Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
, can be an
intimidating place to spend
a semester, especially while
working a full-time internship at
C-SPAN, Interpol or the White
House. However, with the help of
University professors and alumni,
it can also be a place to build
connections that will lead to your
frst job.
Tirty years ago, Professor Bur-
dett Loomis created an internship
program
in D.C. to
help ease
the fnancial
burden that
students face
and give
students
experience in
their respec-
tive felds.
Students must make their own
travel arrangements, pay for
credits per hour, spend time with
other students in the program
and adapt to a diferent environ-
ment.
D.C. or bust
Students are responsible for
fnding a full-time internship,
while the program provides
housing and weekly seminars to
connect students with profession-
als in D.C.
Year afer year, students fnd
great internships that we never
knew existed, Loomis said. Its
a good preparation for fnding
a job.
Loomis said students ofen
believe the stereotype that D.C.
only consists of politicians. He
said he stresses to students each
year that this isnt true.
Even though it seems very
political, the fact is people with
useable skills whatever they
are, from any major really
are attractive to people in D.C.,
Loomis said.
Many internships in D.C. are
unpaid. However, students
negotiate the parameters of their
internship, such as pay and time
of.
Building connections
Dustin Morris, senior from
Wichita, spent last spring as a
paid intern for Sen. Jerry Moran
of Kansas.
D.C. wouldnt run without
interns, Morris said.
Morris said he spent his intern-
ship doing some menial work,
like answering phones and giving
tours, but he was also able to
research foreign policy, a topic of
his choosing.
Unlike many interns in D.C.,
Morris said he was able to meet
and talk with the senator he
worked under.
He had lunch with Moran and
his wife, went on a tour of the
Capitol dome with the senator
and served as photographer for
Moran at an event.
While the senator's time was
very valuable, he would make
it point to chat with the interns
when he arrived to the ofce in
the morning, Morris said.
Finding a job
Trough connections Morris
made in D.C., he got a job at
a political consulting frm in
Kansas City.
Loomis said that most seniors
who go through the program and
seek a job are able to fnd one,
whether its with the organiza-
tion the student interned at or
through a connection a student
made while in D.C.
People come from all over the
country to be in D.C., but the
Kansas community in D.C. is
really strong, Loomis said. We
have lots of alums who are eager
to help.
Edited by Allison Kohn
1
Volume 126 Issue 7 kansan.com Wednesday, September 4, 2013
UDK
the student voice since 1904
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEIS WINNING
MENTALITY
CHECK OUT OPINION
PAGE 12
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All contents, unless stated otherwise, 2013 The University Daily Kansan
CLASSIFIEDS 11
CROSSWORD 5
CRYPTOQUIPS 5
OPINION 4
SPORTS 12
SUDOKU 5
A mainly sunny sky. High
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The first football game is on Saturday! Index Dont
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Todays
Weather
Eighty nine, youll feel so fne.
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DIVERSITY IN DANCE
Te KU Department of Dance
welcomes an internationally
known guest artist this fall for a
semester-long residency.
Talia Beck, a celebrated Israeli
dancer and choreographer, has
arrived to teach her version of
modern dance, which will include
a culmination of the various
techniques and disciplines she
accumulated during her years as a
dancer.
Beck says she doesnt want to
limit her interaction with the stu-
dents to giving information, and
rather hopes that they are able to
exchange ideas and fgure out their
style together.
In some schools or strict dis-
ciplines, we get so obsessed with
technique and getting it right,
Beck said. I would like us to share
joy in movement, and I think that
the dance department at KU has
that; Ive seen it in the students.
Tey just enjoy moving, and its
not something I see everywhere.
One of the ways she plans to
get students thinking about their
movement is
through focus-
ing on each of
their senses.
Ill give them
instructions
like, Feel the
taste in your
mouth, or Feel
the inside of
your ears, and
theyll be like,
What does that
have to do with movement? But
its part of your body; of course it
has to do with movement. Tats
something Id like to explore with
them, Beck said.
Tus far in her classes, Beck says
she has found the students very
willing and ready to learn, even if
some of her techniques are unlike
styles of dance they have seen in
the past.
Teyre open people in general; I
think its something about KU and
the community here. People are
just open, Beck
said.
Beck brings a
unique per-
spective to the
world of dance,
and worked for
years for the
Inbal Pinto and
Avshalom Pollak
Dance Company,
a notable dance
company in Israel.
She has toured worldwide as a
dancer, and her original choreog-
raphy has been performed around
the globe. In 2010, she received
the Ministry of Culture Award for
Young Choreographer.
Her time at the University is
made possible through a residency
that is part of the Schusterman
Visiting Israeli Artist Program. Te
program sends Israeli flmmakers,
writers, musicians, choreogra-
phers and other artists to cultural
organizations and universities
across North America.
Beck and nine other visiting
artists will be in residences in the
United States through this years
program. Te hope is that the
artists will introduce and edu-
cate others about Israeli culture
through the interaction within
their communities.
Ever since I started telling peo-
ple I was coming here, everybodys
been talking about how amazing
Lawrence is and how KU is such
a special place. I have to say, Ive
only been here a few days and I
feel it already, Beck said. I love it
here already; Im really happy and
thankful to be here.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
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The Universily of Kansas School of usiness
PRESENTS
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FREE
HASH
BROWN
pounder
w/ purchase
w/ CHEESE
of a quarter
Mdhghl 4am
Expres 9/30
23rd 8l / 6lh 8l ONLY
Finding something to do in
Lawrence can be hard when your
budget hardly covers a meal. As
it turns out, many businesses in
town ofer discounts to students
throughout the year. Keep an eye
out for deals from these student
favorites.
Sylas and Maddys:
Afer talking to students on
campus, one of the most popular
discounts found was at Sylas and
Maddys on Massachusetts Street.
Te ice cream shop has a buy one
get one free special on Tuesdays,
which is a good opportunity to
meet up with a friend you havent
seen for a while.
Rudys Pizza:
A lot of pizzerias in the Law-
rence area have student discounts
or coupons worth looking out
for. Rudys Pizza at 704 Mas-
sachusetts St. ofers frequent
deals, whether its the Almost the
Weekend (Tursday) Special, a
large two-topping pizza and two
drinks for only $13.05, or the
Everyday Special, which includes
a salad, a slice and a drink for
$6.35.
Dempseys Burger Pub:
If you happen to be down-
town on a Tuesday, you can stop
at Dempseys Burger Pub on
Vermont Street for half-price
burgers with your student ID. It
also ofers $3 select draws on the
same night, as well as other daily
drink specials.
Hollywood Theaters:
Hollywood Teaters on Iowa
Street ofers discounts to students
Monday through Tursdays. If
youre looking to catch the new-
est action-thriller, you can buy
tickets for $9 with a student ID.
Urban Outftters:
Look for college nights at this
popular clothing store located on
Massachusetts Street. On select
days, your KUID can get you a 10
percent discount on all in-store
products. (If you keep an eye
out, you might catch the store on
one of its random discount days,
including when they ofer 50
percent of all products already
marked down.)
Salvation Army:
If you cant aford Urban even
with the discounts, there are
plenty of cheaper options around
town. In to thrifing? You can
fnd some great deals at the Sal-
vation Army on New Hampshire
Street. Like Goodwill and other
resale stores, they have daily dis-
counts on certain departments,
and if you bring your KUID, you
can save an extra 20 percent on
your purchase.
Dont forget:
Always look for coupons. With
the school year kicking of, you
can fnd coupon booklets all over
campus. Dont forget to check
out campusspecials.com as well.
You can fnd deals for almost
everything, from meals to clothes
and even haircuts.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
CALLIE BYRNES
cbyrnes@kansan.com
Local businesses help
students pinch pennies
Follow
@KansanEntertain
on Twitter
WANT UPDATES ALL DAY LONG?
ASHLEIGH LEE /KANSAN
A number of Lawrence businesses offer savings to University students through coupon books, weekly specials and KUID
discounts.
SAVINGS
1
NEW YORK A monthlong
standof that prevented millions of
viewers from watching hit shows
like "Under the Dome" and "NCIS"
and threatened to interfere
with the start of football season
ended Monday afer Time Warner
Cable and CBS Corp. resolved a
programming dispute.
Te deal covers more than 3
million homes in New York, Dallas
and Los Angeles that hadn't been
able to receive programming from
CBS or CBS-owned channels since
Aug. 2. Broadcasting resumed
Monday evening on the East
Coast.
Te companies had been fghting
over how much Time Warner
Cable Inc. would pay for program-
ming on CBS and other channels,
including Showtime Networks,
CBS Sports Network and the
Smithsonian channel. Terms of
the deal were not immediately
disclosed.
Te disagreement came at a
touchy time for networks and
cable companies as more and more
Americans are turning to alterna-
tive ways to watch TV, including
online or on Internet-connected
TVs.
Added pressure was on the two
companies to reach an agree-
ment with CBS holding deals to
broadcast NFL and Southeastern
Conference football, as well as
the start of the U.S. Open tennis
tournament.
Te blackout afected about 1.1
million of New York's 7.4 million
television households that get CBS.
An estimated 1.3 million of 5.6
million households in Los Angeles
were blacked out, along with
400,000 of Dallas' 2.6 million TV
homes, CBS said. Tose are three
of the nation's fve most populous
television markets.
CBS estimated the blackout cut
the network's national viewership
by about 1 percent.
"While we certainly didn't get
everything we wanted, ultimately
we ended up in a much better
place than when we started," Time
Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt
said in a statement.
Te smallest nuances and
touches of detail ofen make the
work of a skilled artist great. Neko
Case, American singer-songwriter
known for a successful solo career
and member of Canadian band
Te New Pornographers, crafs
her music in the same way that
a renowned painter approaches
visual art.
But instead of a paintbrush, she
uses musicianship and poetic
songwriting a touch of piano
or harp here, a carefully placed
lyric there to color many of her
songs with a feeling rather than a
specifc message.
Cases new album Te Worse
Tings Get, Te Harder I Fight,
Te Harder I Fight, Te More
I Love You, isnt winning any
brevity awards with its title,
but the content is anything but
longwinded. Most of the tracks are
brief, sensory representations of
Cases melancholy emotions when
dealing with depression during the
albums production. She described
the feeling of breaking through
these personal problems in a
recent interview with NPR.
Once I stopped fghting it, thats
when it really started, Case said.
Its like a bottleneck broke open,
and everything started to fow
again and my circulation came
back.
Many tracks on Te Worse
Tings Get are tinged with feel-
ings of sadness and depression, yet
it never gets too weepy. For every
song like the haunting Nearly
Midnight, Honolulu, a bitter an-
ecdote about a mother who doesnt
love her child, there is another like
the punked-out single Man, in
which Case pokes fun at everyone
with a Y chromosome.
Te key to Cases unique and im-
mediately recognizable style is her
voice. Her singing is similar to that
of another great singer-songwrit-
er, Joni Mitchell, in its clear and
captivating power, if not its exact
sound. Te song Calling Cards is
an ode to communication between
lovers in the pre-cellular era that
practically bleeds road trip nos-
talgia. She sings the lyrics Every
dial tone, every truck stop, every
heartbreak / I love you more as a
subtle trumpet and sof piano keys
accentuate the vocals.
Like many poets, Case rarely says
exactly what she means, prefer-
ring instead to let listeners fll in
their own impressions. Make no
mistake Neko Case is one mu-
sician who should be considered
a recording artist, in the truest
sense of the word.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 7
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A
t the end of the second
season of Teen Wolf, I
was in love. Te charac-
ters were dynamic and the plot
compelled me to watch particular
episodes over and over again
in case I didnt catch all of the
details. Character Stiles Stilinskis
monologue in the episode Battle-
feld was moving.
Writer and producer Jef Davis
won me over with the insertion of
the Winston Churchill quotation,
If youre going through hell, keep
going. I was thrilled for season
three and the addition of the
Alpha Pack. But while watching
the frst episode, I felt as if Davis
laughed in my face and stomped
on my wooing heart. As the sea-
son continued, my obsession with
Teen Wolf dwindled.
Season three failed in one major
way: storytelling. It started way
too fast with way too many ques-
tions lef unanswered.
Season two ended with the
shapeshifing Kanimas defeat,
thanks to Lydia melting Jacksons
cold, cold heart. Te power of
love defeated Gerard and gave
Jackson his long-awaited were-
wolf body.
Season three has Jackson
living in London, and we can
all say Adios! to any shred of
a world-moving relationship.
So, the fnale of season two was
marked meaningless.
From there, everything went
downhill for me:
Erica dies.
Boyd dies pretty soon afer.
Derek Hales sister is alive? Oh,
darn. So is Gerard.
Someone is killing virgins.
Great.
Allison and Isaac a thing? Stop.
Please.
All of this was handled with an
amateur and sloppy hand. Te
Davis I knew, with his touches of
subtle but understandable story-
telling, was gone with the wind.
With all the new developments,
everything just seems forced. I get
that Davis cant control whether
an actor leaves the show. But how
he handled it made important
character deaths seem fippant.
Two of my favorite characters
were killed of, just like that.
It only gets worse as the season
progresses.
Why are Dereks eyes blue?
Because of another past tragic
love story. Poor Derek had so
much potential as a character, but
instead hes defned by past rela-
tionships. And his fing? Yep, shes
the one sacrifcing the virgins.
Derek is now the shows punching
bag, which doesnt allow any real
character development.
Te only real redeeming plot
point of this season is the revela-
tion that Lydia is a banshee. Tat
has potential to bring up lots of
fun for part two of the season.
And I do have to admit that in
previous seasons,the last couple
episodes have been vital in re-
gards to plot. But if you lose your
audience before those episodes,
whats the point?
Dont get me wrong. Teen
Wolf isnt ruined. But Davis does
need to work on his storytell-
ing. Big time. Less fght scenes
and more getting to know the
characters.
Cherish the characters because
that is why the fans keep coming
back.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
Third season of Teen Wolf
disappoints love-bitten fans
By Emily Brown
ebrown@kansan.com
MTV
MTV
ANTI RECORDS
MUSIC HISTORY
TELEVISION
New Neko Case album stirs listeners emotions
DUNCAN MCHENRY
dmchenry@kansan.com
Time Warner Cable, CBS fnd solution to standoff
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This publicity image released by CBS shows Dean Norris as James Big Jim Rennie,
a town leader on the series Under the Dome, airing Mondays at 10 p.m. on CBS.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Recycle, Recycle, Recycle
Recycle, Recycle, Recycle
Museum of former
dictators last two days
alive opens in Romania
TARGOVISTE, Romania More than
20 years after Communist dictator
Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife,
Elena, were convicted of genocide
and executed in Romania, the country
opened a museum about the last two
days of their lives during the country's
pro-democracy uprising.
The museum is located in a military
building where the trial and executions
took place in Targoviste, a town 80
kilometers (50 miles) northwest of
Bucharest.
Ceausescu had ruled Romania
for nearly 25 years with an iron fst.
Museum visitors will be able to see
metal plates that he and his wife ate
on, the beds where they slept, and
a tiny improvised courtroom where
they faced a hastily conducted trial
before a special military tribunal. The
place where they were fatally shot on
Christmas Day, 1989, at 2:45 p.m.,
also is showcased.
On Tuesday, Gen. Andrei Kemen-
ci, the former commander of the
garrison located in the building, took
journalists on a tour of the museum.
He said Ceausescu was dissatisfed
that he was only given brown bread
and sweets to eat there. Kemenci also
said the leader asked for a change of
clothes and to borrow money to spend
at a military canteen.
In 1989, Romanian forces shot and
killed about 1,100 people conducting
anti-communist demonstrations, most
of them unarmed.
On Dec. 22, the Ceausescus fed
Bucharest in a helicopter after they
were booed by a crowd and hours later
Defense Minister Vasile Milea appar-
ently committed suicide. Abandoned
by the helicopter pilot and most of the
leader's aides, the Ceausescus then
hitchhiked and ended up in Targoviste,
where they were arrested by police.
On Dec. 24, provisional leaders who
took over after the Ceausescus fed
Bucharest decided the couple would
stand trial the next day.
Associated Press
ASSOCIATED PRESS
White contours mark the spot where Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena were
executed. This site turned into a museum in Targoviste, Romania, Sept. 3.
1
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 8
This year for the annual predictions, the crew is made up of the Kansans football
beat writers, sports editors and a ghost of the Kansans past.
FOOTBALL
2. TCU
3. Oklahoma
4. Oklahoma State
5. Baylor
6. Kansas State
7. Texas Tech
8. West Virginia
9. Iowa State
10. Kansas
2. Oklahoma State
3. Oklahoma
4. Baylor
5. TCU
6. Texas Tech
7. Kansas State
8. West Virginia
9. Iowa State
10. Kansas
2. Oklahoma State
3. Oklahoma
4. Texas
5. TCU
6. Texas Tech
7. Kansas State
8. West Virginia
9. Iowa State
10. Kansas
Champion Champion
Mike Vernon
Sports editor
Dylan Lysen
Managing editor
Blake Schuster
Associate sports editor
Champion
STAFF BIG 12 PREDICTIONS
2. Texas
3. TCU
4. Oklahoma
5. Baylor
6. Kansas
7. Iowa State
8. Texas Tech
9. Kansas State
10. West Virginia
Chris Hybl
Football beat writer
Champion
2. Oklahoma State
3. TCU
4. Baylor
5. Texas
6. Kansas State
7. West Virginia
8. Iowa State
9. Texas Tech
10. Kansas
Ethan Padway
Former Kansan associate
sports editor
Champion
2. Oklahoma State
3. TCU
4. Baylor
5. Oklahoma
6. Texas Tech
7. Kansas State
8. West Virginia
9. Kansas
10. Iowa State
Champion
Connor Oberkrom
Football beat writer
2. Oklahoma State
3. TCU
4. Texas
5. Oklahoma
6. Kansas State
7. West Virginia
8. Kansas
9. Iowa State
10. Texas Tech
Champion
Max Goodwin
Football beat writer
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 9
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The Universily of Kansas School of usiness
PRESENTS
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Te Kansas Womens Soccer Club
is looking to make the jump from
a recreational squad to a more
vying team this fall. Te club is
hoping to reach a higher level of
competition than they have in
previous years.
Were shifing from more of a
just-for-fun, recreational team to
a higher competitive team, Club
Secretary Sarah Kwapiszeski said.
Te club is holding tryouts today,
Wednesday, Tursday, and Friday,
from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., at Shenk
Sports Complex on 23rd and Iowa
streets. Te club is searching for
dedicated players who are willing
to take the club to the next level.
Coach Jon Kot is on the lookout
for players with skills that can be
used in more than one position, to
create a more complete squad. Te
club is interested in girls with a
team-comes-frst outlook.
We look at everything from a
team perspective, Kot said. We
want players with a hard-working
attitude and a team mentality.
Building on last years accom-
plishments and working on
individual player growth are going
to be goals for this year.
We focus on team play and want
everyone to focus on the system
and style of play, Kot said.
Te club saw success this past
year when they made a strong
showing at Nationals, making it to
the Sweet Sixteen. Te team is also
looking for a repeat as regional
champions.
Tere are certain people who
have shining moments in some
games and everyone steps up,
Kwapiszeski said. We play really
well as a team.
Although the team lost players
this year, the Jayhawks still have a
good group of girls to work with.
We have a great core team that
will transition the hard work ethic
shown in practices to the games,
Kot said.
Te club will travel to Colorado,
Nebraska, Arkansas and Kansas
State this year, while looking to
make another run at the national
tournament in Phoenix.
We really want to get a lot of
new people at tryouts so we can be
even better this year, Kwapiszeski
said.
Edited by Chas Strobel
TORI RUBINSTEIN
trubinstein@kansan.com
Kansas womens soccer
to hold tryouts this week
CLUB SPORTS
Sendish moves up depth chart to
different position
Ever since Big 12 media days,
Charlie Weis has been gushing
over Cassius Sendish and the big
news on Tuesday was that his role
in the defense is now noticeably
larger.
Sendish was pegged at nickel-
back, but afer fall camp came
to an end, he was moved to free
safety. Te decision also hinged
on the depth at free safety coupled
with the comfort level that Weis
and company had in their two
nickelbacks, Victor Simmons and
Courtney Arnick, who were origi-
nally behind Sendish.
We took a position of strength
and we strengthened a position
that we thought was of weakness,
Weis said.
By fortifying a position, the
depth in the secondary is even
stronger and they have a little
more wiggle room for more action
on defense.
Coaches, including second-year
defensive coordinator Dave Cam-
po, have mentioned in the past
few weeks that Sendish possessed
the versatility to play relatively
anywhere on the feld.
Sendish has received rave reviews
as the acute mind of the second-
ary and is already well ahead of
the learning curve that coaches
expected out of him right from the
start.
It is a cerebral position, Campo
said. Te key to playing to corner
is being able to line up one-on-
one and cover someone, whereas
the safety position, it has all these
diferent run fts, change in cov-
erages.
Many Jayhawks to play in their
frst Division 1 game
All of the buzz this ofseason, all
of the hype, will be tested come
Saturday.
Te fve brand new junior college
players starting Samson Faifli,
Cassius Sendish, Mike Smithburg,
Zach Fondal, Isaiah Johnson and a
number of others who will surely
snif playing time will see Divi-
sion I action for the frst time and
try to prove themselves worthy of
their new scholarship.
One of the biggest challenges
for the group is adjusting to the
new, accelerated level of Division I
competition.
Te speed of the game changes
so much when you go from one
level to the next level, Weis said.
So they wont be able to truly
experience all the things they go
through until youre playing; you
see the speed goes up.
Justin McCay, who was at Okla-
homa for two seasons but never
saw a snap, will also be seeing his
frst lengthy football action since
high school.
Samson Faifli beats out Jake Love
Another emerging depth-chart
story has been the rise of weakside
linebacker Samson Faifli. He beat
out sophomore Jake Love, the
starter last year at the strongside
linebacker spot.
Faifli, a junior college transfer
from American River College in
West Valley, Utah, has been in
competition with Love, but fnally
rose to the top.
Te main diference, Weis said,
was Faiflis size advantage.
Weis said diference in size was
the underlying factor that helped
make his decision.
Although Faifli made a late push
afer getting comfortable in camp,
Weis expected him to rise up and
challenge Love for the starter spot
from the get-go.
While Samson is the starter for
now, Weis mentioned that Love is
still in for a fair share of playing
time, which is the case with a lot of
positions on the Kansas defense.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
BETWEEN THE LINES
Football Notebook
FILE PHOTO/KANSAN
Coach Charlie Weis smiles at the podium after being introduced as the new Kansas football coach during Fridays press conference at Anderson Family Football Complex.
Weis has 33 years of experience in coaching.
Player strength and position strategy ups the ante
Follow
@KansanSports
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MANHATTAN Bill Snyder
isn't about to make sweeping
changes to the depth chart afer
Kansas State struggled on both
sides of the ball in a season-open-
ing loss to North Dakota State.
Tat doesn't mean he won't
make some tweaks for Saturday
night's game against Louisi-
ana-Lafayette.
For one thing, Snyder seemed to
indicate Tuesday that sophomore
quarterback Daniel Sams will see
the feld more in Week 2. Sams
was beaten out for the starting job
late in fall camp by junior college
transfer Jake Waters, who threw
for 280 yards and two touch-
downs but was also picked twice.
"He deserves it and he had a
great practice last night," Snyder
said. "You also have to look at the
fact that Jake proved that he is
a very capable quarterback and
played well during the course of
the ball game. When you've got
a good athlete like Daniel, you've
got to fnd a place for him."
Te Wildcats relied heavily on a
running game that involved quar-
terback Collin Klein last season,
and Snyder seemed reluctant to
tear those plays out of the book
when Waters proved inefective.
Even when Sams entered the
game and ran 17 yards for a
touchdown on his frst play of the
season, Snyder stuck with Waters
on the majority of snaps even
the designed quarterback runs.
"You believe in not breaking
the continuity of the young guy
that's on the feld," Snyder said,
"but by the same token, Daniel's
a very athletic young guy, and
that was just my feeling that he
needed to be on the feld. He has
the capability of making plays and
he did so."
Just not enough of them.
Nobody on the Wildcats made
enough of them.
Afer building a two-touch-
down lead, the ofense suddenly
struggled to move the ball. Te
Bison countered by marching 80
yards in 18 plays for the go-ahead
score in the fnal seconds of the
fourth quarter, the drive so cruelly
efcient that it lef the Wildcats
virtually no time to answer.
Te 24-21 defeat was their frst
season-opening loss under Snyder
since 1989, his frst year at Kansas
State, and the frst loss to an FCS
opponent since the same season.
It was the kind of performance
that would ofen yield wholesale
changes to the depth chart, but
Snyder said that it's premature to
tinker too much with the starters.
"A lot of our number two's
didn't have a chance to be on the
feld at all," he explained. "Tey
need that opportunity and if we
were to make changes, it's a little
bit of guesswork."
While known primarily for his
running ability, Sams believe he
can be an efective passer as well
if he's given the opportunity. He
even credited working with Wa-
ters by far the more polished
QB when it comes to throwing the
ball to fne-tune his delivery
during the ofseason.
"I've improved as a passer
because I really didn't want to rely
on my running ability, because at
the end of the day we're battling
to be quarterbacks," Sams said.
"Quarterbacks are supposed to
throw the ball, so I focused on my
throwing mechanics and myself as
a quarterback."
A
s we all know, the most important
time of year is upon us: college
football season. While many in
Lawrence look forward to October and the
start of basketball, we have the start of a
new football season on our hands and its
full of promise.
Last weekend, the Jayhawk nation took
notice of our purple in-state rivals surpris-
ing loss to North Dakota State in their
shiny new stadium, no less (if you didnt
hear about this, I assume youre enjoying
life under a giant rock). If you didnt catch
the game, you probably saw an infux of
gloating tweets and defamatory Facebook
quips from smug Kansas fans.
While theres nothing wrong with reveling
in Kansas States loss, Kansas fans might be
talking out of turn. Before we take to social
media with snide remarks, we have a cou-
ple questions to answer: Will our team win
some games this year? How can the student
body help our chances (and, in doing so,
gain the rights to trash talk)?
Coach Charlie Weis has done a lot to
improve the Kansas football team afer
going 1-11 last season. According to ESPN.
com, Weis and the Kansas coaching staf
recruited 26 players this year. While some
will redshirt, many will start playing this
season especially the 18 recruits who
transferred from junior colleges and could
have an immediate impact on our success.
While no team is safe from a bad loss,
the Kansas football team is in a completely
diferent situation. Tis team is completely
unproven. We have the potential
to shine past our projected 4-8,
(according to the Kansas City Star),
but we could also do much worse. It
doesnt bode well to talk smack on a
team that has out performed us in the
past several years. It would be very
surprising if K-State didnt come back
from this loss and have a good season.
In short, the karmic forces of college
football are too unforgiving for us to mock
other teams while we have yet to play.
While only time will tell how Kansas per-
forms this season, the concern for students
showing up to the games is still present.
Afer three straight less than favorable
seasons, it can be difcult for the students
to care about attending the games. Its not
hard to notice the crowds tailgating outside
the stadium compared to the feeble num-
bers in the stands. It doesnt take a football
veteran to understand that the home game
atmosphere can afect the outcome of those
games.
If the student
body really wants
football bragging rights over
K-State, its time to start showing up to
games, supporting the team and making
enough noise for every Wildcat in Manhat-
tan to hear.
If we want to earn the right to trash talk,
the Kansas student body should pack the
stands, and cheer its team to victory this
Saturday. And hey, we might just get a W in
the books, too.
Edited by Kayla Overbey
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 PAGE 11 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
!
?
Obviously, [thats] an in-state rival
that got a lot of attention. We had
a really early-morning practice and
they were the frst words being ut-
tered. I said, Did you pay attention?
Did you see what happened? This
isnt a big surprise here fellas. This
is what can happen.
Charlie Weis commenting on
Kansas State loss to KC Star
Kansas recruited 26 players this
year.
ESPN
Q: What was the difference in fan
attendance at Kansas State and
Kansas last season?
A: KSU averaged 8,671 more fans
than Kansas (50,000 - 41,329).
ESPN
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FACT OF THE DAY
TRIVIA OF THE DAY
THE MORNING BREW
Students want bragging rights without wins
This week in athletics
Wednesday
Thursday Friday Saturday
Sunday Monday Tuesday
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
By Miranda Davis
mdavis@kansan.com
Soccer
Creighton
6 p.m.
Omaha, Neb.
Volleyball
Arkansas
7 p.m.
Fayetteville, Ark.
Soccer
Arizona
4:30 p.m.
Tucson, Ariz.
Volleyball
Arkansas
1 p.m.
Lawrence
Soccer
Arizona State
1:30 p.m.
Tempe, Ariz.
NO SCHEDULED
EVENTS
Football
South Dakota
6 p.m.
Lawrence
Wiggins receives All-
American title before
playing in college
Late Night in the Phog might be a few
weeks away yet, incoming freshman
Andrew Wiggins has already received one
of college basketballs most prestigious
titles: All-American.
Wiggins joins Oklahoma State
sophomore point guard Marcus Smart
as the only Big 12 players on the Blue
Ribbon All-America Team and is the
only freshman named to the squad.
Other members include Creighton senior
Doug McDermott, Louisville senior Russ
Smith and Michigan State junior Adreian
Payne.
This is a great honor but really
means nothing since I have yet to play a
game in college, Wiggins said. Were
working hard every day to get better as a
team and get ready for the season.
Last season at Huntington Prep
in West Virginia, Wiggins averaged
23.4 points, 11.2 rebounds and 2.5
assists while being named the national
basketball high school player of the year
and the 2013 Gatorade Male Athlete of
the Year.
Blake Schuster
BASKETBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas State Coach Bill Snyder studies the North Dakota State Buffalos prior to the
kickoff in Manhattan Aug. 30. North Dakota State upset Kansas State 24-21.
Kansas State to make minor changes after upset
FOOTBALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Volume 126 Issue 7 kansan.com Wednesday, September 4, 2013
FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK
STAFF PREDICTIONS
PAGE 8
PAGE 8
S
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
sports
By Mike Vernon
mvernon@kansan.com
COMMENTARY
Kansas State loss
makes bye week
a success
TAKING OUT THE TRASH
CLEANING UP
Jarmoc leads Kansas to victory at UMKC
VOLLEYBALL
BRIAN HILLIX
bhillix@kansan.com
Te scenario has already played
itself out in Charlie Weis mind.
He can see his team beating
South Dakota this Saturday, then
winning against Rice in Houston,
coming back to Lawrence the
next week and defeating Loui-
siana Tech before really proving
something to the fans with a
homecoming victory over Texas
Tech.
Ten, lets go to TCU and see
what its like if were on a little
streak and everyones starting to
get a little juiced around here.
Tats what I want to do, Weis
said on Tuesday at his frst press
conference of the season.
Its been four years since Kansas
started a season on one of those
streaks, and Weis isnt making a
guarantee.
Is it going to happen like that? I
have no idea, Weis said.
But thats the mentality he wants
his players to have going into this
season. He wants them to believe
that they can win every game.
It is his responsibility to be the
leader of the shif in mentality.
He has to instill in his players that
losing will not be accepted in any
form.
Kansas lost fve games last
season by a touchdown or less.
Weis wants his team to disregard
that stat. It doesnt matter what
the score was if you take an L in
the end.
If we lose, we lose, Weis said,
but I think part of the problem
when youre in an organization
that gets used to losing, is losing
is OK. Losing is accepted. If you
play close to winning, its OK, and
thats a pile of garbage.
No player or coach on the team
has been
willing to give
a number
of wins they
expect this
season. And
thats how
Weis wants it.
It would be
another ex-
ample of what
Weis consid-
ers a losing
mentality for players to look at
the schedule, think about how
they match up with each team,
and come up with the number of
games they expect to win.
I mean, if you think like that
you deserve to be fred, or quit
one or the other, Weis said.
You should never ever as a
competitor think like that.
Te game has
yet to begin, but
the bitter taste
of a 1-11 season
hasnt lef Weis
yet. Its still too
early to deter-
mine whether or
not his team tru-
ly has a winning
approach.
Of course, Weis
would like to be-
lieve that there is a diference this
season. Players have said theyve
seen a new mentality. More
established leaders have stepped
up this season. But none of that
means anything until its proven
on the feld.
You start winning a couple of
those close games and the light
switch goes on, and the next thing
you know your team every
week is expecting to win those
games. Teyre not waiting for
something bad to happen. Teyre
making something good happen
when its crunch time, Weis said.
Something good has to happen
frst.
Kansas was picked by Big 12 me-
dia to fnish last once again this
season, and Weis reiterated, as
he did at Big 12 media days, that
that is exactly where the Jayhawks
should be listed for right now. But
he also sent a message to his team:
Until you start winning games,
thats where youre gonna stay.
Edited by Emma McElhaney
MAX GOODWIN
mgoodwin@kansan.com
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kansas head coach Charlie Weis has a discussion with offcials during an NCAA college football game against Texas Tech in Lubbock, Texas, Nov. 10, 2012.