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2005 The University Daily Kansan
Tomorrow
mostly sunny
Saturday
partly cloudy
87 66
Partly Cloudy
Darin Brunin, KUJH-TV
Index
Comics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7B
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
Horoscopes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6B
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5A
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1B
Texas deals Kansas
first Big 12 loss
After two error-ridden
games ended in Texas
victories, Kansas fought
back to win games three
and four. But the effort
wasnt enough as Texas
ended a Kansas six-game
winning streak. PAGE 1B
Group forms to bring attention to Uganda
Erin Larive visited Uganda during the summer and
came back with a goal to educate and encourage
others to help bring peace there. PAGE 3A
Basketball recruits to visit campus soon
Mens basketball coach Bill Self and his staff have
hit the recruiting trail to sell the University of
Kansas to some of the most highly-recruited play-
ers in the nation. PAGE 1B
85 62 87 64
thursday, september 22, 2005 VOL. 116 issue 26 www.kAnsAn.cOm
The sTudenT vOice since 1904
t administration
Offces combine
to help students
By GaBy Souza
gsouza@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Leaders in the Office of the
Vice Provost for Student Suc-
cess want to be more helpful
and accessible to KU stu-
dents. To achieve this goal,
the office will combine with
the Office of the Dean of Stu-
dents.
Marlesa Roney, vice provost
for student success, said com-
bining the two offces would
make the offce more accessible,
less bureaucratic and easier for
students to understand.
Marynell Jones, student
body vice president, said,
Centralizing the location will
give a similar title to everyone
in the offce. Students can go
to anyone in the offce for in-
formation.
The offce also announced
that the title of dean of students
would be replaced by the title of
associate vice provost by March
2006.
The dean of students title
is being retired because of the
confusion regarding the titles
meaning, Roney said. The title
implied that one person was
ministering to the needs of the
entire student body, which is
impossible.
Academic titles dont mean
anything to students, she said.
Roney said the idea sur-
faced in a survey that student
success employees completed
about the offce. Employees
expressed concern about the
confusion between the student
success and dean of students
offces.
Student success manages 18
departments that employ more
than 750 staff members and
1,300 student employees with-
in the Department of Student
Housing, the Offce of Admis-
sions and Scholarships and Stu-
dent Health Services.
The Offce of the Dean of Stu-
dents manages thematic learn-
ing communities and Student
Senate, as well as Homecoming
and the newly formed KU Parent
Association. Five universities in
the Big 12 have eliminated the
dean of students title and re-
placed it with the associate vice
provost title that the University
is adopting.
A 16-member search commit-
tee will begin a national search
to fll the associate vice provost
position, Roney said. The com-
mittee was fnalized yesterday.
Richard Johnson held the posi-
tion until he was fred from the
University in April.
The search committee com-
prises faculty, staff and students.
Ann Brill, dean of journal-
ism, is the chairwoman of
the committee, which also
includes representatives from
the University of Kansas Med-
ical Center and the Edwards
Campus.
Nick Sterner, student body
president, recommended the
students for the committee.
The committee will have its
frst meeting Oct. 1.
Roney said she hoped that
on-campus visits would begin in
February 2006 and that the new
associate vice provost would
start work June 1, 2006.
Edited by Tricia Masenthin
Jared Soares/KANSAN
Catherine McCalley, Mission Viejo, Calif., senior, signs a student up for tickets to the Kansas-Iowa State football
game during the Wellness Fair at the Clean-n-Safe tent. The health fair was held yesterday afternoon on the lawn
outside of Watson Library.
t safety
Registry lacks current
offender information
By John Jordan
jjordan@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The KU Public Safety Of-
fices sex offender registry is
out-of-date and contains sev-
en errors in its list of nine of-
fenders.
The regis-
try, available
at http://
www. ku. edu/
~kucops/CSC-
PAl i s t . ht ml ,
is intended to
provide the
names and ad-
dresses of all
sex offenders
that work at or
attend the Uni-
versity of Kan-
sas.
Yet, accord-
ing to an in-
vestigation by
the University Daily Kansan,
four of the nine offenders on
the list have out-of-date ad-
dresses and three offenders are
no longer at the University.
Chris Keary, KU Public
Safety Office assistant chief,
said that the office does not
compile the information that
appears on the registry. The
information is provided by the
Kansas Bureau of Investiga-
tion, he said.
I dont make changes un-
less I get info from the KBI,
Keary said.
Sandy Meier, manager of
the offender registry for the
KBI, said an offender must
notify the KBI if he or she is a
student or if he or she is plan-
ning to become one. The KBI
then sends that information
on to the University.
Its the offenders respon-
sibility to notify the KBI or a
sheriffs department of any ad-
dress or student status chang-
es, Meier said.
However, if an offender
changes his address without
changing his
cl assi f i cat i on
as a student,
the University
will not be no-
tified, Meier
said. Essential-
ly the Universi-
ty only receives
information on
each offender
once when
his or her sta-
tus as a student
or an employee
is registered.
The investi-
gation revealed
that there are
many discrepancies between
the KBIs list of registered of-
fenders and the KU Public
Safety Offices list.
According to the Registrars
office, one of the listed of-
fenders hasnt attended the
University since Fall 2000.
The public safety office lists
his address as being updated
in May 2005, but the KBI has
no record of the offender.
Another student has moved
four times since being at the
address the KU Public Safety
Office lists him at, said Sgt. Al
Deathe of the Douglas County
Sheriffs Office.
Deathe deals with the coun-
tys sex offenders. He said
keeping track of offenders is
complicated because there are
more than 20 circumstances
that require an offender to
provide updated information
to the KBI.
When Deathe is notifed of
changes, he sends in the infor-
mation to the KBI. Deathe said
it can take two to three weeks
for the list to be updated, be-
cause, he said, the offender
registry offce is understaffed.
Deathe also said names
and addresses arent officially
changed on the list until the
sheriffs office can prove the
offender actually lives at the
new address provided.
Deathe said one offender
on the Douglas County list
doesnt live at the address list-
ed but remains on the list
see OFFeNDeR ON page 4a
Step-by-step process to
update the KU Sex Offender
Registry
F Student sex offender
notifes Sheriffs offce
of KU enrollment
F Sheriffs offce fles
change and sends in-
formation to the Kansas
Bureau of Investigation
FKBI updates its sex of-
fender registry
FKBI then notifes the KU
Public Safety Offce
FThe Public Safety Offce
updates its list
The KU Public Safety Offce sex
offender registry is available
at http://www.ku.edu/~kucops/
CSCPAlist.html. The KBIs site
is available at https://www.ac-
cesskansas.org/ssrv-registered-
offender/index.do.
Source: Kansan reporting
registering
t health
Sexual health campaigns goal
By TraviS roBineTT
trobinett@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Half of all people who are
having sex will get a sexually
transmitted infection by the age
of 25, according to pamphlets
handed out at the 18th annual
Wellness Fair. The pamphlets
are part of Clean-n-Safe, a cam-
paign launched yesterday by the
Wellness Resource Center that
attempts to raise student aware-
ness about STIs.
Bill Smith, public health edu-
cator with the Wellness Resource
Center, said the Clean-n-Safe
campaign attempts to inform
students about gonorrhea and
chlamydia, which are the most
common STIs. Smith said that
there was no difference between
STIs and sexually transmitted
diseases, but that STI was now
the preferred term.
Clean-n-Safe was one of
many booths set up outside of
Watson Library for the Wellness
Fair. The fair showcased services
offered by Student Health Ser-
vices and community organiza-
tions such as Lawrence Memo-
rial Hospital, the American Red
Cross and the Douglas County
AIDS Project.
Catherine McCalley, student
intern at the Wellness Resource
Center, handed out free T-shirts,
cups and pamphlets about STIs
at the Clean-n-Safe booth from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m yesterday.
McCalley, a Mission Viejo,
Calif., senior, said the T-shirts
were gone in less than two hours.
She said that the event was go-
ing well, and that everyone who
stopped by Clean-n-Safes booth
was very responsive to the STI
information the booth was of-
fering.
They really like the logo on
the T-shirt, she said.
Smith said Clean-n-Safe was
sponsored by Gen-Probe, a com-
pany that develops laboratory
and blood screening products
used to test for conditions such
see HeaLTH ON page 4a
Addresses, statuses outdated
As part of a realignment, the Offce of the Dean of Students is
combining with the Offce of the Vice Provost for
Student Success.
According to an
investigation by
the University Daily
Kansan, four of the
nine offenders on
the list have out-
of-date addresses
and three offenders
are no longer at the
University.
By Frank Tankard
ftankard@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Paris Matthews sits in the
lobby of Oliver Hall, wondering
how she got there. Wondering
how she got tossed from inner-
city Los Angeles to New Orleans
to Topeka to Kansas City, Mo., to
Lawrence in less than a month.
She looks well-rested now
after being here for a week: No
circles line her eyes, her hair is
neatly braided.
Its nice here, she says.
Last week, Matthews didnt
even know what a Jayhawk was.
She had no idea shed ever be one.
Her journey started a little
more than a month ago when
she left South-Central Los An-
geles, where shed lived all her
life. She boarded a plane for
New Orleans and traded her
dangerous neighborhood for
Xavier University of Louisiana
to study political science.
She arrived at Xavier, unpacked
her belongings, met her roommate
and started class Aug. 22.
I didnt like it there, she
said. It was too small. The cur-
riculum seemed very easy.
She wasnt there long. Six
days after classes started she fed
the city with two of her friends
from Xavier girls shed gone
to high school with whod since
left the neighborhood after
the news spread that Hurricane
Katrina was going to hit.
The three of them climbed
into a cab around noon on Aug.
28, the day before Katrina hit
land, and headed to Atlanta.
They arrived at 3 a.m., a few
hours before Katrina made land-
fall. Total cab fare for the three
of them: $573, Matthews said.
They stayed in Atlanta for a
couple of days at the home of
one of her traveling compan-
ions, but the friends family
didnt want them there for long,
Matthews said.
She had decided that what-
ever happened, she wasnt going
back to Los Angeles, so she and
her other friend few to Kansas
City, Mo., after two days in At-
lanta, to stay with her friends
aunt and uncle in Topeka.
Matthews was once again told
she could stay there for a while
but not permanently. She learned
that she would have to transfer
colleges because the 4,100-person
Xavier not to be confused with
the larger Xavier University in
Cincinnati had been hit hard.
After about two weeks and an
unsuccessful attempt to get into
Washburn University, the family
suggested she look for another
place to live, she said. One op-
tion was a local shelter for hur-
ricane victims.
I wasnt going to live in a
shelter, Matthews said.
So she called her mother,
who in turn called up some
old friends from their longtime
church in Los Angeles Gil
and Bennie Crockran, who live
in Kansas City, Mo.
As it turned out, they were the
right people to call. Theyd al-
ready been looking into shelter-
ing a hurricane victim, and here
was Matthews at their doorstep,
the girl theyd known since she
was 7 or 8 years old.
I know the environment she
came from, and shes had a tough
row to hoe, growing up in South-
Central Los Angeles, in a gang-
infested neighborhood. God has
his hand on this girls life, Gil
Crockran said. He manages a
Popeyes restaurant in Olathe.
They took her grocery shop-
ping and spent hours on the
phone until she got her $2,000 re-
lief check from the Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency.
They made it their mission to
fnd her a college. First they tried
the University of Missouri-Kan-
sas City, right down the street
from their house. People there
told them to contact Rockhurst
University a few blocks away,
Bennie Crockran said, and
Rockhurst offcials sent them to
the University of Kansas.
The three of them drove to the
University on Sept. 14 and were
relieved when fnally, a university
greeted Matthews with open arms.
Everybody was so kind, like
she was a star. The word had
buzzed around about the girl from
Xavier. People were saying, Is she
here yet? Bennie Crockran, an
animal control offcer, said.
Robert Page, director of the Of-
fce of Multicultural Affairs, gave
the Crockrans and Matthews a
tour of campus, helped Matthews
enroll and gave her a blue T-shirt
with Class of 2009 printed on it.
She started class the next day.
Page contacted Matthews pro-
fessors to make sure theyd let her
make up missed work, and he
warned her that starting school
late would be challenging.
She has a tough road ahead
of her, but with what shes been
through and her life experience, I
think shell be tenacious enough
to make it at KU, both academi-
cally and personally, Page said.
Matthews plans to stay at the
University all four years before
applying to law school.
I dont feel like moving
around no more, she said.
Theres been too much unpack-
ing and packing again.
Edited by Anne Burgard
2a The UniversiTy Daily Kansan ThUrsDay, sepTember 22, 2005 news
y
students $5.00
THE ARISTOCRATS (NR)
9:15 ONLY
644 Mass
749-1912
/,%(57 /,%(57 /,%(57 /,%(57 /,%(57< +$// < +$// < +$// < +$// < +$//
BROKEN FLOWERS(R)
4:40 7:10
Have you reached your Zen yet?
We have the Zen Micro and MP3
accessories.
I think its going to be good for some really clingy
parents that wont really let go of their kids. My
roommates mom is like that, so I kind of know how it
is, but I think it will actually be a good idea.
F Philip Adam, Kansas City, Kan., freshman.
I think its great for parents to be involved. The only
thing is, some students come to school to detach
from their parents. It might make the student feel like
theyre still in high school, with their parents coming
to meetings and being able to phone in. I think col-
lege is more about an independent experience and
not relying on your parents.
F April Rand, Missouri Valley, Iowa, junior.
I think its probably a good idea that parents know
whats going on in the University, as long as they still
give their sons the freedoms they have in college to
be on their own and be independent.
F Javier De Palacios, Santa Cruz, Bolivia,
junior.
I think its a good opportunity for parents to get involved
and know what their children are getting involved in at
the school: know what type of roommate theyre going
to be rooming with if they come from a different back-
ground, if they want to be more associated with different
people. We have different ethnic groups that come from
different places, if they wanted to learn about different
places and have different experiences.
F Duchess Williams, Miami senior.
Well, its good that parents want to be involved in
your education and everything. Who else do you
talk to if you have a problem, because not every-
body knows what youre going through.
FAqua Burras, New Orleans senior.
By Haley Travis
editor@kansan.com
Kansan correspondent
Should parents involvement with their
childs education stop after high school?
THI NK
What do you
?
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activ-
ity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-
Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4962) is published daily during the
school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Weekly during the summer session excluding holidays.
Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120 plus tax. Student subscriptions are paid
through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd.,
Lawrence, KS 66045
KJHK is the student
voice in radio.
Each day there
is news, music,
sports, talk shows
and other content
made for students,
by students.
Whether its rock n roll or reg-
gae, sports or special events,
KJHK 90.7 is for you.
For more
news, turn
to KUJH-
TV on
Sunflower
Cablevision
Channel 31 in Lawrence. The student-
produced news airs at 5:30 p.m., 7:30
p.m., 9:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. every
Monday through Friday. Also, check
out KUJH online at tv.ku.edu.
Tell us your news
Contact Austin Caster,
Jonathan Kealing,
Anja Winikka, Josh Bickel,
Ty Beaver or Nate Karlin at
864-4810 or
editor@kansan.com.
Kansan newsroom
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
media partners
et cetera
t Hurricane katrina
Unexpected path leads to KU
University
opens doors
to student
on campUs
FLech Walesa, former president of
Poland and a Nobel Peace Prize
winner, will receive the 2005 Dole
Leadership Prize at 8 p.m. at the
Lied Center. Tickets are no longer
available.
F Sigma Lambda Gamma sorority is
showing an episode from the PBS
series American Family followed
by a discussion at 6:30 p.m. at the
Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
FMerrill Gilfllan, poet, essayist and
fction writer, is scheduled to read
from his recent work at 4 p.m. at
Oread Books, Level 2 of the Kansas
Union.
FThe Lawrence Flea Market will be
at the Douglas County Fairgrounds,
2110 Harper St., from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. Saturday.
Note: The University Daily Kansan prints campus
events that are free and open to the public. Submis-
sion forms are available in the Kansan newsroom,
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two
days in advance of the desired publication date. On
Campus is printed on a space available basis.
region
Years frst West Nile case
strikes Kansas City man
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A 40-year-
old man has been hospitalized
with the first confirmed case of
the West Nile virus in Kansas City
this year, the citys health depart-
ment said yesterday.
The man spent considerable
time outdoors, the department
said. No other information about
him was released.
So far this year, the state has
reported one death from the
disease, which is transmitted by
mosquitoes. A 70-year-old man
from Adair County in northeast
Missouri died on June 14. The
man had other medical problems,
but the virus was considered a
contributing factor in his death.
West Nile is found in birds.
Mosquitoes, after biting the
birds, transfer the virus to mam-
mals, including humans.
Most people infected with the
virus develop no symptoms,
while others suffer only mild ill-
nesses, such as fever, headache,
body aches, skin rash and swol-
len lymph nodes.
Less than 1 percent of those
infected become seriously ill.
Health officials say people
wanting to protect themselves
should wear an effective insect
repellent, like one that contains
DEET. It also helps to wear long
sleeves and pants when out-
doors. Tires and other items that
can hold water should be re-
moved from properties, because
they can be breeding grounds for
mosquitoes.
The Associated Press
University of Kansas transfer
students from colleges closed
by Hurricane Katrina as of yes-
terday:
FUndergraduate: 19
FGraduate: 6
FSchool of Law: 3
FTotal: 28
Source: Offce of Admissions and
Scholarships
transfers
Frank Tankard / KANSAN
Paris Matthews stands on the lawn in front of Oliver Hall, her new college
home. Matthews, Los Angeles freshman, arrived at the University one week
ago after Hurricane Katrina forced her to leave Xavier University of Louisiana
in New Orleans.
thursday, september 22, 2005 the university daily Kansan 3a news
By Malinda OsBOrne
mosborne@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Erin Larive couldnt believe
what she had heard was going
on in Uganda. She was studying
abroad in Nairobi, Kenya, and
decided to go see for herself. In
Uganda, Larive saw the effects of
the refugee camps in the war zone
of the northern area of the country.
At the camp, people were
eating trash and there were the
malnourished children with gi-
ant bellies, Larive, who gradu-
ated in the spring, said. Its
hard to think that the kids I met
are not still alive.
According to the British Broad-
casting Corp., more than one mil-
lion people inhabit the camps and
face food shortages and lack proper
medication. The refugees relocated
to these camps to escape attacks
from Joseph Konys Lords Resis-
tance Army rebels in their villages.
For 19 years, more than 20,000
children have been abducted by
the rebel forces to be used as sol-
diers and sex slaves.
Rebekah Heacock, Lawrence
senior, heard of the conditions
from Larive and took action.
When I heard about the
situation, I felt like I had a re-
sponsibility to do something,
Heacock said. People need to
know so they can pressure our
government to support peace
negotiations.
Heacock, Larive and Whitney
Onasch, Fairway junior, created the
KU4Uganda Club to educate and
encourage others to act for peace
in Uganda and to call on govern-
ment leaders to make an effort for
peaceful resolution to the war.
More than 20 students have
expressed interest so far, Hea-
cock said. The group has ap-
plied for registration with the
Student Involvement and Lead-
ership Center.
The frst meeting will take place
at 3 p.m. Sunday at Mirth, 745
New Hampshire, formerly Cafe
Nova. The group will discuss its
next event, the GuluWalk Day
on Oct. 21 and 22. Participants
will walk from Free State High
School, 4700 Overland Drive,
northeast of Sixth Street and Wa-
karusa Road, to South Park, 11th
and Massachusetts streets, begin-
ning at 5:30 p.m. A flm about the
children affected by the war will
also be shown at the park. After-
ward, participants will sleep in a
local community building before
walking back to the high school
the next morning.
The Lawrence GuluWalk Day
is one of 32 similar walks taking
place internationally. KU4Ugan-
das goal is to raise at least $2,000
to help provide shelter, food and
support to the night commut-
ers of northern Uganda.
These are children in rural
northern Uganda who walk up
to 7.5 miles each night to the
cities where they feel safer from
rebel attack and abduction than
at home, Heacock said. They
shouldnt be living like this.
Edited by Tricia Masenthin
Meeting
children and
families at a
refugee camp
in northern
Uganda inspired
Erin Larive, a
2005 gradu-
ate, to educate
KU students
about the plight
of Ugandan
refugees. More
than 1 million
people live in
the camps and
face starva-
tion and lack of
medications.
t clubs
Group unites
for Uganda
Trip abroad
sparks call
for action
campus
A new gateway, featuring a water
fountain, will be built near the in-
tersection of 13th Street and Oread
Avenue.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway an-
nounced that the $600,000 gateway
would be funded by a gift from the
Docking family of Wichita.
This is an outstanding way to
honor the legacy of the Docking
family and provide a fitting en-
trance to the University of Kansas,
Hemenway said. This gateway will
improve the visibility of this his-
toric entrance to the campus and
is an integral part of KUs campus
landscape master plan.
The gateway will be named for
the Docking family, including for-
mer Kansas Lt. Gov. Tom Docking
and his wife, Kansas alumna Jill
Docking.
Jill and I hope our support of this
valuable enhancement to the campus
will return to KU some of the im-
mense beneft our family has received
over many generations, Tom Docking
said.
Construction will begin in Spring
2006, pending approval from the
Campus Historic Preservation Board
and the Lawrence Historic Resources
Commission. The gateway fountain
will feature vertical jets of water in a
round plaza.
Ryan Schneider
on the record
F A 21-year-old KU student reported
that a golden retriever bit his leg
and punctured his $40 shorts at
3:15 p.m. Monday in the 900 block
of Arkansas Street.
F An 18-year-old KU student reported
an estimated $1,100 in damage to
a maroon Ford F150 between 10
p.m. Sept. 13 and 4 p.m. Friday at
campus lot 300.
FA 61-year-old KU employee re-
ported $40 in valuables stolen from
a KU Housing Department vehicle
sometime between 3:30 Friday and
8:30 a.m. Monday at campus lot
203.
At the camp,
people were eat-
ing trash and there
were the malnour-
ished children with
giant bellies.
Erin Larive
2005 graduate
Contributed photos
Docking family contributes
funds for a new gateway
4A The UniversiTy DAily KAnsAn ThUrsDAy, sepTember 22, 2005 news
Keep the candle burning
Offender
continued from page 1a
at that address because
the sheriffs offce cant
prove hes living some-
where else.
This guy is riding
the trains somewhere,
Deathe said. Hes one
that likes to stir up
trouble.
Jerilyn Smith, director
of GaDuGi Safecenter, a
support center for rape
victims, said the center
does work with the KU
Public Safety Offce and
uses its sex offender reg-
istry. She said she had
concerns that it wasnt
as up to date as the
KBIs registry.
It does cause me
alarm, but I dont want
to point a fnger at the
PSO [Public Safety Of-
fce] or any other pub-
lic law enforcement,
Smith said.
Smith said she knew it
was up to the sex offend-
er to keep the sheriffs
offce informed of his or
her current address, so
she said she didnt think
it would be appropriate
to blame law enforce-
ment for mistakes.
The KBI updates its
sex offender registry
by sending out letters
to registered offenders
every 90 days and the
Web site is updated ev-
ery week, Meier said.
A summer audit by
the KBI and Kansas
sheriffs offces found
that 13 percent of the
3,392 offenders were
not at the address listed
on the registry.
Edited by Anne Bur-
gard
Josh Kirk/KANSAN
The Big 12 Council on Black Student Government sings at a candlelight vigil in front of the Kansan Union last night.
Similar vigils were held simultaneously on nine other Big 12 campuses in support of the Hurricane Katrina Relief
Fund.
Health
continued from page 1a
as STIs. He said the
Wellness Center will
continue Clean-n-
Safe at least through
this semester and pos-
sibly into the spring.
Patricia Denning,
chief of staff at Watkins
Health Center, said
only a handful of uni-
versities offer Clean-n-
Safe.
Clean-n-Safes Web
s i t e, www. cl ean- n-
safe.com, lists eight
participating universi-
ties other than Kansas.
According to the
Web site, three out of
four chlamydia cases
and three out of fve
gonorrhea cases occur
in people 15 to 24 years
old.
Both diseases can
be transmitted through
oral, vaginal and anal
sex.
Many people affect-
ed by gonorrhea and
chlamydia do not show
symptoms.
A urine sample is all
that is needed to con-
duct a test.
The results are usu-
ally available within a
few days.
Anyone who tests
positive for gonor-
rhea or chlamydia re-
ceives a prescription
for antibiotics.
Smith said Clean-n-
Safe would be at the
Jaybowl on Oct. 6 and
would sponsor a free
night of bowling.
Edited by Erin Wis-
dom
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005 WWW.KANSAN.COM PAGE 5A
OPINION
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TAKING A STAND
Keep education for all
Greek representation misleading, unfair
ALL GREEK TO ME
Man, when someone hands me a ier on
campus, its like saying, Hey. Throw this away.

Bill Braskey fathered 3 of my 4 children.

Its kind of interesting that instead of getting


their opinions from educated political analysis
from places like CNN or a newspaper, people get
their opinions from Kanye West.
Education is a right every
person should be able to ac-
cess. The truth is, however, that
an enormous part of the U.S.
population is denied this right.
Immigrants without legal cit-
izenship status in the country
struggle to receive a higher edu-
cation because the law requir-
ing states to provide education
stops at the high-school level.
In order to remedy this in-
equality between students, the
Georgia Senate will vote on a
law that would allow immigrant
students who meet certain re-
quirements to pay in-state tu-
ition. Kansas has already ad-
opted a similar law by passing
the House Bill 2145.
Just like in Georgia, this bill
has many opponents. These op-
ponents do not understand the
value of education, regardless
of immigration status. People
against the in-state tuition bill
argue that illegal immigrants
do not pay taxes, therefore they
should not be able to benet
from the state.
What they have not gured
out is that illegal immigrant pay
taxes just like any other citizen.
By living and working in the
state of Kansas, residents pay
sales tax and any workers tax-
es. If people contribute to the
Kansas economy, they should
be allowed to enjoy the essen-
tial right to education.
But any of the states debating
in-state tuition laws will benet
greatly from immigrants getting
higher education even after
they graduate from college.
One of the requirements for
those who want to enjoy the in-
state tuition bill is to pledge to
work for the state where they
go to college after graduation.
This means that states will
enjoy the wisdom they have
planted in the students. After
all, education is the basis of a
good, stable democratic coun-
try.
People who immigrate to the
United States do so because
they have few other options in
their own country. They wish
for better opportunities for
their children.
Yet, the people who refuse to
support the in-state tuition bill
are closing the door for these
opportunities. Instead, they
prefer to have poorly educat-
ed people living in the United
States because students, rather
than leaving the country, will
start working right after high
school.
The reason why paying in-
state tuition is so important for
illegal immigrants is that they
can not submit a Free Applica-
tion of Federal Student Aid as
an out-of-state citizen could.
These immigrants know that
the opportunities they are given
by going to college is price-
less and they are truly going to
school to learn.
As students of higher educa-
tion, we have to decide who the
people we want taking classes
next to us will be. Though the
house bill already applies in
Kansas, students represented
by Chris Kobach are trying to
appeal it. So, write your con-
gressman or any representative
in the Kansas government.
Let them know your opinion
about the issue. After all, this
bill reects on the University
of Kansas, and the students af-
fected will be the same students
sitting next to you in class.
Vilchis is a Shawnee sopho-
more in journalism and
international studies.
As the recovery continues from
the devastation wrought by Hur-
ricane Katrina, great attention has
been given to the slow and ineffec-
tive relief efforts that contributed
to the loss of hundreds of lives.
The governments shufing feet
had little to do with race, and ev-
erything to do with the income
level of the aficted. Nearly all of
the dead are poor African-Ameri-
cans, without the nancial means
to afford a hotel, or even a ticket
out of town, resigned to stick out
a category-ve hurricane in a city
laying 10 feet below sea level.
After the initial destruction,
the real tragedy began, as state
and federal emergency relief was
inexcusably slow to act, resulting
in many more deaths. Many crit-
ics have blamed this lack of con-
centrated and prompt relief on the
race of the victims.
Picking on the poor is a popu-
lar pastime in our country. While
oppression of the lower classes
has occurred since man began
walking upright, the bullying has
become particularly nasty during
the last 25 years, when Reagan-
omics, a bastardized version of
supply-side economics, was un-
veiled to the masses.
Tax cuts for the wealthy and
trimming of government spend-
ing (read: social programs for the
poor) was promised to lead to un-
precedented economic growth for
all citizens, rich and poor.
The wealth gained by the super-
rich would trickle down to the
middle and lower classes in the
way of better jobs and lower con-
sumer prices.
In reality, Reaganomics did
little trickling, and by 1988 it re-
sulted in a deep recession that
prompted then candidate George
H.W. Bush to decry the duplici-
tous economic policy as voodoo
economics.
What this thinly veiled attack
on the poor did accomplish was
mass cutting of social programs
for the needy, a crushing federal
debt that were still saddled with
today, and the largest gap between
the rich and the poor that civiliza-
tion had ever witnessed.
This income gap remains, and
its only grown larger during the
Clinton and Bush administra-
tions.
So when faced with these so-
bering statistics, what was Presi-
dent Bushs response? Tax cuts for
the wealthy. Based on Congres-
sional Budget Ofce gures, more
than 66 percent of the $600 billion
in tax cuts went to families making
more than $200,000 a year, with
half of this money going to fami-
lies making more than one million
dollars a year.
According to recycled 1980s
talking points, this money will
trickle down to the hungry mass-
es. As the rich gorge, the poor con-
tinue to wait for their promised
windfall, which history shows will
most likely never come.
The result of this full assault on
the working classes is particular-
ly poignant to the people of New
Orleans, who know all-to-well the
harsh realities of poverty.
Only Detroit has more poverty-
stricken residents, with nearly
one-fourth of its families and 40
percent of its children living below
the poverty level.
Most of these peoples lives are
daily tragedies; Hurricane Katrina
only added to the grief and brought
the ckle attention of America to
bear on the hardships suffered by
the poor in New Orleans.
Now we need to shift that at-
tention to the troubles faced na-
tionwide by the working poor,
and engage in real solutions to the
very real problem of poverty na-
tionwide.
Responsible tax policy com-
bined with necessary, efcient
programs to help the needy, and
a sensible and compassionate at-
titude toward the needy are whats
needed to combat the growing
poverty problem.
Tax cuts aimed at the richest
among us only exacerbate these
struggles, and the zeal to help out
those who need it least will only
be abated for a short time: before
the Katrina catastrophe, the Sen-
ate was set to vote that week on
a repeal of the estate tax, which
would benet all of 2 percent of
the richest families in the country,
none of whom will be going to
sleep hungry tonight.
A popular saying amongst pro-
ponents of Reaganomics is A
rising tide lifts all boats. Hur-
ricane Katrina and its aftermath
reinforces the reality that this ris-
ing tide simply drowns those who
cant afford boats, an unaccept-
able reality in a country overow-
ing with wealth.
Raine is a Wichita senior in
journalism and psychology.
I hope that through this writ-
ing I wont discredit a past writer
who, through his pledgeship at
one fraternity, Sigma Nu, felt he
was able to ascertain the activi-
ties of the entire fraternity com-
munity. I wish, however, to of-
fer my own observations about
the fraternity community, as
someone who actually has close
contact with all 19 of them, and
works with them on a daily ba-
sis.
Where should I start? Should
I tell you about how fraternity
men consistently earn grades
higher than the average KU stu-
dent? Perhaps I should tell you
about how Beta Theta Pi, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon
Pi, Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Chi
all received awards this summer
from their national organizations
for being outstanding chapters?
How about the already $13,153
that has been collected for do-
nation to the Red Cross for hur-
ricane relief and 25 members of
Delta Chi going down to New
Orleans during Fall Break to
help? And these projects are
only from the eight chapters with
whom Ive spoken recently, and
they are largely in addition to
their normal philanthropy proj-
ects.
How about the measures we
put in place to prevent chap-
ters from getting out of control
so they dont resemble Animal
House and the programs de-
signed to promote responsible
alcohol use? I could go on.
No. Lets not talk about those
things. They arent nearly sensa-
tional enough. Lets talk about
hazing, or rather, the misconcep-
tions about its prevalence in fra-
ternity life.
Had the author I previously
mentioned written what he
did 25 years ago, I would have
agreed with him to a large ex-
tent. But the suggestions that
hazing is still a common practice
at this University is categorically
false; especially in the sense that
his article implies. People hear
the word hazing and instantly
they imagine physical abuse to
incoming freshmen. They imag-
ine people being paddled. They
imagine people being forced to
drink or do demeaning activities.
Those activities are a relic of the
past and are as dead as the chap-
ters who practiced them.
What Sigma Nu got in trouble
with, I suspect, had little to do
with that type of physical hazing,
but rather activities that many
people may not even consider
hazing at all, in the traditional
sense. Thats pure conjecture,
though; and Im not trying to
downplay the harm that may be
caused psychologically, only that
hazing no longer strictly means
physical abuse.
To suggest, however, that any
type of activity falling under the
category hazing is as pervasive
as suggested is ridiculous. What
makes it even more ridiculous is
that the author is such an out-
sider to the whole system.
He pretends, it seems, to
know something he does not.
I dont think hes alone in his
misconceptions, though ev-
erywhere in lm and television
we see fraternities portrayed in
that fashion. Fraternities, being
mostly secret societies, are mis-
understood on many levels. This
is just one of them.
Is every fraternity man the
saint their creeds ask them to
be? No, of course not. Do some
guys party too hard? Probably,
but not in any greater proportion
than the general student popu-
lation. Do fraternities facilitate
the transition of new students
into collegiate life, guiding and
supporting them along the way,
while also managing to have
fun? Absolutely.
Ladies and gentlemen, its time
to shed the belief that todays fra-
ternity is the same as it was 25
years ago. The fraternity of the
21st century is one that contrib-
utes back to its community, one
that builds men up instead of
tearing them down and one that
fosters the ideal environment
for developing upstanding citi-
zens and leaders of tomorrow. It
would be substantially off base to
suggest anything to the contrary.
I see this because I am involved
with it every day; and it breaks
my heart that more people cant
see these organizations from the
same perspective that I do.
Thank you to all you members
of fraternities who live by your
creeds. Keep up the great work;
it doesnt go unnoticed by every-
one.
Shorten is a Stilwell senior in
business administration and
pre-medicine. He is president
of the Interfraternity Council.
SCOTT SHORTEN
opinion@kansan.com
WHEN IT RAINES IT POURS
Wealth of knowledge
CHRIS RAINE
opinion@kansan.com
ALAIDE VILCHIS
opinion@kansan.com
1973 the top 20 percent
of households ac-
counted for 44 percent
of total U.S. income
By 2002, this percent-
age had increased to
50 percent, with real
wages for the middle
and lower classes stag-
nant or dropping
And in 2004 alone, the
Census Bureau reported
another 1.1 million
people had dropped
below the poverty level
37 million people
now live in poverty,
and nearly one in ve
children will grow up
poverty-stricken in the
richest country in the
history of civilization
info tidbits
A boat is a boat, but the mystery box could
be anything! It could even be a boat!

So Im locked out of my house, and none of them can


let me into the house, so I thought Id call you.

Im ashamed to admit, but I jumped on


the Bill Braskey bandwagon.

Didnt the chancellor hear? Randy Moss


already found a cure for cancer.

Is it bad that Im just counting the days until the


guy I sleep with and his girlfriend break up?

Can we please stop talking about Sigma Nu and


Hurricane Katrina and get back to important issues?
Like why Jessica so deserves Jason more than
Alex does on Laguna?

Tell the freshmen to start walking


home before they get fat.
I thought I had mono for the last few weeks,
but it turns out I was just really bored.

My anthropology professor just offered extra-credit


points for participating in an anti-war demonstration
on campus. Does throwing rocks at it count?

Was the commentator of the Chiefs game


having an affair with Randy Moss?

Dear girl at the gym talking on a phone while using a


stair-stepper: No. (Pause) No. No. No. No. No.

Kappa Tappa Kegga challenges Rhombus


House to a drinking contest.

I am a division manager! I drive a Dodge Stratus!

Free for All, you remind me of the girl I met last


weekend. You never answer your phone.

True or False? I nally made it into the Free for All.


This is for all the vegetarians at KU. Everytime you
eat a salad, Im going to eat three animals.

To the guy on Monday night at the rec center:


Whoever told you your mustache was cool lied.

Im pretty sure Jesus doesnt love the


Rhombus House either.

Whoever lost their pink girly cell-phone on the bus,


I gave it to the bus driver, so check with them.

How many comments do you get and how


long does it take to listen to them?
(Editors note: Depends how drunk you guys get.)

Whoever said they stole the Tennessee sign is a


liar. Ive got it in my living room right now!

Since when does McDonalds need a searchlight


on their roof? Did they run out of fat people and so
now they are looking for fat aliens?
news 6A The UniversiTy DAily KAnsAn ThUrsDAy, sepTember 22, 2005

PARENT
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NO
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LIKE
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KIDS
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NO
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ME
LIKE
MY
PARENTS
DONT
KNOW
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H a v e y o u r e a c h e d y o u r Z e n y e t ?
Catch this weeks
football play-by-play.
brought to you by
and
Red Lyon
Tavern

944 Mass.832-8228
Jared Soares/KANSAN
A man walks down Jayhawk Boulevard Monday during a brief rain shower. Wet weather moved through Lawrence earlier this week.
Blue sky, wet walk
The AssociATed Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A
group of survivors of clergy
sexual abuse yesterday urged
the Roman Catholic Diocese
of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.
and a Boy Scout group to re-
move the name of a priest ac-
cused of sexual abuse from a
chapel at a Boy Scout camp
near St. Joseph.
The Survivors Network of
those Abused by Priests asked
Bishop Robert Finn and a Boy
Scout headquarters in St. Jo-
seph to remove the name of
the late Rev. Sylvester Hoppe
from the chapel at Camp Gei-
ger.
The Scouts named the chapel
after Hoppe in 1999 in honor of
his nearly 75 years of involve-
ment with the organization.
In the last three years, three
men have fled lawsuits against
the diocese claiming that
Hoppe sexually abused them
in the 1950s. The diocese set-
tled one lawsuit for $10,000;
the other two are still pending.
The men claim in the lawsuits
that the diocese ignored and
covered up reports of abuse by
Hoppe, who died in 2002.
SNAP thinks other lawsuits
against Hoppe are likely, said
David Clohessy, the groups na-
tional director.
Publicly honoring an ac-
cused serial molester severely
discourages other victims who
are considering reporting these
kinds of crimes, he said.
Although the camp is owned
by the Boy Scouts and the dio-
cese has no authority to change
the name, it could encourage
the Scouts to take that step, Clo-
hessy said.
The Rev. Robert Murphy,
vicar general of the diocese,
issued a statement that did
not address SNAPs request,
other than noting that the Boy
Scouts own and supervise the
camp.
Murphy said the diocese re-
grets any clergy sexual abuse
and is ready to help any vic-
tims.
We stand ready to offer our
support and our resources for
healing to victims and survivors
of abuse, Murphy said in the
statement.
The head of the Boy Scout
headquarters in St. Joseph
said the request would be for-
warded to the groups facilities
committee for any possible ac-
tion.
t abuse scandal
Group urges
name removal
By Ryan Colaianni
rcolaianni@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
Two weeks. Thats how long
the Kansas football team will
have to prepare before facing
Texas Tech on Oct. 1.
Kansas football coach Mark
Mangino and his coaching
staff said they have focused on
their own team during practice
rather than focusing on the
Red Raiders.
Mangino said the focus will
shift onto Texas Tech today.
I think weve got some mo-
mentum here, he said. In one
sense, youd like to say you
would like to keep playing.
The other half of that story is
that we could use some time to
improve ourselves fundamen-
tally.
Junior center David Ochoa
welcomes the bye week for the
team.
When you get an off week
like this, it almost serves a dual
purpose, he said. You get to
rest your body a little bit, and
you dont necessarily have the
pressure of a game on Satur-
day.
Mangino said although the
team has prepared specifcally
for the Texas Tech game, yes-
terdays practice focused main-
ly on fundamental skills.
The timing was good for
it, we got our nonconference
schedule completed, and it
was a good time to focus on
making ourselves better and
not get too tied up working
on an opponent, Mangino
said.
The Jayhawk secondary will
likely prepare the most for the
Red Raider team, which has
passed for more than 800 yards
in just two games this season.
After intercepting no passes
in the frst two games, Kan-
sas picked off four passes last
week, two by senior safety
Rodney Fowler.
Fowler said that the extra
preparation time will help the
Jayhawks get ready for a diff-
cult offense.
They have a very complicat-
ed offense, so any flm we can
get it helps, Fowler said. Just
the extra week to prepare for
them will help us know what
they do real well.
The offense, after rushing for
more than 200 yards in each of
the frst two games, produced
just 41 yards last week. That
has Ochoa, and the rest of
the offensive line, working on
opening the running lanes.
As you address those is-
sues, the run game starts to get
a little bit better, Ochoa said.
The angles start to improve
and the run lanes start to open
up a little bit.
Last year, the Jayhawks
would have defeated the Red
Raiders if not for a second-half
collapse that led to the Jay-
hawks 31-30 loss.
see WeeK OFF On page 4B
www.kansan.com page 1b Thursday, sepTember 22, 2005
sporTs
sporTs
By Ryan SChneideR
rschneider@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas mens basketball
team will face Kentucky in Jan-
uary in what may be the most-
anticipated home game of the
season.
Before the 11 a.m. tip-off,
offcials from Kansas and Ken-
tucky will have spent months
planning for the marquee
match up.
Coaches must be consulted
and schools must compare
open dates before television
officials can begin salivating
at the chance to broadcast a
Final Four-caliber match up
long before the madness of
March.
This behind-the-scenes work-
load for Kansas belongs to Ath-
letics Department offcial Larry
Keating.
Keating, senior associate
athletics director, is responsi-
ble for scheduling football and
basketball games. Scheduling
is important to a strong nation-
al reputation, whether building
a program or maintaining an
established tradition.
For football, Keating said,
there are only a handful of
teams that would be consid-
ered for nonconference games.
After 30 years of scheduling,
Keating has a good idea of
which teams will best fit into
the Jayhawks nonconference
schedule and which teams
would be willing to travel to
Lawrence for a game. The key
to nonconference games for
most teams in major confer-
ences is starting league play
with an unblemished record.
When the department
schedules a guarantee game,
the opposing team is guaran-
teed a predetermined amount
of money for coming to Law-
rence. A home-and-home se-
ries typically involves at least
one home game for each team
in the agreement.
On average, Keating said, Di-
vision IA football teams receive
a $400,000 paycheck for play-
ing the Jayhawks at Memorial
Stadium. Division IAA teams
receive between $250,000 and
$275,000.
The amount paid to an op-
posing team is determined
based on the potential income
from football games. Before
entering into negotiations with
other schools, Keating has
an undisclosed limit on how
much can be spent to lure an
opponent to Lawrence. Keat-
ing said schools with stadiums
that seat more than 85,000
fans, such as Tennessee or
Ohio State, could potentially
pay up to $1 million to oppo-
nents per game.
Mid-level college teams still re-
ceive their $1 million pay day, no
matter the outcome of the game
against a high-ranked opponent.
In many cases, their pro-
grams require them to do guar-
antee games because of budget,
Keating said.
see sCHeDULes On page 4B
t aThleTics deparTmenT
Program success drives schedules
By MiRanda lenning
mlenning@kansan.com
Kansan senior sportswriter
Some of the countrys top
high school basketball players
will help the Jayhawks kick off
the 2005-06 season at this years
Late Night with Bill Self.
Since Sept. 9, the frst day
that NCAA coaches were al-
lowed to contact recruits, Kan-
sas mens basketball coach Bill
Self and his staff have been on
the recruiting trail, selling Kan-
sas to some of the most highly
recruited basketball players in
the nation.
At the top of the Jayhawks
list of recruits are three high
school seniors: guard Sherron
Collins, forward Darrell Arthur
and guard Obi Muonelo.
Collins, a 5-foot-11-inch
point guard from Chicago
Crane High School, is the
fourth-ranked point guard in
the class of 2006, according to
the recruiting Web site Rivals.
com. Collins is being recruited
by Georgia Tech, Wisconsin,
Illinois, Indiana, Mississippi
State, Iowa and Missouri, ac-
cording to the Web site. But
Kansas is the only team he is
scheduled to visit so far.
Self visited Collins on Sept.
12, when they talked about the
Kansas program, said Anthony
Longstreet, Collins high school
basketball coach.
Coach Self gave him some
history, some of the former
players and current players
and what its like to play bas-
ketball at Kansas, Longstreet
said.
He said Self told Collins that
if he chose Kansas he would
play point guard, despite the
Jayhawks deep backcourt.
My understanding is that
he talked to Chalmers about
it, Longstreet said. He seems
to think Sherron is the missing
piece.
Longstreet, who dealt with
Self when he coached at Il-
linois, said he would endorse
Kansas if he felt Collins had
used good judgement in weigh-
ing his options.
Ive known coach Self for a
long time, and I trust him, Long-
street said. If he says something,
then I have to believe him.
see HaTCHLIng On page 4B
Finding this years
hatchling Hawks
t FooTball t FooTball
Kansas benefts from a week off
Kansan fle photo
Junior running back Jon Cornish breaks up the middle during the game
against Lousiana Tech Saturday. Cornish ran for 39 yards and scored one
touchdown during the 34-14 victory.
We could use
some time to im-
prove ourselves fun-
damentally.
Mark Mangino
Kansas football coach
By Matt WilSon
mwilson@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
The 24th-ranked Kansas vol-
leyball team had its six-match
winning streak snapped last
night with a heartbreaking 3-2
loss at No. 23 Texas.
The Jayhawks (10-2, 2-
1 Big 12) found themselves
unable to weather multiple
early storms produced by
the Longhorns (7-2, 2-1) and
were unable to
create enough
thunder them-
selves. Despite
rallying to win
games three
and four, the
teams early
struggles cost
the Jayhawks
a chance at
their first-ever
3-0 start in the
Big 12 Confer-
ence.
K a n s a s
jumped out
to a 5-0 lead
in the frst game, prompting
Texas to call a time-out. Texas
regrouped and began a slow
climb back into the game and
eventually tied the score at 14.
The lead went back and
forth from there before the
Longhorns grabbed it for good
with a 6-0 run that gave them
a 26-22 lead and, eventually, a
30-26 victory.
Game two was more of the
same, as Kansas jumped ahead
5-2 but again allowed Texas to
come charging back. With the
score tied at 20, the Longhorns
rattled off six of the next seven
points for a commanding 26-
21 lead. They won the second
stanza 30-24.
Kansas volleyball coach
Ray Bechard said he was dis-
appointed in the way the Jay-
hawks played in the early go-
ing. Kansas had 27 combined
hitting and service errors in the
frst two games.
We were just handing
them points, he said. We
had more kills
and more digs
than them, but
our errors re-
ally cost us.
Kansas fi-
nally got on
the board
in the third
game. The Jay-
hawks were in
control in the
middle of the
set after a 5-0
run gave them
a 20-13 lead.
They built
their advan-
tage to eight points at 23-15
before watching the Long-
horns mount yet another
comeback. Texas closed to
within two at 29-27, but a
kill from sophomore opposite
hitter Emily Brown won the
game for Kansas.
The Jayhawks were aided by
a .438 attack percentage, while
the Longhorns hit .250.
Kansas carried its momen-
tum into the fourth game. The
Jayhawks held an early 8-6
lead, but that advantage would
be short-lived. Texas stormed
back to seize control at 14-12.
From there the two squads
went back and forth. The game
was tied at 26 before Kansas
scored four of the last fve
points to win 30-27.
The ffth, and deciding game,
was hard-fought. The Long-
horns went on a 4-0 run to put
the Jayhawks down 8-4 in the
middle stages.
Kansas came back to get
within one point at 12-11, but
that was as close as the Jay-
hawks would get. Texas held
on to win the game 15-13 and,
with it, the match.
Texas sophomore outside
hitter Jen Christian led the
Longhorns with 20 kills and
10 digs. UT junior outside hit-
ter Dariam Acevedo added 22
kills.
Kansas was led by senior
outside hitter Paula Catens
21 kills and 10 digs. Four Jay-
hawks fnished with double-
digit kills.
Kansas has now lost three
straight matches to Texas, dat-
ing back to last season when
the Longhorns swept the sea-
son series with the Jayhawks.
Bechard was pleased with
the effort his team made to
get back into the match, even
though the Jayhawks came up
short.
We didnt play that well
technically, but we fought like
crazy, he said.
That is a constant that will
serve us well in Big 12 play
throughout the season.
Edited by Anne Burgard
Texas Sopho-
more outside
hitter Jen
Christian spikes
a ball to Kansas
senior setter
Andi Rozum dur-
ing yesterdays
match. The
game concluded
in a Kansas
defeat of 3-2.
Annie Snodgrass/DAILY TEXAN
Longhorns kill winning streak
t Volleyball
We were just
handing them
points. We had
more kills and more
digs than them, but
our errors really
cost us.
Ray Bechard
Kansas volleyball coach
2b The UniversiTy Daily Kansan ThUrsDay, sepTember 22, 2005 sporTs
TOMORROW
FSoccer vs. Baylor, 7 p.m.,
Waco, Texas
SATURDAY
FCross Country Roy Griak
Invitational, 11:20 a.m., Min-
neapolis, Minn.
FSoftball vs. Pittsburg St.,
noon, Arrocha Ballpark
FSoftball vs. Missouri
Southern, 4 p.m., Arrocha
Ballpark
FVolleyball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m.,
Horejsi Family Athletics
Center
SUNDAY
FSoftball vs. Rockhurst,
noon, Arrocha Ballpark
FSoccer vs. Texas A&M, 1
p.m., Jayhawk
Soccer Complex
FSoftball opponent TBA, 2
p.m., Arrocha Ballpark
athletics
calendar
Talk To Us
Tell us your news. Contact Kellis Robi-
nett or Eric Sorrentino at 864-4858 or
sports@kansan.com
By Drew Davison
ddavison@kansan.com
Kansan sportswriter
Nebraska (5-3):
Ne b r a s k a ,
preseason No.
2, had an up-
and-down non-
conference sea-
son with three
come-from-behind victories.
The Cornhuskers latest victo-
ry, over U.C.-Irvine, 2-1, was a
comebackaswell.
Sasha Andrews, defender,
earned Big 12 Defensive Player
oftheWeekhonorslastweekaf-
ter a career week that included
threegoals.Andrewsisthelead-
er of a strong Nebraska defen-
sive unit that will contend for
theconferencechampionship.
Offensively, Brittany Timko,
junior forward, was last sea-
sons Big 12 Player of the Year
and should lead the Cornhusk-
ers again this season. She al-
ready has 14 points, including
a conference-high eight assists.
Timko has three goals along
witheightassists.Nebraskawill
be on the road to open Big 12
play in Boulder, Colo., against
Colorado. Kansas lost to Ne-
braska 1-0 last year at Kansas.
The Jayawks and Cornhuskers
square off Sept. 30 in Lincoln,
Neb.,whereNebraskahasa5-1
recordthisseason.
Colorado (3-3-2):
Coloradowas
rankedNo.5in
the preseason
conferencepoll,
just behind
Kansas. After a fve-game win-
less streak, Colorado was able
to win its fnal two nonconfer-
ence games against Detroit and
Pittsburgh.FranMunnelly,Col-
orado midfelder, looks to lead
the Buffaloes this season. She
leadsColoradowiththreegoals
andsevenpoints.Coloradowill
host the North divisions fa-
vorite, Nebraska, this Friday in
Boulder, Colo. The Jayhawks
will head where the Buffaloes
roam, Prentup Field, Oct. 16.
Kansas defeated Colorado 2-1
lastyearinLawrence.
Oklahoma State (7-0-2):
The Cowgirls, preseason No.
7, are the only
team heading
into conference
play without a
loss. Oklahoma
State leads the
Big 12 in goals
scored through the nonconfer-
enceseason.
Coach Karen Hancock said
some of Oklahoma States op-
ponents were not as high-cali-
ber as the Big 12 teams, but
they played well. The Cow-
girls have a young team, and
they enter the season with 10
freshmen and expect them to
be contributors. Both Bettina
Grossmann, freshman mid-
felder, and Angelika Feld-
bacher, freshman forward,
should step up for Oklahoma
Statethisseason.Theyearned
Big 12 Defensive and New-
comer Players of the Week for
their performances last week.
The team defeated in-state ri-
val,Tulsa,6-1,SundayinStill-
water,Okla.,sotheyareenter-
ing conference play on a roll.
With veteran leadership from
junior forward Jesyca Rosholt,
who had a hat trick against
Tulsa, the Cowgirls will work
to continue their nine-game
unbeatenstreak.Rosholtleads
Big 12 players with 19 points
andsevengoals.TheCowgirls,
whotheJayhawksdefeated1-0
lastseasoninStillwater,Okla.,
will visit Lawrence Oct. 7 to
takeontheJayhawks.
Missouri (5-2-1):
The Tigers,
preseason No.
6, fnished the
nonconference
season on a losing note falling
to No. 17 Cal Poly, 1-0, Sun-
day. Missouri is tied for second
in shutouts, with fve, so Laura
Buehrig,sophomoregoalie,has
played solid between the posts.
In fact, she notched the 100th
saveofhercareerFridaywitha
victoryoverCollegeofCharles-
ton,1-0.
Jennifer Nobis, senior for-
ward, also played a key roll
in the victory, heading in the
game-winning goal. Nobis
leads the team with 11 points
on the season. Aria Hudetz,
junior midfelder and forward,
and Amber Swinehart, senior
forward, are tied for ffth in
theBig12withfourgoalseach
this season. Kansas was able
to march into Columbia, Mo.,
last season and defeat the Ti-
gers, 3-1. This year, Missouri
travelstoLawrencetotakeon
KansasOct.28.
Iowa State (5-
2-2):
IowaState,
preseasonNo.
9,tiedin-state
rival,Drake,1-
1,tocloseout
nonconferenceplay.However,
theydefeatedtheirbigger
in-staterival,Iowa,oftheBig
10,earlierthismonth,2-1,in
IowaCity,Iowa.Sophomore
ReneedeSt.Aubin,midfeld-
er,wasoneofthreemidfeld-
ersinthecountrynamedto
SoccerBuzzMagazinesElite
TeamoftheWeekforher
performanceduringtheweek
ofSept.4.Shescoredgoalsin
threeconsecutivegameshelp-
ingdefeatIowa,SouthDakota
StateandColoradoCollege.
DeSt.Aubinistiedforsecond
ingame-winninggoalsthis
season.Lastyear,Kansas
shutoutIowaState4-0inthe
regularseasonanddefeated
theCyclones4-1intheBig
12tournament.TheJayhawks
willfacetheminAmes,Iowa,
Oct.2.

EditedbyTriciaMasenthin
t big 12 soccer
Individual honors
dominate early weeks
By Mark DenT
mdent@kansan.com
Kansan staff writer
For the 2005-2006 golf sea-
son, players on the Kansas
womens golf team are already
comparing themselves to leg-
endssuchasthegreatSquints,
the lovable Smalls, and of
course,theuntouchableBenny
TheJetRodriguez.
Were a lot
like the kids on
the Sandlot,
sophomore Sar-
ahKierlsaid.
Now, trade
fair territory
for fairways,
leading off
for teeing off,
home runs for
holes in one,
anditbecomes
easier to see
Kierls com-
parison.
Theyre a
bunch of kids
who come to-
gether to play
ball just like
us, she said.
We love to golf and look for-
ward to playing with one an-
other.
The KU womens golf team
expects to have Sandlot suc-
cess for the 2005-2006 season
becauseofthestridesmadelast
season and this summer and
the team chemistry the team is
buildingon.
Last season, the Jayhawks
were a young, inexperienced
bunch that had their ups and
downsthroughouttheyear.
One of the teams highlights
included a team victory at the
Marilynn Smith Sunfower In-
vitational, which was the pro-
grams frst tournament victory
since1990.
Attheendoftheyear,theJay-
hawkscouldntquitepieceitall
together, fnishing ninth at the
Big12Tournament.
We were really close to
breaking through at the end of
theseason,butwewerejusttoo
inexperienced, womens golf
coach Erin ONeil said. It was
understandable.
ONeil expects much more
outofherteamthisseason,es-
peciallybecauseoftheworkher
playersputinthissummer.
Team members summer on
the links included countless
hoursofworkingontheirshort
game and course management
inthescorchingheat.
Eachplayeralsocompetedin
tournaments, including junior
AmandaCostnerwhoplayedin
theU.S.WomensAmateur.
Costner, expected to lead
the Jayhawks this year, has
alreadygottenofftoasizzling
start.
The junior finished third
overall last week at The Ptar-
miganClassicandledtheteam
toasixth-placefnish.
After breaking out last sea-
son with four fnishes in the
top20attournaments,includ-
ing a frst-place fnish at The
LadyBoilermakerInvitational,
Costner is being counted on
tohelptheteamreachitslofty
goals.
These goals include placing
in the top fve at most tourna-
ments, fnishing in the top fve
in the Big 12 Conference and
reachingNationals.
Dreambigisourmotto,and
Ibelievewewilldowhateverit
takes to achieve these dreams,
senior Meredith Winkelmann
said.
The young, inexperienced
teamoflastyearisnowaveter-
an team led by seniors Winkel-
mann and Chelsey Pryor, plus
topindividualCostner.
Throw juniors Jill Womble
andKellyBirdsellintothemix,
along with sophomores Kierl
and Annie Giangrosso, and the
Jayhawks have all the ingredi-
entsforsuccess.
Tocreatearecipeforsuccess,
however,morethanjustthein-
gredientsarenecessary.
The ingredients must be
blended together correctly, and
this team has done that by al-
readycreatingundeniablystrong
teamchemistry.
Thisspecialbondisnotonly
evidenttotheplayersbutalsoto
thecoach.
Theres very close team
chemistry this season. Were all
striving for the same thing and
thatmakesadifference,ONeil
said.
Team camaraderie and fun
may be high on the teams
list of priorities for the sea-
son, but just like the kids on
The Sandlot, the Jayhawks
are totally dedicated to their
sport.
We love to play golf, Kierl
said.Itswhywerehere.
EditedbyAnneBurgard
t Womens golf
From novices to
veterans, team
grows up together
Kierl
Winkelmann
We love to golf
and look forward
to playing with one
another.
Sarah Kierl
Golfer
ncaa FooTball
Iowa State upsets
Iowa, rises in rankings
Iowa State coach Dan Mc-
Carney was so thrilled with
the home crowds enthusiasm
during the Cyclones victory
over Iowa two weeks ago in
Ames, he e-mailed all the ISU
students thanking them for
their support.
The responses fooded the
coachs in box.
The e-mails are out of
sight, he said. I only had one
negative response, and it hap-
pens to be a Hawkeye fan who
goes to Iowa State.
The Cyclones (2-0) moved
into the Associated Press Top
25 after upsetting then-No. 8
Iowa two weeks ago and will
play at Army at West Point,
N.Y., tomorrow night.
Iowa State will play as a
ranked team for the frst time
since Nov. 9, 2002.
Theres not much meaning
in rankings right now, but (a
victory) would be a good notch
in Armys situation, he said.
McCarney said he was wary
of the Cadets (0-2) because
they came close to beating
Baylor last weekend and were
hungry for a win.
I havent seen this team
(Iowa State) on the road yet,
McCarney said. The atmo-
sphere of West Point, 4,000
cadets, their history and tradi-
tion, I dont know how it will
affect this team.
mlb
St. Louis plays toward
100-victory season
CINCINNATI Jason Mar-
quis made another solid pitch
to join the St. Louis Cardinals
playoff rotation.
The resurgent right-hander
threw seven solid innings, and
homers by David Eckstein and
So Taguchi powered the St.
Louis Cardinals to their 96th
victory last night, 5-1 over the
Cincinnati Reds.
The Cardinals clinched
the NL Central title over the
weekend, giving themselves
two weeks to get ready for the
playoffs and another shot at
the World Series. They were
swept by Boston last October.
The Cardinals are trying for
their frst back-to-back 100-vic-
tory seasons since they had
three straight from 1942 to 44.
While they count down to
100, manager Tony La Russa is
trying to fgure out which start-
ers will stay in a condensed
playoff rotation.
I feel I could help this team
in that role, Marquis said. If
not, so be it.
Albert Pujols, the heart of
the Cardinals lineup, had
three hits and gave teammates
a scare last night when he
pulled up while running out a
ffth-inning double.
Pujols waved off La Russa
and a trainer while hunched
over at second base and
played the rest of the game.
Albert rolled his ankle, La
Russa said. Hes fne.
There will be no letup,
Eckstein said. We have a
week and a half left. Were go-
ing to play every game hard,
as you can tell by the last two
nights.
The Associated Press
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3B SPORTS
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BY DANIEL BERK
dberk@kansan.com
KANSAN SENIOR SPORTSWRITER
Oklahoma football coach
Bob Stoops announced this
week that junior quarterback
Paul Thompson will be switch-
ing positions.
Thompson started the rst
game of the year at quarterback
for the Sooners but was benched
in favor of Rhett Bomar. Thomp-
son will be switching to wide
receiver. Stoops said Thompson
would still be the teams backup
quarterback but would spend
most of his time in practice as a
wide receiver.
Oklahoma wasnt the only
team in the Big 12 Conference
to move one of its quarter-
backs. Oklahoma State moved
Donovan Woods from quar-
terback to the defensive back-
field. Like Thompson, Woods
started the first game of the
year and was projected to be
the teams starting quarter-
back throughout the season.
After the rst two games,
Oklahoma State coaches gave
Bobby Reid the job and moved
Woods to defense. Joe Defor-
est, associate head coach, said
Woods has played well in his
new position.
He made a great tackle, de-
ected a pass, had a couple of
other big plays and his knowl-
edge at quarterback seems to
help him with the coverages,
DeForest said. Both Oklahoma
and Oklahoma State have bye
weeks this week. Oklahoma will
kick off its conference sched-
ule Oct.1 against Kansas State.
Oklahoma State will start its
conference season Oct. 1 against
Colorado.
Tough Test
Colorado will be traveling to
Miami this weekend to do battle
with the nationally ranked Mi-
ami Hurricanes.
Colorado had a bye week last
weekend and enters its contest
against Miami undefeated at 2-0.
Colorado football coach Gary
Barnett said it was good to have
an extra week to prepare for
Miami. He said that he didnt
know how the game would af-
fect Colorados Big 12 chances,
but he said that it was just an-
other game and shouldnt be
looked at as a must-win.
All these games have the
same value as a win or a loss,
Barnett said.
Barnett said Colorado will
have to shut down Miami
running back Tyrone Moss in
order to have a chance. Moss
has compiled 241 yards and
three touchdowns in the Hur-
ricanes first two games of the
season.
Colorado will be led by Joel
Klatt, senior quarterback. Klatt
has 469 yards passing in two
games and two touchdowns.
Back to it
Both Kansas State and Iowa
State will return to action this
week after having a bye week
last weekend.
Iowa States bye came after
an emotional 23-3 win over ri-
val Iowa. This week Iowa State
will travel to play Army tomor-
row night. Iowa State will be
the second team in the Big 12
to play at Army; Baylor played
there last week. Dan McCarney,
Iowa State football coach, said
he knew it would be a tough
game for his team.
We are playing a legendary
football coach in Armys Bob-
by Ross and at a legendary sta-
dium, Michie Stadium, where
Army has won over 70 percent
of its games, McCarney said.
Kansas State will also return
to action after not playing last
weekend. Kansas State defeated
Marshall its last time out 21-19
on the road.
This week Kansas State will
face North Texas at home.
Kansas State football coach
Bill Snyder said the team had
a good week of practice and
is looking forward to playing
North Texas.
We spent a lot of time last
week on fundamentals, ball
management, technique and all
the things you try to do on an
open date, Snyder said.
Kickoff for the Kansas State-
North Texas game is scheduled
for 1:10 p.m.
Edited by Erin Wisdom
OU, OSU try out new QBs
BIG 12 FOOTBALL
Matt Sayles/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oklahoma sophomore running back Adrian Peterson, left, is tackled by
UCLAs Bruce Davis during the rst half at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.,
on Saturday, Sept. 17.
4B The UniversiTy Daily Kansan ThUrsDay, sepTemBer 22, 2005 sporTs
Schedules
continued from page 1a
Recently, the Kansas foot-
ball team has scheduled as
many guarantee games as
possible, Keating said. Guar-
antee games, against schools
such as Appalachian State or
Jacksonville State, allow the
department to play a game in
Lawrence without having to
play a road game against that
team.
He said in the next few
years, as the program pro-
gresses, the team would be
able to schedule at least one
home-and-home game per
year.
The football team com-
pleted a home-and-home
agreement with Northwestern
last season. It will complete
an agreement with Toledo
in 2007, which required two
games in Lawrence and one
in Toledo, Ohio.
Keating is still searching
for one additional nonconfer-
ence game to fill the football
schedules in 2006 and 2007.
The schedule for next sea-
son includes nonconference
home games against North-
western State and Florida In-
ternational and an away game
against Toledo.
The Big 12 Conference
football schedule is complet-
ed in four-year blocks, Keat-
ing said. It takes four years
for Kansas to play a home
and away game against all six
teams in the South division.
Kansas Athletics Director
Lew Perkins said smart sched-
uling was a key to success in
football and basketball.
Scheduling is one of the
most important things to
building our program, Per-
kins said.
Similar to football, the
amount paid to a team in
basketball is based on the
average income from a home
game. In basketball, the aver-
age is about $50,000, Keating
said. The basketball average
was similar to what numerous
schools across the country
pay opponents, he said.
Even though Kansas mens
basketball coach Bill Self
leads a well-established pro-
gram, scheduling games
against major and mid-major
teams is important to main-
taining a nationally recog-
nized program.
The team typically has 11
nonconference games each
season. Keating said that on
average, the team played six
guarantee games and four or
five home-and-home games
per season.
The four or five home-
and-home games are against
higher-caliber teams than the
guarantee games. The remain-
der of the schedule is filled
with conference games and a
preseason tournament.
When scheduling games,
Keating said he looked for
respected mid-major schools,
as well as national champion-
ship contenders.
This season the mens bas-
ketball teams mid-major op-
ponents include Nevada, the
2005 Western Athletic Con-
ference champion, and Pep-
perdine, the 2003 West Coast
Conference runner-up.
We try to play upper teams
in the mid-level conferences,
Keating said. Theres a dif-
ference in playing the No. 1
team instead of the No. 10
team.
Keating said the major
games against teams such as
Kentucky or Michigan State
were not difficult to schedule
because they were typically
tied to prime television times
on ESPN or CBS.
The team completes a home-
and-home series against Ken-
tucky this season. Kansas still
has contractual obligations
to play away games against
Georgia Tech and Michigan
State. Michigan State and
Georgia Tech played at Allen
Fieldhouse in 2003 and 2005,
respectively.
Those high-profile games
will bring in paychecks and
inspire fans to dream of mar-
quee match ups for seasons to
come.
EditedbyTriciaMasenthin
Hatchlings
continued from page 1a
Darrell Arthur will join Col-
lins in visiting Kansas during Late
Night weekend. Arthur is a 6-foot-
9-inch forward from South Oak
Cliff High School in Dallas. He is
the fourth-ranked power forward
in the class of 2006, according to
Rivals.com. The scouting report
on Arthur says he is athletic for
his size, a good inside player and
an outstanding rebounder. Arthur
is also being recruited by Baylor,
Texas, North Carolina, Indiana
and SMU, according to Rivals.
com.
Muonelo completes the trio of
high school seniors who will be in
attendance at Late Night. Muone-
lo, a 6-foot-4-inch shooting guard
from Edmond, Okla., is the third-
ranked point guard in his class, ac-
cording to Rivals.com.
There will also be a slew of high
school juniors in Allen Fieldhouse
getting their frst tastes of Jayhawk
basketball. The list includes Cole
Aldrich, a 6-foot-9-inch forward
from Bloomington, Minn., who
is the eighth-ranked player in the
class of 2007; Lance Storrs, a 6-
foot-5-inch small forward who
is ranked top 30 from Decatur,
Ga.; Jeremy Price, a 6-foot-9-inch
small forward from Decatur, Ga.;
George Goode, a 6-foot-7-inch
power forward from Raytown
South High School in Raytown,
Mo., and Alex Legion, a 6-foot-3-
inch guard from Detroit.
Another high school junior
could make the list. Tyler Reed,
from Burlington High School in
Burlington, might make the short
drive to Lawrence for Late Night,
said Stacy Reed, his father and
coach.
He been coming to Late Night
since he was a kid, Stacy Reed
said.
Tyler Reed is being recruited by
many schools, including North
Carolina, Mississippi State, Illi-
nois, Stanford and UNLV.
When asked if he wanted his
son to attend a Kansas school,
Reed said, He is still young, but
when the time comes I want him
to make the right decision.
EditedbyBeccaEvanhoe
Week off
continued from page 1a
Although Texas Tech has
a game this weekend against
Indiana State, a division IAA
opponent, the game is not ex-
pected to challenge the nation-
ally ranked Red Raiders. Last
weekend Texas Tech scored 80
points against IAA Sam Hous-
ton State.
The rare weekend off for
the Jayhawks has a few players
making plans
for the football-less weekend.
Ochoa will be attending a
wedding, and Fowler plans to
be just like any other student
this weekend: watching college
football and doing homework.
EditedbyTheresaMontao
The AssociATed Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Denny
Hocking had just 53 at-bats for
Kansas City since being called
up from the minors on Aug. 6.
He came through when the Roy-
als needed him yesterday.
Hockings two-run pinch
single with two out in the ninth
inning gave Kansas City its frst
four-game sweep in six years
with 4-3 victory against the De-
troit Tigers.
Its not a comfortable situ-
ation to be in, Hocking said.
Youve got one chance to go up
there and succeed. It is like what
I try to tell all the guys that arent
playing that day that go down
and are preparing in the (indoor
batting) cage from the ffth inning
on. I tell em, Someone in here
is going to have a big impact on
the game. Today was my turn,
Hocking said.
Tigers reliever Fernando Rod-
ney (1-3) gave up a leadoff single
to Matt Stairs in the ninth. Mark
Teahen doubled with one out
and Angel Berroa was intention-
ally walked to load the bases
with one out.
After John Buck struck out,
Hocking who at 35 is the sec-
ond-oldest Royals player bat-
ted for Andres Blanco and sin-
gled on a 2-2 pitch.
When youre an older guy on
a younger team, you can lead by
example or you can lead verbal-
ly, Hocking said. I lead enough
here verbally. I had a chance
here to lead physically today, it
worked out in my favor. I was
happy to get the opportunity
and I was ready. Today I had a
chance to pick a lot of guys up
by doing something on the feld.
I think they appreciate that.
Kyle Snyder (1-3) pitched
3 2/3 scoreless innings for the
victory, giving up three hits and
striking out four.
That at-bat doesnt happen
without the effort Kyle Snyder
threw out there today, Hocking
said.
Snyder picked up his frst vic-
tory since June 4, 2003, against
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
I went to my cut fastball quite
a bit and it really helped keep the
hitters off stride, Snyder said.
Snyder gave up a double to
Ivan Rodriguez, the frst batter
he faced, to put runners on sec-
ond and third with one out. Craig
Monroe hit a high chopper to
Teahen at third base, who leaped
and threw him out at frst base.
Teahens play won the ball
game when he left his feet, Sny-
der said. If that ball gets over
his head or he doesnt feld it, we
dont get Monroe out and both
base runners score and its a to-
tally different ball game.
The Royals again avoided
becoming the frst team in the
majors with 100 losses this sea-
son. Detroit dropped its seventh
in a row despite an impressive
home run by Chris Shelton that
bounced off a sport utility ve-
hicle. The shot was estimated at
449 feet, the longest in Kansas
City this year, and gave Detroit a
3-1 lead.
No matter how far you hit it,
it is just one home run and no-
bodys on base, so it is just one
run, Shelton said.
Kansas City has won six in
a row at home, its best streak at
Kauffman Stadium since it went
11-0 to start the 2003 season. This
was the Royals frst four-game
sweep since May 1999 at Minne-
sota, and their frst at home since
August 1994 against Oakland.
The Tigers went 0-for-5 with
runners in scoring position.
I just look back at the oppor-
tunities we had, Tigers manager
Alan Trammell said. We had
runners on frst and second and
nobody out in the frst and we
didnt score. In the sixth after
Sheltons hit the home run, we
had runners at second and third
with one out and didnt get any-
body in. Going back those (lack
of) runs hurt us. They got it done
and we didnt.
Aaron Guiel hit a solo home
run in the Royals third. Emil
Brown had a sacrifce fy in the
sixth, giving him a team-leading
81 RBIs.
Curtis Granderson led off the
Tigers third with a home run. He
has three homers, four doubles
and eight RBIs in his past 13
games.
Jason Johnson, who was sent
back to the Tigers team hotel on
Tuesday with a sore throat, gave
up fve hits and two runs in six
innings. He failed to improve to
4-0 in fve starts against the Roy-
als this season.
Royals lefty Jimmy Gobble,
making his fourth start since
being moved into the rotation,
allowed three runs on fve hits
over 5 1/3 innings.
Sheltons sacrifce fy in the
third scored Placido Polanco,
who had tripled for one of his
three hits.
t mlb
Royals sweep series
sports thursday, september 22, 2005 the university daily Kansan 5b
By Doug Ferguson
The AssociATed Press
Everywhere she goes, people
cant help but notice Michelle
Wie.
As a 13-year-old still wearing
a retainer, she was warming up
on the practice range for a ju-
nior pro-am at the Sony Open in
Honolulu. When she pulled out
her driver, fve PGA Tour play-
ers on both sides of her stopped
to watch her launch tee shots
that approached the 300-yard
marker.
Last year in Portugal, where
Wie received the Laureus World
Newcomer of the Year award,
she walked into the banquet
room flled with celebrities, in-
cluding Michael Douglas, Mor-
gan Freeman and Placido Do-
mingo.
Everyone in the room
stopped what they were do-
ing and watched her go to her
table, said Greg Nared, a Nike
business manager who has been
tracking Wie the last two years.
That told me a lot.
The 15-year-old from Hawaii
who commands so much atten-
tion is on the verge of command-
ing top money. Wie is about to
turn pro, and endorsements es-
timated to be worth as much as
$10 million a year await.
Two sources close to Wie,
speaking on condition of ano-
nymity because she is still an
amateur, said the announcement
will not be made until endorse-
ment deals are signed.
That could be done before the
Samsung World Championship,
which starts Oct. 13, two days
after her 16th birthday. It will be
the eighth and fnal LPGA Tour
event Wie plays this year.
There is nothing to say until
everything is completed, her fa-
ther, B.J. Wie, said yesterday.
He added that we are getting
close, but said her decision to
turn pro would not be related to
Samsung.
It doesnt have to be asso-
ciated with a tournament she
would play, the father said.
There is no target date we have
to meet.
When it happens, she will be
the highest-paid female golfer in
the world.
One deal that is nearing com-
pletion is with Nike, which is
no surprise. Wie has been play-
ing its irons and golf balls the
last two years and often wears
the swoosh on her clothing. A
source with knowledge of the
negotiations said the deal could
be worth anywhere from $4 mil-
lion to $5 million a year.
She also is working on a
deal with an Asian-based elec-
tronics company that could be
worth about $3 million a year.
Golf World magazine reported
another possible endorsement
with an airline company.
Annika Sorenstam, the best
player in womens golf, makes
about $7 million a year in en-
dorsements. No other female
golfer is close.
B.J. Wie declined to discuss
endorsement opportunities,
but he noted that his daughter
who made straight As in the
spring semester while playing
three LPGA Tour events wants
to graduate with her class and
still wants to pursue a business
degree, preferably at Stanford.
Wie poised to go pro
t LPGA
Laura Rauch/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Michelle Wie watches her tee shot on the 11th hole during a practice round for the U.S. Womens Open at Cherry
Hills Country Club in Denver on June 22. Sources close to Wie say the 16-year-old golf prodigy is poised to turn pro
and sign endorsement deals, including one with Nike, that could bring the teenager as much as $10 million. If true,
she would become the highest-paid female golfer in the world.
the
student
perspective
ENTERTAINMENT 6B ThE UNIvERsITy DAIly KANsAN ThURsDAy, sEpTEMBER 22, 2005
t horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY,
Thursday, Sept. 22, 2005:
You might need to break tradition this year
and become involved in many differ-
ent activities. Though it might be more
comfortable to stay in the same space, by
walking down the untrodden path, youll
greet success. Money fows from the end of
October on. Many of you will experience a
pay raise or promotion. You deserve it! Oth-
ers will use a new talent. Be verbal; dont
hold back. You might simplify your life and
spend time with fewer friends, but more
time with special ones. You will get what
you want but will work hard to get it. If you
are single, romance might be diffcult. Once
someone enters your life, getting rid of this
person is a whole other story. If you are
attached, work on a common goal, which
could involve a trip. GEMINI always has a
different view.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHHH Finally, with the Autumnal
Equinox, you breathe a sigh of relief. Wait
until the afternoon before expressing your
opinions, which, for the most part, you have
kept to yourself. Others still could be reac-
tive. Tonight: Hang at a favorite spot.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Use the morning for anything you
fnd very important. Others will be more
responsive at this time. By the afternoon,
work and perhaps an expenditure take a
higher priority. Walk your talk, and others
will respect you. Tonight: Gather your bills.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH In the afternoon, the Moon slides
into your sign. Yes, you will be feeling your
Wheaties, and why not? Your creativity
emerges. Where you plug this energy in is
your call. Romance could fourish, if you
want it to. Tonight: What you want.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Family and domestic matters take
on an even higher priority in the next few
weeks, starting today. You might need to
distance yourself or pull back some. Some-
times all you do is run around. Stop. Think.
Refect. Tonight: Into your private world.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH By midday, you feel as if some of
the recent weight and burdens might be
lifting. Encourage others to join in on a proj-
ect. Your words seem to work like magic;
just express yourself. Use that famous Leo
charm. Tonight: Try a new jazz spot.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Pressure builds for you to do what
you have been talking about. Take the frst
step. Others will be unusually supportive.
A fnancial matter will be resolved to your
liking. Know when to say enough. Tonight:
Burn the candle at both ends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH The Sun moves into your sign
today, lightening up your mood. You hear
news from a distance. Dont accept
information at face value. It is important to
check out facts. Use the computer or make
calls. Tonight: As you wish.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH You will need to lie back for a little
longer. Besides, without your direction or
push, you could be delighted by an associ-
ate and her offer. Trust will build if you let
this person reveal herself. Tonight: Have a
long-overdue chat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH Starting this afternoon, you open
up to a more social period in which you
meet new people and broaden your hori-
zons. As a result, you can make a dream a
reality in the next month. Others seek you
out. Tonight: Decide frst whom you want to
be with.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Examine what you want from as-
sociates and co-workers. If you are not in
a working situation, examine your daily life.
What do you need to spice it up or make it
more to your liking? You will want to be in
the limelight. Tonight: Run errands on the
way home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH Spontaneity works and takes you
down a new path, if you are open. In fact,
in the next few weeks, you might want to
explore your options. Nothing is written in
stone. Let your imagination fow. Tonight: Be
with the person you have the most fun with.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Your concerns revolve around your
home, fnancing and a partnership. Some
might be looking at new homes, while
others might want to invest in their present
abode. Dont hesitate. Go for what you
want. Tonight: Happy at home.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day Youll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffcult
Greg Griesenauer/KANSAN
t damaged circus
t ciNNamoN couNTY
t The masked aveNgers
t FaNcY comiX
Doug Lang/KANSAN
Max Kruetzer/KANSAN
Andrew Hadle/KANSAN
pEoplE
Talk show televises sonogram
to prove Banks breasts are real
NEW YORK - Talk about keeping it real.
Tyra Banks underwent a televised sono-
gram on her new talk show to prove that
her breasts arent fake.
Im tired of this rumor. Its something
thats followed me forever, the supermod-
el said Tuesday on The Tyra Banks Show.
After Banks asked the men in the audi-
ence to leave, Garth Fisher from ABCs
Extreme Makeover performed a touch
test and then the sonogram. He conclud-
ed: Tyra Banks has natural breasts; there
are no implants.
By no means am I saying a breast
implant is a bad thing, but its not a choice
that I made, the 31-year-old model said.
But its something that a lot of the public
... think that I have, and thats so frustrat-
ing for me.
Banks, who models for Victorias Secret,
also displayed how her push-up bra exag-
gerated her body. But, Banks said she was
not totally real.
I got fake hair, yall. I got fake eyelash-
es, she said.
The hour-long show was, as Banks de-
clared, all about breasts! It also featured
lessons on proper bra ftting and an ap-
pearance by a slimmed-down Anna Nicole
Smith.
Aside from her syndicated daytime talk
show, Banks also plays host to Americas
Next Top Model. The ffth installment
of the UPN reality series premiered last
night.
The Associated Press
Friend, co-host visits Nebraska
to honor Johnny Carsons life
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. Ed McMahon
is taking to the road to pay tribute to
longtime TV partner Johnny Carson, stop-
ping in the late-night kings home state to
refect on the pairs friendship.
Carson, who grew up in Norfolk, died
Jan. 23 of emphysema at age 79. He was
the host of The Tonight Show Starring
Johnny Carson from 1962 to 1992.
McMahon started working with Carson
in 1957 as his announcer on Who Do You
Trust? The game show ran until 1962.
Heeeeeres Johnny! was the boom-
ing announcement from McMahon that
ushered Carson out to the stage of The
Tonight Show.
McMahon said he was closer to Carson
than Carsons brother. They ate dinner
together several nights a week and talked
about their troubles, dreams and families.
Johnny once described our relation-
ship by saying we were as close as two
people could be without being married,
McMahon said.
Carson was the acknowledged king of
late-night television and McMahon said
the job was tough. It had its highs and
lows like any job, and Carson took it all in
stride, he said.
There is no planning. On the night it
is really great, its euphoria and if it is not
so great there is always tomorrow night.
That was his attitude, said McMahon, who
gave a talk Tuesday.
Everywhere I go people remember the
certain moments of the show as the high-
light of anything they ever saw in televi-
sion, he said.
The Associated Press
CLASSIFIEDS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7B
SERVICES
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For all your repair needs
* Import and Domestic
Repair & Maintenance
* Machine Shop Service
* Computer Diagnostics
841-4833
11th & Haskell
www.ubski.com
1-800-754-9453
Breck, Vail,
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& Keystone
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Fast, quality jewelry repair
custom manufacturing
watch & clock repair
817 Mass 843-4266
marksinc@swbell.net
Work part-time from home or office. Earn
an EXTRA $2,000-3,000/mo. Cal l
1-888-450-4383 ext. 4546.
BAR TENDING!
$300/day potential. No experience nec.
Training Provided.800-965-6520 ext.108
City of Lawrence
Internship avlb in City Managers office to
provide active Web page design using
hand-coded HTML (no WYSIWYGs); Cas-
cading style sheets; & PDF file creation.
Expr & interest in local govt a plus. Flexible
schedul e between 8am-5pm w/apprx
10-20 hrs wkly. $8.00hr. Submit cover ltr
w/resume by 09/26/05 to:
City Hall, Personnel
6 E6 St, Lawrence, KS 66044
personnel@ci.lawrence.ks.us
EOE M/F/D
Female disabled student seeks responsible
femal e to hel p wi th errands. Li ght
housekeeping. Arts & crafts projects.
Background in arts a plus. Very flexible
hours. 5-20/wk, but needs some weekends.
$8.50/hr. Cal l 785-760-3797 after
7pm. Also seeking yoga/workout partner
for early mornings, same info as above.
Customer servi ce/sal es rep needed.
Work from home & earn up to $500/wk.
Call Schott at 816-364-4720.
HEY SPRING BREAKERS! Have the
Spring Break of your life with Studentcity.-
com. Lowest prices, crazy parties, free
meals! Book 12 trips and receive 2 trips,
VIP status and $. Call Sarah ASAP for
more info 310-413-0511.
** #1 Spring Break Website! Low
prices guaranteed. Book 11 people, get
12th trip free! Group discounts for 6+
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Spri ng Break 2006. Travel wi th STS,
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com.
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the top credit cards for STUDENTS avail-
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SPRING BREAK- Early Booking Specials-
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SPRING BREAKERS
Book Early & Save! Lowest Prices! Free
Meals & Parties by 11/07/05. Book 15 and
Receive 2 Free Trips! Visit www.sun-
splashtours.com or Call 1-800-426-7710.
Accounting Majors, PT position. CPA firm
needs person to perform accounting and
book keeping duties. Could become FT
during summer and or after graduation.
Call Sandy, 842-2110 to set up interview.
ATTN Marketing, Media & Communi-
cations Majors: Alum looking for inde-
pendent sales rep for small radio network.
Work PT from own space a few hrs a wk.
Require internet savvy, innovative, moti-
vated person with great phone skills. Earn
commision plus bonus. E-mail sales@wil-
lowpointproductions.com or call (402)
469-4361.
Assistant needed in busy doctors office.
PT position. 7am to 12pm or 3pm to 7pm
Monday-Saturday. Call 749-0130
Adobe Illustrator artist wanted! PT
flex hrs. Screenprinting company. Friendly
environment. Call John 913-669-3939.
1 room for rent in great house on Naismith
Dr. W/D, FP, fam rm, l g ki tchen, no
pets. $350 + 1/3 util. Call 766-0773.
1 BR for rent. very nice. fireplace, skylights,
one car gar, al l appl i ances, W/D
hook-up, no smoking. 2901 University Dr.
Call 785-748-9807.
2 BR spacious, remodeled like new. 9th
and Emery, W/D, DW, CA, balcony, 1 1/2
bath. NO PETS/SMOKING. Price reduced
to $500+ util. 841-3192 or 764-1527.
2 BR, 1 BA apartments- pool, exercise fa-
cility. Large floor plan in great close location-
$512.00. 1 BR $495.00 Eddi ngham
Apartments 841-5444
3 BR, 2 BA. Available now! 1700 square
feet on Adam Avenue. No pets. Cal l
785-841-4785.
3 BR, 2 BA condo. Awesome location.
W/D incl. 927 Emery Rd. 1st floor. Avail.
neg. $870/mo. Call 785-393-1138.
4-5 BR house, 2 BA, whirlpool tub, wood
fl oors. By downtown & on bus route.
1103 Connecticut. $1260/mo. 218-8323.
Stop Renting! Buy! 3 BR foreclosure.
onl y $8,100! Must see! Li sti ngs
800-385-4006 ext G340.
4BR- 2story, 2BA, 2 patios, 2 car-garage,
2 good 2 miss! 4009 Overland Dr. Privacy
fence, dishwasher, W/D, $1000/mo. Near
HyVee. Bus route!! Avail. NOW.
785-331-4350!
3 BR townhomes avail. now. Brighton Circle
& Adam Ave. Speci al Rates. NO
PETS. 841-4785. www.garberproperty.com
9 BR, 4 BA. 1232 Ohio. Accommodates
15 residents. $4,365/mo. 1 block from
Union. Avail. now. Call Larry 842-3535.
4 BR, 2 BA, parking, CA, 1008 Mississippi,
785-691-5794 $1100. Wood fl oors,
DW, porches.
4 BR, 2BA Townhome 515 Eldridge. DW,
W/D, 2 car gar. 4 Roommates allowed.
$995/mo. Call Kate 841-2400 ext. 30
Newly remodeled 1, 2 ,3 BR available
immediately. Rent specials. 841-7849.
4 BR + office house next to campus. 1628
W. 19th Terr. 2500 sq. ft, 2 car gar.,
fenced back yard. Familyroom w/bar for
entertaining. Avail. Sept. 1. 423-1223.
4 BR, 2 BA plus study. Available now!
1628 W. 19th Terrace. 2500 square feet.
$1250/mo. Call 785-423-1223.
1 BR in 8 person house @ 1140 Mississippi.
Newly remodeled, digital cable/internet.
$255 /mo. Call Bob @ 913-206-5657.
3 BR, 2 BAcondo near campus. W/D,
$300/mo. utilities paid. 550-4544
1 BR in 3 person home for female room-
mate. 27th & Lawrence Ave. $275/mo. In-
ternet & W/D incl. Call 913-244-1977.
2 BR through May 31. Close to KU &
downtown. On bus route. $600/mo. incl.
util. & cable. Oct. rent free. Call 864-4669.
PT nanny/housekeeper. Single dad in OP
area. Housekeeping, groceries, laundry,
meal prep, some babysitting, transporta-
tion. 2 kids, 9 & 13. No drinking, drugs,
smoking. Emotionally stable, reliable, very
safe, good at following directions carefully.
15-20 hrs/week. Call 913-649-2100.
MTCTickets
Buy/sell Chiefs, Nascar, & all KU tickets.
Dave Matthews (first 15 rows), Coldplay.
MTCTickets-the friendly ticket broker.
www.mtctickets.com. Call 913-766-9990.
Toyota Corolla, 93. Great shape!
Must see! Only $800! Listings
800-426-9668 ext G346.
NEW and refurbished computers from
$149 complete. $40 flat labor rate. Used
monitors & printers. 785-776-6310.
Kegorator 4 Sale. Holds 4 kegs. Taps
included. CO2 tank & reg. $1250/OBO.
(785) 218-2523.
$500! Police impound! Hondas,
Chevys, Toyotas, etc. From $500!
Cars/Trucks/SUVs/Jeeps. For listings
800-426-9668 ext 4565.
For Sale: Two bicycles sold separately or
together. Wi l l negoti ate. Pri ce range
$300-$500. Call Jeff Curtis 865-1517 or
550-3799.
Lawrence Flea Market
Indoor/outdoor fair grounds. 21st &
Harper. Saturday Sept. 24th. 9am-4pm.
Antiques, collectibles, computers. 60+
dealers.
1 BR apartments $480.00 West side loca-
tion with wonderful park-like setting...pool,
exercise facility...Quail Creek Apartments
785-843-4300
Suzuki Hayabusa 2003. LIKE NEW.
Garage kept! Only 1283 miles. $5000
OBO. Email John: mhilr509@aol.com.
1 BR Condo. D/W, Fireplace, W/D, sun
room, golf course view, close to KU, private
parking. $515/mo. Call 785-218-3200.
Subs, salads, wraps & sushi 10% dis-
count for students wi th student ID.
Miller Mart Deli, 2301 Wakarusa Drive.
PT housekeeper/nanny. Single dad in OP
area. Housekeeping, groceries, laundry,
meal prep, some babysitting, transporta-
tion. 2 kids, 9&13. No drinking, drugs,
smoking. Emotionally stable, reliable, very
safe, good at following directions carefully.
15-20 hrs/week. Call 913-649-2100.
Antique Brunswick Billiard Table. Profes-
sionally disassembled ready-to-move.
$1499. + Whirlpool Gold side-by-side re-
fridge used 4 months, renovated kitchen.
$799. Call Barbara 816.444.5809.
Mystery Shopper
Get paid to shop. Earn up to $150 a day.
Training provided. Call 800-890-0471.
Movie Extras/ Models. Earn up to $250 a
day. All looks needed. Experience not re-
quired. Call 800-644-8149.
Need extra cash while in college? Be re-
sponsible, drive Saferide. Must be 21 with
a good driving record. Call 785-842-0544.
Now Hiring for positions in our nursery
and preschool rooms. Every Thursday
morni ngs from 8:45-12.. Pay i s
$6.50-$7/hr. Call Mandy at 843-2005 ext.
201 to schedule an interview.
STUDENTS NEEDED to participate in
speech perception experiments. $8 per
hour. Must be a native speaker of English.
Contact the Perceptual Neuroscience Lab
pnl@ku.edu or 864-1461.
Office receptionist, PT, mornings. Eligible
for Kansas work study. Cal l
785-843-8479 or email
marstonhc@sunflower.com.
PT kennel staff. Hardworker needed for
kennel staff. 15 hrs/week. Bring resume &
apply in person at Wakarusa Veterinary
Hospital. 1825 Wakarusa Dr.
Youth intern position avail. Male or female.
7-10 hrs/week. Call Pastor Beau @
Crosspointe Church @ 331-2704.
UnI Computers is seeking qualified techni-
cians and experienced sales people to fill
part and full-time positions. Certifications
and/or customer service experience a
plus. Bring resume to 1403 W 23rd ST,
Lawrence KS, 66046 or call 785-841-4611
Sheridan County Economic Development
is seeking energetic, outgoing, self-motiva-
tor to fill the position of Sheridan County
Economic Director. Responsibilities are
j ob retenti on, grant wri ti ng, busi ness
growth. Be willing to become a certified
grant writer. Equal opportunity employer.
Salary range $24,000-$50,000 depending
on experience. Please mail resume to
Sheridan County Development, Box 839,
Hoxie, KS 67740.
Get Paid To Drive a Brand New Car!
Now paying drivers $800-$3200 a month.
Pick up your free car key today.
www.freecarkey.com
KanREN, Inc. is seeking candidates for
Service Desk Technicians. Employees
will monitor and receive support calls from
members of our statewide networks. Duties
i ncl ude but are not l i mi ted to i ni ti al
troubleshooting and diagnosis of network
issues. Employees will also maintain the
trouble ticket system and will assist in
other departments of the company as
needed. Positions available are part time
with day, evening, and weekend hours
available. Experience with customer ser-
vice, computer networks and basic com-
puter troubleshooting is preferred but we
will train the right individuals. Salary
ranges from $7 - $10. Please apply in per-
son at 1405 Wakarusa Drive, Suite B.
INTERNET WORK! $8.75-$38.50/HR!
FT/PT/Summer. $25 Bonus!
Studentsurveysite.com/dailyk
Instructors needed NOW for recreational
gymnastics classes at south Kansas City
gym. Perfect job for dance, athletic, edu-
cation, social work majors. GOOD PAY!
Call Eagles (816) 941-9529.
The Lied Center of Kansas has a paid stu-
dent graphic designer position available.
Prefer experience on Macintosh platform
using QuarkXpress, InDesign, Illustrator,
Adobe Photoshop, and PowerPoint. For
more information and/or to apply, please
go online to jobs.ku.edu. Apply online by
Wednesday, September 28 at 5:00 p.m.,
or for more information call 785-864-3472.
EO/AAEmployer and Paid for by KU.
Childcare Asst. needed. Mon & Wed. 8:45
am-12:15pm. College hrs and ref required.
NW Lawrence location. 331-2652.
Classifieds Policy: The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertise-
ment for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or
group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orienta-
tion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept
advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, lim-
itation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, famil-
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limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in
this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
classifieds@kansan.com
classifieds@kansan.com
Theres a better way to vent.
free for
all
864-0500.
8b The UniversiTy Daily Kansan ThUrsDay, sepTember 22, 2005 sporTs
This week the Kansas mens
golf team hosted the Kansas
Invitational at Alvamar Golf
and Country Club and won by
three strokes over Tulsa.
Leading the way for the Jay-
hawks in their second tour-
nament was none other than
Gary Woodland.
Its vital for the Jayhawks
that Woodland become that
guy the team
can always rely
on for a round
in the 60s, the
guy who can
replace former
KU golfer Kev-
in Ward.
Woodl ands
improvements
on his perfor-
mance last sea-
son indicate he
may be on his
way to doing
this.
Lets go back
to last years
Kansas Invita-
tional.
Woodland struggled as he
fired a three-round total of
225, nine-over-par.
He placed in a tie for 31st,
seventh on the team. Senior
Kevin Ward played lights
out and won the golf tourna-
ment.
Flash forward to this weeks
event.
Wo o d l a n d
held a two-shot
lead after scor-
ing 69 and 66
in his frst two
rounds.
He led all
other Jayhawks
and fnished
the tournament
in third place
overall.
His overall
score of 209
was 16 shots
better than his
pe r f or manc e
last year.
Woodl ands
pe r f or manc e
at the 2005 Kansas Invita-
tional also shows the leaps and
bounds he has taken.
Last season he didnt fre a
round lower than 68.
He has already done that
three times this season in just
two events.
His best tournament perfor-
mance last season came at the
Stevinson Invitational, where
he tied for 13th.
So far this season he has fn-
ished frst and third and that
third place fnish would have
been a second consecutive win
had Woodland avoided a fnal-
round 74.
Woodlands strength gives
him an advantage over every
other golfer that steps on the
tee.
This guy can crank drives
out past the 335 marker all day,
driving distances that rival the
likes of Tiger Woods and John
Daly.
And oh yeah, his swing speed
is even faster than Tigers.
Watching him swing the driv-
er is like being at a live PGA
event.
Taking over for a player like
Kevin Ward will be tough.
Ward won two individual
titles last season and is now
making money on the Gateway
Tour.
But then again, Woodland
may be on his way to his sec-
ond individual title of the sea-
son, in week two.
F Hall is a Woodbridge, Va.,
senior in journalism.
Tim Hall
thall@kansan.com
Woodland swinging
toward second title
t big sky to big time
mlb
Royals to open season
in April against Tigers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The
Kansas City Royals will open
next season at home on April
3 against the Detroit Tigers, the
club announced yesterday as it
released its 2006 schedule.
The schedule also features
six games against the Car-
dinals, May 19 through 21
at Kansas City and June 30
through July 2 at St. Louis.
Another schedule highlight
includes the New York Yankees
at Kauffman Stadium on Labor
Day for the beginning of a
three-game series on Sept. 4.
The Royals are also home on
July 4 as part of a three-game
series against the Minnesota
Twins.
Kansas City will play host
to NL Central Division teams
Pittsburgh and Milwaukee,
June 20 through June 25, in
interleague play. The Boston
Red Sox will play their only
series at Kansas City on Aug. 8
through 10.
The Royals will fnish
the season with seven road
games, with the fnale on Oct.
1 at Detroit.
Kansas City, with the worst
record in the majors, said it
would not raise ticket or park-
ing prices next year.
The Associated Press
Its vital for the
Jayhawks that
Woodland become
that guy the team
can always rely on
for a round in the
60s, the guy who
can replace former
KU golfer Kevin
Ward.
+21
+18

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