,
and contribute your piece of the
puzzle. Find materials at home
or nearby.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9
Focus on your career today and
tomorrow. Ask for what you need,
and be patient... transmission
breakdowns or slips in translation could warp the meaning.
Repeat, and relax. Find multiple
routes to your goal.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8
Take a trip or explore a new
scene. You dont need to go far.
Backyard journeys can be quite
satisfying. Keep communications
channels open, and expect some
delays (especially with transportation or shipping). Saving is
better than spending now.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9
Get straight about what
doesnt work. Gain more than
expected. Attend to finances and
administration for the next two
days. Avoid talking about money
with partners, or risk misunderstanding.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9
You have plenty of support.
Teamwork is your secret weapon.
Ignore doubts. You can succeed.
You dont have to do it all,
personally. Delegate! Take care
with a change in plans.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Take on more work, and earnings
increase. Gather ideas and
feedback. An important person
is feeling generous. Take the
student role. Put your heads
together. A feisty argument could
curtail travel. Relax at home.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7
Today can be really fun, especially avoiding miscommunication and arguments. A private
conference spells out the facts.
Now is the time to get creative.
All is not as it appears. You get
really lucky. Follow through.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8
Your hearts at home and in the
garden. Pare down to make more
space with a cleaning or renovation project. In a disagreement
about priorities, listen to the
opposing view. Consider all
possibilities.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9
Desire for more income guides
your decisions. Maintain
objectivity. The funding will be
available. A purchase becomes
possible. Finish a study project
now. Practicing something you
love to do goes well now.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

OJOS Eyewear launched in February and encourages social responsibility and traveling. The companys motto is, The enthusiastic pursuit of fun and global citizenship.

MARIA SANCHEZ
@MariaSanchezKU

In 2011, Tyler Reynolds was


a senior from Austin, Texas, studying human biology
and on track to graduate. All
it took to throw Reynolds off
that track was a nearly twomonth trip to Barcelona.
Surrounded by rich culture,
Reynolds fell in love with the
aesthetic and spirit of traveling. He decided to put off his
degree and pursue a different
passion. It was in Spain that
Reynolds created the blueprint for OJOS Eyewear and
eventually paired with University alumnus Phil Ozorkiewicz to make that blueprint
a reality.
Ultimately with what were
building, its something that
was going to be worth it and I
knew that going in, Reynolds
said.
OJOS is a sunglasses business based out of Venice,
Calif., that encourages social
responsibility and traveling.
The business motto is, The
enthusiastic pursuit of fun
and global citizenship. Reynolds said after stepping outside of his comfort zone and
discovering his passion for artistic expression in Barcelona,
he had a desire to help others
find themselves through traveling as well.
For me, that had such an
amazing impact because it
was a light bulb moment when
I decided I wanted to be more
involved in the creative process and inspire others to have
this moment, Reynolds said.
The word ojos translates to
eyes in Spanish, which illustrates the Spanish culture that

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
inspired Reynolds. However,
Ozorkiewicz said it also suggests something deeper.
You can spin that so many
different ways, Ozorkiewicz
said. Changing the way you
view the world and the way
you look at things, just changing that whole global perspective.
Reynolds took this perspective and passion and created
designs for the eyewear himself. Reynolds said the design
process is therapeutic for him.
I love sitting down and being able to create something

from scratch and see it come


to life. I think that process
clears your head, Reynolds
said. Its a creative outlet that
releases endorphins for me.
After a small launch party
at Tonic in Lawrence during
Reynolds senior year, he and
Ozorkiewicz created campaigns through Indiegogo.
After almost two months, they
had raised enough funds to
begin buying products.
OJOS Eyewear officially
launched on Feb. 7. Through
the process of starting OJOS
from the ground up, Reynolds

said the experience of entrepreneurship was and continues to be an emotional roller


coaster.
Theres small victories that
seem like massive victories
and theres small blows that
feel like massive blows, thats
just the name of the game,
Reynolds said.
With Ozorkiewicz and
Reynolds having paid their
way through college, the two
also share an apartment in
Venice that functions as the
OJOS Eyewear headquarters.
Ozorkiewicz said funding al-

ways presents a challenge.


Not necessarily having the
capital you need to get some
things done is a roadblock,
Ozorkiewicz said. Its just
something that motivates you
to work harder to get where
you need to go.
Since their launch, Reynolds
and Ozorkiewicz said they are
attempting to run a business
how consumers would want it
to be run. OJOS Eyewear now
has six styles that are each
available in two different col-

SEE OJOS PAGE 6

Scholarship program provides trips abroad


MINSEON KIM
@minseonkim94

With the variety of 40 foreign language programs offered at the University and
the establishment of the
School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures starting as
early as next fall, Anne Wallen, assistant director of the
National Scholarships and
Fellowships at the University
Honors Program, said offering Critical Language Scholarships is a good fit for the
University.
The Critical Language
Scholarship program, which
started in 2006, provides a
rare opportunity for students
who are studying critical languages languages the U.S.
determines important for
Americans to know for trade,
defense or other strategic
reasons. The scholarship provides an immersive language
program and cultural experience abroad for two months
during the summer. The CLS

also covers the cost of most of


the cultural activities abroad,
room and board, airfare and
language classes.
The national deadline for
the 2015 summer scholarship
is Nov. 12. As it approaches, a workshop will be held
Thursday from 1-3 p.m. in
room 318 of Bailey Hall. The
workshop will provide help
for students who have already started the application
process. Wallen said students
who attend the workshop
will be able to put finishing
touches on their drafts and
enhance all aspects of their
application. Students who are
interested in applying for the
Critical Language Scholarship can contact Wallen.
This is one [scholarship]
that matches well to KUs
strengths, and weve had a
fair number of students get
the scholarship in the last
several years, Wallen said.
As a federal scholarship, it
focuses on representing diversity within the U.S. and

accounts for the diversity of


majors, ethnicities, socioeconomic backgrounds and
more.
KU does relatively well
compared to other Kansas
institutions, but they still, at
the national level, would like
more Kansans generally to
apply, Wallen said.

... when you travel abroad,


you do things that you never
usually do, and I am glad I
did.
GARVEY BURROWS
Senior from Miami, Fla.

She said the application


process itself is a learning opportunity for students since
they write about themselves
and what they want to study
in a different way than they
would write in class. Students
will be notified in January if

they are finalists and will find


out later in the spring semester if they are receiving the
scholarship fund. Though the
CLS does not announce how
many finalists there are each
year, four students from the
University were scholarship
recipients last year.
Sally Kagay, a senior from
Topeka, was one of those
four. Kagay received the
scholarship to study Farsi.
She said she still remembers
the moment she received the
scholarship.
[I was] ecstatic, Kagay
said. I took a screenshot of
the email and still have it in
my iPhone.
Kagay said living with a
host family was one of the
best parts of studying abroad
in Tajikistan. She said there
were children in the family
she was staying with, so it
was a lot of fun to practice
the language with them.
Garvey Burrows, a senior
from Miami, Fla., was another recipient of the scholarship

from Kansas, he also studied


Farsi. He received the scholarship after applying for the
second time. He said the second time he applied he had
refined his Farsi-related experience, such as waking up
at 3 or 4 a.m. to Skype with
students in Tajikistan during
the past year and becoming a
Farsi tutor.
Wallen said prior application experience is asked in
the application questions as
a way to show sincerity and
long-term interest in learning the critical language.
During his time abroad,
Burrows said he remembers
leaving the city of Tajikistan
and camping on the weekend
with other CLS members.
I think thats the time I will
never forget, he said. I have
never been camping in the
U.S., but I think when you
travel abroad, you do things
that you never usually do,
and I am glad I did.

Edited by Alyssa Scott

PAGE 6

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

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OJOS FROM PAGE 5


ors and offered at $87. Compared with companies like
Ray-Ban, this price is catered
to the wallets of travelers.
We want our eyewear to be
accessible to people just like
us. Were going for our target
market in our motto, Reynolds said. That has a natural
travel aesthetic to it.
Reynolds and Ozorkiewicz
said that as travelers themselves, they know what can
happen when you are constantly on the move. It was
important to them that customers could get two pairs of
sunglasses for $134.
We dont want people to
have to sacrifice an arm and
a leg because we ourselves are
building this thing so we ourselves wouldnt want to pay
an arm and a leg for eyewear,
Reynolds said.
Not only were the two set
on offering accessible, quality
eyewear, but they were also set
on improving something dear
to their hearts. Ozorkiewicz
spent most of his life traveling
and camping and said he has
witnessed beautiful places destroyed by deforestation and
environmental tragedies.
Its a terrible thing to see. I
figured if we were going to do
something, we have to do it
right, Ozorkiewicz said. Not
just volunteering our time but
creating a product that can
inspire others to have fun get
out there and make a difference in the world.
With every pair of glasses sold, 10 trees are planted

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Phil Ozorkiewicz, left, and Tyler Reynolds, right, are both KU alums and co-founded OJOS Eyewear.

OJOS Eyewear. Being a Lawrence native, Ozorkiewicz


suggested OJOS unique culture would be at home on
Massachusetts Street.
For now, the BarceloTYLER REYNOLDS na-born dream has just
Co-founder of OJOS Eyewear begun in California and as
it grows, the founders find
themselves emotionally connected, Reynolds said.
through the Trees for the FuWith every sale, with every
ture organization. To date,
single change and every single
OJOS Eyewear has indirectly
piece that gets put together in
planted 3,000 trees. The busithe puzzle, were super conness also taxes themselves a
nected to it, Reynolds said.
one percent earth tax, which
Were super in tune with that
is donated to 1 Percent for
emotion because its so dear to
the Planet and, in turn, other
our hearts.
organizations that are earth
friendly. The pouches that
Edited by Andrew Collins
OJOS eyewear come in also
support and create jobs for
indigenous women in India
who hand craft them.
Reynolds said as a young
company, they dont always
fully appreciate their products contribution to these
causes, as they are not on a
large scale. However, Reynolds said he is still proud.
That was sort of surreal when that mass order of
pouches came in and we
knew that each and every
one was hand woven and
provided income for these
indigenous women in India,
Reynolds said.
Not only touching the lives
of those overseas, but also
closer to home, Ozorkiewicz
said with each pair of sunglasses sold, a handwritten
thank-you note is sent along
with it.
Just to show the customer
that they are extremely important to us, Ozorkiewicz
said. It is really an OJOS
family and a collective people trying to make a difference in this world.
Reynolds and Ozorkiewicz
said they plan on expanding their eyewear styles and
hope to return to their roots
in Lawrence someday to sell

We want our eyewear to be


accessible to people just like
us. Were going for our target
market in our motto.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

PAGE 7

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE DAILY DEBATE


Whos better? Peyton Manning or Tom Brady?

By Sean Collins
@Seanzie

TOM BRADY

n Sunday, Tom Brady


once again proved
that he was the better
quarterback between himself
and Peyton Manning. The
two pure pocket-passers are
arguably the best to ever play
the position, but Brady takes
the prize.
The New England Patriots
throttled the Denver Broncos
43-21 on Sunday. While Manning had 438 yards passing
and two touchdowns, he also
threw two interceptions and
couldnt keep up with Tom
Brady, who had 333 yards,
four touchdowns and only one
interception, which was his
first in four weeks.
Aside from the season, Brady
has always done more with
less. According to pro-football-reference.com, Brady
has only had four Pro Bowl
receivers his entire career:
Randy Moss, Wes Welker,

Matt Slater and Troy Brown,


along with one tight end, Rob
Gronkowski. For the duration
of his career, Manning has had
the luxury of having top NFL
receivers since he entered the
league. He has thrown to seven
Pro Bowlers: Marvin Harrison, Reggie Wayne, Dallas
Clark, Ken Dilger, Demaryius
Thomas, Julius Thomas and
Wes Welker.
Even with the lack of weapons,
what really separates Brady
is his postseason stats. Brady
has always been better in the
clutch, with an 18-8 career
postseason record, via NFL.
com. This includes three
Super Bowls in five appearances. Manning has struggled
in the postseason his entire
career. Outside of his Super
Bowl victory in 2006, Manning
has had an abysmal playoff
record of 11-11 (4-0 in 2006).
This record includes getting
knocked out eight times in the
first round.
Along with the win-loss woes,
Peyton takes much of the
blame for the losses, throw-

ing 22 interceptions in the


postseason. His quarterback
rating drops from a 97.7 in the
regular season to a 90.5 in the
playoffs. Brady, however, has
thrown for 43 touchdowns,
which according to NFL.com,
is two shy of Joe Montanas
record. Manning has 36 playoff
touchdowns.
Manning may have the edge
in many categories; holding
records for touchdowns in
a season and career passing
touchdowns. However, when
it comes to clutch situations
in the playoffs, Brady has continuously gotten the job done
more than Manning.
After Sundays matchup, Brady
is now 11-5 against Manning,
holding a clear edge against
him for his entire career. Manning may have the impressive
records and the insane regular
season statistics, but Brady
wins when it is most important, and that is what makes
him the better quarterback.
Edited by Kelsie Jennings

By Austin Wagoner
@AWagoner23

PEYTON MANNING

t 38 years old, this


could very well be
Peyton Mannings
last year in the league. The
only person that really
knows that is Manning
himself and his decision
may likely depend on how
the Denver Broncos finish
out the season.
Regardless, when Peyton
Manning hangs up his
cleats he will go down as
arguably the best to ever
play the game. Manning
will be in the top-five in
virtually every passing
category in the history of
the NFL. He just broke
Brett Favres all-time
passing touchdown record
and has currently extended
it to 515 with no signs of
slowing down. The man is
an offensive coordinator on
the field.

Tom Brady has had more


postseason success and that
is understandable because
he has won three Super
Bowls to Peytons one. If we
are going off Super Bowl
wins why doesnt Terry
Bradshaw come into the
conversation because he
won four? The reason is
quite simply Super Bowl
victories equate from a
good team not just an exceptional quarterback.
Brady has had great teams
every time he has won a
Super Bowl. He has had a
Hall of Fame coach sitting
next to him on the sideline
for his entire career. Peyton
has had five different head
coaches and has been
through a number of offensive coordinators as well.
To many people around
the league, Manning is the
most prepared quarterback
anyone has ever seen. He is
impossible to prepare for
because his photographic
memory will remember a
blitz ran against him ten

years ago or a play he ran


in the third quarter five
years ago, which makes
him almost impossible to
prepare for.
When asked how to stop
Manning by ESPN, New
York Jets head coach Rex
Ryan said, Weve got to
be like that goalie for the
Rangers, referring to
Henrik Lundqvist. Weve
got to stand on our head.
Weve got to play our best
game, theres no question
about it, and hope he has an
off day. Thats how you stop
this guy. In other words, it
doesnt really happen.
If this is Peytons last year in
the league, look for him to
hoist the Lombardi Trophy.
He will most likely have to
go through Tom Brady and
the Patriots to do it. Brady
has the series lead of 11-5,
but what a way out it would
be to finish on top by going
through his rival.

Edited by Andrew Collins

DAILY DEBATE RESULTS: NOV. 4, 2014


Who will take over for Conner Frankamp?
DEVONTE GRAHAM: 65%

FRANK MASON: 35%

VOTE FOR THE WRITER WITH THE MOST CONVINCING ARGUMENT AT KANSAN.COM

23 people polled

Bowen prepares for Iowa State, Mangino matchup


BLAIR SHEADE

@TheRealBlairSheady
The matchup Saturday will
be a special homecoming for
a former Kansas coach. Iowa
State offensive coordinator
Mark Mangino was the head
coach at Kansas from 20022009, and interim coach Clint
Bowen was the defensive
coordinator during the reign of
Mangino. Bowen met with the
media Tuesday to discuss the
Kansas matchup against Iowa
State and the Mangino offense.

Bowen coaching under


Mangino

Bowen
worked
under
Mangino for eight seasons
at Kansas, and Bowen said
Mangino showed how to
prepare a football team and
emphasized
work
ethic.
Mangino taught Bowen to

pay attention to details, and


Bowen learned the little
things do matter. Mangino
had everything so precise on
the team that he enforced the
players to wear the same gear
the same way every practice.
We worked hard and
developed a good program,
Bowen said. It was just a
standard that was set that the
players had to meet at all times,
and it was philosophical the
way things probably should be.

following weeks the Friday


before the game.
Yeah, but it wasnt due

Looking to Satuday

After the loss to Baylor,


Kansas was immediately
focused on Iowa State, but
Bowen might have been
focusing on this game a little
too early. Bowen said this
game is special, but looking
ahead to opponents isnt
anything new, and most weeks
the coordinators plan out their

The [offensive] coordinator


just kind of has the final say
on what he really wants and
what hes truly trying to put
together. But its always a
collective effort.
CLINT BOWEN
Kansas interim head coach

to Iowa State, Bowen said.


Thats just the normal routine.
Any time we had a little extra
time on Friday, we always
glanced ahead.

Preparing for Mangino

The offense that Mangino


runs at Iowa State is similar

to the offense he ran while


at Kansas. Bowen said the
offenses are similar, but
football has changed over the
years. Bowen doesnt know
what the latest Manginoscheme is because the two
coaches havent talked in a
long time.
Theres just a lot of different
wrinkles, things going on
now that theyre up to what
everyone else is doing, where
that 2009 stuff is kind of
teams have moved through
that, Bowen said.

Iowa State offense

Currently, the Cyclones


are the only team other than
Kansas to be winless in the
Big 12. Unlike Kansas, Iowa
State ranks in the nations top
100 for total offense. Iowa
State junior quarterback Sam
Richardson leads the Cyclones

@KANSANSPORTS
!

E
M
CLE th
Y
REC ov. 8
N

in total rushing yards as well


as passing yards. Iowa States
other weapon is senior tight
end E.J. Bibbs, who leads the
cyclones with six touchdowns,
can line up all over the field,
Bowen said.
E.J. Bibbs can line up as
a wide receiver and is very
effective running routes,
catching the ball, Bowen said.
[Bibbs] 260 pounds, runs
really well, runs good routes.
Hes a talented young man. Hes
one of the better dual threat
players in the conference.

Kansas has new cooffensive coordinator

Since the Baylor loss,


the Kansas staff has made
some changes. Kansas wide
receivers coach Eric Kiesau
will team up with John Reagan
to call plays Saturday. Reagan,
also the offensive line coach,

had a lot on his plate, and


Bowen wanted Reagan to pay
more attention to the offensive
line. Bowen said even though
Kiesau and Reagan will be
labeled
co-coordinators,
other coaches give their input
into the offensive planning.
The communication is
always bouncing off the wall,
really not just amongst the
two coordinators but amongst
the entire staff, Bowen said.
The coordinator just kind
of has the final say on what
he really wants and what hes
truly trying to put together.
But its always a collective
effort.

Edited by Andrew Collins

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PAGE 8

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

Remembering
the Royals roller
coaster ride

REMINISCING
ON THE
ROYALS

By Shane Jackson
@JacksonShane3

Old fans and


new fans alike
look back on a
Royals season
for the ages
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fans display signs of support during the Season Celebration by the Kansas City Royals for the community Thursday at Kauffman Stadium in
Kansas City, Mo.

STELLA LIANG

caught up in watching the


Royals postseason run to the
World Series. All over campus
Gretchen Beaver was not there was newfound interest in
originally a Kansas City Royals the team, students were wearfan. Up until the Royals played ing Royals gear and people
the Oakland Athletics in the were bonding over the teams
Wild Card game, she had nev- success.
er watched an entire game.
Just walking down the street
Beaver, a senior from Inde- in a Royals shirt, shouting out
pendence, was instantly drawn Go Royals, its like the Rock
in and found a community.
Chalk, Beaver said. It was
That first Wild Card game, the same type of thing, but for
Royals.
Alex Blau, a senior from
Overland Park, also felt the
Royals brought people togethIve been watching the
er.
Royals for so long and to see
Its funny because Kanthe community that came
sas City has always kind of
together in Lawrence even
been divided with politics
was really neat.
and whatnot, but for the past
month, to have a team kind
ALEX BLAU of bring the city together and
Senior from Overland Park be one was really cool, Blau
said. I definitely saw a switch,
and I think going forward, its
there were so many hits and going to be really great for the
steals and everything, and I re- city.
alized this is a lot more enterDrawn in by the beauty of
taining than I thought it would Kauffman Stadium, Blau said
be, Beaver said. I kept watch- he has been a fan since he was
ing, and they kept winning, 5 or 6 years old. Unlike those
and so Im like Im hooked.
who started watching the RoyShe is one of many students als for the first time this past
at the University who were month, Blau said he watched
@stelly_liang

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kansas City Royals Salvador Perez, right, takes a photo with his phone as Lorenzo Cain addresses the crowd
during the Season Celebration by the Royals for the community on Thursday at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas
City, Mo.
most of the regular season
games this year.
According to ESPN, 77 percent of the televisions that were
turned on last Wednesday in
the Kansas City market were
playing Game 7 of the World

Series. In Lawrence, watch


parties or restaurant viewings
during the postseason games
were common.
Ive been watching the Royals for so long and to see the
community that came together
in Lawrence even was really
neat, Blau said. It was nice
to be a part of.
The team even brought
together fans outside of
Kansas. Over Fall Break,
Beaver went to Las Vegas,
and she said she was able to
bond with people who were
watching a Royals game.

I was able to say Royals are


on, and instantly I was part of
the community, Beaver said.
I was instantly a friend, so the
Royals brought together a little
good friend group wherever
you went.
On campus, the Royals success became a common topic
that could break the ice.
That person that you might
not know very well wearing a
Royals shirt, it sparks a conversation that you wouldnt be
used to, Blau said.
Edited by Ashley Peralta

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I remember sitting in the


Kansas City T-Bones press
box in CommunityAmerica
Ballpark after the Boston
Red Sox had swept the
Kansas City Royals in the
first series after the All-Star
Break. The Trade Deadline
was approaching and James
Shields inevitable departure
was just around the corner.
I will give them one more
series, I said back then to a
couple fellow media interns.
A loss to the Chicago White
Sox and its time to get
something back for James
Shields.
I wasnt the only one who
felt that way. Fellow fans
and local media alike were
echoing my comments. I remembered vividly 610 sports
host Danny Parkins talking
about the Kansas City Chiefs
reporting to camp at the
same time the Royals had
lost their fourth straight
since the All-Star Break.
History had done little
for us to believe otherwise. In the past the Royals
were asked just to get fans
through the summer and
to Chiefs season. Give us
relevance until August, and
we were just fine.
Last year was even better
than we could have imagined. The Royals were mathematically in it until the
final weekend of the regular
season, giving us relevant
baseball through September.
Then, the Chiefs gave the
fans a magical season that
led to a playoff berth following a season in which they
were the worst in the league.
Kansas City has been, and
always will be, a football
town. The Chiefs will dominate the talk at the coffee
shop as the fall draws near.
That was until this year.
The stage was set. Chiefs
players began to report as
the Royals dropped their
fourth straight loss following
the All-Star Break on July
21. But then it began. The
Royals beat the White Sox
and wound up winning their
next 11 series, a streak that
continued through the end
of August. It gave Kansas
City fans hope once more.
It wasnt the first time this
season the Royals had toyed
with my emotions. On May
29, the Royals were just
24-28 and beginning to slide
once again.
But a misfire from Blue
Jays shortstop Jose Reyes
allowed Jarrod Dyson to tie
it up in the ninth. Kansas
City then went on to win the
game in the 10th inning and
went on a 10-game winning
streak, the longest in the
majors this season.
Even last year the Royals
entered the All-Star Break
with a dismal 43-49 record
but went 43-27 to finish the
year.
Kansas City needed another huge second half this
season to make a magical
playoff run that ended with
a heartbreaking World
Series loss in Game 7 to the
San Francisco Giants.
But in its first playoff
appearance in nearly three
decades, the Royals needed
just one month to bring
baseball back for good in
Kansas City.
It remains uncertain who
will take the diamond come
Opening Day 2015, but one
thing remains certain. At
any point next year the Royals will have you losing faith,
only to bring you back in to
enjoy the ride.
Lets just hope the ride is as
good as this last one.
Edited by Jacob Clemen

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Obviously, my teammates know


I need to be more aggressive and
assertive this year, and it kind of
starts with me. So Im really worried
about what I need to do team wise
and I feel the individual stuff that
comes with it will take care of itself
if I do that.
Marcus Paige, North Carolina
junior point guard

FACT OF THE DAY

North Carolina point guard Marcus


Paige earned the most votes of
any preseason All-American this
year, named on 58 ballots from the
65-member national media panel.
Associated Press

TRIVIA OF THE DAY

Q: Besides Okafor, who were the


last two freshmen to be named
to the AP preseason All-American
team?
A: Harrison Barnes in 2010,
Andrew Wiggins in 2013.
Associated Press

PAGE 9

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2014

THE MORNING BREW


Kansas players deserving of All-American team honors

n Monday, the Associated


Press released its annual
preseason college basketball All-American team. This team
predicts which five players will have
the best season at their respective
positions. While not always accurate,
the prediction always ignites conversation.
The AP has chosen Duke University freshman center Jahlil Okafor,
University of North Carolina junior
point guard Marcus Paige, University
of Louisville junior forward Montrezl Harrell, University of Wisconsin
senior forward Frank Kaminsky and
Wichita State University junior point
guard Fred VanVleet, to represent its
preseason All-American team.
While many of the players on the
team are certainly deserving of the
preseason honor, there is a noticeable
lack of representation from the University of Kansas on the list.
The Jayhawks certainly have their
fair share of players who are deserving of being represented on the APs

By Derek Skillett
@derek_skillett

All-American team. Two of those


players include sophomore guard
Wayne Selden Jr. and junior forward
Perry Ellis.
After averaging a respectable 9.7
points per game and 2.6 rebounds per
game, Selden looks primed for a huge
season. After lingering in the shadows
behind top-three NBA draft picks Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid, Selden
looks to show the country why he was
selected as a McDonalds All-American in his final year of high school.
He should get ample opportunities to
showcase his athleticism and shooting
ability throughout the season.
Perry Ellis is another Jayhawk who

should experience a big


2014-15 season. After arriving in Lawrence in 2012 as a
McDonalds All-American,
Ellis has quietly (no pun
intended) developed into
one of the Big 12s leading
scorers. After averaging 5.8
points and 3.9 rebounds in
13 minutes per game as a
freshman, Ellis increased
his scoring output to 13.5
points and 6.7 rebounds per game in
his sophomore year. In the 2013-14
season, Ellis ended up averaging
19.4 points per 40 minutes per game,
according to Sports Reference. If
Ellis can increase those numbers,
he should receive no shortage of
All-American honors.
Freshman forward Cliff Alexander
is also deserving of cracking the
All-American lineup. In Monday
nights season-opening exhibition
game against Washburn, Alexander scored a team-high 14 points
on 6-for-8 shooting, grabbed nine

rebounds and
recorded three
blocks in only 17
minutes of playing
time. If those numbers are any preview
of what is to come,
Alexander could have a
special year.
Okafor, Paige,
Harrell, Kaminsky and
VanVleet are all deserving
of their preseason All-American honors. All of these players
will take on starring roles on their
respective teams and will have a great
shot to make a big impact on the
college basketball world in this upcoming season. However, there are a
few Jayhawks who deserved to have a
shot to be put on a list with those elite
players. Ellis, Selden and Alexander
will have a long season to make sure
the AP understands its mistake in
snubbing them.
Edited by Logan Schlossberg

Kansas looks to gain separation in Big 12 ranks


MATT CORTE
@Corte_UDK

With just one win separating


fourth place Kansas volleyball
(16-7,4-5) from the bottom
of the Big 12, you could say
parity is a word that strongly
describes this conference thus
far.
Behind the top three Big 12
records of Texas, Kansas State,
and Oklahoma, six schools sit
within two games of each other halfway through the conference season.
A sense of urgency is likely
brewing in the Jayhawks, as
this parity shows it's going to
be difficult for Kansas to sweep
any conference season series.
Just look at this past Saturday's match as evidence. The
Jayhawks lost in five sets to an
average TCU team after pummeling the Horned Frogs in
Lawrence two weeks before.
Now, Kansas hopes to recover from that loss and beat a
Baylor team (13-11, 3-6) that
is only a game behind in the
standings.
"We got Baylor and [Texas]
Tech, and those are teams that
are biting on our heels a bit,"
coach Ray Bechard said. "We
could have created some separation with this match [against
TCU], but we kept all those

teams five and below on our


heels, so every match is going
to be important."
Unlike the scenario in which
Kansas first won at home and
then lost to TCU on the road,
Kansas has a chance at sweeping the season series against
Baylor in Lawrence after already beating the Bears in
Waco.
If history repeats itself, however, as it often does, this
match should be another tight
one.
Since 2008, a team has swept
the season series only once,
and that was last season when
Kansas swept Baylor.
One statistic favoring the
Jayhawks chances to win is
that the team has only lost to
Baylor once at home since
2008, and the challenge of defeating the Bears on the road is
already taken care of.
Then
again,
Baylor's
two-match winning streak is
also its longest in the Big 12
this season, so the Bears will
be coming in with momentum.
In order to achieve victory,
Kansas should follow one simple rule: stop junior outside
hitter Andie Malloy.
Although the Bears rank seventh in the Big 12 in kills per
set at 13.21, Malloy individual-

BEN LIPOWITZ/KANSAN

Tayler Soucie, center, and her teammates celebrate a point against TCU on Nov. 1. Kansas is just one win away from fourth place in the Big 12.
ly ranks third in the conference
with an average of 4.03 kills per
set.
Malloy alone produces about
a third of the offense for Baylor,
so shutting her down would

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In order to accomplish that,
Kansas has to do what the team
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The Jayhawks are currently
second in opponents hitting

housing

percentage in the Big 12 at


.202, and the teams 2.57 blocks
per set rank third in conference.
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Volume 128 Issue 42

kansan.com

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

sports

COMMENTARY
Washburn savors
chance to play
Kansas in Allen
Fieldhouse

LOOKING BACK

READY FOR A REMATCH


Kansas to face Oklahoma in first round of Big 12 tournament after Fridays loss

BEN CARROLL
@BCarroll91

By Ben Felderstein
@Ben_Felderstein

n the beginning of
every college season,
whether it be football
or basketball, the powerhouses around the nation
start their season off with
weaker opponents. Whether
those opponents are Division II or Division I-AA, the
result is usually the same
the home team wins in a
blowout.
This was the case Monday
night when Kansas faced
Washburn for the first exhibition game of the season.
As expected, Kansas won in
a blowout, 85-53. Washburn
played hard and put up a
good fight but Kansas size
and superior talent ended
up being too much for the
Ichabods.
After a 32-point loss, it is
normal to assume a team is
feeling deflated and down
on themselves. But thats
not the case for coach Bob
Chipman and the rest of the
team.
It was a great opportunity
for us, Chipman said. We
were able to give guys an opportunity out there and try
to come together as a group.
This isnt the only opportunity like this Washburn will
get. The rest of its preseason
schedule consists of Oklahoma and Kansas State.
Washburn has the toughest preseason schedule in the
nation, Self said jokingly.
If there was a preseason
Division II RPI, theyd be
number one.
For Washburn, its not
about winning, its about
learning and enjoying the
moment. Its not every day
that Division II basketball
players get to play in the
greatest college basketball
venue in the world and go
up against the fifth ranked
team in the country.
During Washburns press
conference, Chipman told
the media that Self went and
spoke to Washburn for 15
minutes the night before the
game. Self talked to the players while they were shooting
just about basketball and
getting better.
It didnt look like it today,
Chipman said. But I guarantee you its going to be
worth five victories for us,
coach Self coming out and
talking to our group.
There is no better place to
play a game of basketball
than Allen Fieldhouse. For
a team like Washburn it
should be more about the
experience than the game
itself.
Id definitely say its the
atmosphere, said Washburn
guard Korey Fisher, who was
asked what hell remember
the most. As a native Kansan, you always watch KU
on TV, but you dont really
grasp what its like until you
get on the court.
Edited by Ashley Peralta

Old and new fans alike reminisce on memorable Royals season | PAGE 8

On Halloween night,
No. 14 Kansas soccer lost
its final game of the regular
season in Norman, Okla.,
to the Oklahoma Sooners
in a game. A draw or a win
would have secured the No.
2 seed for Jayhawks in the
Big 12 tournament, which
begins Wednesday afternoon in Kansas City, Mo.
Now penciled in as the No.
3 seed, the Jayhawks are
slated for a rematch against
the sixth-seeded Sooners
at Swope Park Village in
Kansas City, Mo., at 8 p.m.
Wednesday.
Even though the Jayhawks
are coming off a bit of a
rough stretch losing three
of their last four matches to
close out the regular season,
coach Mark Francis said he
believes they have the competitive edge over the Sooners after dropping Fridays
game.
I think its hard to beat
somebody twice, Francis
said. I think the advantage
for us is that we lost. Our
guys are pissed off. Theyre
going into the game with a
chip on their shoulder because were playing the same
team that we just lost to five
days ago.
As if having the opportunity to watch Oklahoma on film and adjust the
things they were unable to
accomplish Friday wasnt already enough, the Jayhawks
have yet another advantage
on their side. Because the
tournament is only about
45 miles east of Lawrence,
Kansas gets the privilege of
practicing at Rock Chalk

Park. They also get to sleep


in their own beds in Lawrence, as the rest of the
conference resides at hotels
and practices on Astroturf,
which is not the surface the
games will be played on.
I think the traveling takes
a toll on your body, so not
traveling is going to be
nice, junior forward Ashley
Williams said. Were going
to have the most fans because [the game] is in Missouri, but its really close to
where were at. So those two
things will be huge pluses
for us this week.
The Jayhawks began the
season on an eight-game
winning streak, then lost
a match at Marquette, and
went on to win six more in
a row. They have the second-leading scorer in the
Big 12 on their side in junior midfielder Liana Salazar, who scored a third of
the teams goals this season.
They are also poised on the
defensive side of things, as
Kansas has only given up 12
goals all season, a mark that
leads the conference.
The biggest advantage of
all for Kansas seems to be its
senior goalkeeper Kaitlyn
Stroud, whose 0.61 goalsagainst average leads the Big
12 and only 18 other goalies
in the nation sit above that
mark. Her 13 career shutouts rank third all-time at
Kansas.
Shes a very good goalkeeper, senior defender
Caroline Van Slambrouck
said. Shes grown so much
as a player.
For the Jayhawks, the key
to a deep run in the postseason is to strike first and
strike early. On only one

GEORGE MULLINIX/KANSAN

The Kansas womens soccer team celebrates after scoring a goal against University of Texas at San Antonio.
occasion has Kansas given up
more than one goal in a game.

the Bears and the Cowgirls


once this season, but both
were won by just one goal. But
first, Kansas will need to find
a way to take revenge against
Oklahoma to move onto the
semifinals and potentially the
Big 12 championship on Sunday.
Were excited to play, and

LOOKING AHEAD:
If Kansas wins Wednesday
night, they will go on to play
the winner of the Oklahoma
State vs. Baylor game, which
would be played Friday. Jayhawks already defeated both

I think its going to be an advantage, Van Slambrouck


said of the scheduled rematch
with the Sooners. Everyone
is still fired up from the loss
[on Friday], and were ready
to go out and show that we are
the better team.

Edited by Kelsie Jennings

WOMENS SOCCER BIG 12 TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE

WEDNESDAY,
NOVEMBER 5
WEST VIRGINIA (1)
TCU (8)

FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 7

11:30 A.M.
5:30 P.M.

TEXAS TECH (4)


TEXAS (5)

SUNDAY,
NOVEMBER 9

2 P.M.
3:30 P.M.

OKLAHOMA STATE (2)


BAYLOR (7)

5:30 P.M.
8 P.M.

KANSAS (3)
OKLAHOMA (6)

BIG 12 CHAMPION

8 P.M.

Ellis embracing different type of leadership


SHANE JACKSON
@jacksonshane

There he stood, with media


members
crowded
around him, keying on every
soft-spoken word. Perry Ellis
seemed more poised on mens
basketball media day than in
years past. Part of that could
be because this is now his
third go-around, as he enters
his junior campaign.
I remember being 17 and
not talking at all, but its got
a lot better, Ellis said. Even
my interviews are out the roof
better now as I do this more.
Its no secret that Ellis is typically quieter than most of his
teammates. On the court, Ellis is the silent assassin, consistently providing reliable
production on the offensive
end.
That proved to be the case in
the first exhibition Monday.
Ellis was one of four players to
get at least 20 minutes. He finished with nine points, which
was tied for the third-most on
the team. He knocked down
four of his five free throw attempts on a night when the
team finished just 50 percent
from the line.
Even though Ellis averaged
the second-most points per
game (13.6) last year, he often
flew under the radar compared to freshmen Andrew
Wiggins and Joel Embiid.
Gone are Wiggins and Embiid. Replacing them are the

less prolific incumbent freshmen replacements Kelly Oubre Jr. and Cliff Alexander.
That leaves Ellis as one of the
older players on this young
squad.
Christian Garrett is the lone
senior for Kansas this year.
Ellis is one of four juniors
including Evan Manning,
Hunter Mickelson and Jamari
Traylor.
All eyes will turn to the
6-foot-8 forward out of Wichita, as the young Kansas squad
is in need of some direction.
Typically leadership means
being more vocal, making Ellis sudden new role a bit of a
challenge for him. Knowing
his team needs him to play
a bigger role, Ellis has been
working on the attribute he
has struggled with in the past.
Coach knows Im not a real
vocal guy, Ellis said. But
there are situations that you
need to be more vocal, and
Im working on that.
Despite Ellis taking on
this new role, coach Bill Self
doesnt plan to change a thing
about his leader.
In the past I felt like I had
forced some guys out of their
comfort zone, Self said. Im
not going to do that with Perry.
Ellis may not have to be
outspoken this year. In fact,
Kansas may have a few other
players who the newcomers
can look to.
Im going to have a bigger

JAMES HOYT/KANSAN

Perry Ellis pauses during Kansas exhibition game against Washburn on Monday. As a junior, Ellis is one of the
veteran Jayhawks and will look to take on a leadership role for the underclassmen.
role on this team, Traylor
said. Im one of the older
guys, so Im looking forward
to taking a leadership role
and helping out some of these
younger guys. Not too long
ago that was me asking the
questions.
Perhaps the most talented
player on the team is Wayne
Selden Jr. He was one of two
Jayhawks to start in all 35
games a year ago. But like
Ellis, he was often overshadowed by the likes of Embiid
and Wiggins.
Like Ellis, Selden may be

asked to take a bigger role this


year, not just on the court, but
off as well.
We have a lot of young guys
that are looking up at me even
as a sophomore, Selden said.
Its just about being vocal
and being supportive.
An example of that was
Selden taking the microphone
after the scrimmage at Late
Night and thanking the thousands of fans for coming out.
Regardless of who is more
vocal, it looks like this trio of
Jayhawks will lead the pack
this season. Self must feel the

same way since he brought


Ellis, Selden and Traylor to
address the media at Big 12
Media Day.
Especially for a team with a
streak of 10 consecutive conference championships on the
line, a group of experienced
players leading the way is a
good thing.
We dont want to be the
ones to end the streak, Ellis
said.
Well said by the man of few
words.
Edited by Alyssa Scott

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