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The KU Microgravity Team

designed and submitted


three projects to test in a
NASA simulation.
1B
The Kansas football team lost
another game after leading
17-0 at halftime, falling to
Oklahoma State on
Saturday, 42-32.
The student vOice since 1904
3A
monday, october 16, 2006
www.kansan.com
Vol. 117 Issue 41
PAGE 1A
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
2006 The University Daily Kansan
75 55
Cloudy
Rainy
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Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7B
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Horoscopes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1B
Sudoku. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
index
Few showers
58 34
WEDNESDAY
57 51
crIme
Student-flled
neighborhoods
attract violence
By Kim Lynch
With virtually one hand, the
assembled crowd wiped away stray
tears as Pulitzer Prize-winning
reporter Jim Sheeler read aloud from
his winning article, Final Salute.
The article, published in a spe-
cial section of the Rocky Mountain
News, was accompanied by photo-
graphs from Todd Heisler, who also
won a Pulitzer for his work.
With a slide show of the pic-
tures playing on a screen towering
above the speakers, accompanied
by the deep, powerful music of a
cello, emotions ran high on Kansas
Editors Day.
The School of Journalism invited
the two Pulitzer Prize winners, as
well as Rocky editor and publisher
John Temple and
the focal point
of the article,
Marine Corps
Maj. Steve Beck,
to speak to a
group of students,
faculty and profes-
sional journalists
for the annual event.
Final Salute recounts Becks
experiences as he tenderly and care-
fully notified families that their
loved one had died in combat and
walked them through the processes
and rituals that accompany the bat-
tlefield death of a Marine.
The story was more than a year
in the making, Sheeler said. In that
time, Sheeler and Heisler attend-
ed the funerals of fallen Marines,
played with the children whose
fathers would not be coming home
and documented a story that Beck
said had never been told before.
Beck, who was reserved and often
took thoughtful pauses to prepare
his responses, said from when he
first met Sheeler and Heisler, he
tried to impress upon them the grav-
ity of the story.
I knew the journey I would have
to take them on, Beck said repeat-
edly. The Marine, who said he had
faced some criticism within his own
chain of command for allowing the
story to be written and granting the
team so much access, said he trusted
his instincts that Sheeler and Heisler
were doing the story for the right
school of journalIsm
Pulitzer Prize winners, Marine share stories of grief
Vanessa Pearson/KaNSaN
todd Heisler, photojournalist, left, JimSheeler, reporter for the Rocky Mountain
News, center, and Maj. Steve Beck discuss working on the Pulitzer Prize-winning story,
Final Saluteon Kansas Editors Day on Saturday in 110 Budig Hall. Heisler and Sheeler won
the prizes in photography and reporting for the story.
See editors oN Page 3a
athletIcs department
Temple
crIme
By dAvid LinhArdt
A 19-year-old McCollum Hall
resident remembered the shock she
felt when she woke up Aug. 27 about
2:30 a.m. with no pants or under-
wear on and a sharp pain between
her legs.
The KU student recounted that
moment and added further details
at the preliminary hearing on Oct.
12 of Arrin Bernard, an 18-year-old
McCollum resident charged with
allegedly raping her earlier that
night.
Bernard was charged Aug. 28
with having sex with the victim
without her consent. The University
Daily Kansan has a policy of not
revealing the names of alleged vic-
tims of sexual assault.
The woman said she was
asleep when the incident allegedly
occurred, but that at least five or six
friends were in the room watching a
movie while the incident may have
occurred.
She had been taking vodka shots
with those same friends earlier in
the evening before the group went
to a party on Tennessee Street about
9:30 p.m. She drank beer with her
roommate at the party, and the
group returned to McCollum after
midnight, she said.
The group may have decided to
order pizza and watch a movie, the
woman said. She said she lay down
on her bed with Bernard and fell
asleep as the movie began to play.
Her memories were somewhat
fuzzy until she fell asleep but when
she woke up about an hour later,
wearing only a tank top, the shock
jolted her into alertness, she said.
She had been lying on top of the
blankets, but when she woke up she
was underneath a blanket, she said.
Alleged rape victim
gives testimony during
preliminary hearing
See trial oN Page 6a
By c.J. moorE
Lew Perkins couldnt help but
smile as he responded to reporters
questions about the sanctions the
NCAA handed the University of
Kansas last week.
His smile grew larger in response
to a question about his predecessor,
former Kansas Athletics Director Al
Bohl, who the NCAA said described
his approach to college athletics in
one statement to a KU compliance
worker: Compliance doesnt sell
tickets.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway
said Bohl had never made that state-
ment to him.
I think you know what my
response to that would have been,
Hemenway told the assembled jour-
nalists.
Because of Bohls disregard for
compliance, the NCAA labeled
the University as having a lack of
institutional control. But the sanc-
tions the NCAA chose to impose
amounted to little more than a slap
on the wrist.
The committee has been very
fair with us, Hemenway said. We
trust the process, and we accept the
committees judgment.
The Kansas Athletics Department
walked away with three years of pro-
bation and lost three scholarships in
football and lost a scholarship and
eight paid on-campus recruiting
visits for mens basketball over the
next two seasons. The University
will not appeal the decision.
The infractions committee
accepted several of Kansas self-
imposed sanctions, including the
already-served penalties by the
womens basketball program that
the committee deemed wholly dis-
proportionate to the violations that
were reported, especially as related
Mark Mangino and his football teamlost scholarships for committing academic fraud.
athletics director LewPerkins was citedfor improving the Universitys NCAArules compliance.
attorney Rick evrard was responsible for conducting the initial investigation for the University.
Bill Self and his basketball teamlost a scholarship and and face recruiting restrictions.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway hiredathletics directors who, the NCAAsaid, ignoredcompliance.
the NCaa said Bonnie Henricksons womens basketball teamfaced disproportionate sanctions.
Photos by Vanessa Pearson/KaNSaN
See violations oN Page 3a
NCAA ANNouNCes sANCtioNs
Football, mens basketball face restrictions for past violations
see also...
complete coverage of the
ncaa sanctions is inside. on
page 1B, columnist michael
Phillips writes that the
sanctions prove the ncaas
irrelevance. on page 2B, see a
sport-by-sport breakdown of
the violations.
also, visit kansan.com for
the full report issued by the
ncaa, as well as responses
from kansas ofcials.
By dAvid LinhArdt
Matthew Geis, Topeka junior,
looked up from an Oct. 10 poker
game at a Lawrence apartment as
his friend answered a knock at the
door. Another poker player was
supposed to be arriving.
Instead, two men entered the
apartment. One of them wrestled
Geis friend into a headlock, dragged
him back into the apartment and
put a gun to his head. Geis and his
friends were being robbed.
Last weekend, Lawrence police
and the KU Public Safety office
continued investigating aggravated
robberies and burglaries that vic-
timized KU students.
Geis incident occurred at
Meadowbrook Apartments, near
15th and Iowa streets, but several of
the crimes, including a home inva-
sion and a case of sexual battery,
allegedly occurred near 12th and
Louisiana streets.
Fabian Conde, Overland Park
junior, lives in a house near the 1200
block of Tennessee. On Oct. 8, what
Conde described as a drunken
fight broke out during a party.
Conde normally leaves his front
door unlocked and lets almost any-
one inside to party and drink. Later
that evening, seven to 10 men alleg-
edly gained entry to Condes house.
Though Conde and his roommates
said they had nothing to do with
the fight earlier, the group of men
demanded revenge for the brawl.
One guy started swinging a bat,
Conde said. We got it away from
him, but others started throwing
fists. There were three of them on
each of us.
The men allegedly smashed
Condes TV and kitchen table and
threw a cinder block through the
garage door.
Conde called the police but
acknowledged that without insur-
ance, there was little the police
could do for his situation. He said
the fight was the stupidest thing
thats ever happened in his life.
The sad part about it was that
we were used to people going in and
out, Conde said. Now if we dont
know you, were not letting you in
the house.
See hearing oN Page 6a
NEWS 2A
Monday, october 16, 2006
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KJHK is the student
voice in radio. Each
day there is news,
music, sports, talk
shows and other
content made for
students, by stu-
dents. Whether its
rock n roll or reggae, sports or spe-
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For more
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turn to
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A husband is what is left of
the lover after the nerve has
been extracted.
Helen Rowland
Every 10 to 13 seconds
someone in America gets
divorced.
Source: iVillage.com
Want to know what people
are talking about? Here is a list
of Fall Breaks most e-mailed
stories from Kansan.com.
1. Marijuanas benefts
explored
2. NCAA orders additional
penalties for Kansas
3. Accounting majors hired
fast
4. Joes Bakery: New twist on
sweet tradition
5. Avid K-State fan converts
to Jayhawks lover
The KU Public Safety Ofce
reported that someone took
four remote transmitters and
four remote controls from an
unlocked room in Woodruf
Auditorium. The theft occurred
between Oct. 7 and Oct. 8, and
the total value of the loss was
$1,800.
The KU home of National
Public Radio, in the Audio Read-
er Center, reported the theft of
an Acer desktop computer from
the building. The theft occurred
between Oct. 11 and Oct. 12,
and the total value of the loss
was $300.
A KU student reported that
someone stole a Canon digital
camera, the camera case and a
memory card while the student
watched the KU football game
Oct. 7. The theft occurred at Me-
morial Stadium, and the total
value of the loss was $375.
HealtH
Raising concern about
breast cancer awarness
to be weeks primary goal
Campus and community or-
ganizations will observe Breast
Cancer Awareness Week this
week to raise concerns about
the illness and the importance
of prevention at the University
of Kansas.
Kathy Rose-Mockry, direc-
tor of the Emily Taylor Womens
Resource Center, said that many
KU students and staf members
might not fully realize the ef-
fects of the cancer. She said the
disease can be treated if caught
early.
The Emily Taylor Womens
Resource Center, along with the
Watkins Health Center, Lawrence
Memorial Hospital and Sigma
Lambda Gamma sorority, will
sponsor information tables on
Wescoe Beach Monday, Thurs-
day and Friday and in the Kan-
sas Union Tuesday and Wednes-
day. The groups will also have a
panel discussion with survivors
at 8 p.m. Monday at the Gridiron
Room in the Burge Union and a
5K run/walk through campus on
Sunday.
It is $2 to participate in the
run/walk, and Rose-Mockry said
all proceeds would go to the
greater Kansas City afliate of
the Susan G. Komen Foundation.
Rose-Mockry said that this
is the frst year that University
groups will have a full week of
events for Breast Cancer Aware-
ness Week.
Courtney Hagen
Spotlight
on
Organizations
Students for
Fair Trade
Megan Hirt
Debuting on campus this semes-
ter, Students for Fair Trade is already
hard at work raising awareness about
the importance and the impact of
fair trade.
The fair trade movement helps
disadvantaged farmers and artisans
in developing countries earn suf-
ficient wages by making their goods
available on the international mar-
ket.
KU students have previously been
active in the movement through the
Lawrence Fair Trade Commission,
which operated on campus as a
branch of Ecumenical Christian
Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
But Selena Self, Norman, Okla.,
junior, and active member of the
new organization, said that the desire
to involve a larger percentage of
the student body in local fair trade
efforts spurred the recent formation
of Students for Fair Trade.
If we became an official KU orga-
nization, then more students could be
aware of what we do, Self explained.
Students for Fair Trade educates
and motivates through campus-wide
events that not only showcase fair
trade goods, but also show the short-
comings of current international
trade relations.
The Hunger Banquet brings to
life social inequalities, Self said of
the upcoming event, at which par-
ticipants are randomly assigned a
new identity that designates them
as a high-, middle- or low-income
citizen for the evening. Sixty percent
will be of the lower class, and their
banquet will be meager portions of
rice and water, while the 15 percent
in the high-class will feast comfort-
ably on a 3-course meal.
Self said Hunger Banquets are
powerful examples of social injustice,
as participants experience first-hand
the disparities that exist between the
worlds richest and poorest citizens.
Students for Fair Trade is partner-
ing with Student Union Activities to
host the banquet on Oct. 23 in the
Kansas Union. Though similar events
have occurred on campus before, Self
hopes that collaboration with SUA
and numerous other student groups
will help bring a large turnout to this
Banquet. Vouchers are required and
available at the SUA box office on the
fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
Students for Fair Trade will be
transforming the ECM building into
a marketplace of fair trade goods
from November 24 to November 30.
The Holiday Market will feature fair
trade edibles and artwork originating
from South America to Asia.
Self encourages students to get
involved in the organizations grass-
roots initiatives that promote fair
trade goods and push for interna-
tional trade reform.
Students for Fair Trade meets
every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the ECM
building. More information is avail-
able at www.lawrencefairtrade.org,
and any questions can be sent to
Selena Self, sself@ku.edu.
Kansan correspondent writer Me-
gan Hirt can be contacted at edi-
tor@kansan.com.
Edited by Aly Barland
Wave your hands in the air
Vanessa Pearson/KANSAN
Brandon Bowman, Lawrence senior and drummajor, directs the marching band outside Chancellor Robert Hemenways home on Saturday before the football game. The chancellor held a pre-game
bufet for Kansas Editors Day. The band played several songs including the fght song and the Rock Chalk Chant.
criMe
Men stabbed at nightclub,
require medical attention
Two Lawrence men were stabbed
early Friday morning at Liquid Bar
and Nightclub, 804 W. 24th St.
William Mitchell, Mayetta sopho-
more, received several stab wounds
to the torso, ear and neck. He re-
ceived stitches and staples to more
than a dozen stab wounds, and was
released from Lawrence Memorial
Hospital at 2 p.m. Friday.
Williams older brother Edward
Mitchell, a 21-year-old Haskell In-
dian Nations University student,
was fown to KU Medical Center in
Kansas City, Kan., Friday morning by
helicopter. Edward received several
sets of stitches from the altercation,
and was released Friday at 10 p.m.,
said William Mitchell.
Lawrence residents James Green,
19, and Harlan Masqua, 20, refused
medical assistance at the scene,
according to a Lawrence Police
Department media release. Green
later received stitches to an ear at
Lawrence Memorial Hospital Friday
afternoon.
Two men, ages 18 and 22, were
found Friday morning two blocks
from the scene and are being ques-
tioned by Lawrence police. Through
interviews and reviews of a surveil-
lance camera, the department has
identifed two other individuals in-
volved with the altercation.
Matt Elder
speaKer
Speaker to address harmful
efect of religion on society
Richard Dawkins, an ethologist
and evolutionary biologist, will
speak at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the
Lied Center.
Dawkins is the Charles Simonyi
Professor of the Public Understand-
ing of Science at Oxford University.
He studied under Niko Tinbergen, a
nobel prize winning ethologist. He
wrote numerous best-selling books,
which have sparked controversy,
been translated into many difer-
ent languages and won various
awards. Dawkins most recent book,
The God Delusion, examines how
religion is both irrational and ex-
tremely harmful to society. Dawkins
will discuss the book in his lecture
tonight.
Dawkins lecture is part of the
Humanities Lecture Series and the
Difcult Dialogue Series, Knowl-
edge: Faith and Reason.
Darla Slipke
KU Memorial Unions
BIRTHDAY
Unveiling of new
KU History Panels
in the traditions area.
WEEK EVENTS
Free KU Koozies!
Free Cake & Punch!
Checkout the complete list of events at
Specials at
KU Bookstores
The Market
Jaybowl
The Underground
KU Bookstores | kubookstores.com KU Dining Services | kudining.com KU Memorial Unions | www.union.ku.edu
serving the
KU community
Celebrating
www.union.ku.edu
Contributing to student success.
NEWS
3A
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Student scientists
design zero-gravity
experiments for NASA
BY NATE MCGINNIS
Three teams of engineering stu-
dents are submitting self-designed
experiments to NASA for a chance
to test them in zero gravity at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston.
The teams, collectively known as
the KU Microgravity Team, are sub-
mitting proposals to test a propulsion
system for a small satellite, a docking
mechanism and a lunar rover.
The teams will submit the experi-
ments to the Reduced Gravity Flight
Program sponsored by NASA. If
selected, they would spend two
weeks next summer testing their
experiments in zero gravity.
Ben Parrott, Overland Park
senior, participated in the program
last summer and helped organize
the teams for this years proposals.
His team last year designed and test-
ed a cold gas propulsion system for a
small satellite using compressed air
and nitrogen.
Parrott said his team spent the
first week of the program fine-tun-
ing the experiment and preparing
it to fly on the aircraft. The sec-
ond week consisted of testing the
experiments on an airplane in zero
gravity.
To test their experiments in zero
gravity, the team flew aboard a gov-
ernment research vehicle nicknamed
the weightless wonder, a C-9 style
aircraft that simulates a zero gravity
environment.
The plane creates a zero gravity
environment by flying in a parabola
pattern. The planes follows a parab-
ola pattern, and the steep descent
creates a negative G-force and simu-
lates a zero-gravity environment for
about 30 seconds, and the pattern is
then repeated.
The day before the experiments
flew on the plane, Parrott said a
team of NASA engineers, insurance
observers and flight directors asked
them questions and approved the
project for flight.
Trevor Sorensen, associate pro-
fessor of aerospace engineering and
the teams faculty adviser, said the
group originally proposed and had
their experiment accepted by NASA
in 2004, but didnt test it in the sum-
mer of 2005 because of problems
with the zero gravity aircraft NASA
used in the program.
Sorensen said this years proposal
was designed to overcome problems
from last summers experiments. He
said the test plane interfered with
the satellites wireless controls and
the team didnt get the full results
they wanted from the experiment.
Aaron Terrell, Auburn, Ala.,
senior, is working on a different
proposal to create a space shuttle
docking mechanism for the inter-
national space station using shape
memory alloy.
Terrell said shape memory alloy
was a combination of metals that
can change shape, stiffness or posi-
tion by stimulation from an electri-
cal field or heat.
The molecular structure of the
shape metal alloy is set in a certain
shape, such as a straight bar. The
alloy can then be bent out of its orig-
inal shape, distorting the original
molecular structure. When the alloy
is exposed to an electrical current, it
undergoes a molecular change that
rearranges the alloy back into its
original shape.
Terrell said the team designed
a docking mechanism to use two
different pieces of the alloy. One of
the pieces would start out straight
and then be coiled. When a space
shuttle needed to dock, an electrical
current would stimulate this piece,
causing the metal to expand out-
wards towards the shuttle. Once the
mechanism is attached to the shut-
tle, another piece of shape memory
alloy, which was designed to do the
exact opposite, will contract and
pull the shuttle back towards the
space station for docking.
The third proposal would test
the capabilities of a lunar rover in
reduced gravity. The lunar rover
is the same idea in theory as the
Mars Rover, but must be designed
to function on the moon which is
about one-sixth of Earths gravity,
where as martian gravity is about
one-third.
Terrell said none of the team
members receive class credit for the
projects and all the work is done
solely for the experience. Parrott
said if not all of the proposals are
accepted, the team members will be
redistributed so everyone can par-
ticipate in the program.
Kansan staf writer Nate McGinnis
can be contacted at nmcginnis@
kansan.com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
Contributed Photo
The KU Microgravity Teamsubmitted three proposals to test a propulsion systemfor a small
satellite, a docking mechanismand a lunar rover to a programsponsored by NASA.
to the mens basketball program.
We knew there was a chance
something could happen, mens
basketball coach Bill Self said of
the lost scholarship. But to be real
candid, we did not anticipate that
that would occur.
Gene Marsh, chairman of the
NCAA Committee on Infractions,
which determined the sanctions
Kansas would face, gave tremen-
dous credit to Perkins for enhanc-
ing the climate of compliance in
the department and for discover-
ing the previous violations. Marsh
alluded to the fact that the Perkins
hire may have lessened the sanc-
tions Kansas faces.
Bohl, as well as former Athletics
Director Bob Frederick, left vacant
positions in the compliance depart-
ment throughout their tenures,
despite funding being budgeted for
those positions. Throughout their
tenures, numerous secondary vio-
lations were found by the depart-
ment, but not reported to the con-
ference office or to the NCAA.
The breakdown in communi-
cations and the failure of the com-
pliance office to meet its responsi-
bilities coupled with the then-
director of athletics ignoring the
need to upgrade the compliance
effort are clear indicators of a
lack of institutional control, the
NCAA wrote in its press release.
When he arrived at Kansas, the
compliance department included
half a worker, Perkins said, because
that persons duties were split
between two departments.
I did think it was unusual for a
school this size to basically have a
half person and we took immedi-
ate action to rectify that, Perkins
said.
Perkins has increased the com-
pliance staff to five employees since
being hired in 2003.
Hes made all the right moves
since taking the job and hes helped
the school a great deal in its com-
pliance effort, Marsh said.
And instead of dropping its
iron fists and possibly penalizing
Kansas with post-season or TV
bans, the NCAA chose to firmly
slap Kansas on the wrist.
And Perkins was able to keep a
smile on his face.
Kansan staf writer C.J. Moore
can be contacted at cjmoore@
kansan.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
VIOLATIONS (CONTINUED FROM 1A)
reasons.
Even more than having the right
motivation, though, Beck said he
had to convince the two journalists
that this story couldnt be written
in days or weeks. It turned out, the
story couldnt be written in months,
either. What started as a story idea
on Veterans Day 2004 finally saw
print on Veterans Day 2005.
Getting that much time is not
possible for the average reporter,
Temple suggested. Sheeler had that
much time because he had earned
it with his other stories and he had
built trust with his editors, Temple
said.
For the team Heisler, Sheeler,
Temple and Beck the story was
never just a story and never a quest
for a Pulitzer Prize, they said. The
two journalists have continued to
follow the families they profiled
including documenting the birth of a
child whose Marine father had died
in Iraq and invited the families to
the newsroom on the day the Pulitzer
Prizes were announced. The families
spoke after the Pulitzer victory was
announced and brought most in the
newsroom to tears, Temple said.
As Sheeler read aloud from his
article at Kansas Editors Day, many
in the audience openly sobbed or
quietly studied the floor.
Mallory Curry, Overland Park
sophomore, said the speakers made
her see the human side of the story.
Kansan staf writer Kim Lynch can
be contacted at klynch@kansan.
com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
EDITORS (CONTINUED FROM 1A)
Volunteers are greatly needed and appreciated! While
you are assisting KU students you can also study and do
homework! Pick up forms in room 410 in the Kansas Union!
If you have any questions regarding the service or about
volunteering, please email Safety@ku.edu
Have you ever felt unsafe walking alone at
night on campus? Wish someone could
walk with you? Jaywalk can help!
What is JayWalk?
Where is JayWalk?
When is the service available?
Who walks with me?
JayWalk is a service available to all students
who want a JayWalk volunteer to WALK them
to their residence hall or car, or to wait with
them for the Night Campus Express Bus or
SafeRide.
The JayWalk station and volunteers are
located inside Anschutz Library.
JayWalk runs Sunday through Thursday
from 8pm to midnight.
One male and one female will escort you
to a specic location.
WANT TO VOLUNTEER FOR JayWalk?
Call us at: 864-3222
JayWalk is giving away an IPOD Nano!
Every time you use our service or
volunteer with JayWalk, you get your
name in the drawing, which will be in
December!
Tonight at 6:30
Smith Hall Room 100
For two decades, the Acholi people of
Northern Uganda have been caught in a
civil war between a rebel group whose
main objective is inhumane terror and a
government whose military response has
often increased misery and suffering.
Over one and a half million people
have been displaced into camps and over
25,000 children have been abducted to be
used as soldiers and sex slaves. This lm
is the story of Uganda, her stolen children,
and the ght to be free.
Join Habitat for Humanity
Collegiate Challenge for
an alternative spring break
experience!
Informational Meeting
Tonight, 8pm
4th Floor Lobby,
Kansas Union
One week to
change a life, one
week to change
your own.
Want to connect with new people?
Want to make a difference?
KU Habitat for Humanity
entertainment 4a
monday, october 16, 2006
horoscope
damaged circus
sQuirreL
GREG GRIESENAUER
WES BENSON
10 is the easiest day, 0 the most
challenging.
aries (march 21-april 19)
Today is a 9
You have a tendency to get way
out on the leading edge. You
dont have to be foolish about it,
though. It takes discipline to be a
survivor.
Taurus (april 20-may 20)
Today is a 5
Even if you know the answer, dont
tell unless youre asked. People
who are not listening to each
other wont listen to you, either.
gemini (may 21-June 21)
Today is a 9
One of your natural talents is a
willingness to ask questions. That
will be required now, as you sort
the fact from the fction.
cancer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 6
Get your group to agree on a goal
and stick to it, until its done. Teach
them to be loyal to one another,
and to you.
Leo (July 23-aug. 22)
Today is an 8
Let others do the talking now. You
watch and look and listen. When
you make your move, dont waste
an ounce of energy.
Virgo (aug. 23-sept. 22)
Today is a 5
You have something hanging
around in your closets that you
can put to use. Dont buy new,
save your money. Youll need it
very soon, for something else.
Libra (sept. 23-oct. 22)
Today is an 8
Youll fnd out about trust and
moderation. A little exaggeration
could turn into a very big deal, so
take care.
scorpio (oct. 23-nov. 21)
Today is a 5
Keep most of your comments to
yourself. The others dont need
to know what you really think.
Besides, youll save a lot of time.
sagiTTarius (nov. 22-dec. 21)
Today is a 7
Keep the others motivated. You
cant do what they are doing
directly, but you can make abso-
lutely sure they do it. Welcome to
management.
capricorn (dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 5
Caution is advised, but you already
do that. Take charge of the situa-
tion, and fnd out as much as you
can. You can use this situation to
your advantage.
aQuarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8
Dont try to vanquish a noble
adversary all by yourself. Get a lot
of people on your side, and then
attack.
pisces (Feb. 19-march 20)
Today is a 7
Keep at a difcult job, even
though youd rather do anything
else. Once this item is scratched
of your list, you will fnally relax.
Wednesdays cryptoquip:
Wednesdays answer
KU Trivia
THIS WEEKS PRIZE:
Two FREE
massages from
Pinnacle Career
Institute!
Need a hint?
www.ku.edu
Who was the rst mens basketball coach?
Log on to kansan.com to answer the
question!
Your Halloween Headquarters!
Fog Machines
Costumes
Props
Accessories
23r d & Nai s mi t h865- 3803
856-0606 15th & Wakarusa
At Zig & Macs,
$1.50
Domestic
DRAWS
25
Chicken
WINGS
_
Specials really are special
MONDAY SPECIALS
Come watch all the
games on our
29 HDTVs!
entertainment
Actors hand out awards at
Woodstock Film Festival
WOODSTOCK, N.Y. In a role
reversal, actors Matt Dillon and
Rosie Perez got to be on the giving
end of an awards show, hand-
ing out Woodstock Film Festival
honors.
Dillon, an Academy Award
nominee for Crash, presented the
Trailblazer Award to Independent
Film Channel Chairman Jonathan
Sehring. Dillon starred in the IFCs
2005 release Factotum.
When a little indie flm be-
comes a big hit, the producer and
distributor never get the atten-
tion they deserve, Dillon said at
Saturdays presentation.
Perez presented the Maverick
Award to two-time Academy
Award-winning documentary
flmmaker Barbara Kopple, whose
subjects have included Woody
Allen and boxer Mike Tyson.
You have two completely
diferent men, and they are both
really messed up, Perez said.
Kopples newest documentary,
Shut up and Sing, is about the
backlash against the Dixie Chicks
after the country music group
publicly criticized President Bush.
Julia Loktevs Day Night Day
Night was named Best Feature
Film. It tells the story of a 19-year-
old girl and the three masked men
who strap a bomb to her back and
drop her of in Times Square.
Associated Press
World
Kidman visits Kosovo as
U.N. goodwill ambassador
PRISTINA, Serbia Nicole
Kidman is playing a role that has
nothing to do with movies, tour-
ing Kosovo as a United Nations
goodwill ambassador to the tense
province.
Im here ... to learn so that I can
help your country at this crucial,
crucial time for the future, Kidman
said after arriving Saturday, to
meet people, hear their stories
and educate myself, and I suppose
be a voice for you if you need it.
The actress was named
goodwill ambassador of the U.N.
Development Fund for Women, or
UNIFEM, in January and the tour of
Kosovo is her frst visit in that role.
Kidmans two-day visit
comes at a sensitive time as
ethnic Albanians and Serbs are
negotiating the status of Kosovo.
Ethnic Albanians want full
independence for the province
of 2 million, while Serbia insists
Kosovo should remain under its
sovereignty.
Associated Press
entertainment
The Grudge 2 debuts at
No. 1 in its frst weekend
LOS ANGELES Early Hallow-
een spirit gripped movie audiences
as the fright fick The Grudge 2
debuted at No. 1, taking in $22 mil-
lion during its frst weekend.
Sonys horror sequel bumped
the previous weekends top flm,
the Warner Bros. release The
Departed, to second place. The
Departed, a mob epic from Martin
Scorsese, took in $18.7 million,
lifting its 10-day total to $56.6 mil-
lion, according to studio estimates
Sunday.
Universals Man of the Year,
with Robin Williams as a political
comic whos elected president,
opened at No. 3 with $12.55 mil-
lion.
Sarah Michelle Gellar, who
starred in the 2004 hit The
Grudge, returns for a cameo in
the sequel, which features Amber
Tamblyn as her sister, haunted by
the same angry spirits introduced
in the frst movie.
The Grudge 2 was not
screened for critics beforehand,
and those who did review it on
opening day generally trashed
the movie.
Associated Press
OPINION
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
BROWER: Rivalries are good for college sports,
but some fans take them too seriously. Cheer
for your school without behaving like a child.
See kansan.com for more opinions and Free for All comments
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006
WWW.KANSAN.COM
OPINION PAGE 5A
The University Daily Kansan emphasizes the First Amendment:
Register your bike
to deter thieves
Creative
costumes
draw more
attention
Fans take college rivalries
too seriously, act immature
OUR VIEW
COMMENTARY
FREE FOR ALL
Call 864-0500
SUBMISSIONS
The Kansan welcomes letters to the editor and guest
columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length,
or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Frank Tankard or Dave Ruigh
at 864-4810 or e-mail opinion@kansan.com.
General questions should be directed to the editor at
editor@kansan.com
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Frank Tankard opinion editor
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Maximum Length: 500 word limit
Include: Authors name; class, hometown (student); posi-
tion (faculty member/staff ); phone number (will not be
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Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack a
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EDITORIAL BOARD
Jonathan Kealing, Erick R. Schmidt, Gabriella Souza, Frank
Tankard, Dave Ruigh, Steve Lynn, McKay Stangler and Louis
Mora
BY TERESA LO
KANSAN COLUMNIST
OPINION@KANSAN.COM
Bike thieves have plagued cam-
pus again this semester and its
time for students to fight back by
registering their bicycles with the
Lawrence Police Department.
For 25 cents, Lawrence police
will give you a sticker license to
place on your bicycle. You get a
copy of the registration, which
includes your bikes serial num-
ber.
Bike licenses deter thieves. A
smart thief will avoid stealing
a bike with an affixed license.
The license makes stolen bikes
easier for police to identify, so
police are more likely to catch
criminals riding or transporting
stolen bikes.
The license also makes selling
a stolen bicycle more difficult.
No one pawn shop or other-
wise wants to buy stolen prop-
erty easily identified as such.
If recovered by police, your
bike is more likely to be returned
to you. The license and regis-
tration provide information that
the Lawrence Police Department
and the KU Public Safety Office
need to contact you and return
your property.
Sgt. Dan Ward, spokesman for
the Lawrence Police Department,
says that people most often steal
bikes for immediate transporta-
tion and dump them later. When
Lawrence police recover a bike,
they usually cant determine the
bikes owner. The police recover
more bikes than are reported
stolen, Ward says, so they sell the
unclaimed bikes at auctions.
If you own a bike, get a license
at the Judicial & Law Enforcement
Center, 111 E. 11th St.
Steve Lynn for the editorial
board.
In about two weeks, many of us
will celebrate Halloween, a holiday
characterized by delicious candy
corn, carved pumpkins, and of
course, slutty outfits worn by nor-
mally conservatively dressed ladies.
What do you want to be? A
nurse? No, a slutty nurse. A police
officer? No, a busty police officer. A
kitten? No you get the idea.
This phenomenon was captured
in Mean Girls when Cady states,
Halloween is the one night a year
when a girl can dress like a total slut
and no other girls can say anything
about it.
And its true. Browse the racks
of any Halloween store or online,
and you will find that most female
costumes show some obvious sex
appeal. However, when all ladies
dress sexy, they tend to blend in
together and the entire point of
looking hot and gaining attention
is lost. For proof of this, look at
any photo of Hugh Hefner and his
league of blonde girlfriends. Sure,
they are pretty, but when they are all
together they all look the same.
That is why I propose that ladies
try something new to get noticed
this Halloween. I propose that they
wear food costumes. After all, food
ranks at the top of the list of some
peoples forbidden desires. There
are a variety of cheap costumes that
could be made. Dress up in red
and wear a green hat. Strawberry!
Tape purple balloons to your body.
Grapes! You and your friends could
show up as the Fruit of the Loom
team!
For those who really want to go
all out and get attention, dressing
like a hot dog would really do the
trick. I am sure a hot dog costume
would be expensive, but the joy one
would spread would be well worth
the price. Imagine the dirty double-
entendres one, man or woman,
would receive if they showed up at a
party dressed up as a hot dog.
Hey, baby. You want to see my
weiner?
I can already see your weiner.
Awesome.
The possibilities are endless.
Over all, I dont think there
is anything wrong with dressing
slutty on Halloween. I did it once
my freshman year, and it was fun
getting ready, taking pictures, and
laughing with my friends. Yet, if one
really wants to stand out, then dont
be afraid to try something new. Be
funny. Be scary. Sometimes those
costumes are the most fun.
Lo is a Cofeyville senior in
history.
Free for All callers have 20 seconds
to speak about any topic they wish.
Kansan editors reserve the right to
omit comments. Slanderous and ob-
scene statements will not be printed.
Phone numbers of all incoming calls
are recorded.
I just came out of the Under-
ground, and two guys were talking
in-depth about Xena, the Warrior
Princess.

You are entering a world of pain.

I need a rich boyfriend. I dont


even care if it is your parents
money. I just need you to have a
nice car.

They just discovered a real, live


Jayhawk in South America. This
deserves to be front-page news.

I dont think you try too hard


to be funny, Eric Jorgensen. I love
reading your stuf. P.S. You are cute.
Call me.

OK, there are two things I hate


in this world: Turtlenecks and
people who wear turtlenecks.
Especially sweater turtlenecks.

Spangles does not have fne


dining.

My roommate got drunk and


pissed in my laundry basket, too. I
know how you feel.

How come anteaters never


get sick? Because they are full of
antibodies.

Hey freshmen: It is Monday and


I dont think they are charging
cover to get into class, so you can
go ahead and take of that wrist
band you got at The Hawk.

To all of you who think the Little


House on the Prairie dresses are hot:
I have news for you. They are ugly,
they were ugly and they will still be
ugly tomorrow.

I have a hair on my tongue. Do


you know how much I hate that?

I am just going to go on the


record right now and say: I love
oral sex.

Last weekend I ended up going


home with this girl, and she told
her friends that I had absolutely no
game. Now I am wondering what
would have happened if I had had
game.

I bet my roommate $5 I would


be in Free for All. Where is my
money?

I am looking for some sperm


banks in Lawrence because I am a
little low on cash.

I am man enough to admit: I


love the new Beyonce song.

Abe Lincoln was a bad, bad


man.

I just saw a guy on a bike run a


stop sign and almost get hit by a
truck. And you know what? I was
for the truck.

To the tough guy who is going


to punch of a ticket writers head:
What kind of car do you drive?

Is it sad that I only read the


paper for the Free for All?

I saw a fock of geese fying


south for the winter, and I thought
of the Mighty Ducks.

I cant believe David Linhardt


called someone a urinal cracker.
Im going to e-mail this article to
my uncle; he is a racist plumber. He
will love it.

They better be building a Taco


Bell on top of the Underground.
If they arent, the construction is
pointless.

I dont get Sex and the City. Is


it about three hookers and their
mom?

Why would you ever wear a K-


State sweatshirt on campus?
COMMENTARY
BY CHRIS BROWER
KANSAN COLUMNIST
OPINION@KANSAN.COM
Muck Fizzou. You cant spell sucks
without K-S-U. Is anyone else getting
bored with this stuff?
School rivalry can be a good
thing. A little emotion never hurt in
making a game more exciting, but
when were yelling obscenities and
trying to taunt the other team, you
have to step back to realize that what
were doing is extremely corny.
For starters, who are we? Were
college students. Who are the players
on the field or court? College stu-
dents. So why are we trying to turn
every game into some sort of gladi-
atorial event, yelling cheesy taunts in
a weak attempt to frazzle the other
team?
Instead our taunts and T-shirts
make us look really immature. Like
four-year-old kids in the sandbox,
we put down the other kids in an
attempt to gain power over them.
While the players on the field or
court generally act civil, we jump up
and down in the audience barking
slurs, thinking what we do actually
has an effect, when in reality it likely
doesnt.
I find myself getting caught up in
it, too. I can think of a few basketball
games at which I stood brooding
after an opposing player scored on
us. I felt anger towards him. He had
no right to score on us, I thought.
But then I had to step back and real-
ize just how stupid I was acting.
Ive been at basketball games
when a fan of the opposing team was
in the stands. A few disgruntled stu-
dents took it upon themselves to start
trash-talking the other person and,
sadly, the other person fired back.
I cant help but think how pathetic
this makes our
school look.
Just because
they root for a
different team,
should we be
bad-mouthing
people who
come to see a
game in our
fieldhouse?
At least
weve stopped
tearing down
goalposts at
football games. What kind of corny,
barbaric tradition was that?
Fan #1: Dude! We won the
game! What should we do?
Fan #2: Destroy the field!
Im happy that Ive never seen a
basketball game in which students
ran onto the court and carried off
the basketball goal. Ive yet to hear
of a golf tournament where a student
ripped apart the bunker and then
carried a piece of the fairway down
Mass. Street.
Despite how corny this stuff is, it
is really entertaining to see how seri-
ously people take college rivalries,
as if they were something of impor-
tance. Ive had people badmouth
me for the simple fact I attend the
University of Kansas. How pathetic
is that? Luckily, Ive never felt the
need to go, Oh yeah, well the fact
that you go to Nebraska means
you suck! Because at the end of
the day, the fact we go to different
schools means absolutely nothing.
Why are we using it as fuel to start
a fire?
If youre going
to attempt to taunt
players and dis-
tract them, at least
be original about
it. Theres nothing
more boring than
going to games
and hearing stu-
dents try the same
tricks that never
work. Next time
a player comes to
the free throw line
in a basketball game do something
other than yell You suck! or Miss
it! Instead, put some originality
into it. Yell out your favorite recipe
for apple upside-down cake. Or
how about yelling out all the state
capitals. I dont know about you, but
that would really distract me.
So the lesson is simple: Enjoy the
games. Bring some emotion to it. But
all the childish insults should stop.
Brower is an Overland Park
junior in creative writing.
If youre going to taunt
players and distract them, at
least be original. Next time a
player comes to the free throw
line, yell out your favorite recipe
for apple upside-down cake.

Grant Snider/KANSAN
NEWS 6A
monday, october 16, 2006
crime
Identity thef creates problems for students, universities
By Jack Weinstein
Jenni Henslee had some difficulty
when she went to sign her lease last
year. The credit check application
she had filled out came back as
someone elses social security num-
ber.
She was shocked.
The Shawnee junior thought
she had written down the wrong
number so she called her mom to
make sure. The number was right.
Someone had stolen her identity.
Police told Henslee that a woman
had obtained her social security
number when she was 16 and had
used it for several years, destroy-
ing Henslees credit. Henslees social
security number now has a red flag,
making it difficult to do simple
things like getting an apartment or
getting her utilities turned on.
Through March 2006, 212 cases
of identity theft have been reported
in Lawrence, said Sgt. Dan Ward of
the Lawrence Police Department.
Universities and businesses are
some of the groups most suscep-
tible to breach. Jane Rosenthal, pri-
vacy coordinator and custodian of
records at the KU Privacy Office,
said that of those entities, 30 per-
cent of breaches were institutions of
higher education.
Identity theft is the fastest growing
crime in the U.S. for the sixth year
in a row, said Todd Davis, CEO of
LifeLock, an Arizona company that
helps its customers avoid becoming
the victims of identity theft. LifeLock
is the biggest company of its kind.
Davis said there were 115 cases of
data breach at 85 universities in the
past 18 months. Davis added that
two of those cases had occurred at
the University of Kansas.
Rosenthal said one of those
instances could have been when an
unsecured page on a Department
of Student Housing Web site was
breached last December, but she
couldnt say for sure. Housing offi-
cials said at the time that none of
the compromised information was
accessed.
Youre 25 times more likely to
have your identity stolen than your
car stolen, Davis said. We lock our
cars, insure our cars; we need to do
the same with our identities.
Davis said criminals can gain
access to private information in a
number of ways.
He said 50 percent of the time
someone the victim does business
with loses the information. About
16 percent of the time, credit card
information is stolen by a waiter or
bartender when a tab is opened and
16 percent of the time identity theft
is from dumpster diving or digging
through trash. The rest of the time,
about 18 percent, a family member
or friend steals the information.
On college campuses, databases
can be hacked into to get informa-
tion. Mail, especially pre-approved
credit card offers, can be stolen.
College students should also be
careful what they put on popular
social networks like Facebook and
MySpace, Davis said.
The University has taken steps to
alert students, faculty and staff to the
dangers of identity theft and how to
prevent it, including making anyone
with a KU e-mail address change the
password once a semester.
The Privacy Office was estab-
lished in part to help educate the
KU community about the dangers of
identity theft and what to do if ones
identity has been stolen. At www.
privacy.ku.edu, students, faculty and
staff can use the resources on the
Web site to avoid becoming a victim
of identity theft.
Were taking a more global
approach, Rosenthal said. KU is
at the forefront of that. Not many
universities have privacy offices yet.
Davis said anyone could avoid
becoming a victim of identity theft.
He recommended setting fraud
alerts with any of the three major
credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian
or TransUnion. Fraud alerts allow
potential victims to monitor their
credit reports and the company will
let them know if any new accounts
have been opened. Alerts last for 90
days and one company will notify the
others if unusual activity is detected.
He also recommends opting out of
all pre-approved credit card offers by
calling (888) 5OPT-OUT. By doing
that, ones name is removed from all
lists bought by companies to obtain
personal information for five years.
By doing those things, Davis said
it would be difficult for criminals
to use personal information if they
gained access to it.
Its unrealistic to think that
criminals cant get our information,
Davis said. The key is making that
information useless.
Davis said if people set up fraud
alerts and opt out of all pre-approved
credit card offers, then identity theft
would go away.
As for Henslee, she still has to
send all of her personal information
to the Social Security Administration
to get her identity back. Shes going
to get a credit card to establish her
own line of credit, but putting up
with some of the headaches as a
result of having her identity stolen is
something she may have to deal with
for the rest of her life.
Hopefully, it will get better, she
said.
kansan staf writer Jack Weinstein
can be contacted at jweinstein@
kansan.com.
Edited by Aly Barland
She said during her testimony that
Bernard told her to kiss him after she
asked Bernard where her underwear
and pajama pants were located.
She left her residence hall room
and went to a friends room, where
she discovered vaginal bleeding. She
went to the bathroom three times to
try and stop the bleeding, she said.
According to a KU Public Safety
office report, the woman also sus-
tained minor injuries. A friend and
a McCollum resident assistant took
the woman to Lawrence Memorial
Hospital, located at 325 Maine St.
Bernards attorney, Greg Robinson,
probed the womans memories, dwell-
ing on the amount of alcohol she
consumed and how she often couldnt
clearly recall details from what she
allegedly told staff at the hospital.
Robinson questioned how her
memory was fuzzy before she fell
asleep and only became clear when
she woke up half naked, still allegedly
in bed with Bernard. He asked her
if she had taken her own clothes off
while under the influence of alcohol.
Bernard allegedly told her she
took her own clothes off, the woman
answered. She conceded it was pos-
sible, but that she had never done
such a thing before.
The hearing will conclude Nov. 1
with test results and testimony from
hospital officials.
kansan staf writer David Linhardt
can be contacted at dlinhardt@
kansan.com.
Editedby KristenJarboe
Hearing (continued from 1A)
crime (continued from 1A)
On Oct. 12, someone sexually
attacked a female KU student walk-
ing near the intersection of 12th and
Tennessee streets. A man allegedly
shoved her to the ground and groped
her, according to a Lawrence police
press release.
She screamed and the man ran
away. The woman described the man
as a white male, 160 to 200 lbs.,
wearing blue jeans. As of Sunday, no
arrests had been made.
Geis wont soon forget his experi-
ence last week. Two suspects forced
Geis and his friends at gunpoint to
empty their pockets and lie down.
They allegedly took cell phones, wal-
lets and even the poker chips.
As of Sunday afternoon, police
are still looking for the suspects. Geis
and other witnesses described them
as a black male in his early 20s and a
stocky Native American or Hispanic
man in his early 20s.
Lawrence Police asks anyone with
details about these crimes to call the
tips hotline at 843-TIPS.
kansan staf writer David Linhardt
can be contacted at dlinhardt@
kansan.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
sports
After struggling recently, the
volleyball team got back on the
right track with a historical
victory against Kansas State.
2B 3B
the Kansas soccer team left no doubt as
to who was the better team in the Border
showdown, defeating Missouri 4-0
on sunday.
Monday, october 16, 2006
www.kansan.com
sports
PAGE 1B
dancing nachos
A football program that
recruited players who were not
academically eligible. A basketball
program that had gifts given to its
players by boosters. An athletics
director, Al Bohl, who said com-
pliance doesnt sell tickets.
Thursday should have been a
bad day for the Kansas Athletics
Department. Instead it was a bad
day for the NCAA.
Collegiate sports governing
body was revealed to be toothless,
doling out punishments that will
barely be a speed bump to the dif-
ferent programs.
Even though the reduction in
scholarships is a serious matter, its
not a fatal matter, football coach
Mark Mangino said.
Basketball coach Bill Self did
his best to sell the sanctions as
an inconvenience. He said that
because the team brought all its
recruits into town last weekend for
Late Night, they might have seen
the sanctions and been scared
away.
But I dont think thats what
they saw at all.
They saw a Kansas program
that had a lack of institutional
control get punished with the
collegiate equivalent of a time-out.
They saw an impotent NCAA
organization refuse to take a stand
against blatant cheating and fraud
because it happened at a big-time,
big-money school.
And they saw an Athletics
Department that, from the top
down, has the NCAA in the palm
of its hand.
At this point, Bill Self is like
former president Bill Clinton after
the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
The only thing left for him to do
is reenact the Saturday Night Live
skit and announce that, I ... am ...
bulletproof.
In August, the entire Kansas
staff flew to Baltimore, sat in a
room for eight hours in what
womens basketball coach Bonnie
Henrickson called a scared-
straight program, and tried to
defend themselves against the
allegations.
Ultimately, the crew was unsuc-
cessful, and the NCAA deemed
that Kansas had a lack of institu-
tional control when the violations
occurred. But that hearing wasnt
the start of Kansas problems. It
was the end of them.
The loss of scholarships will
have a negligible effect. Manginos
program, like most college-foot-
ball programs, almost never oper-
ates at full scholarship capacity,
and Self volunteered to take his
scholarship loss next year, perhaps
assuming that a certain Brandon
Rush wont be using his.
As for probation, its a fancy
term that means, as Self put it,
one misstep, and you could be in
a bad situation.
By the time the dust had
cleared Thursday night, youve got
to wonder if he even believed his
own words.
After all, NCAA, the next time
you try to come after Self and the
gang, youd better bring kryp-
tonite.
Phillips is a Wichita senior in
journalism. He is the Kansan
sports editor.
Editedby KristenJarboe
By micHAEl PHilliPs
kansan sports editor
mphillips@kansan.com
University
sanctions
not a fatal
matter
nba
oKLahoMa state 42, Kansas 32
Bad to worse
amanda sellers/KaNsaN
Jerome Kemp, senior safety and Mike rivera, 40, sophomore linebacker, tackle Oklahoma State Universitys Adarius Bowman, wide receiver, during Saturdays game at Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks lost to Oklahoma State 32-42.
By RyAn scHnEidER
After mastering the art of the
close loss, Kansas found another
way to cough up a lead.
This time, the collapse began
shortly after halftime and didnt
stop until the Jayhawks suffered
one of their most head-shaking
defeats in years.
Kansas continued its mid-sea-
son free fall Saturday, losing 42-
32 to Oklahoma State. It was the
teams third-straight loss, with the
last two happening in Lawrence.
We got outplayed, Kansas
coach Mark Mangino said. And
we got out coached in some areas
too. Theres no question about it.
There certainly was no ques-
tion that Kansas was outplayed in
the second half. After shutting out
Oklahoma State in the first two
quarters, Kansas gave up 42 points
and more than 300 yards of total
offense in the second half en route
to one of the most disappointing
losses of the Mangino era.
This week, the Jayhawks didnt
wait until the fourth quarter to
start their implosion. It began
shortly after the marching band
left the field at the end of halftime.
Oklahoma State scored a touch-
down on its second possession of
the third quarter to cut the lead
down to 10. The 54-yard touch-
down pass from quarterback
Bobby Reid to receiver Adarius
Bowman was one of five times the
duo would hook up for scores in
the game.
The Cowboys went for and
recovered an onside kick on the
ensuing possession. It gave OSU
the momentum for good and
essentially set up another all-too-
common Kansas collapse.
This time it wasnt conserva-
tive play calling or turnovers that
doomed the Jayhawks it was the
secondary.
Despite the play of sophomore
cornerback Aqib Talib, who broke
up three passes and intercepted
another, Kansas secondary gave up
411 yards passing. Of those yards,
300 went to Bowman, smashing
the Kansas school record of 231
yards for receiving yards by an
individual opponent.
Ive tried to find another way
to sugarcoat it, Mangino said. But
we played poorly in all areas of
pass defense.
Just like Nebraska was able to
torch Kansas secondary for three
deep touchdowns two weeks ago,
Oklahoma State was able to do
the same thing and more. Five
of the Cowboys six touchdown
passes were 25 yards or more. All
five of those scoring passes went
to Bowman.
By sHAWn sHRoyER
Before addressing the media,
Adarius Bowman set his Gatorade
and KFC on the ground. Other than
that, his hands held on to every-
thing they touched on Saturday.
When all was said and done,
Bowman, Oklahoma States wide
receiver, had amassed 13 receptions,
300 receiving yards and four touch-
downs. All were personal bests, and
his receiving yards set Oklahoma
State and Big 12 records.
Although Bowman posted
these statistics against the worst
pass defense in the conference, he
seemed to be the only person who
couldnt believe what hed achieved.
I still dont really know what
answers to give you, Bowman said
when asked how he felt about his
performance. Man, it just kind of
happened.
His shock is believable. Only 10
other Division 1A receivers have
ever roamed more freely through
an opposing secondary. Bowman
himself was four years removed
from his last 300-yard performance,
which came as a senior at Notre
Dame High School in Chatanooga,
Tenn.
Bowman had to sit out the 2005
season after transferring from
North Carolina, so for Oklahoma
State wide receivers coach Gunter
Brewer, his pupils big game was the
culmination of all the hard work
hed put in to make Bowman a lethal
offensive weapon.
My adopted son had the day
Ive always been waiting for him to
have, Brewer said of how close the
Jayhawks drop more than 600 yards in third-straight loss
anna Faltermeier/KaNsaN
Graham, a young fan, tries to keep the ball spin fromHarlemWizards A. Train, right, alive while Mr. Handles, also of the HarlemWizards, helps
himout. The HarlemWizards entertained fans at Late Night this year with stunts and fan involvement.
OSU wide receiver shows talent against
Kansas, commended by Mangino
see football oN paGe 5B see bowman oN paGe 4B
By mARK dEnt
Sundays game at Allen
Fieldhouse was meant to be a
homecoming for Kirk Hinrich and
Nick Collison, but the Fieldhouse
also brought back memories for
Sonics guard Ray Allen as well.
Its no different than
Connecticut, said the former
Husky. You watch a lot of big
games and see a lot of banners
hanging in the building.
Allens familiarity helped him
lead all scorers with 22 points in a
preseason overtime loss to the Bulls
110-105.
Allen recorded all of his points
in only 23 minutes of action. The
6-foot-5-inch guard drove, pulled
up and even hit a contested a three-
point shot to score 12 in the opening
quarter and another 11 in the third.
Allen shot 7-for-11 from the field,
2-for-3 from three-point range and
6-for-6 from the foul line.
Im just trying to get in sync,
Allen said. I know I can score, but
its the other stuff I gotta work on.
Seattle outscored Chicago in
those periods, 57-54, but couldnt
keep its lead in the fourth.
The Sonics stretched their lead
to 92-87 after a Robert Swift lay up
in the paint with 3:20 left to play,
but the Bulls used their superior
reserves to come back.
see nba oN paGe 6B
hes got skills
Players feel collegiate nostalgia;
Sonics lose to Bulls in overtime
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NCAA implements penalties against three sports
BY C.J. MOORE
Darnell Jackson said he didnt
know he was breaking any rules.
But the relationship that Jackson
and former Jayhawk J.R. Giddens
formed with booster Don Davis,
along with graduation gifts from
boosters given to graduating seniors
from 2000 to 2004, led the NCAA to
take away one scholarship from the
mens basketball team for both the
2007-2008 and 2008-2009 seasons.
Kansas must also forfeit eight paid,
official, on-campus recruiting visits
throughout the next two seasons.
The infractions committee decid-
ed to penalize the mens program as
a result of Jackson accepting imper-
missible items, which included
almost $4,500 in gifts, from Davis
and then competing for Kansas
while ineligible to do so, thereby
conferring a substantial competitive
advantage, according to the infrac-
tion committees report.
While Jackson was still in high
school, Davis befriended Jackson
after finding out about his fathers
death years earlier. The relation-
ship between the two continued
past Jacksons enrollment at the
University. Davis provided Jackson
and his family transportation, meals
and a loan for a car. On one occa-
sion, Davis drove Jackson and his
AAU coach to NCAA tournament
games, where the University provid-
ed complimentary tickets as the two
were listed as a guest of a player.
Jackson said he didnt realize he
was breaking any rules at the time.
He was suspended for the first nine
games of last season as punishment
for his actions.
It felt like they were telling me
who I can be friends with and who I
cant be friends with and who can be
my role model in my life, the junior
forward said. It hurt a lot. It felt like
when a parent has a baby and they
take that baby away and you can
never see him again.
Kansas other infraction came
from graduation gifts given to
graduating seniors, a practice that
had been going on since 1988. The
gifts were cash ranging from $25 to
$400 from multiple boosters.
Kansan staf writer C.J. Moore can
be contacted at cjmoore@kansan.
com.
Edited by Kristen Jarboe
Mens basketball suffers after relationships with boosters
Jayhawks shut out Cyclones, Tigers in weekend games
BY JEFF DETERS
The Kansas soccer team won
its final regular season road games
this weekend by defeating the Iowa
State Cyclones 2-0 on Friday and the
Missouri Tigers 4-0 on Sunday.
The victories improved the
Jayhawks record to 9-6 overall and
4-3 in the Big 12 Conference.
Against Iowa State, freshman for-
ward Shannon McCabe and sopho-
more midfielder Jessica Bush each
scored one goal. Coach Mark Francis
was pleased with the teams offense,
which had struggled in recent
weeks.
Its good for us to get a win and
score more than one goal, which we
havent done in a while, he said.
Prior to Fridays game, the
Jayhawks hadnt scored more than
one goal in their six previous games.
Following the victory against Iowa
State, Francis said his team needed to
be ready for the Border Showdown.
We need to show up Sunday and
perform well against a good Missouri
team, he said.
And Francis team certainly did
that, tying its season high with four
goals against Missouri. Bush and
freshman forward Monica Dolinsky
led the Jayhawks with two goals each.
Dolinsky also added an assist in the
game.
The Tigers had 18 shot attempts
in the game, compared to only 10
from the Jayhawks, but Kansas goal-
keepers sophomore Julie Hanley and
junior Colleen Quinn had three saves
each to stop the Tigers attack.
Francis was pleased his team was
able to finish the road schedule on
a good note. and was hopeful that
would carry into the final weeks of
the season.
The Jayhawks will return home
Friday for a game against the Baylor
Bears at 3 p.m. at the Jayhawk Soccer
Complex.
Kansan sportswriter Jef Deters
can be contacted at jdeters@kan-
san.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
SOCCER 4-O
ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT
BY C.J. MOORE
Unlike the football and mens
basketball programs, the NCAA
found the womens basketball pro-
gram at Kansas had suffered enough
as a result of the Universitys self-
imposed sanctions.
The self-imposed penalties
against the womens program were
the loss of two scholarships dur-
ing the 2005-06 academic year, and
Kansas was allowed to have only two
coaches recruit off campus instead
of three.
The penalties, which the com-
mittee deemed disproportionate to
the infractions committed, came as a
result of secondary violations by the
previous coaching staff, led by long-
time-coach Marian Washington.
The most serious violation included
transportation given to a prospec-
tive womens basketball player to an
on-campus testing site by former
assistant coach Tim Eatman in the
fall of 2002.
Rick Evrard, the Universitys
counsel on matters relating to
NCAA rules violations, said the
former coaches would not initially
answer questions during the inves-
tigation, which led to the Athletics
Departments decision to place the
program on probation.
We said, were going to take the
high road here and were going to
conclude that violations occurred,
Evrard said.
Because of the disproportionate
penalties tag given to the womens
program and the additional sanc-
tions placed on the mens pro-
gram, Hemenway became worried
of the publics perception of the
University.
Yesterday when the chancellor
had the opportunity to read this
report, probably his most violent
reaction was someones going to
perceive that weve treated mens
basketball differently than womens
basketball, Evrard said, because
the language in the report says there
was wholly disproportionate penalty
to womens basketball as there was
to mens basketball.
Despite not being involved in any
of the infractions, current womens
basketball coach Bonnie Henrickson
had to deal with the penalties last
season.
It handcuffed us a little bit, but it
didnt kill us, she said.
Kansan staf writer C.J. Moore can
be contacted at cjmoore@kansan.
com.
Edited by Kristen Jarboe
BY C.J. MOORE
The NCAA Committee on
Infractions found the most to dislike
in the football program at Kansas,
taking away three scholarships for
both the 2007-2008 and 2008-2009
seasons because of violations that
occurred in the summer of 2003
a summer football coach Mark
Mangino would like to forget.
The committee found that while
two prospective student athletes
were taking a test they needed to
pass in order to qualify academical-
ly in August 2003, a graduate assis-
tant coach was looking up answers
for them in a textbook. The NCAA
also found that graduate assistants
arranged for improper proctors for
prospective student athletes who
were taking exams to qualify for
admission.
The problem for the football pro-
gram, in the eyes of the committee,
was that it was relying too much on
last-minute admission for numer-
ous potential students.
Its just too much to expect; too
many miracles there, said Gene
Marsh, chairman of the NCAA
Committee on Infractions.
The problems for Mangino and
the football program stemmed from
the recruitment of numerous junior-
college players who arrived on cam-
pus during the summer of 2003.
Entering the summer, Mangino said
he believed those players were on
track to graduate and would be
eligible for the fall semester. Slowly
but surely, however, Manginos
recruiting class that summer began
to unravel.
It just kind of snowballed, and
we had kids here stuck on campus,
Mangino said.
He said some athletes were so
far behind in credits that they were
asked to return home, while others
continued to take correspondence
courses, trying to become eligible.
However, both the committee
and KU officials said there was no
reason to believe Mangino had any
knowledge of the improper behav-
ior.
The NCAA accepted a self-
imposed punishment of accepting
only three junior college players in
both 2006 and 2007, along with the
committees additional sanctions
the loss scholarship losses.
Kansan staf writer C.J. Moore can
be contacted at cjmoore@kan-
san.com.
Edited by KristenJarboe
Football team loses scholarships for next two seasons
Violations from previous womens basketball coach still affect current team
kansan.com
It was a busy weekend
in the Big 12. Highlights
included Missouri losing its
frst game of the season, to
Texas A&M, and Texas and
Nebraska remaining unde-
feated in conference play.
Oklahoma also sufered a
blow when running back
Adrian Peterson broke his
collarbone, sidelining him
for the rest of the season.
Visit Kansan.com for a full
recap.
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Kansas sweeps K-State
BY DREW DAVISON
Brittany Williams English class
had to fll the Atlanta freshman in
on the Kansas-Kansas State rival-
ry before Wednesdays volleyball
match.
Te middle blockers play
against the Wildcats made it seem
like she knew more about the in-
trastate rivals as she led Kansas to
its frst ever victory against Kansas
State in the sold-out Horejsi Fam-
ily Athletics Center. Williams fin-
ished with a career-high and team-
high 19 kills.
The Jayhawks defeated the
Wildcats in a four-game match,
26-30, 30-26, 30-28 and 30-20.
It was the first time Kansas has
defeated Kansas State in Lawrence
since 1994.
In game one, Kansas State came
out swinging and put Kansas into
a corner. The Jayhawks never led,
as the Wildcats got off to a strong
start. Kansas State won the first
game by four.
It was kind of like two boxers
feeling themselves out in the first
game, Kansas coach Ray Bechard
said. We didnt counter punch
very well.
The Jayhawks first lead of the
match didnt come until game two
when they led 17-16. Kansas won
the game on a block by senior out-
side hitter Megan Hill.
Bechard said instant points, like
blocks and aces, are something his
team had been working on in the
past couple of weeks.
The Jayhawks squeaked by the
Wildcats in game three, winning
by two. Correa led the team with
four kills, including the game-win-
ning kill just inside the baseline.
The Jayhawks finished the
match with an 8-3 run in game
four. Kansas hit a match-best .326,
committing just three errors.
With the victory, the Jayhawks
snapped a five-game losing streak,
while holding the Wildcats winless
in conference play.
This is where we turn our sea-
son around, Emily Brown, junior
right-side hitter, said. Being at
home and wanting to keep K-State
winless, it all came together.
Kansan sportswriter Drew Davi-
son can be contacted at ddavi-
son@kansan.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
BY DREW DAVISON
The volleyball players resurrected
their postseason hopes with a sweep
against Baylor Saturday night in the
Horejsi Family Athletics Center.
We knew if we won this game,
were right back in the hunt for the
NCAAs, junior opposite hitter Emily
Brown said. We were ready to turn
the season around.
Kansas (10-9, 3-7 Big 12) swept
Baylor (13-8, 2-7) with scores of 30-
23, 30-27 and 30-24. It was the first
time the Jayhawks swept a confer-
ence team this season.
With a victory against in-state rival
Kansas State Wednesday, Kansas won
its first back-to-back games since
early September.
We had a lot of confidence com-
ing out after K-State, senior outside
hitter Megan Hill said. Everyone
is playing together, and everyone is
excited. We move up three spots
from that one win, so it was huge
for us.
The Jayhawks moved from dead
last in the Big 12 standings at 11th
(Oklahoma State doesnt have a pro-
gram) up to eighth place ahead of
Texas A&M, K-State and Baylor.
Kansas never trailed in game one
against Baylor, winning by seven.
The Jayhawks had four serving aces,
including two from freshman libero
Melissa Grieb to win the game. It
was the first time in ten matches that
the Jayhawks won their first game.
Kansas coach Ray Bechard said win-
ning game one was important for his
team because it makes it tough for
the opponent to bounce back, espe-
cially on the road.
A frightening moment marred
the Jayhawks game-two victory. Jana
Correa, senior outside hitter, dove for
a ball and hit her head on the bench.
I wasnt looking at the chair, I was
just trying to get the ball, she said. It
hurts a lot.
Correa continued to compete after
the crash without sitting out. She led
the team with a match-high 16 kills.
To send the Bears back to Waco,
Texas, the Jayhawks ended the match
with two kills from Correa. She had
a .351 hitting efficiency, committing
only three errors in the match.
Baylor is a good team having
their struggles right now, Bechard
said. The Jayhawks are starting to
move in a different direction and that
was the difference tonight.
Brown finished with 13 kills and a
team-high 12 digs.
After the football team collapsed
earlier in the day, Brown said the
team wanted to make it a good week-
end to be a Jayhawk.
Kansas has a week off until it
travels to Texas A&M (9-8, 2-7) on
Saturday. Bechard has had success
against the Aggies in Lawrence, how-
ever, he has never won at College
Station in his nine years at Kansas.
After beating K-State Wednesday
and Baylor Saturday, Bechard is look-
ing forward to the extended break
preparing for A&M.
It is easier to get their attention
and get them motivated, he said,
because they are feeling good about
how things are going right now.
Kansan sportswriter Drew Davison
can be contacted at ddavison@
kansan.com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
Kansas ninth in Big 12 rankings
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
Brittany Williams, freshman middle
blocker, hits the ball toward Kansas State
middle blocker Kelsey Chipman during
Wednesdays game in the Horejsi Family
Athletics Center. Williams had 19 kills and
helped the Jayhawks defeat the Wildcats.
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
The womens volleyball teamcelebrate after an ace point was scored against Kansas State
onWednesday night at Horejsi Family Athletic Center. The Jayhawks defeated the Wildcats in four
games.
OSU 42 - KU 32 5B Monday, october 16, 2006
t he re
w
i
n
d
Oklahoma State 42
Kansas 32
October 14, 2006
OSU 42 - KU 32 4B Monday, october 16, 2006

up or down
The Kansas defense
allowed Oklahoma
State to gain more
than 600 yards. Can
the defense get it
together and shut
down Baylor or will
it be another down
week for the Hawks?
The defense
looked helpless
in the second half
Saturday, and the
Jayhawk secondary will be
overwhelmed again this week
against Baylor. Bears quarter-
back Shawn Bell ranks second
in the Big 12 in passing yards,
and four Baylor players have
at least 25 receptions already
this year.
Kyle Carter
The Kansas
defense really has
no place to go but up following
a dismal second-half showing
against the Cowboys. Baylor
likely will not have anyone that
creates the matchup problems
that Adarius Bowman gave
the Jayhawks en route to 300
receiving yards. Its gut check
time for the Jayhawks, who
desperately need a win against
an improved Baylor squad.
Kayvon Sarraf
Kerry Meier
was supposed to
be the inexperi-
enced question
mark. The ofensive line was
supposed to have put it all
together and been the rock of
the ofense. Instead, Meier is
being forced out of the pocket
regularly by four-man rushes.
If the Kansas line doesnt
improve immediately against a
fast and active Baylor defense,
Kansas fans are going to see
more of the same.
Erick R. Schmidt
Bad reputa-
tion or not,
Baylor may
possess too much frepower for
the Kansas defense to handle.
Under the supervision of quar-
terback Shawn Bell, the newly
minted Baylor spread ofense
has been surprisingly potent to
this point in the season. Unfor-
tunately for the Jayhawks, Aqib
Talib is the only member of the
secondary who has shown any
consistency, but Talib can only
cover one receiver at a time.
Asher Fusco
At this point,
the team has no
other choice but
to get it together.
Mangino and the Jayhawks
have been fnding new ways
to lose for the last three weeks,
and they will eventually snap
out of it. The team is reeling
and Mangino has to fnd a way
to erase the past and focus on
getting a victory against Baylor.
Daniel C. Weixeldorfer

Oklahoma St. 0 0 21 21 42
Kansas 7 7 3 15 32
SCOring:
FIrST QUArTer
KU Herford 33-yard pass from Meier (Webb kick), 4:19.
SeCOnd QUArTer
KU Fine 4-yard pass from Meier (Webb kick), 14:09.
THIrd QUArTer
KU FG Webb 43 yards, 10:46.
OkSt Bowman 54-yard pass from reid (ricks kick), 8:19.
OkSt reid 29-yard run (ricks kick), 7:17.
OkSt Bowman 25-yard pass from reid (ricks kick), 4:38.
FOUrTH QUArTer
OkSt Bowman 55-yard pass from reid (ricks kick), 13:38.
KU McAnderson 11-yard run (Fine pass from Meier), 7:46.
OkSt Bowman 64-yard pass from reid (ricks kick), 7:08.
OkSt d.Woods 25-yard pass from reid (ricks kick), 2:27.
KU Fields 8-yard pass from Meier (Webb kick), 1:22.
individual:
rUSHInG OkSt, Hamilton 11-70, Savage 8-55, reid 14-46, Tos-
ton 9-23, Team 1-(minus 2). KU, Meier 20-70, Cor-
nish
10-55, Sharp 1-27, McAnderson 2-14, Murph 1-14,
Team 1-(minus 2).
PASSInG OkSt, reid 23-35-1-411. KU, Meier 15-27-1-187.
reCeIVInG OkSt, Bowman 13-300, d.Woods 3-42, Pettigrew 3-
35, Hamilton 2-6, Parks 1-15, Toston 1-13. KU, Fine
4-58, Henry 3-37, Murph 3-22, Fields 2-11, Herford
1-33, Sharp 1-15, Lamb 1-11.
Associated Press

BY Shawn ShroYer
In 1989, Oklahoma State coach
Mike Gundy burned Kansas for a
school-record 434 total yards of
offense as the Cowboys starting
quarterback, leading Oklahoma State
to its fourth victory of the season.
Keeping with tradition, the
Jayhawks allowed another Cowboy
quarterback to dominate them as
Oklahoma State won its fourth game
of the season. It was sophomore
quarterback Bobby Reid who did it
this Saturday, racking up 457 total
yards of offense, breaking Gundys
record.
Gundy was stoked about his teams
comeback victory, but a little disap-
pointed that his record had been
surpassed.
Total offense, he did? That
stinks, Gundy said. I didnt know
that. If I did, I wouldnt have called
that last pass play.
Of course, the victory in 1989 was
Oklahoma States last one of the sea-
son. The Cowboys hope that wont be
the case in 2006.
With a tough schedule includ-
ing Nebraska, Texas and Oklahoma
left to play, a loss on Saturday
would have crushed Oklahoma States
postseason hopes. Senior offensive
lineman Corey Hilliard said plans
for making a bowl appearance after
a loss to Kansas would have only left
one hopeful mindset.
It would have been wishful think-
ing, Hilliard said.
Instead, Hilliard said overcom-
ing a 17-point deficit to beat Kansas
on the road had boosted Oklahoma
States confidence, which will carry
into the second half of its schedule.
Gundy said his team would also
find confidence in seeing how much
it had improved from its 4-7 record
a year ago.
Our team is better, Gundy said.
Theyve come a long way, because
they believe in themselves and know
theyre a better football team.
Kansan sportswriter Shawn Shroy-
er can be contacted at sshroyer@
kansan.com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
Now that were at the midway
point in the season, its time to give
a progress report on how the team
is faring so far. Remember that if
your grade is below a C, you must
have your parents or legal guardians
sign and return this form.
OffenSe: Kerry Meier and
Jon Cornish have both looked ter-
rific when playing at full health.
Unfortunately, the two have only
done that together once, and that
was the first game of the season.
Injuries continue to plague the unit,
and Cornish took his turn limping
off the field on Saturday, although
perhaps he was just trying to disas-
sociate himself from the spectacle.
As in, Cornish is listed as day-to-
day with a strained dignity. His
health and the Jayhawks hopes are
intertwined. Grade: B+
defenSe: Ahh, where to begin?
Lets start with defensive tackle
James McClintons reaction when
asked what giving up 600 yards does
for morale.
600 yards? he asked, sounding
surprised.
Yes, the numbers shocked even
the Kansas defense, which appar-
ently wasnt debriefed on just how
lopsided the battle was.
Dont look for the problems to
get any better. Aqib Talib can cover
only half the field, leaving a spot
that must be filled by a freshman.
Much like with the Reid-Floodman-
Kane defense of three years ago, it
will take time for the young players
to mature. Until then, Jayhawk fans
can only dream of what the unit
might have been with Talib and
Charles Gordon on opposite sides
of the field. Grade: D-
SpeCial TeamS: Kicker Scott
Webb has performed well, convert-
ing on almost every opportunity
he has had. The same cannot be
said, though, of punter Kyle Tucker,
who can be safely crossed off your
award-watch list. On the plus side,
hes not out punting his coverage.
Grade: C+
COaCHing: Mark Mangino
and friends need to do something
about how badly the Jayhawks get
pummeled in the fourth quarter.
Opponents have scored a com-
bined 32, 29 and 40 points against
Kansas in the first, second and third
quarters, respectively. In the fourth
quarter, theyve put 69 points on the
scoreboard. And that doesnt count
the 13-0 that the Jayhawks have
been out scored in overtime.
Perhaps some of that lies in the
fact that once the Jayhawks take
the lead, they get more conserva-
tive than Fox News. At the start of
Saturdays game, offensive coordina-
tor Nick Quartaro called seven runs
and 10 passes. After the Jayhawks
went up 14-0, he went with 13 runs
and six passes until the Cowboys
took the lead, at which point he
switched right back. No consistency
means no results. Grade: D
The postseason is almost cer-
tainly out, with Kansas needing a
miracle on the road against Baylor,
Iowa State or Missouri. However,
this is as good a time as any to right
the ship for next year. A little excite-
ment wouldnt hurt, either. Ive got
better ways to experience boredom
than paying $10 for a football ticket.
Phillips is a wichita senior in jour-
nalism. he is Kansan sports edi-
tor.
Edited by Catherine Odson
Cowboy breaks
coachs old record
Despite Kansas running
coverages that Oklahoma
State wasnt prepared for,
Cowboy receivers found
holes in the secondary with
ease.
Bowman said Kansas ran
a Cover 2 on the game film
they watched during the
week, but on Saturday they
mainly covered quarters of
the field. Nevertheless,
Brewer said his receivers
came up to him through-
out the game with routes the
defense was leaving open.
Kansas might have over-
looked Bowman, who entered
Saturday as Oklahoma States
leading receiver, but he
certainly had coach Mark
Manginos attention when
the game was done.
He gets my vote for the
Heisman, Mangino said.
Kansan sportswriter Shawn
Shroyer can be contacted
at sshroyer@kansan.com.
Edited by Kristen Jarboe
It wasnt as if the troubles in the
secondary came as a surprise to
Kansas coaches. Mangino said the
defensive coaches had tried to find
ways throughout the season to cover
up their problems in the second-
ary. The problem Saturday was that
Oklahoma State made all those
changes irrelevant. There was no
hiding the Jayhawks lack of experi-
ence and coverage problems.
Kansas gave up 603 yards of total
offense Saturday. It was the most
yards given up since last seasons
blowout at Texas. In that game, the
Longhorns racked up 617 yards
against the Jayhawks nationally
ranked defense.
Despite his teams youth and rela-
tive inexperience in the secondary,
Mangino said he refused to use it
as an excuse for its performance
against the Cowboys.
We gave them a scholarship to
play here, Mangino said. Youve got
to be ready to play, whether youre
a freshman, redshirt freshman or
senior.
With the loss, Kansas drops to
3-4 on the season and 0-3 in the Big
12. To qualify for a bowl game, the
Jayhawks will have to win a game
on the road, which hasnt happened
since 2004.
Im still thinking about the
postseason, junior defensive tackle
James McClinton said. As a team, I
believe were going to step up to the
occasion and fight.
Kansan senior sportswriter ryan
Schneider can be contacted at
rschneider@kansan.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
Jerome Kemp, senior safety,and Joe Mortensen, sophomore linebacker, tackle oklahoma States Adarius Bowman, wide receiver, during the second half of Saturdays game. Bowman ended the game with a Big
12-record 300 receiving yards for the Cowboys.
footbAll (continued from 1B)
boWMAN
(continued from 1B)
football notebook
Senior running back Jon
Cornish had his worst game of
the season, though his perfor-
mance can be attributed to an
undisclosed injury. He had 55
yards on 10 carries. Cornish was
seen sitting alone on the bench
for most of the second quarter.
The ugly game overshad-
owed the successful return of
freshman quarterback Kerry
Meier from an undisclosed injury.
In his frst start in nearly a
month, he showed no ill efects
of the injury he sufered against
Toledo. Meier was 15-for-27
passing for 187 yards, with three
touchdowns and an interception.
On the ground, Meier rushed for
70 yards on 20 carries.
Overall, some of the things
I did in the frst three games,
I think that I overcame those,
Meier said. I have learned from
them, and I executed this time.
Kansas has now lost two
home games in a row for the
frst time since the 2004 season.
Saturdays attendance, 41,203,
was the smallest crowd at a
conference game since the game
against Texas two years ago.
despite giving up more
than 600 yards, Kansas still has
not allowed a 100-yard rusher
since the loss to Texas in 2004.
Ryan Schneider
Anna faltermeier/KANSAN
brian Murph, senior wide receiver, dives for yardage during the frst half of the game against oklahoma State Saturday. Murph caught three passes for 22 yards during the game.
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
Jon Cornish, senior running back, sits on the bench during the fnal minutes of Kansas loss to oklahoma State. Cornish was unable to play the fourth quarter because of an injury but is expected to be ready to play in
Saturdays game against Baylor.
Oklahoma State 42, Kansas 32
from the press box
iT waS Over wHen...
OSU quarterback Bobby reid
threw a 64-yard touchdown to
wide receiver Adarius Bowman
midway through the fourth
quarter. Kansas had scored a
touchdown seconds earlier to
cut the Oklahoma State lead to
three, but the Cowboys touch-
down was the back breaker.
reids fourth touchdown pass of
the game put the Cowboys back
up by 10 points.
game Ball gOeS TO...
Quarterback Kerry Meier
showed no ill efects of the un-
disclosed injury that sidelined
him for Kansas three previous
games. Meier fnished the game
15-for-27 passing for 187 yards,
with three touchdowns and an
interception. On the ground,
Meier rushed 20 times for 70
yards.
game TO fOrgeT...
Kansas secondary gave up
411 yards passing, including
300 yards to Bowman. The Cow-
boys also had fve touchdowns
through the air. While Kansas
secondary has been suspect for
much of the season, Saturday
was defnitely its lowest point of
the season. The Jayhawks pass
defense ranks at the bottom of
the conference and for good
reason.
STaT Of THe game...
The Cowboys scored 42
points in the second half. It was
the most points the defense has
allowed this season. OSU scored
touchdowns on four straight
possessions in the second half to
erase a 14-point halftime defcit.
Ryan Schneider
Anna faltermeier/KANSAN
Anna Katherine Marquette, 3, cheers with a Ku cheerleaders pompoms during the game against oklahoma State Saturday afternoon. Marquette
attended the game with her momand dad.
Anna faltermeier/KANSAN
Rodney Allen, senior defensive end, tries to tackle oklahoma State quarterback Bobby reid dur-
ing the game Saturday afternoon. reid ran for a 29-yard touchdown in the third quarter, the longest
rush of his career. Ku lost the game 42-32.
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
oklahoma State corner back Jacob lacey and his teammate tackle Brian Murph, senior
wide receiver. Murph gained 14 yards for the Jayhawks but the game ended in a Kansas loss.
Jayhawks earn
below average
midterm grades
BY Michael PhilliPS
kansan sports editor
mphillips@kansan.com
SPORTS 6B
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006
at the uni on
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HUMANITIES LECTURE
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All events are free and open to the
public. No tickets are required.
For more information contact the Hall Center at 785-864-4798, via
e-mail at hallcenter@ku.edu, or visit our Web site at www.hallcenter.ku.edu.
This series is co-sponsored by Kansas Public Radio, and partial funding is provided by
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RICHARD DAWKINS
Monday, October 16
7:30 pm
The God Delusion
Lied Center
Appearing jointly in Difficult Dialogues at The Commons.
A Dialogue with Richard Dawkins,
Tuesday, October 17 at 9:00 am, Hall Center Conference Hall
Co-sponsored by Student Union Activities.
BY RYAN SCHNEIDER AND
SHAWN SHROYER
For one of the few times at Allen
Fieldhouse, Kansas fans had torn
loyalties.
Rather than a sea of blue, both
red and green jerseys dotted the
crowd during the return of Nick
Collison and Kirk Hinrich to Allen
Fieldhouse.
The duo played for Kansas from
1999-2003, and led the Jayhawks to
two Final Fours in that time span.
On Sunday afternoon nearly
13,000 fans showed up to watch
an NBA preseason game between
Hinrichs Chicago Bulls and
Collisons Seattle SuperSonics.
Its probably the most exciting
preseason game Ive ever played,
Hinrich said. For that many people
to show up, its great to see all those
fans here.
Fans made their feelings for the
returning Jayhawks felt early in the
game. Hinrich committed a foul less
than 10 seconds into the game and
boos rained down. A basket or good
play for either player drew the loud-
est cheers.
The game was the first time
that either Collison or Hinrich
had returned to the fieldhouse
floor wearing anything other than
Jayhawk blue. It also marked the
first of several times that the two
and their teams will meet through-
out the season.
It was kind of weird being here
with a different group of people,
Collison said. Two separate parts
of my life kind of combined.
Emotions aside, both Hinrich
and Collison said the game itself
wasnt pretty. The two combined for
seven turnovers. Sloppy play aside,
the duo gave Kansas faithful plenty
of reasons to cheer.
Collison finished the game with
12 points and 10 rebounds in 27
minutes of play. He left the game
midway through the third quarter
with cramps and did not return.
Hinirch had 11 points and four
assists in 27 minutes.
Despite playing on opposing
teams, Hinrich and Collison enjoyed
taking the court in front of the fans
who supported them throughout
their collegiate careers.
Its nice to feel appreciated,
Hinrich said. Kansas fans, theyre
great. Theyre diehard and I appre-
ciate them a lot more than they
appreciate me, probably.
Kansan sports writers Ryan Sch-
neider and Shawn Shroyer can be
contacted at editor@kansan.com.
Edited by Kristen Jarboe
NBA (CONTINUED FROM 1B)
Anna Faltermeier/KANSAN
Chicago Bulls guard Kirk Hinrich shoots during the frst half of the game against the Seattle
Supersonics Sunday afternoon at Allen Fieldhouse. Hinrich played against former KU team mate
Nick Collison, who plays for the Sonics. The Bulls beat the Sonics 110-105 in overtime.
NBA
Former stars Hinrich and Collison
return to play one another
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
Bulls guard, Kirk Hinrich, left, attempts
to block a shot fromformer teammate Nick
Collison, forward for the Super Sonics. The
two played in Allen Fieldhouse on Sunday
afternoon for an NBA exhibition game.
Jayhawks return to Fieldhouse
Guard Andre Barrett scored to
cut Seattles lead to three, and then
Victor Khryapa took over. The 6-
foot-9-inch Russian hit a three-point
shot to tie the game at 92 and then
answered Seattle forward Damien
Wilkins three-point play with
another game tying three-pointer.
Khryapa scored 13 points for the
game and the Chicagos bench out-
scored Seattles bench 66-51.
I thought Victor was outstandng,
said Bulls coach Scott Skiles. He
made a couple of big shots.
A minute later, a Chicagos
Tyrus Thomas made an even big-
ger shot with his team down 98-
96. Andre Barrett took the ball up
the court with 13 seconds left and
found Khryapa at the top of the
key. Khryapa then swung the ball
to a wide-open Thomas with six
seconds on the clock. The rookie
Thomas didnt even hesitate before
sinking a jumper just in front of the
three-point arch to send the game
into overtime.
Thomas, who finished with 12
points, saved the game again in the
extra period by icing the game with
a free throw to put Chicago up for
good 110-105. Not all the players
were thrilled at having to play five
more minutes.
Theres nothing worse than an
overtime game in exhibition, Skiles
said. Except, its nice to get some
end of game stuff with Tyrus out
there.
Although Allen said he would
have liked to be on the floor with the
game on the line, the 10-year veteran
had no problem leaving the outcome
in the hands of the younger players.
In these situations you dont want
to take away from the guys trying to
make the team, Allen said.
Former Missouri guard Kareem
Rush also suited up for the Sonics.
Rush, who isnt guaranteed a roster
spot, didnt play because of a groin
injury.
Kansan sportswriter Mark Dent
can be contacted at mdent@kan-
san.com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
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Sturdy bike lock, Trek Kryptonite. Hardly
used. Comes with two keys. $25.
316-516-0350
hawkchalk.com/97
Interested in being a founding member of
the KU chapter of Zeta Sigma Chi? Email
us at ku_zchi_ig@yahoo.com for more
information. hawkchalk.com/60
FOR SALE: 1996 Jeep Cherokee Sport
4x4. H.O. engine, ac, am-fm-cd, 112,000
miles. Very clean and always well cared for.
$3,950 Firm. Call 785-547-7448 today!
hawkchalk.com/35
Needed: Personal Care Attendant for a 10
year old boy with physical disabilities.
785-856-0815.
SECURITY BENEFIT needs ACCOUNT
SERVICE REPSto start full-time, on
choice of either mid-Nov date or early Jan
date in Topeka, KS. All degree programs
welcome for this entry-level career opp.
After comprehensive training, ASR's pro-
vide information and service (no selling or
solicitation) relating to financial products.
Competitive salary and benefits package
for this opportunity in our dynamic technol-
ogy-based business, se2. Apply via our
online application at www.securitybenefit.-
com. or phone 785.438.3732. EOE.
Teaching Counselors work to enhance
the lives of individuals with developmental
disabilities in community based settings.
Positions available: Part Time-- Mon-Fri
4p-9p; Mon-Fri 6a-10a; Full Time-- Fri 3p-
Sun 11p. If you enjoy helping others,
excellent benefits, and a competitive
salary, please apply at CLO, 2125
Delaware, Lawrence, or call 785/865-5520
ext. 313 for more information.
We pay up to $75 per survey.
www.GetPaidToThink.com
Party Personnel is hiring banquet
servers. $9.25/hr. Kansas City. Call Gary
at 913-963-2457 or print off application
online at www.partypersonnelkc.com.
Remodeled 2 BR and 3 BRincludes W/D,
DW, new carpet, new tile, fireplace, back
patio, $650-$750. 785-841-7849
1998 chevy cavalier, $1200 firm. reliable,
good gas mileage. Done quite a bit of work
on it, call 913-579-2795 for more info.
hawkchalk.com/85
2005 Honda Rebel. 250cc's. Orange. 65
miles per gallon. Great starter bike!
$2800. Call 785-383-7548
hawkchalk.com/46
Black w/tinted windows. 85,000 miles
runs great $5,200 obo. Call 314-610-0703
hawkchalk.com/91
Are you tired of living in the dorms or
Greek houses? If so, move into this luxury
4BR, 2-1/2 bath duplex w/ fireplace & 2
car garage. Quality appliances-refrig,
stove, microwave, DW, & washer/dryer.
408 Trent Court. Great NW location on
cul-de-sac, only $1,095 plus deposit.
Small pets negotiable with deposit. 1st
month rent free if you call now
785-979-0806.
hawkchalk.com/34
3 BR, 2 BAfurnised/unfurnised apartment
available now. Includes full sized WD, dish-
washer, microwave, balcony, private park-
ing lot, and 24 hr. emergency maintenance.
Location easily accessible to downtown,
KU and K-10, Call 749-0445
1 BR, 1 BAvery near KU campus.
$500/mo + util. Ready by Sept. 23.
ejstrumpet@yahoo.com or 505-850-5946.
turqoise bracelet, meaningful. small white
camera. oakleys. please. call me and I'll
identify. 913 515 0333
hawkchalk.com/75
Female, Black and White cat young
with no collar.
Lost around 12th & Louisiana
If found please call (913)961-8735
hawkchalk.com/76
MYCATIS MISSING!! Named Calvin
Awhite/cream color with tan markings,
light blue eyes. front paws declawed.
Please call: 620-200-3445 REWARD!!!
hawkchalk.com/87
Lawrence Property Management
www.lawrencepm.com. 785-832-8728 or
785-331-5360. 2 BRs Available now!
Microwave for Sale. Great condition. $20.
call Danielle @ 785-393-5115.
hawkchalk.com/72
I have a Cannondale F600 MTB for sale,
disc brakes, 618 front rim, and a new set of
tires and tubes. Brand new $1300, I bought
it a year ago for $800, selling for $450.
theski@ku.edu
hawkchalk.com/94
KEGERATOR new black paint and Regula-
tor, Full CO2, works great, $200 firm cash.
1st come 1st serve, Call Tyler 785-766-
8081. NEED SELLFAST!
hawkchalk.com/93
1 BR in 4 BR 4 BAapt. Looking to sublease
for spring semester. Available mid Dec.
$339/mo Call 618-334-5542.
hawkchalk.com/58
3 BR all appliances W/D included. Newly
remodeled. Near dt/ KU. Available now.
920 Illinois. $1200/mo. Call 691-6940
www.ubski.com
1-800-754-9453
Breck, Vail,
Beaver Creek,
Arapahoe Basin
& Keystone
#1 College Ski & Board Week
BRECKENRIDGE
Ski 20 Mountains &
5 Resorts for the
Price of 1
$
179
from only
plus tax
1-800-SKI-WILD
Gumby's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers
and all positions. Start today, cash paid
daily 1445 W. 23rd Call 785-841-5000
INTERNET WORK!
$8.75-$139.+/Hr! $25
Bonus! Studentsurveysite.com/dailyks
Wanted. 1 BDRM Apt Honest, studious,
Non-smoke grad needs cheap, quiet,
Comf. space to write. Need Nov 1.
Cntct: Michael, przybee@yahoo.com
Earn $800-$3200 a month to drive brand
new cars with ads placed on them.
www.AdCarKey.com.
Female math tutor wanted for high school
student. Hours may vary. Call 550-6555
evenings.
Child care attendant needed for church
nursery Sundays 9:30 am-noon and/or
Tuedays 6-8 pm. 843-7066 for more info
Wanted: JOB. Nat?l f-ship grantee
needs immed income. ME: 12+ yrs
mgr, MUS/THF bkgrd, sev?l langs.
Acad CV or voc info on req.
Cnct: Michael, przybee@yahoo.com
Fashion, beverage, food, music or other
topic of pop/modern culture critics
and experts wanted. Contact letsgetcriti-
cal@gmail.com for more information.
Classifieds Policy: The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for
housingor employment that discriminates against any personor groupof persons based
on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Fur-
ther, theKansan will not knowinglyaccept advertisingthat is inviolationof Universityof
Kansas regulationor law.
All real estate advertisinginthis newspaper is subject tothe Federal Fair HousingAct
of 1968whichmakes it illegal toadvertise any preference, limitationor discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an
intention, to make any suchpreference, limitationor discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised inthis newspa-
per are available onanequal opportunity basis.
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
In a Class of its Own.
Dodge Neon 1996, black, auto tansmis-
sion,great car. 101,500 miles.
Call: 785-840-8763
hawkchalk.com/92
Classifieds
7B
Monday, october 16, 2006
LATE NIGHT IN THE PHOG
8B
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006
!REYOU
Paid for by KU
gisler online,
ww.inlernalional.ku.edu
conlacl Jane rungu,
ong Hall Foon 300
gap@ku.edu , 3646161
4HENYOUNEEDTO
KNOWABOUT'!0
Taking a cIass with an internationaI focus7
Participating in internationaI co-curricuIar activities7
Studying a foreign Ianguage7
Studying abroad7
Undergraduales are recogniz
for lheir inlernalional experienc
es. Cerlifcalion is offered on KU
lranscripls if lhey conplele 2 of
3 requirenenls: A. Sludy Abroad
B. 2 seneslers of foreign
language and 3 inlernalionally
lhened classes C. Parlicipalion
'LOBAL
!WARENESS
0ROGRAM
0REPARETOLIVELEADAND
WORKINAGLOBALSOCIETY
in cocurricular or service orienled
aclivilies lhal have an inlernalional
focus.Cerlifcalion is every senes
ler. Those who have conpleled
sone or all of lhe requirenenls
can also parlicipale.
Dancing highlights
season premiere
BY SHAWN SHROYER
Before Late Night in the Phog,
sophomore guard Mario Chalmers
said the teams goal for this season
was to stick together.
And while the Jayhawks kept in
step surprisingly well during their
pre-scrimmage dance routines, they
didnt appear to be on the same page
during the scrimmage.
On a night that included Big and
Little Jay playing 80s video games
and a parody of Dancing with the
Stars, it was the mens rusty scrim-
mage that stood out.
Coach Bill Self, who doubled as a
judge during his teams Dancing with
the Stars presentation, was pleased by
his players dance moves, but not as
much with their performance during
the scrimmage.
Certainly wasnt our play, Self
said of the highlight of his night. I
think our guys actually did a pretty
good job dancing with the young
ladies. I dont know if thats a high-
light, but I thought it was pretty
funny.
Former Kansas point guard Aaron
Miles and Danny Manning, direc-
tor of student-athlete development,
joined Self on the panel to judge
the freshmen, sophomore and junior
dance routines, which were all accom-
panied by Rock Chalk Dancers.
The freshmen led off the competi-
tion with the jive. Self called them
naturals, but the freshmen earned
the low score of 26 out of 30.
In their second Late Night appear-
ance, the sophomores tango took
second place with a score of 27. Self
offered the most encouragement to
sophomore guard Brennan Bechard.
Brennan, they were no better
than you a year ago, so you can see
what a difference a year makes, Self
said.
As expected, the competition was
the juniors to win. Dancing the waltz,
they took first with a score of 29.
Following a strong showing in
dancing shoes, expectations were
high for the scrimmage.
Some players looked good in their
first action of the season, but as a
whole, the team showed much room
for improvement.
After 11 minutes of the 20-minute
scrimmage, the teams were dead-
locked at 13-13. However, the red
team, led by juniors Darnell Jackson
and C.J. Giles, pulled away for the
26-23 victory, leading by as many as
seven points down the stretch.
For freshman guard Sherron
Collins, playing in Allen Fieldhouse
for the first time was somewhat
nerve-racking.
At first, I had the jitters and the
butterflies I was so nervous, he said.
I hit a free throw, so I was all right
after that. If I didnt make the free
throw, I would have been a lot more
nervous.
Collins may not have posted the
most impressive statistics, but his
quickness, passing and hustle didnt
go unnoticed.
I thought Sherron, without ques-
tion, was one of the best players out
there, Self said. He makes things
happen.
Kansan sportswriter Shawn Shroy-
er can be contacted at sshroyer@
kansan.com.
Edited by Catherine Odson
BY JEFF DETERS
The womens basketball team
got its season off to a roaring
start Friday at Late Night when
coach Bonnie Henrickson made
her entrance into Allen Fieldhouse
driving a red Ferrari.
Fans cheered as they watched
her exit the car and make her way
to center court. Henrickson then
gave high praise to the large crowd
in attendance.
You are the reason Allen
Fieldhouse is the best place to play
basketball in the world, Henrickson
said.
Fans roared in response, and
then watched the women perform
a dance and later play a scrimmage.
The blue team defeated the white
team by a score of 15-11. Senior
guard Shaquina Shaq Mosley and
freshman guard Lindsay Ballweg
each scored five points to lead the
blue team.
The Jayhawk defense was strong
early, especially sophomore for-
ward Marija Zinic. She pulled
down a game-high four rebounds.
Henrickson said at this point the
teams defense is ahead of the
offense, but she hoped the offense
would improve over the season.
One player who might play a
large role in that is freshman guard
Kelly Kohn. She is one of seven
freshmen on the team and led the
white team with four points.
Kelly Kohn has been as com-
petitive as I thought she would
be, she said. She in that fresh-
men class has probably exhibited
the most leadership of that group.
She doesnt mind walking up to
somebody and saying were going
to be better than that today. And I
like that.
Last year as a recruit, Kohn made
an official visit to campus and expe-
rienced her first Late Night.
I was definitely sold, she said.
The whole atmosphere of all the
people in here and how passionate
all the fans are to support KU
basketball its something that I
really wanted to be involved in.
The freshmen also spent a con-
siderable amount of time prac-
ticing the funky dance the team
performed at Late Night. Kohn
thought the team danced very well,
but Henrickson thought one group
stood out.
I thought the upperclassmen
came out with a better rhythm than
the freshmen did, she said. The
freshmen might have been a little
nervous.
While a few nerves were to be
expected, Kohn said Late Night was
still a great experience.
It was so much fun, Kohn said.
It seems like it lasted for like 10
seconds, but it was worth every
second of it. And I cant wait to do
it again next year.
Kansan sportswriter Jef Deters
can be contacted at jdeters@
kansan.com.
Edited by Kate Shipley
Freshman Kohn
revels in spotlight
Amanda Sellers/KANSAN
Russell Robinson, junior guard, goes up for a shot against the red teamduring the Late Night
in the Phog Friday night. Robinson scored two points during 19 minutes of playing. The mens
basketball scrimmage concluded Late Night.
Amanda Sellers/ KANSAN
The womens basketball teamgathers at center court to end its skit during Late Night in
the Phog Friday night. The teamwill start its season against Fort Hayes State Nov. 1 in Allen
Fieldhouse.

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