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THURSDAY
F Mens golf, DelWalkerIntercollegiate,allday,Long
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FRIDAY
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F Womens golf,TheDerbyInvitational,allday,
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F Rowing,HeadoftheHooch,timeTBA,Chattanooga,
Tenn.
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WE LOVE OUR KANSAN.
the student perspective
Rowers take ffth in four boat
sports Monday, october 31, 2005 the University daily Kansan 3b
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Check out News!
t Swimming
Freshman breaks record
By Kelly Reynolds
kreynolds@kansan.com
kansan sportswriter
The Missouri swimming and
diving team came ot Lawrence
this weekend and like its foot-
ball and soccer counterparts, it
left a loser.
The Kansas swimming and
diving team defeated No. 20
Missouri 175-125 on Friday
night in Robinson Natatorium.
Kansas last defeated Mis-
souri six years ago.
The victory moved the team
to 2-1 in dual meet competi-
tion and 1-0 in the Big 12
Conference.
The early conference vic-
tory is an indication of the
progress the team has made
since the 2004-2005 season.
Last year, the Jayhawks went
1-5 in the conference.
The only conference victory
was at the end of the season,
against Iowa State.
We take the rivalry just as
serious as every other team,
Kansas swimming coach Clark
Campbell said. The past few
years, we havent held our
end of the deal.
Defeating a ranked team al-
lowed the Jayhawks to see how
good they really were, senior co-
captain Gina Gnatzig said.
Although Fridays victory
boosted team morale, Gnatzig
remained humble on her out-
look for the rest of the sea-
son.
Since we beat Missouri,
people will now come after
us, Gnatzig said. Yes, it was
a win, but its not going to be
easy.
Gnatzig said having a quick-
er start to the season would give
the team ample time to make
improvements.
Last year, we started doing re-
ally well halfway through the sea-
son at the North Carolina Invite,
Gnatzig said.
It was just so exciting to beat
them. We havent beaten them
since Ive been here, and to do
it in my fnal year is great, she
said of Missouri.
Fast times highlighted the
Jayhawks victory.
Freshman Ashley Leidigh
shattered the Robinson pool re-
cord by a half of a second in the
100-yard butterfy fnishing with
a time of 55.00 seconds. The old
record was 55.52 seconds. Lei-
digh had one of the top times in
the nation in the butterfy event,
Gnatzig said.
In addition to breaking the
pool record in the 100-yard
butterfly, Leidigh captured
first place in the 200-yard
butterfly and the 100-yard
freestyle. She was also a mem-
ber of the first place 400-yard
freestyle relay team alongside
Gnatzig, sophomore Terri
Schramka and freshman Mol-
ly Brammer.
Ashley really broke
through to a whole new per-
formance level, Campbell
said. You have things that are
momentum changers, and her
butterfly race that took place
in the first third of the meet
really electrified the team and
fans.
Shanna Bradbury and
Danielle Hermann also rep-
resented the freshman class.
They swam in the 200-yard
individual medley and both
breaststroke events. Brad-
bury placed first in the IM.
Hermann captured first in the
100-yard breaststroke and the
200-yard breaststroke. Sch-
ramka picked up a victory in
the 200-yard backstroke.
Other standout swims includ-
ed victories by Gnatzig in the 200-
yard freestyle and Jenny Short in
the 100-yard backstroke.
The Jayhawks will meet Iowa
and Missouri State in a double-
dual meet on Nov. 4 at 4 p.m. in
the Robinson Natatorium.
We need to swim with the
same enthusiasm and energy as
we did with Missouri, Camp-
bell said. If we can beat Iowa,
theres a good chance we will
be a top 25 team.
Edited by Jonathan Kealing
t rowing
By KRisten JaRBoe
kjarboe@kansan.com
kansan sportswriter
For Kansas rower Jelayna
Da Silva, getting an extra
hour of sleep because of day-
light-saving time on Sunday
morning didnt matter.
She was awake at 4 a.m.,
ready to row at the Head of
the Iowa regatta.
The Kansas varsity womens
four boat, which has four wom-
en in a boat, fnished second
in the regatta from Iowa City,
Iowa.
We had really good team-
work in this race, Da Silva
said. Weve been working a
lot on our technique and ft-
ness, and it all came together
in this race.
Rowers Jennifer Ebel and Kris
Lazar competed in the womens
four boat with Da Silva.
I think were in good shape
this year and that makes a dif-
ference, Lazar said. Its en-
couraging to see for the spring
season. Were looking very
strong.
But top-ranked teams such
as Minnesota, Wisconsin and
Iowa were more of an issue
in the womens varsity eight.
Minnesota took frst place,
Wisconsin, which entered two
boats, took second and third
and Iowa took fourth place.
Kansas fnished ffth, but
only half-second behind Iowa.
All three teams were ranked in
the top 20 last year.
Other results for Kansas in-
cluded fourth, ffth and sixth
places in the womens open,
with sophomore Tiffany Jeffers
taking third.
Kansas rowing coach Rob
Catloth said he was pleased
with the rowers performances.
Theyre rowing three two-
and-a-half mile races in a day
and performing very well.
Kansas will travel to Chat-
tanooga, Tenn., next weekend
to compete in the Head of the
Hooch regatta.
The varsity eight is typi-
cally our main focus, so well
be working on that this week,
Da Silva said. And almost ev-
eryone on varsity will be row-
ing in a single so well be look-
ing at that as well. But were
always looking to come away
with a win.
Improving their technique
and ftness is always something
the women work on in practice
and in competition.
Its the little things we do
to improve that make a big
difference out on the water,
Ebel said. We just always go
out to row the race the best
we can.
The Head of the Hooch will
have several teams Kansas typi-
cally does not see, such as Ten-
nessee, so it will be a good op-
portunity to see how it measures
up against the competition.
We have to keep improv-
ing and improving, Lazar said.
Theres no doubt our team likes
racing, so itll be good to get out
there and see how we compare
to our competition.
Edited by Nate Karlin
Rylan Howe/KANSAN
KU freshman swimmer Danielle Herrmann takes a breath during the
200-yard breaststroke Friday night in the Robinson Natatorium. Her-
rmann won the race with a time of 2:21.75. She also won the 100-yard
breaststroke and helped the swimming and diving team defeat Mis-
souri 175-125.
big 12 football
MANHATTAN Kansas
State already knew its Big 12
North title hopes were be-
tween slim and none.
Now, as the old one-liner
goes, slim has left town.
Saturdays 23-20 loss to
Colorado, which lifted the
Buffaloes to a No. 25 ranking
and gave them sole posses-
sion of the division lead, also
eliminated Kansas State from
contention. But the Wildcats
can still salvage a bowl bid
with two wins in their last
three games, and they insist
they can do it.
Its tough. The locker room
is down, but we know weve
still got a chance to make it to
a bowl game, safety Marcus
Watts said after Saturdays 23-
20 loss to Colorado eliminated
the Wildcats from North conten-
tion. We only need two wins in
our next three games, so well
come back. Well come back
ready to practice on Monday.
It wont be easy, though.
Kansas State (4-4, 1-4), which
has lost three straight, sits in
ffth place in the six-team divi-
sion, ahead of only Kansas.
The Wildcats have already
played the Jayhawks, mean-
ing their last three games will
come against teams ahead of
them in the standings and
gunning for bowl berths of
their own.
Kansas State plays this
weekend at Iowa State, which
is coming off a 42-14 rout of
Texas A&M. The Wildcats go
to Nebraska after that, then
close out the regular season at
home against Missouri.
The spirit on this team,
the effort, the improvement is
still there, linebacker Brandon
Archer said. I believe we can
pull out two wins.
The Associated Press
Loss ends Wildcats
hope of North title
ku 13 - mu 3 ku 13 - mu 3 monday, october 31, 2005 the university daily kansan 5b 4b the university daily kansan monday, october 31, 2005
Smith suffers
3-year slump
t football
Extra Points:
Freshman Anthony Collins made
his first career start, at right tackle,
in place of senior Matt Thompson.
Collins did not play after he com-
mitted a personal foul. Thompson
replaced him.
The 6-3 lead that Kansas had after
running back Clark Greens touch-
down run was the first time Kansas
had held a lead since it was up 3-0
against Kansas State.
Mark Simmons caught two passes
for 33 yards, which increased his
streak of catching a pass in a game
to 32 consecutive games.
Greens 125 yards gave him eight
career 100-yard games.
Gordon moved into 10th place on
the all-time Big 12 punt return list
with his 42 return yards. Gordon
has 940 career return yards.
The three points Kansas allowed
were their least against Missouri
since 1999 when the Jayhawks
topped the Tigers 21-0.
Saturdays attendance of 48,238
was the highest of the season at
Memorial Stadium.
Key Plays:
Green had back-to-back rushes of
nine yards and 16 yards. Those
rushes helped lead the Jayhawks to
their first touchdown of the game,
a 1-yard Green touchdown run.
Junior running back Jon Cornish
had a rush of 12-yards to put
Kansas in a first and goal from the
10-yard line. Cornish ran the ball 10
yards on the next play and picked
up the games second touchdown
and a 13-3 lead.
Late in the fourth quarter, with Mis-
souri driving, Smith passed deep
into the endzone. He was picked off
by senior cornerback Theo Baines at
the 1-yard line, virtually sealing the
victory for Kansas.
Key Stats:
38 Number of rushing yards for
Missouri quarterback Brad Smith
34:47 Amount of time that the
Kansas offense stayed on the field,
nearly 10 more minutes than Mis-
souri.
208 Number of rushing yards for
Kansas.
3 Number of consecutive times
that Kansas has beaten Missouri.
Quotes:
I have had the good fortune to be in
some really good programs that had
great defenses. Today I had never
been around a defensive unit that
executed their game plan, exactly
the way it was set up in practice.
coach Mark Mangino on the
defenses performance.
I cant tell you that I am a media
watchdog, but I dont think anyone
picked them to win the game today,
but they knew they were going to
win the game.
Mangino on who expected them to
win the game.
We defnitely have our spirits pretty
high, we dont think our season is
over by a long shot. We are just try-
ing to stay positive and go out there
and get us two more wins and get us
bowl eligible.
Swanson on the teams bowl
hopes.
The wind really blew hard behind
our offensive line and running backs
because they ran well in the fourth
quarter.
Mangino on the teams choice
to have the wind at its back in the
fourth quarter and its infuence on
the teams success.
Small details make up Kansas victory
4. Missouri 5. Texas A&M 6. Oklahoma
7. Texas A&M 8. Kansas 9. Missouri
10. Kansas State 11.Oklahoma State 12. Kansas
1. Texas 2. Texas Tech 3. Colorado
Iowa State climbs, Missouri takes a fall
Defense holds
quarterback
to 179 yards
MeganTrue/KANSAN
Seniors Banks Floodman, linebacker, and Charlton Keith, defensive end, cel-
ebrate after the second touchdown. The defense allowed 38 yards on the ground.
Megan True/KANSAN
Kansas senior defensive end Charlton Keith sacks Missouri senior quarterback Brad Smith during the third quarter of the Saturdays
game. Keith had two sacks in the game and leads the teamon the season.
Megan True/KANSAN
Kansas fans celebrate defeating Missouri by throwing the goalposts into Potter Lake on Saturday. Hundreds of Jayhawk fans gathered
around Potter Lake to watch. Many went swimming with the goalposts as well.
Football
continued from page 1B
Swanson was pleased, but not sur-
prised, with Greens performance.
Clark was huge. Clark was just be-
ing Clark. He will pound it all day,
Swanson said. Fortunately the line did
a great job creasing some lanes for him.
Once he gets an open feld he is really
hard to bring down.
Green wasnt the only successful
Kansas running back. Junior Jon Cor-
nish accumulated 54 yards, including
a 10-yard touchdown run in the fourth
quarter.
Green scored the teams frst touch-
down of the game in the second quar-
ter, from one yard out.
Green was key on that scoring drive.
He rushed the ball four times for 27
yards and the score.
Rodriguez said Missouri dropped
members of its secondary throughout
the game, afraid Kansas was going to
throw the ball. Rodriguez thought that
approach was due to the fact that Kan-
sas threw the ball 50 times the week
earlier against Colorado.
The Kansas defense certainly was fresh
when it came on the feld. The defense
had another stellar performance, holding
Missouri to just 180 yards of total offense
including 33 rushing yards. The defense
also forced two turnovers an intercep-
tion and a fumble recovery.
We made mistakes, and you cant
make mistakes. Especially against a
good defense, Missouri coach Gary
Pinkel said. Give them some cred-
it, they are a good defensive football
team.
Kansas held Missouris versatile
quarterback, Brad Smith, to 38 yards
on 20 carries. Smith ran for more
than 200 yards last week against Ne-
braska.
They were able to make adjustments
on the fy as far as responsibilities and
did a good job of game planning and
executing it, Missouri running back
Tony Temple said.
The Kansas rushing attack actually
helped neutralize its opponents rush-
ing game. Because Kansas was able to
run the football effectively and gain frst
downs, the Missouri offense stayed off
the feld. Kansas held the ball for nearly
10 minutes longer than Missouri.
Mangino recognized the discrepancy
in time of possession as one of the keys
in Kansas victory.
Defensive coordinators are always
running to the offensive coordinators
saying can we run the ball, can we
move the chains, can we eat up the
clock. Lets just try to keep our guys off
the feld so they can be fresh when they
go out, Mangino said.
Edited by Jonathan Kealing
By Daniel Berk
dberk@kansan.com
KANSAN SENIOR SPORTSWRITER
For the third consecutive year,
the Kansas defense stopped
Brad Smith enough to secure a
victory over rival Missouri.
A week after being named
national player of the week by
USA Today and Sports Illustrat-
ed, the Missouri senior quarter-
back struggled throughout the
game completing just 14 of 37
passes for 141 yards and gaining
only 38 yards rushing.
Last week, Smith accumulat-
ed nearly 500 yards of total of-
fense against Nebraska, which
entered the game with the No. 1
rush defense in the Big 12 Con-
ference. But this week was a
different story for Smith against
another top defense.
Losing this rivalry game, it
hurts, it hurts a lot, Smith said.
I gave it everything I got, but
there just isnt anything I can do
about it now.
The Kansas defense consis-
tently bottled up Smith at the
line of scrimmage and forced
him to move outside the pocket,
rather than have the ability to sit
in the pocket and create plays,
like he did last weekend.
Smith said the Missouri of-
fense was expecting more blitzes
from the Kansas defense like in
years past, but instead it dropped
defenders back into zone cover-
age and made Smith scramble.
Kansas football coach Mark
Mangino said the defense made
adjustments from last year and
gave Smith several different
looks than it had in the past.
We got to Brad Smith the
last couple of years with intense
pressure and blitzing, Mangino
said. There is no doubt that
Missouri was prepared for all
those blitzes. Our defensive line
dropped to zones and squeezed
the pocket in front of him to
force him out of the pocket.
Mangino also said that he had
never seen a defense execute its
game plan as well as the Kansas
defense did on Saturday.
Smith said the offense was
out of sync all game. Whether it
was penalties, sacks or miscom-
munication, the Kansas defense
had Missouris offense off-bal-
anced and frustrated.
Kansas 13-3 victory against
Missouri marks the last time Kan-
sas will play against Smith. He
will end his career later this sea-
son at Missouri with nearly every
passing and rushing record in the
books, but will also leave with a
1-3 career record against Kansas.
Smith said Kansas would al-
ways rise to the occasion and
make plays to stop him from
what he wanted to do. Smith has
accounted for 400 yards of total
offense during the past two years
against Kansas, which was 80
fewer yards than he accounted
for last week against Nebraska.
Smith, however, began to
move the ball effectively late in
the fourth quarter. He scram-
bled for a frst down on fourth
and 10 and broke free from a
Nick Reid tackle. After complet-
ing three more passes for three
frst downs and a gain of 33
yards, Kansas cornerback Theo
Baines intercepted Smiths pass
at the goal line with fewer than
fve minutes in the game. The
interception secured the victory
for Kansas.
Senior Jayhawk defensive end
Charlton Keith, who registered
two sacks of Smith and pres-
sured himall game, said this was
an important game for Kansas
future.
We just lined up and played
fundamental football, Keith
said. We had 11 guys pursuing
the ball, and thats pretty im-
pressive. We have a lot of young
guys on the team that are step-
ping up and making plays, and
thats looking good for the fu-
ture of KU football.
Edited by Nate Karlin
Cheers to the KU faithful. Fans
helped the Jayhawks through-
out the day, cheering at the right
times in the game. The loud fans
contributed to the snap that
sailed over Brad Smiths head,
and the defense fed off the fans
energy.
Jeers to the geniuses who rushed the
feld. When Kansas defeats a team
three years in a row, the goalposts
should stay on the feld and out of
Potter Lake.
Cheers to the older twirlers during
the halftime show. The crazy twirling
lady with the wild hair is always a
fan favorite at homecoming. The
little old man was a welcome addi-
tion this year.
Cheers to Brad Smith. For three
straight years, the Heisman Tro-
phy hopeful has given Jayhawk
fans plenty to cheer about. Nick
Reid, Charlton Keith and compa-
ny will be in Smiths nightmares
this Halloween, no doubt.
Jeers to any KU students who
brought along an MU fan to the game.
Jeers to the MU fan who pur-
posely walked through the stu-
dent section in the fourth quar-
ter with his girlfriend, fipping
everyone off. Hope she realizes
hes a keeper.
Worst fan attire: Anyone dressed
in neutral colors. Pick a side and
dont leave us guessing.
Announced attendance: 48,238
Rock Chalk Chant began with 2:40
left in the game.
CJ Moore
Scoring Summary:
Kansas 0 Missouri 3
1st Quarter, 5:55
Adam Crossett 39-yard feld
goal
7 plays, 21 yards, TOP 2:13,
Kansas 6 Missouri 3
2nd Quarter, 6:05
Kansas 6 Missouri 3
Clark Green, 1-yard run
(Scott Webb blocked PAT)
8 plays, 49 yards, TOP 4:17
Kansas 13 Missouri 3
4th Quarter, 12:59
Jon Cornish, 10-yard run
(Scott Webb made PAT)
6 plays, 43 yards, TOP 2:03
Stat Sheet
Cheers, jeers for fans on Saturday
Megan True/KANSAN
Kansas sophomore tight end Derek Fine pushes through the Missouri defense Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium. Fine and the Jayhawks defeated the Tigers 13-3, the Jayhawks third victory in as many years.
Robinett
continued from page 1B
What other school in the country
would have rushed the feld after defeat-
ing Missouri? Troy fans did last year, but
thats about it.
Remember, New Mexico, 2-4 in the
Mountain West Conference, defeated
Missouri on the road 45-35 earlier this
year.
No, its hard to imagine any fans, oth-
er than those of the worst football pro-
grams, getting excited about winning a
game against Missouri.
Dont get me wrong, Jayhawk fans de-
served to be happy about the victory. It
ended a four-game losing streak and kept
slim hopes of a bowl game alive. But
tearing down the goalposts was extreme.
Fans should have waited, realizing
that next week was the game that merit-
ed a large celebration. Kansas has an op-
portunity to end a 37-year losing streak
to Nebraska.
The Kansas Athletics Department will
continue its efforts to keep fans in the
stands.
I think students should be sending a
message to themselves, Marchiony said.
Even next week if we beat Nebraska,
the smartest thing they could do would
be to stay off the feld. Until that hap-
pens, there will be the danger of some-
one getting seriously hurt or killed.
The only time in recent memory that
KU fans have acted this badly was in
2003, when a handful of students rushed
the court at Allen Fieldhouse following a
victory against Texas. Even then, about
16,000 fans stayed in their seats and
booed those foolish enough to run onto
the court.
On Saturday, when one person got
on the feld, more than a thousand fol-
lowed. To see so many classless Kansas
fans was most disappointing.
The Kansas football teamisnt a pow-
erhouse and it wont be anytime soon.
But its time for Kansas fans to recognize
the steps this team has made since the
Terry Allen era and stop rushing the feld
after mediocre victories.
F Robinett is an Austin, Texas, senior
in journalism. He is Kansan sports
editor.
Fans
continued from page 1B
The staff responsible for low-
ering the goalposts couldnt get
its job done because NCAA
regulations state that the posts
must stay up until the clock has
reached zero. The rules also
call for a school to have backup
goalposts on hand at the stadi-
um in the event that one comes
down before the game ends.
Unlike last year, the play-
ers did not celebrate with the
fans on the feld. Most of them
quickly went into the locker
room, but a few players stopped
to pose for pictures or interview
with television reporters.
Senior quarterback Jason
Swanson said the team went
into the locker room and had a
party of its own.
Its the greatest feeling ever
to come in here, everybody
throwing Gatorade around,
Swanson said. Thats how it
should be.
As the parties continued both
inside and outside the locker
room, security guards kept a
close eye on the celebration on
the feld to ensure that no one
got hurt.
Its dangerous, and we dont
need to do that, Mangino said.
Were better than that.
Mangino also referred to an
incident last Saturday at the
University of Minnesota-Mor-
ris, where a student was killed
after a goalpost fell on him.
The recent event did not
seem to damper the festivities
for those who rushed the feld.
Edited by Nate Karlin
Editors Note: The Kansan
Big 12 Power Rankings are vot-
ed on by Ryan Colaianni and
Daniel Berk, Kansas football
writers, as well as Kellis Robi-
nett, sports editor, and Eric Sor-
rentino, associate sports editor.
The Texas Longhorns remained
at the No. 1 spot after improving
to 8-0 on the season. Texas had a
scare inits game against Oklahoma
State, falling behind 28-9 at one
point. The Longhorns regroupedat
halftime and outscored the Cow-
boys 35-0 in the second half. Okla-
homa State witnessed a similar oc-
currence in Austin, Texas, last year.
Oklahoma State was ahead 35-7,
but Texas scored 42 unanswered
points to beat the Cowboys 56-
35. In the teams last three games
against each other, Texas has out-
scored Oklahoma State 118-0 in
the second half.
Texas quarterback Vince Young
set a Texas school record for total
offense in a game with 267 yards
rushing and 239 yards passing.
The biggest winner of the week
was Iowa State. The Cyclones
marched into College Station and
beat the Texas A&MAggies 42-14.
This gave themthe biggest jump of
the week. The Cyclones moved up
three spots to sixth.
The biggest loser of the week
was Missouri. The Tigers dropped
fve spots in the rankings to ninth
after losing 13-3 to Kansas this
weekend. Voters ranked Missouri
as high as seven and as low as 11.
Kansas contained Missouri quar-
terback Brad Smith, who came off
246 yards and three rushing touch-
downs against Nebraska. In Law-
rence, the KU defense held Smith
to 38 yards rushing and 141 yards
passing with no touchdowns.
Oklahoma moved up two spots
to fourth. The Sooners are coming
off a road victory against Nebras-
ka, a game that saw running back
AdrianPetersonreturntoform. Pe-
terson rumbled for 146 yards and
two touchdowns. Although Okla-
homa has lost three games, it is still
4-1 in the Big 12 Conference.
Edited by Katie Lohrenz
Justin ONeal/KANSAN
Kansas senior defensive end Charlton Keith fushes Missouri quarterback Brad Smith out of the pocket on Saturday
at Memorial Stadium. Keith recorded two sacks for a total loss of 18 yards.
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t horoscopes The Stars Show the Kind of Day Youll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffcult
Seth Bundy/KANSAN
EntErtainmEnt 6B thE UnivErsity Daily Kansan monDay, oCtoBEr 31, 2005
t Lizard boy
t Friend or Faux?
t squirreL
tFancy comix
Wes Benson/KANSAN
Andrew Hadle/KANSAN
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Monday, Oct. 31, 2005: Often, you
might want to retreat from situa-
tions. Actually, maintaining a low
profile will work well for you and
will add to the lucky nature of your
year. Think through decisions rather
than have a knee-jerk reaction.
Often, you will want to sort out your
feelings. Your instincts are unusu-
ally strong, especially with money.
In fact, you might restructure your
finances and the manner in which
you handle them. If you are single,
you will have many admirers; just
make sure the person you choose
is available. If you are attached,
plan plenty of getaways together.
Be more open. LIBRA makes a good
healer or doctor for you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHHH You simply are not able
to get away from the Halloween en-
thusiasm. Just when you are deep in
concentration, a witch or gremlin pops
by. Why fght the inevitable? Network
while getting into the humor of the
moment. Tonight: At one of the many
pumpkin parties.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH You might need to be an anchor,
as everyone trips on his or her alter
ego or fantasy character. You get the
job done and fnish off what others
might be too distracted to do. Your
amazing sense of graciousness wins
over a loved one. Tonight: Just make
sure you are ready for the trick-or-
treaters.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Your enthusiasm cant
be quelled. You see whatever oc-
curs in a positive light. Allow more
humor and fun in, especially today.
Someone might make a last-minute
suggestion. Go for it. Tonight: Be a
kid again. You might like a piece of
candy or two.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHHH You naturally fnd fun,
though for whatever reason, you might
feel a need to anchor in those around
you. If you can work from home,
please do. Be ready to pick up where
someone has left off. Tonight: Make
sure you have enough candy.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You naturally get into the
levity of the day. In fact, you might be
happy just watching the kids and their
friends getting excited. Think fun
when making plans later in the day.
You wont be able to contain others.
Tonight: Hang where the fun is, or be
the one distributing the candy.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Last-minute details could keep
you in your head and not as aware as
you would like to be. You might need
to make a last-minute purchase. Also,
an expenditure might surround your
home or domestic life. Tonight: Dont
be extravagant.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH With the Moon in your sign,
where you direct your energy counts.
You are likely to succeed. Be willing
to adjust and make positive changes
if need be. People might be unusually
unpredictable. Tonight: Either watch-
ing the action or being part of it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HH You might want to be more of an
observer than a player right now. Use
extreme caution with your fnances;
you could have an unexpected expen-
diture. Dont take a comment person-
ally. Tonight: Vanish like a ghost.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH No matter how many times
you twist and turn your plans, you like
the end results. You do need to be
around people, be it at work or in your
personal life. You make a great addi-
tion. Tonight: Get into the fun nature of
the night.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Whatever goes on, you natu-
rally fall into the position of leader of
the gang. Your decision counts. Others
will naturally accept you as wise and
intelligent. Tonight: Get into the Hal-
loween spirit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH Your imagination could
go haywire or really be out there,
especially if conjuring up any ideas,
projects or Halloween plans. Listen
to a friend who might have a more
grounded perspective. Tonight: Let
your imagination rock and roll now,
even if it means a last-minute change.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH A partner dominates plans,
ideas and decisions. Dont buck this
trend, for now. Let this person have his
or her moment of glory. This person
wants you to focus on just him or her.
Do it. Be a good listener. Tonight: Enjoy
the moment.
pEoplE
NEW YORK Whats it like
growing up as the magical Harry
Potter? For teen actor Daniel
Radcliffe, its not that weird.
Radcliffe, the 16-year-old
star of the upcoming Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire,
has spent almost a third of his
life making movies. His latest
flm, based on J.K. Rowlings
novel, opens in two weeks.
Radcliffe was frst cast as Pot-
ter when he was 11. Since then,
a lot has changed: hes taller
and his face has become more
defned, his voice has changed,
hes got complexion issues and is
growing starter stubble.
Radcliffe is still waiting for
one teenage milestone a
girlfriend. Have sparks fown
between him and Emma
Watson, who plays the nerdy
Hermione Granger?
No. But I had a big crush
on her when I frst met her,
defnitely, he said.
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS A white suit
belonging to John Lennon that
he wore on the album cover of
Abbey Road sold for $118,000
at an auction while the Austin
Princess he drove in the movie
Imagine went for $150,000.
Anthony Pugliese of World
Films in Del Ray, Fla., bought
the suit, and the automo-
bile was bought by a private
Japanese investor, said Darren
Julien, president of Juliens
Auctions, the frm holding Sat-
urdays auction in Las Vegas.
The Associated Press
Sam Hemphill/KANSAN
Potter actor looking
to work magic on girls
Lennons Abby Road
suit sells for $118,000
CLASSIFIEDS MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2005 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7B
SERVICES TRAVEL
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DONS AUTO CENTER
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* Import and Domestic
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817 Mass 843-4266
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$695/mo. 913-768-1347.
1 BR avail. Immediately! Between campus
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2-3 BR apartments. West side location with
wonderful park-like setting...pool, exercise
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1-2 BR 1 BA apartments- pool, exercise
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in great close location. $300 off special!
Call Eddingham Apartments
841-5444.
TRAFFIC TICKET PROBLEMS?
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Zinas Market grand opening! European
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BAR TENDING!
$300/day potential. No experience nec.
Training Provided.800-965-6520 ext.108
1 BR plus study unfurnished avail. Novem-
ber 1st. Near KU & downtown. No pets.
$380/mo plus util. 785-843-4217.
2BR next to campus, 1030 Mi ssouri .
$600/mo. Available November 1. Water,
trash and gas paid. 785-556-0713.
Awesome location! 927 Emery Road.
1st floor condo, 3BR, 2 full bath, W/D
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Call 393-1138.
4 BR, 2 BA. 2-story, 2 patio, 2 car garage, 2-
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Customer Service/Sales Rep needed.
Work from home. Earn up to $500/wk. PT.
Call Ms. Goertzen @ 913-538-6461.
SPRING BREAKERS
Book Early & Save! Lowest Prices! Free
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Receive 2 Free Trips! Visit www.sun-
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234-7007 www.endlesssummertours.com.
1985 Honda Rebel 250 cc. Runs great,
looks clean. Just serviced. Have mods.
$1800 obo. Call 318-0737, leave message.
1977 Honda CB-750. $700 or best offer.
Runs good, perfect starter bike.
Contact Reid 393-2386
Can help edit & format dissertations & the-
ses. Call Sherry Sullivan, Word Proccessor
at 913-677-2672. Since 1982.
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
Safe Ride is seeking part-time drivers.
Must be 21 yrs. old, clean driving record.
Flex hrs., $ 6.45/hr. Apply in person at
Lawrence Bus Co. 841 Pennsylvania.
Do you like Kids?
Stepping Stones is now hiring teachers
aides to work 7-11 am, 9-1:30 pm, or
1:30-6 pm MWF. Apply at 1100 Wakarusa.
Experiences gymnastics instructor needed
for child and youth services at Ft. Leaven-
worth. Flexible schedule, must be comfort-
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least 18 years of age. Must provide profes-
sional certificates/ credentials or degree
with credit hours in gymnastics field.
To apply contact NAF Personnel at
913-684-2747
Taco Bell now acceptng applications for our
NEW location. Full and part-time day crew
positions available. Apply in person
1408 W. 23rd Street, Lawrence, KS.
TEXTBOOK CLERK
Duties include inventory, stocking, filing,
sales and assisting in book buyback pro-
gram. Monday thru Friday, 8 hour shifts.
Must have available to work from 7:00 AM-
7:00 PM during winter break. Position
begins 12-1-05 through Spring Rush. Pay
rate $6.50 per hour. Preference given to KU
students. Apply at the Human Resources
Office, Kansas Union, 3rd Floor. EOE.
MIRACLE VIDEO
Clearance Sale on Adult Movies. VHS
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841-7504
3 BR, 2 1/5 BANew Duplex. Seeking female
roommate. 2 car garage, W/D. $350/mo.+
util. Call Amy 785-213-2233.
3 BR, 2BA avail at Parkway Commons.
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1 BR apt. avail. to sublease mid-Dec. W/D,
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630-452-9052.
HUGE 1 BR apt. W/D, 2 decks, walk-in
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3 BR, 2 BAhouse seeking male roommate.
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Seeking responsible person to share part of
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No smoking. 841-2829.
2 BR Tuckaway apartment for lease. 2600
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Naismith Hall available for sublease. Male
or Female. Rent includes unlimited meal
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3 BR townhomes avail. now. Brighton Circle
& Adam Ave. Speci al Rates. NO
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3 BR, 2 BA + study/office. Fire place,
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1 BR avail. in 2 BR apt in Highpointe.
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Newly remodeled 1, 2 ,3 BR available
immediately. Rent specials. 841-7849.
4 BR, 2 BA, parking, CA, 1008 Mississippi.
785-691-5794 $1100. Two months
free rent! Wood floors, DW, porches.
ROOMMATE/SUBLEASE
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KANSANCLASSIFIEDS In a Class of its Own.
By Drew Davison
ddavison@kansan.com
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
The five soccer seniors
could not have left the Jay-
hawk Soccer Complex more
pleased Friday.
Before the match, forward
Nicole Braman, goalkeeper
Erin Ferguson and forwards
Kimberly Karfonta, Caroline
Smith and Jessica Smith were
honored.
Kansas ended the regular
season by beating Missouri
3-2 in double overtime on Se-
nior Day with the game-win-
ning goal from junior defend-
er Holly Gault.
Kansas soccer coach Mark
Francis said the senior class
would graduate as one of the
most successful KU classes, in
terms of its tenure and what the
program accomplished.
Theyve all done an awe-
some job, Francis said.
Caroline Smith, an Edina,
Minn., native, scored the 50th
goal of her career in the season
fnale.
I waited to get it today
because it was senior day
and against Missouri, Smith
said.
She said de-
spite the seniors
being honored,
the most impor-
tant part of the
weekend was
getting a victory
over Missouri.
Smith will
leave as Kansas
all-time leader
in points, goals,
assists, game-
winning goals
and shots.
Braman, a
Niwot, Colo.,
native who
transferred to Kansas from
Ohio State, said her experi-
ence at Kansas was amaz-
ing. She notched her first
goal of the
year in Ames,
Iowa, on Oct.
2 against Iowa
State.
Jessica Smith,
co-captain and
Wichita native,
will leave Kan-
sas with a hat
trick to remem-
ber this year.
She scored three
goals against
O k l a h o m a
State on Oct. 7
in Kansass 4-1
victory.
I would like to thank my
teammates for always open-
ing their hearts and minds to
who I am and what I stand
for, Smith said.
Karfonta will be remem-
bered as the only KU play-
er capable of performing a
round-off backflip after she
scored a goal.
The only time the Edmond,
Okla., native did not perform
the backflip was on her game-
winning goal against Texas on
Oct. 23.
That game was the Jay-
hawks first victory over the
Longhorns in school history.
Throughout her career, she
has been a key contributor
and added depth to the team.
The best memories of all
have been the friends I have
made, Karfonta said. I know
that I have 23 friends for the
rest of my life.
Ferguson, a Glen Elyn, Ill.,
native, said her favorite mem-
ory was when Kansas won
the Big 12 Championship last
year.
I just remember the excite-
ment of every player, whether
they played and made a huge
impact or made an impact just
by cheering, Ferguson said.
There is a possibility the
team will play again in Law-
rence, depending on how well
it does at the Big 12 Tourna-
ment in San Antonio. If Friday
was the last time the seniors
played at the Jayhawk Soccer
Complex, all have left with
great memories.
Edited by Katie Lohrenz
sports 8B the University Daily Kansan MonDay, octoBer 31, 2005
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t Soccer
Ending with a bang
Rylan Howe/KANSAN
Senior forward Caroline Smith moves around Missouri freshman defender Kat Tarr toward the ball. Smith scored the
50th goal of her career early in the match. The fve seniors Nicole Braman, Erin Ferguson, Kimberly Karfonta, Jes-
sica Smith and Caroline Smith won their fnal home game at Jayhawk Soccer Complex on a double-overtime goal
by junior defender Holly Gault.
Soccer
continued from page 1B
Kansas fnished in a four-
team tie for second place.
All fve seniors parents were
introduced before the game for
the Jayhawks most stress-in-
ducing game of the season.
Playing to keep its season
alive, Missouri (9-7-3, 3-5-2 Big
12) fell behind, tied the game and
took the lead in the back-and-
forth match.
Its huge,
Kansas soccer
coach Mark Fran-
cis said. And
being a Kansas-
Missouri game,
theres always a
lot of emotion in
that game, even
if there is nothing
on the line out-
side of that. Ob-
viously, for the
seniors, too, we
wanted to win it
for them.
C a r o l i n e
Smith had Kan-
sas on the board within the third
minute on senior Jessica Smiths
assist. Caroline Smiths eighth goal
of the season marked the 50th of
her career.
I just wanted to get it today,
Smith joked after the game. It
was senior day against Missouri.
But like Ive said, the goals and
that stuff doesnt really matter.
We got the W and thats what
is important.
Smiths early goal highlighted an
abundance of offensive movement,
but the spark was not consistent.
Missouri seniors Amber
Swinehart and Jennifer Nobis
teamed up in the 22nd minute
for Swinehearts 12th goal of the
season to tie the game at one.
When they equalized, I think
the momentum shifted, Fran-
cis said. They really picked it
up and we kind of backed off a
little bit.
Missouri took a 2-1 lead not even
a minute into the second half.
Swinehart and Nobis teamed
up again, only this time switch-
ing roles. Nobis tallied her sev-
enth goal of the season, tapping
the ball in after Kansas defend-
ers defected it.
This would mark the end of
Missouris offense.
Another ten minutes passed be-
fore Kansas tied the score, but the
shift in pace changed immediately.
The Jayhawks refused to lose.
It started with Michelle Ras-
mussen, a junior from South
Dakota, driving in a jaw-drop-
ping beauty from 25 yards out.
Rasmussen tied the game with
the goal in the 57th minute.
You can tell
when you hit it
when you strike
a ball well, Ras-
mussen said. It
was fun and a
good goal.
From half-
time to Gaults
104t h-mi nut e
clincher, the
Kansas offense
nearly tripled
its frst half shot
count. Kansas
outshot Mis-
souri 30-13 and
doubled its shot
on goal count
14-7.
They went ahead and I
think that gave us a little bit
of fire under our butts, Fran-
cis said. After we tied it up,
I think we dominated the rest
of the half.
In true All-American form,
Smith shot 12 times in the
match, seven of which were on
goal. One actually was a goal,
and she took time to pick up her
eighth assist.
Youve got to give Missouri
credit, Francis said. They
didnt quit regardless of the
score and the situation. They
kept themselves in the game.
By the time Gault nailed the
golden goal in double overtime,
the 600-plus fans in attendance
sounded more like 6,000 fans
roaring in celebration.
It was great to beat Missouri
on our own feld, Smith said.
The possibility that we could
have ended Missouris season
makes it even sweeter. Its good
to watch Missouri go home with
a loss.
Edited by Katie Lohrenz
I just remember
the excitement of
every player, wheth-
er they played and
made a huge impact
or made an impact
just by cheering.
Erin Ferguson
Kansas senior goalkeeper
Youve got to
give Missouri cred-
it. They didnt quit
regardless of the
score and the situ-
ation. They kept
themselves in the
game.
Mark Francis
KU soccer coach