Financial Flux: The University Daily Kansan
Financial Flux: The University Daily Kansan
Financial Flux: The University Daily Kansan
An important part of
healing comes from
reaching out and getting
support.
KATHY ROSE-MOCKRY
Director of Emily Taylor Center
CAMPUS INTERNATIONAL
SEXUAL ASSAULT
AWARENESS
WEEK EVENTS
TECHNOLOGY ENTREPRENEURSHIP
AND INNOVATION IN ISRAEL
Two-week study abroad shows
students Israeli innovation
KAITLYN KLEIN
[email protected]
Israel is the place to be if youre
interested in innovation, new
business and entrepreneurship.
Tese are the qualities that in-
spired Professor Wallace Meyer,
Jr., to plan a two-week winter
study abroad program for under-
graduate and graduate students in
all areas of study.
Israel is second only to Silicon
Valley in the worlds production of
innovation, Meyer said referenc-
ing the number of new compa-
nies, patents and venture capital
investments in both areas.
During the program, students
will spend one week at the Tech-
nion - Israel Institute of Tech-
nology in Haifa, Israel, attending
seminars and discussions about
business and technological inno-
vation and one week touring his-
torical sites and companies in the
area.
Te program is unique com-
pared to other business-focused
programs because it will allow
students the opportunity to fnd
out why Israel is an entrepreneur-
ial leader, Meyer said.
Meyer said the goal of the pro-
gram is to capture the innovation
that occurs in Israel and, ideally,
bring it back here so that were
that much the better for the expe-
rience.
Dan Dutcher, a journalism ma-
jor from Wichita, said he found
the program while interning for
the School of Business and is
thinking of applying.
I think the mixture of learn-
ing about the culture and history
of the country as well as why new
businesses are successful will be a
great experience, Dutcher said.
Edited by Chas Strobel
Winter break program: Jan.
5 to Jan. 19
Deadline to apply: Oct. 1
Decision date: Oct. 15
Minimum GPA: 2.5
Open to graduate and
undergraduate students
Open to all majors
Study abroad Coordinator
Justine Hamilton
3 credit hours under ENTR
500/898
Serves as capstone for
B-School Entrepreneurship
certifcate
Estimated cost $4,469 for
tuition and program fee
Offce of Study Abroad
1
NEWS MANAGEMENT
Editor-in-chief
Trevor Graff
Managing editors
Allison Kohn
Dylan Lysen
Art Director
Katie Kutsko
ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT
Business manager
Mollie Pointer
Sales manager
Sean Powers
NEWS SECTION EDITORS
News editor
Tara Bryant
Associate news editor
Emily Donovan
Sports editor
Mike Vernon
Associate sports editor
Blake Schuster
Entertainment editor
Hannah Barling
Copy chiefs
Lauren Armendariz
Hayley Jozwiak
Elise Reuter
Madison Schultz
Design chief
Trey Conrad
Designers
Cole Anneberg
Allyson Maturey
Opinion editor
Will Webber
Photo editor
George Mullinix
Special sections editor
Emma LeGault
Web editor
Wil Kenney
ADVISERS
Media director and
content strategist
Brett Akagi
Sales and marketing adviser
Jon Schlitt
N
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
news
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2013 PAGE 2
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weather,
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percent chance of
rain. Wind E at 5
mph.
Is it summer again? Wow, Kansas. Wow. Perfect football weather.
Calendar
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Now you can have something more
to talk about. Add a business minor
before September 20th and give
your resume a louder voice.
Visi sit t www.business.ku.ed edu/ u/minnor
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What: LibArt Exhibit Opening and
Awards
When: 3 to 4 p.m.
Where: Watson Library, Third Floor
West
About: Reception celebrating the
third year of student artwork shown
in University libraries.
What: Sexual Assault Candlelit Vigil
When: 8 p.m.
Where: Campanile
About: Vigil where the campanile
will toll for every survivor helped by
GaDuGi this year.
What: Business Career Fair
When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union, Fifth Floor
About: Career fair sponsored by the
School of Business.
What: Kristins Story
When: 7 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union, Woodruff
Auditorium
About: Lecture by Andrea Cooper on
her daughters experience with sexual
assault and suicide.
What: Ambassador John Limbert
discusses U.S.-Iran relations
When: 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union, Kansas Room
About: Free discussion by Ambassa-
dor Limbert, a veteran U.S. diplomat
and former offcial at the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran, where he was
held captive during the Iran hostage
crisis in 1979.
What: SUA campus movie series:
Monsters University
When: 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union, Woodruff
Auditorium
About: Rated G. Free with SUA stu-
dent saver card, $2 with KU ID, $3 for
the general public. Tickets available
night of show in the Kansas Union
Hawk Shop, located on level four.
What: Monarch Butterfy Tagging
When: 7:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Where: Baker-Haskell Wetlands
About: Tagging of the thousands of
monarch butterfies that stop on their
way south.
What: Family Weekend Tailgate
When: 9 to 11 a.m.
Where: Memorial Campanile, The Hill
About: Food, games, giveaways and
activities sponsored by SUA.
Victorias Secret PINK
returns to campus
Attention Victoria's Secret PINK
fans: Mark your calendars for this
Friday because the PINK truck is
stopping on campus as part of its
annual campus tour.
The truck will make its second stop
to the University campus on Sept. 20
at the Kansas Union from 11 a.m. to
4 p.m. Throughout the course of the
day there will be several activities for
students, including a PINK bouncy
castle and several giveaways.
Some of the items featured in the
giveaway are PINK drawstring bags
that students voted for on Pinterest.
KU PINK representative Julia Chasen,
a senior from Olathe, said the event
not only shows students that they're
valued customers, but also promotes
the Victoria's Secret brand.
"Last year was the frst time they
came and it was because we beat
Missouri in a contest and they were
impressed with the student turnout,"
Chasen said. "It's really a way to
connect with students."
Elly Grimm
TOPEKA Te State Board of
Education voted Tuesday to re-
quire certain Kansas educators
renewing their teaching licenses
to submit fngerprints for checks
against a state criminal data-
base in an efort to better screen
classrooms for convicted felons.
Te 9-1 vote came during a fol-
low-up to the board's discussion
in August of how to strengthen
a law requiring prosecutors to
notify the state about criminal
convictions of people seeking
or renewing teaching licenses.
"If it is our job to police it, per-
haps we need to say this is the
way it's going to be," said board
member Deena Horst of Salina.
Kansas has been fngerprinting
applicants for new teaching li-
censes since 2002. Te new policy
would extend the requirement to
those teachers renewing licenses
who had never been fngerprinted.
Teachers must renew their li-
censes every fve years, but they
would only be fngerprinted on
the frst renewal. Deputy Educa-
tion Commissioner Dale Dennis
estimated the policy change would
apply to about 35,000 teachers in
Kansas, but said the number of
actual renewals would be about
5,000 less because of retirements.
State law bars the board from
issuing licenses to anyone con-
victed of sex crimes, child abuse,
murder or certain other ofenses.
Scott Gordon, chief counsel for
the Kansas Department of Edu-
cation, said the reporting would
help the agency do a more thor-
ough job of deciding if action
should be taken against a teacher
who has been charged, but poten-
tially convicted on a lesser charge
that wasn't among the felony sex
or drug crimes listed in statute.
"I don't want to wait until a case is
over before I fnd out how the case
has been pled down," Gordon said.
Te board will fnalize the pol-
icy and hold a public hearing
on the change later this year.
Prosecutors are required to reg-
ularly report all felony convic-
tions to the Department of Educa-
tion so it can check them against
employment rosters. But there are
no penalties for not complying.
"Tere's no teeth in the stat-
ute," board member Ken
Willard of Hutchinson said.
Willard said he has spoken with
Attorney General Derek Schmidt
about getting prosecutors to com-
ply with the reporting statute.
Don Brown, spokesman for
Schmidt, said the attorney gen-
eral had "repeatedly" encouraged
prosecutors to comply with the
law and was willing to continue to
work with the board of education.
Te board also voted to develop
a new monthly report that would
be sent to county prosecutors
and district attorneys for them
to return with updates on any new
felony convictions involved li-
censed teachers. Te state will also
make outreach eforts to the Kan-
sas County and District Attorneys
Association to encourage more
compliance with the law, as well as
speaking with the judicial branch
about increasing awareness.
Board member Steve Roberts of
Overland Park cast the lone vote
against the new policy, question-
ing if fngerprinting would be the
best way to enforce the policy.
"I'd like a defnition of what
problem we're trying to solve,"
he said, adding that he sup-
ported eforts to prevent pedo-
philes from being in schools.
Teachers renewing their li-
censes will pay a one-time fee
of $50 for the fngerprinting,
which will be sent to the Kan-
sas Bureau of Investigation for
background checks. Although
applicants will not be required to
submit to fngerprinting for sub-
sequent renewals, a fee is charged
to all teachers to run their name
against criminal records an-
nually to verify their status.
Gordon said if a teacher re-
newing their license did have
a prior conviction for a felony,
they could always petition the
courts to have the record ex-
punged so that it wouldn't ap-
pear on a background check.
FREEBIES EDUCATION
ASSOCIATED PRESS
State board to revise
teacher licensing rules
CRIME
Follow
@KansanNews
on Twitter
Bidens niece arrested
in NYC police scuffe
NEW YORK The niece of Vice
President Joe Biden is being accused
of striking a New York City police
offcer.
Police said Tuesday they took
Caroline Biden into custody after
responding to a report of a dispute at
her Tribeca apartment.
Police said the 26-year-old scuffed
with offcers as they tried to break
up a fght between her and her
roommate. They said she lunged
at an offcer, struck another offcer
and resisted being handcuffed. They
didn't say what the fght was about.
Biden was arrested on charges of
obstructing governmental adminis-
tration, harassment and resisting ar-
rest. She was given notice to appear
in court Oct. 29, and was released.
A phone listing for her couldn't be
found, and it wasn't clear if she had
a lawyer.
The vice president's offce declined
to comment.
Associated Press
Recycle Recycle
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 3
POLICE REPORTS
In preparations for breast cancer
awareness week, check out
emilytaylorcenter.ku.edu for an
application for an award that will
go to a student who has been
affected by breast cancer either
personally or through a family
member.
A 36-year-old male was
arrested yesterday on
Interstate 70 on suspicion of
driving while intoxicated, third
offense, and driving with a
suspended license. No bond
was posted.
A 28-year-old male was
arrested Monday on the 2400
block of Ousdahl on suspicion
of operating a vehicle under
the infuence, no insurance
and no valid drivers license. A
$700 bond was paid.
A 20-year-old male was
arrested Monday on the 2300
block of Iowa on suspicion
of possession of controlled
substance and possession of
drug paraphernalia. A $2,000
bond was paid.
A 27-year-old male was
arrested Monday on the 1000
block of Missouri on suspicion
of driving with a suspended,
revoked or cancelled license
and habitual violator. A $200
bond was paid.
Emily Donovan
Information based on the
Douglas County Sheriffs
Offce booking recap.
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Whether youre an anglophile
or youre considering applying to
the London Review study abroad
program, which has a preferred
deadline of Oct. 1, Brits and Au
Marche are the places for you.
At the two side-by-side shops
929 and 931 Massachusetts
Street you can get a preview
of the sort of treats youll fnd in
Britain and Europe and goods
not typically found in America.
When we frst opened, we didnt
really know any other stores that
were like ours, said Sally Helm,
the co-founder and owner of
Brits. We just knew that if people
were half as interested in Britain
as we were, people would come.
As it turns out, Helm was
right. Brits focuses primarily
on British products, and while
the store does attract travelers
from Britain and other Europe-
an nations, it also brings in an-
glophiles from all around the
Kansas City area. As British pop
culture has become more popular
in the United States, the store has
attracted a larger variety of people.
My favorite part of the store is
probably the fan base, said Sean
Gardner, a retail associate at Brits.
We have a lot of regular customers,
and afer Doctor Who got big, it
expanded into new demographics.
Te store ofers merchandise
from various pop culture phe-
nomena aside from Doctor Who,
including Harry Potter and One
Direction. Tey also sell an as-
sortment of tea, candy, and food
typically found in Britain. If youre
looking for delicacies
from other European
countries, however,
you can head next
door to Au Marche.
While Brits and
Au Marche are not
directly related, the
two shops work to-
gether closely and
feed of one an-
other. Both attract
an eclectic group of consumers.
Tere are a lot of customers from
Europe and a lot of well-traveled
people, said
Alex Montgom-
ery, a cashier at
Au Marche and
a junior from
Overland Park.
Plus work-
ing downtown
with the Law-
rence locals is
always a cool
experience. You
always meet interesting people.
Helm said that opening the stores
in Lawrence was pure luck, since
she just happened to be living in
town at the time. While she hadnt
expected Lawrence to bring in a
large group of customers, she real-
ized she was lucky to be in what she
considered a quirky, cool town.
I love being here in Lawrence,
Helm said. Ive had a lot of sup-
port from the community and
Ive made a lot of friends. Its
been a wonderful experience.
Edited by Emma McElhaney
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NEW RELEASE
Over 250 Lawrence residents
and students waited outside their
favorite Lawrence video game
retailers Monday, Sept. 16, for
a new product from Rockstar
games. It was the next chroni-
cle in a series that hasnt released
a game title for a major console
since 2008: Grand Tef Auto V.
Grand Tef Auto IV, released in
2008, told the story of a Russian im-
migrant in Liberty City, which had
been used in previous titles such
as Grand Tef Auto III and was
heavily based of New York City.
However, that game lef some stu-
dents unwilling to play to the end.
Grand Tef Auto IV took me
too long to beat; I didnt really play
it, Cody Flitcraf, a freshman, said
Monday night at the Hastings Enter-
tainment at 23rd and Iowa streets.
With a production and mar-
keting budget of $265 million,
Grand Tef Auto V cost more
to produce than most Holly-
wood flms. Tis sort of hype has
made University gamers eager
to see what Rockstar Games has
up its sleeve for this falls release.
I have been a major fan of ev-
ery Rockstar game ever made and
they have yet to disappoint, so Im
looking forward to seeing what
they do, senior Evan Hurley said
as he waited outside the GameStop
at 33rd and Iowa streets. One
of the things that I loved most
about Red Dead Redemption
was roaming around in the wil-
derness, so Im looking for-
ward to the free-roam map.
Set in the fctional city of Los San-
tos, Grand Tef Auto V gives
players the ability to play as three
separate characters. Each char-
acter has a sub-story that helps
develop their role in the games
overall plot. Te characters in-
clude Michael DeSanta, a retired
conman, Franklin Clinton, a re-
po-man for a car dealership and
Trevor Phillips, a drug-addicted
psychopath. All three characters
are pulled into organized crime for
one personal reason or another.
But organized crime and may-
hem are not the only things a
player can pursue in this game.
Players can choose between an
array of mini-games, which in-
clude golfng, mountain-biking,
scuba-diving for virtual treasure
and base-jumping, among others.
Like previous Grand Tef Auto
releases, the game features a satiri-
cal viewpoint on American society,
refects the latest culture and mocks
it in a way that is signature to Rock-
star Games and Grand Tef Auto.
In one of their trailers they
showed something from the mov-
ie Heat, where an armored car
hit another car to knock it over,
Hurley said. So they obvious-
ly have drawn some infuenc-
es from movies for this game.
All movie references and cultur-
al spin-ofs aside, Grand Tef
Auto V will be a game that many
University students will enjoy
throughout the entire school year.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
ROCKSTAR GAMES
TOM DEHART
[email protected]
Video gamers welcome highly
anticipated Grand Theft Auto V
PRINCE POPSICLE
LONDON Prince Harry
spent the night in a giant freez-
er to simulate the conditions
he will face when he treks to
the South Pole in November.
Te 29-year-old royal, who will
race with a team of injured British
servicemen and women against
groups from the United States
and the Commonwealth, spent
around 20 hours in a cold chamber
where he was subjected to tem-
peratures of -31 Fahrenheit, with
wind speeds of 45 miles per hour.
Alongside four teammates, all
amputees who lost limbs afer sus-
taining injuries in Afghanistan,
Harry tested the clothing he will
wear on the 200-mile expedition
and learned how to avoid frostbite.
When asked Tuesday what the
worst part of his overnight experi-
ence was, Harry joked: "Going in."
Te challenging expedition is
set to begin in late November
and is expected to last about 15
days. Te teams plan to trek be-
tween nine and 12 miles each day.
Actors Alexander Skarsgard
from the "True Blood" series and
Dominic West of "Te Wire"
will also participate in the race.
Harry spends night in deep freezer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Britains Prince Harry warms his hands after a cold chamber training exercise with
the Walking with the Wounded South Pole Allied Challenge 2013 British team at
Nuneaton, central England, on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Follow
@KansanEntertain
on Twitter
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 9
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ATLANTA In the game of
blind baseball, players use their
sense of sound to make up for
their lack of sight. Tey play
the game known as Beep base-
ball with an oversized sofball
that beeps and bases that buzz.
Te National Beep Baseball Asso-
ciation was founded in 1975. Teams
have formed nationwide and com-
pete annually in a World Series. In
east Atlanta, a team called the At-
lanta Eclipse plays at a local park.
Players wear blindfolds to en-
sure fairness since each person
has a varying degree of blind-
ness. Te pitcher and the catcher
are sighted and play on the same
team as the batter.
On a hit, the bat-
ter runs toward the
buzz of either the
frst or third base,
which is decided
by an ofcial. Tere
is no second base.
A run is scored if
the batter tags the
base before the
felder can pick
up the ball; otherwise the batter
is out. In this adapted version of
America's pastime, cheering is not
permitted until the play is over.
For the players, the game is about
much more than physical activity;
it helps them cope with the chal-
lenges of being blind. Here are the
stories of three players in Atlan-
ta and surrounding areas whose
lives have been improved by what
happens on the baseball diamond.
PROVE YOU WRONG
Dee Butler, 55, began experienc-
ing problems with her sight as a
teenager, and in school would ask
to sit near the front of the class. At
24, she was diagnosed with cone-
rod dystrophy, a progressive dis-
ease that causes the deterioration
of the retina and leads to blindness.
She took up blind baseball a few
years ago afer a tumultuous rela-
tionship with a now ex-husband.
"I have an ex-husband I call my
'wasband,'" said Butler, stand-
ing in the convenience store
she used to run in Hapeville,
an Atlanta suburb. "For a long
time, he used to make me feel so
down. I was always never good
enough for anything. I was ugly.
I was fat. I couldn't do anything."
She heard it so ofen, But-
ler said she became depressed.
"And then I just started get-
ting mad.
He would al-
ways tell me
I couldn't do
anything by
myself," she
said. "And so
I looked at
him right in
the eye, and
I said, 'You
know what,
I'm going to prove you wrong.'"
She packed up her 9-year-old
twin girls and 11-year old son,
and lef. On the suggestion of a
friend who knew about the At-
lanta Eclipse, Butler decided to
give the game a try, although she
doubted she could master it. She
showed up time afer time, strug-
gling to hit the ball, with every
swing a miss. Even when she could
see, she had never been athletic.
"As a child, I was always
like a girly girl," she said.
When she hit the ball for
the frst time, and made her
frst run, she was hooked.
"I enjoy it. I love getting out
there and hitting that ball and
making them runs, doing ev-
erything that I didn't think
I could do before," she said.
LIGHTEN UP MY DARKNESS
Jimmie Burnette, 44, took up
Beep baseball afer sufering a brain
tumor in 2010 that lef him blind.
"I wanted to give up. When I
frst got home, I felt real alone. I
couldn't see anything. My initial
reaction was 'run away,'" said Bur-
nette, sitting in his living room
next to his wife, Tiawanna. "At
times, it's almost like total dark.
It's gloomy. But I have to fnd
things to lighten up my darkness."
From the hospital bed to the
baseball feld, Burnette's journey
has been flled with challenges:
rehab afer the surgery, Braille
classes and training sessions on
how to get around as a blind per-
son, from crossing the street
safely to taking public transpor-
tation. Trough it all, he feels he
has lost his independence and
role as provider for the family.
"I was brought up with the at-
titude of a man doesn't work, he
doesn't eat. I kept saying to myself,
'You're not a man anymore, you're
not a man anymore,'" said Burnette,
a former FedEx driver and hobby-
ist model airplane builder who is
now unemployed and on disabil-
ity. "BEEP baseball is helping me
out. It takes away from me think-
ing about I'm less than a man."
"Now I realize I'm still the
same man, just have to do
things diferently now," he said.
DO THE IMPOSSIBLE
Roger Keeney, 67, has played
Beep baseball for 38 years, mak-
ing some 20 World Series ap-
pearances. Growing up, Kee-
ney's sight was considered "low
vision." He was diagnosed with
retinitis pigmentosa, a disease
that leads to a decrease in vision
over the course of several years.
Trough college, Keeney was
still driving and riding motorcy-
cles legally, but that changed in
1990 on his farm in New York.
A piece of machinery broke
and hit him in the head. When
he woke up, he couldn't see.
Tese days, hitting a ball he can't
see comes easier to Keeney than
fnding a paying job. Te father of
two has a master's degree in thera-
peutic recreation and is working on
his doctorate in adapted physical
education. He is the founder and
volunteer executive director for a
non-proft group that organizes
adapted sports activities in Athens,
Ga., and surrounding areas. Keeney
hopes that as the group's funding in-
creases, he'll be able to draw salary.
Keeney said he is ofen passed
over for jobs because he's blind.
"Blind folks can do nearly any job
that you can do except for maybe
drive down the road. It is hard for
employers to believe that we can
do the job," said Keeney from his
home in Athens, a college town
about 70 miles east of Atlanta.
"On paper, I'm number one or
number two every time I apply
for anything. But as soon as I walk
through the door of the ofce to the
interviewer with my white stick,
you can feel the mood in the room
change," he said. "You can phys-
ically feel the change. And the at-
titude is prevalent that this person
can't do the job they've applied for."
Many afernoons, Keeney practic-
es in his front yard, swinging a base-
ball in the air. No ball is thrown,
no bases are run. It's just Keeney
with his 9-year-old daughter Alexis
yelling "ball!" to emulate the words
of the pitcher before the windup.
Keeney approaches the sport
as seriously as he would a job,
hooked on the belief that he can
achieve things that at frst may have
seemed unachievable, even to him.
"It's hard to believe that you're go-
ing to be able to stop that ball out in
the feld with your body and pick it
up when it's been hit and it's rolling
hard or fying hard across the feld,"
said Keeney, smiling. "It's a rush you
will never forget. Do the impossible
and then nothing is impossible."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Richard Sexton, left, is guided by John Steven to the batters box during a blind baseball practice in Atlanta on April 14, 2012.
Despite daily, person challenges, hitting and catching a ball and running full speed in total darkness teaches them they can
achieve what was once thought unachievable.
PLAY BALL
Game of blind baseball helps
players cope with disability
ASSOCIATED PRESS
!
?
Look, right now, weve got 12-13 games
to go. Were not taking any chances. Were
going with our best guys and getting after
it every single day.
Royals manager Ned Yost,
The Kansas City Star
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FACT OF THE DAY
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
THE MORNING BREW
By Miranda Davis
[email protected]
This week in athletics
Sunday Monday Tuesday
Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
Womens Golf
2013 Marilynn Smith
Sunfower Invitational
All Day
Manhattan
Womens Golf
2013 Marilynn Smith
Sunfower Invitational
All Day
Manhattan
Mens Golf
Desert Classic
All Day
Laramie, Wyo.
Volleyball
North Dakota State
Noon
Lawrence
Soccer
Illinois State
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Football
Louisiana Tech
11 a.m.
Lawrence
Soccer
South Dakota State
6 p.m.
Brookings, S.D.
Volleyball
Notre Dame
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Volleyball
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7 p.m.
Lawrence
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
When the Royals last won the World
Series, the top grossing flm was Back
to the Future.
IMDb
The 1985 World Series Royals team
included George Brett, who returned
to the Royals this year as an interim
hitting coach.
FFToday.com
Royals fans keep fngers crossed for postseason
BASEBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Simmons two-run error lifts Nats over Braves 6-5
WASHINGTON Shortstop
Andrelton Simmons allowed
Denard Span's grounder to bounce
through his legs for a game-
ending, two-run error, lifing
the Washington Nationals over
the Atlanta Braves 6-5 Tuesday
in the makeup of a series opener
postponed by a shooting rampage a
day earlier at the nearby Navy Yard.
Pinch-hitter Chad Tracy had
an RBI grounder against Craig
Kimbrell in the three-run ninth as
Washington kept Atlanta's magic
number at four for clinching
the NL East for the frst time
since the Braves' streak of 11
consecutive division titles from
1995 to 2005. A sweep of the day-
night doubleheader would have
sealed the division for Atlanta.
Washington closed within
4 games of Cincinnati for the
NL's second wild-card berth
with 12 games remaining.
Atlanta trailed 3-0 but took a
4-3 lead in the eighth on Evan
Gattis' two-run homer of Tyler
Clippard on an 0-2 pitch, which
stopped an 0-for-18 skid. Te
Braves added a run in the ninth
when Elliot Johnson singled,
advanced on a throwing error by
lef felder Bryce Harper, stole third
and came around as shortstop
Ian Desmond allowed Freddie
Freeman's four-hop grounder to
bounce of the heel of his glove
for his 18th error this season.
Kimbrel (3-3), who leads the major
leagues with 47 saves, had converted
37 in a row but blew a save chance
for just the fourth time this season.
Adam LaRoche walked on a full
count, Wilson Ramos reached
on an infeld single and Anthony
Rendon walked on a 3-2 pitch.
Afer Tracy's grounder, Atlanta
elected to pitch to Span with frst
base open, and he hit a three-
hopper over the mound that rolled
past Simmons into center feld.
Ian Krol (2-1) faced two batters
in the ninth, giving Washington
its frst win in seven home
games against Atlanta this year.
Before the game, both teams
stood in front of their dugouts,
heads bowed, and a color guard
was stationed behind home plate
during a minute of silence to pay
tribute to the people killed Monday
and those afected by the shootings.
Span's second-inning single
extended his hitting streak to
27 games, matching Colorado's
Michael Cuddyer for the longest
in the major leagues this season.
Washington took a 3-0 lead
in the frst against Mike Minor
on Jayson Werth's RBI double,
Harper's run-scoring groundout
and LaRoche's RBI single.
Freddie Freeman's sixth-inning
sacrifce fy of Dan Haren made
him the frst Atlanta player with
100 RBIs in a season since Chipper
Jones and Jef Francoeur in 2007,
and pinch-hitter Dan Uggla
singled in a run in the seventh.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Atlanta Braves Evan Gattis (24) hits a two-run home run during the eighth inning
of the frst baseball game of a doubleheader against the Washington Nationals at
Nationals Park Tuesday in Washington. The Nationals won 6-5.
FOOTBALL FACELIFT
MAKING CHANGES
Weis updates player positions seeking victory against Louisiana Tech on Saturday
MAX GOODWIN
[email protected]
OL
OL
C OL OL
WR 1
TE
WR 2
QB
RB
Volume 126 Issue 16 kansan.com Wednesday, September 18, 2013
FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK
PAGE 10
PAGE 11
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
By Mike Vernon
[email protected]
COMMENTARY
Weis chart changes
are no surprise
T
his was inevitable.
It could be called an
unintended consequence of sorts,
or just a time to make changes, but
either way Charlie Weis is shufing
his deck in hopes of giving Kansas
football a better hand.
Tis is what happens when a
team full of junior college players
and transfers come together over a
spring, summer and fall to compete
against groups who have played
together for years.
On Tuesday, Weis announced four
changes to his starting lineup for
Saturdays game against Louisiana
Tech and two additional changes
with his second string players.
Te majority of those changes, fve
to be exact, come on the ofensive
side of the ball, where the Jayhawks
have struggled mightily in their
frst two games. While its a small
sample size, Kansas scoring ofense
is currently ranked No. 91 in the
country with 22.5 points per game.
So Weis made some changes,
starting with the teams problem
position: wide receiver. Junior
Rodriguez Coleman will start over
Justin McCay, the heralded transfer
from Oklahoma. On the opposite
side, sophomore Tre Parmalee, a
shorter receiver, will start over Josh
Ford, who transferred from junior
college last season.
Tis isnt Weis hitting the panic
button in any sense. Tis is a coach
who inherited a new car with
trendy features. Hes still fguring
out what buttons can actually make
his driving experience, or the team,
better.
When you have a high number of
junior college players and transfers
flling your lineup to start the year,
changes like these are bound to
happen. A guy like McCay, who
appears to carry a load of potential,
may not be ready to play at a high
level yet. Or simply, that day may
never come.
Tese are the risks one takes
when recruiting junior college
players. Sometimes it works
well, like with safeties Isaiah
Johnson and Cassius Sendish, and
sometimes it doesnt.
Weis adjustments for week three
refect this ongoing transition
period. What happens during
training camp cannot match the
intensity when the stands fll and
the lights fick on for a fall Saturday.
Some players, and apparently
the Jayhawks old receivers, dont
respond well to the added pressure.
Teres no way Weis couldve
known that to be true. Of the six
depth chart changes, fve involve a
junior college player. Te result for
Weis and his crew for two weeks
hasnt been aesthetically pleasing,
and Weis knows that.
For now, hes just trying to fgure
out who will give the Jayhawks
their best chance to win. Tere will
be more depth chart changes as the
season goes on and the coaching
staf further familiarizes itself with
their personnel.
Until then, some patience is key.
Its not worth getting worked up
over yet.
Edited by Emma McElhaney
Te plan was never to play all
19 of the junior college players
that transferred to Kansas in the
ofseason.
Te Jayhawks led the nation in
junior college recruits this season,
and those players were expected
to infuse the program with
talented players to fll the holes
on the roster. But rather than
adding so many new players this
season, the coaching staf intends
to stagger the junior college class
between this season and next with
redshirts.
One of the things as a coaching
staf that we wanted to do was try
to hold a third of them and play
two-thirds of them, Weis said at
his weekly press conference on
Tuesday afernoon.
One of the players that will sit
out this season will be defensive
lineman Marquel Combs, who
was the top-ranked junior college
recruit by ESPN.
Tose rankings, along with the
media hype and fan excitement
surrounding Combs, meant
nothing to Weis and his coaching
staf when they made the decision
of who to play and who to
redshirt.
Everyone was more enamored
with the names, and were more
enamored with whats best for the
program, Weis said.
Combs is not the only key name
that was decided to have more
value for the team afer a season
of the feld. Andrew Bolton,
another defensive lineman, was
expected to help bring a stronger
pass rush for the Jayhawks as well,
but he will also likely redshirt this
season.
We think Combs and Bolton
have huge upside, Weis said.
Were going to do our best for
neither one of those guys to see
the feld this year.
Of course, theres always the
chance of Weis being forced to
play one of the two due to an
injury or lack of production on
the defensive line, but so far that
hasnt been an issue. Afer two
games, the Jayhawks have six
sacks, compared to the 10 sacks
all of last season.
Cornerback Kevin Short is
already playing with the Kansas
scout team in practice and will
not be able to play this season
because of an academic ruling by
the NCAA.
I wasnt counting on that
situation with Kevin, obviously,
but we were hoping to sit at least
one of them, Weis said.
Weis made a statement through
a press release last week that said
he was disappointed with the
NCAAs decision.
Teir rationale was that
because Kevin has a redshirt year
available, it would be best spent
solidifying his academics, Weis
explained. He will still have two
years of eligibility remaining afer
this season.
Tat leaves 13 junior college
players that will play this season.
All of them are listed in the top
two at their position on the depth
chart, and seven of them are listed
as frst string.
Players like Combs, Bolton and
Short will be there if needed, but
Weis would rather save them for a
year if he can.
Tose guys are all waiting
in the wings, Weis said. Tat
bodes well for the future of our
program.
Edited by Emma McElhaney
When you have the 116th total
ofense in the country afer only
two games, exploring alternatives
certainly couldnt hurt.
Coach Charlie Weis released
a depth chart during his weekly
presser on Tuesday that featured
some new names in starting
positions on ofense in hopes
that it may spark a stale ofense
who have dropped a total of
nine passes, including Jimmay
Mundine who dropped two in the
Rice game including a possible TD.
Tis, in turn, led to Weis playing
Trent Smiley over Mundine in the
number one tight end slot.
When a reporter asked the
reason for this, Weis conjured up
a simple reason.
Did you watch the game? Is
this a rhetorical question? Weis
said. Right now we have to see if
we can get any better there [in the
tight end position].
Trent Smiley, who has seen some
snaps in the last two years with the
Jayhawks, ofers a diferent style
of tight end and is a little more
physical than Mundine.
You only have two choices, guys
get better or you tweak and make a
couple of moves, Weis said.
Te ofensive line saw a little
change when Riley Spencer, a
senior who missed 11 games
last year afer a knee injury, now
replaces Zack Fondal at the right
tackle spot.
We werent pleased with our
ofensive line play in the last game
coming of these knees hes
been slow coming along, healthy,
but slow hes gotten better
and better, Weis said. Riley is
a big man and I think one of the
things he will bring a little more
physicality.
Jake Heaps will start the game
Saturday against Louisiana Tech
two top wide receivers with Tre
Parmalee and Rodriguez Coleman
replacing Josh Ford and Justin
McCay as the drops continue
to be a lingering problem and
the physicality is not quite at the
content stage.
With some receiving changes
going on, Weis said that Brandon
Bourbon and Tony Pierson, who
both sit at the fanker position, will
see an expanded role in Saturdays
game as they look to connect more
through the air.
Pierson has accounted for 177
of the Jayhawks 660 total yards so
far this season and is currently the
leading receiver for the Jayhawks.
Louisiana Techs forceful defense
tops the country in tackles for
a loss with 29 and top fve in
sacks, having already amassed
nine in just two games thus far.
With league play on the horizon,
another defensive test will be there,
as a shakeup on ofense looks to
prompt them to be a little more
potent.
You cant win games when
youre scoring 14 points. Tat just
isnt going to be good enough,
Weis said.
Edited by Chas Strobel
Weis divides recruit class
into players and redshirts
MICHAEL STRICKLAND/KANSAN
Jake Heaps points to a receiver in the game against Rice last weekend. The Jayhawks hope to reduce the number of drops in
the upcoming game against Louisiana Tech.
Offense
1. Rodriguez Coleman
2. Justin McCay
1. Tre Parmalee
2. Josh Ford
1. Riley Spencer
2. Zach Fondal
1. Trent Smiley
2. Jimmay Mundine
1. James Sims
2. Darrian Miller
3. Taylor Cox
CONNOR OBERKROM
[email protected]
ADJUSTMENTS LINEUP
Big changes for starting line
THE MORNING BREW