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Volume 128 Issue 55



THE UNIVERSITY DAILY

KANSAN
Kansan.com | The student voice since 1904



BLACK FRIDAY



Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Black Friday sales start earlier | PAGE 5

Students lead peaceful march after Ferguson events
KELSIE JENNINGS
@kelcjen

On a cold Monday night,
students calmly and quietly
marched across the University
campus in remembrance of
Michael Brown, the 18-yearold black man who was shot
and killed by a police officer
in Ferguson, Mo., this August.
Marchers gathered at the Kansas Union and walked across
campus to the Burge Union,
where the march ended with
an open discussion between
members of the Black Student
Union and other march participants.
Students were asked to wear
white, but many students were
bundled up in coats and hats as
due to the chilly weather. The
group was quiet as they moved
across the dark campus, quietly
talking amongst themselves.
Some students walked with
their hands raised and others
carried a sign reading “Hands
up, don’t shoot” in reference to
Michael Brown before he was
shot and killed.
The march marked the first
day of events that will take
place on campus the rest of the
week, known on social media
as #KansasBlackOut week.
Caleb Bobo, president and
founder of the student group,
KU Black Men’s Union, said
that the events planned for
this week were inspired by a
group of black students who
were upset with the negative
response that came from some

University students and they
wanted to show support for
Brown’s family since they aren’t
able to be in Ferguson. He said
that the Black Student Union
came up with the idea for the
march. Bobo said this week
is not just for the University,
but that Kansas State, Emporia
State, Wichita State and Washburn are having their own
campus events.
“This was more than just a
black community event, and
I think that it went really,
really well,” Bobo said after the
march and discussion at the
Burge Union.
Bobo, a resident of St. Louis,
said it’s been hard to watch
the area he grew up in get a
bad reputation because of the
rioting on the news.
“St. Louis is a great place to
raise a family, but there are
problems,” Bobo said. “I wish
that people would take into
account the problems instead
of judging the city.”
Bobo estimated that there
were about 50 to 75 students
who participated in the
march across campus. He had
instructed participants before
the march that it was meant
to be peaceful and respectful
and for marchers to stay on
the sidewalk and keep their
voices low. He wanted to make
sure that the group followed
University policy and didn’t
want to disrupt other students
on campus.
A few students who marched
said they were not really

JAMES HOYT/KANSAN

University student Chelsea Whiteside, center, and graduate student Jameelah Jones, right, march in the front of the Kansas Blackout protest group.
shocked when they heard the
verdict on Monday, Nov. 24,
that Darren Wilson, the officer
who had shot Brown, did not
face charges for Brown’s death.
Prechus Gillom, a freshman
from Kansas City, Kan., said
she was in a dining hall on
campus when she heard the
verdict on TV. She said she
wasn’t shocked by the grand
jury’s decision because of
how the Trayvon Martin case
ended, and thought there was a
possibility that this case would
be decided similarly. She was
excited to participate in the

march to honor Brown and his
family.
“I was actually excited that us
as a community at KU wanted
to do something in honor of
Mike Brown without it being
a negative connotation behind
it like the people of Ferguson,”
Gillom said. “It was a nice,
peaceful walk in honor of him
and something respectful to
his family that they wanted all
along.”
Another student, Tyler
Allen from Denver, Colo.,
was pleased with the student
participation and spoke of the

diversity of the marchers.
“It’s not just black people
fighting for black justice. It’s
people with hearts, it’s people
who understand equality,
people who want to live in a
better society who go out and
do these things,” she said. “If it
were to be a white, young man
that was done wrong, I would
go out and march too because
there has to be some type of
equality and some type of justice in order for us to function
as a society.”
Adam Khalil, a senior from
Kansas City, Kan., knows a

lot of people who live out in
Ferguson and said his friends
don’t agree with how some
rioters are responding to the
verdict. Khalil said he likes to
think long about things before
forming an opinion, but he
said he lost a little hope after he
heard the verdict.
“Some things are just not
going to go our way,” Khalil
said. “But I hope that, at least
for this campus, that we can
come together.”

— Edited by Miranda Davis

City of Lawrence
funds $10M for
Rock Chalk Park
ALLISON KITE
@Allie_Kite

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/KANSAN

Annette Bloch, president of R.A. Bloch Cancer Foundation, talks about her potential donation toward the University of Kansas Medical Hospital.

KU Medical Center receives
$10M donation, if able to match
ADAM JAMIESON
@senorjamieson

Annette Bloch, Kansas City
philanthropist, has donated
$10 million to build an extension to the University of Kansas Hospital in the form of a
Challenge Match. This means
that the Medical Center will
receive this donation, but
only if they can raise an equal
amount themselves.
A statement on the University of Kansas Medical
Center’s website says the proposed extension to the hospital in Kansas City will be
called the Cambridge North
Tower. It will have 92 beds
and will be the home of the
neurology, neuroscience, surgical oncology and ear, nose

Index

CLASSIFIEDS 9
CROSSWORD 6

and throat departments. It is
estimated to cost $279 million altogether.
Bloch has a personal connection with victims of illness, especially cancer. She
is the widow of Richard
A. Bloch, founder of H&R
Block. According to the R.A.
Bloch Cancer Foundation
website, Richard Bloch was
diagnosed with lung cancer
in 1978 and was told he only
had three months to live. He
battled through it and lived
long enough to be diagnosed
with colon cancer in the
1980s. He made a full recovery both times, according to
the website.
Annette Bloch has a long
history of philanthropy with
the KU Medical Center. The

CRYPTOQUIPS 6
OPINION 4

University of Kansas Hospital
website recognizes a $20 million donation that she made
in 2008, as well as ongoing
support of the Richard and
Annette Bloch Heart Rhythm
Center.
In a video release accompanying the donation, Bloch
said, “There’s a wonderful
feeling of power when you’re
able to give, and to give something that you know will help
so many people and save
lives, and in your lifetime if
you can even save one life it’s
a wonderful thing to be able
to do.”
However, the medical center
is not expecting to raise all
the money through such substantial donations.
“There’s a lot of people who

SPORTS 10
SUDOKU 6

All contents, unless stated otherwise, © 2014 The University Daily Kansan

Don’t
Forget

don’t have $10 million to give
away,” said Jill Chadwick,
director of the KU Medical
News Network. “If they understood that if they just give
$5 or $10 that’s really how
we’re going to get this thing
built. (Monday) is for cyber
shopping, but Tuesday is for
giving. It’s called Giving Tuesday.”
According to a release from
Dan Margolies of the Heartland Health Monitor, the
University of Kansas Hospital has been able to raise
$34 million overall toward
the Cambridge North Tower
and $1.37 million toward the
challenge match so far.
— Edited by Lyndsey Havens

To maybe, kind of start
preparing for thinking about
studying for finals.

The Lawrence City Commission is in the process of shelling out $10 million to help
pay for infrastructure at Rock
Chalk Park, but Athletics is in
charge of the $40 million lease
for the sporting facilities.
The Lawrence City Commission has paid all but $1 million
of the $10 million it will take
to fund the infrastructure,
which includes roads, parking, sewer pipes, water, storm
drainage, running trails and
tennis courts at Rock Chalk
Park. The process is almost
complete, but about $1 million worth of work remains
undone according to David
Corliss, city manager of Lawrence. The city issued debt to
pay for the work and will use
sales tax dollars appropriated
for parks and rec to pay it off.
The City Commission also
paid $10 million for the construction of the recreational
center at Rock Chalk Park,
which is free to Lawrence and
Douglas County residents, including students. Corliss said
the city thought the partnership would be beneficial to
both the city and the University.
“It was a unique opportunity
to partner with the University
of Kansas,” Corliss said. "KU
is obviously an important part
of the community, an important part of our community
identity. It’s our largest employer.”

Today’s
Weather

The softball, soccer and
track structure is currently
owned by Bliss Sports, a local
sporting company, but at the
end of the $40 million lease,
KU Athletics will become the
new owner. Jim Marchiony,
associate athletics director for
Public Affairs, said the lease
situation was the most financially sensible for the University. Funding for the lease will
come from the Athletics general budget, which includes
revenue from the Williams
Education Fund.
Marchiony said the partnership would benefit both the
city and the University because it would create a new facility for sports that don’t generate considerable revenue.
“The reason we did it is because we needed facilities for
those sports,” Marchiony said.
“We were using sub-par facilities for those women’s sports
for many years, and we needed to correct that. This was a
way to do that.”
He added that the new facility would attract bigger events
that would bring in revenue.
He said whereas a normal
softball game would only
bring in revenue from the opposing team’s arrival in town,
a tournament would bring in
significantly more.
The University will host an
NCAA track regional tournament at Rock Chalk Park May
26-28.

Generally sunny with
no chance of rain. Wind
SSW at 10-15 mph.

— Edited by Rob Pyatt

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N

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

The
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Managing editor
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FRIDAY

SATURDAY

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Cloudy with a 20 percent chance of
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Tuesday, Dec. 2

Wednesday, Dec. 3

What: Sexual Education Committee
When: 7 p.m.
Where: Ecumenical Campus Ministries
About: Rachel Gadd-Nelson from
GaDuGi SafeCenter will talk about
Rape Culture

What: Resident Fellows Seminar
When: Noon to 1:30 p.m.
Where: Hall Center
About: A lecture by Margot Versteeg,
associate professor of Spanish &
Portuguese

Associate digital editors
Stephanie Bickel
Brent Burford
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THURSDAY

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Calendar

news

Editor-in-chief
Emma LeGault

PAGE 2

Thursday, Dec. 4

Friday, Dec. 5

What: Conflict Management

What: Undergraduate Research

Workshop
When: 9 a.m. to noon
Where: Joseph R. Pearson Hall,
Room 204
About: A workshop about conflict
as a natural part of relationships,
including confrontation and
resolution

Office Hours
When: 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Where: Strong Hall, Room 151
About: Learn how to get started in
research, find a mentor or apply for
funding.

Arts Center helps plan 9th street corridor
ALICIA GARZA
@AliciaoftheUDK

Residents of East Lawrence,
City commissioners and leaders from the Lawrence Arts
Center met today to discuss
plans and concerns for the
recreation of the 9th St. corridor — the street located in the
newly designated ‘Cultural
District’.
Many citizens voiced concerns over the project, including its placement along the
street, partying, anti-family
friendly themes, traffic, parking meters, how far the cor-

ridor would stretch and the
hours of operation.
Christina McClellan, director of arts and culture for
the city, said the corridor will
benefit University students.
“One of the ideas of the project is to provide infrastructure
related to bikes, sidewalks and
lighting. I know many University students live in the area
and probably appreciate those
types of amenities,” McClellan said. “What exactly that
will look like, we don’t know
at this point. We know there
will be an art component and
I’m sure University students

will appreciate having this
really high caliber art in their
midst.”
The project would include
working with local artists and
businesses to build the project. While a complete plan has
yet to be been drawn up by officials, meetings will continue
until they reach a unanimous
decision.
Some of the people in attendance thought that the project
was gentrifying — causing a
shift in the area’s urban lifestyle and rising property values. Sarah Rooney, a citizen
living in East Lawrence with

her family, doesn’t think the
project itself is beneficial to
the community, but the methods used to come up with the
idea are.
“I think the community would be fine without it
[the corridor]. They talked
about gentrification, which
I think we have gentrified it
on our own, organically,” said
Rooney. “It was a slow process, it’s different than something coming in and putting
itself in your community.
“But there is opportunity,
they’re doing a really good
job opening the lines of com-

munication, trying to involve
everybody, so kudos to the
commission and everybody
involved. I think it was a hard
place getting here, and it’s uncomfortable, trying to make
peace with all the different
viewpoints, but it’s a new way
of working, and just that in itself is a benefit for everybody.
Hopefully it will work out the
way we’ve thought about it.
Nothing ever works out exactly as it is planned, but at
least everyone is trying, and
that’s what is beneficial to the
community.”
— Edited by Rob Pyatt

IOA working on sexual harassment training
ALLISON KITE
@Allie_Kite

Last year’s sexual harassment training PowerPoint is
soon to be replaced by a newly revamped version, created
by the Office of Institutional
Opportunity and Access.
Last year, the office released
a sexual harassment training
that about 50 percent of the
student body participated in,
IOA Executive Director Jane
McQueeny said. However,
she said this year the training will be mandatory for all
students and the content will
be more interactive. The new
version will include videos
along with the information
and a final quiz.
The training was released
via email last year, and McQueeny called it mandatory.
However, students who didn’t
complete the training faced
no consequences, and students could click through the
basic PowerPoint in a matter

of seconds without a timer on
the slides.
“I would also like to say
you weren’t a very engaged
or knowledgeable person of
our community if you didn’t
take the training,“ McQueeny
said.
This year, however, students
who don’t complete it will receive a hold on their account
similar to the mandatory
Alcohol Edu, the training
the University uses to teach
students about alcohol consumption.
Emma Halling, a member
of the Title IX roundtable
and the Chancellor’s sexual
assault task force, expressed
frustration with last year’s
training for several reasons
including its lack of enforcement. She said she believed
that the training should be
equally important to Alcohol
Edu.
“The quality and the demands of the trainings were
so different,” Halling said. “So

it seemed like the University
was prioritizing alcohol over
sexual consent, which was a
real problem for me.”
Voluntary participation was
the hope when McQueeny set
out to create the first training
in 2012. She said she didn’t
believe a mandatory training
would promote engagement
even if it required all students
to participate.
“It’s important that you
know what our University
expectations are in terms of
sexual violence, sexual harassment on campus,” she
said. “I have always thought
that students would want to
do this — would want to do
this not only to inform themselves but to make sure that
they protected themselves,
knew where to go, knew how
to respond to things.”
However, in a busy college
student’s schedule, a voluntary sexual harassment training may not make the cut,
according to Halling. She said

she didn’t believe students
would willingly participate
and a voluntary training
wasn’t enough effort on the
part of the University.



“It seemed like the University
was prioritizing alcohol over
sexual consent, which was a
real problem for me.”
EMMA HALLING
Title IX roundtable member

“Imagine if your professor
was like, ‘Well, you know, I’m
having this final, but I don’t
want to make it mandatory.
I want you to do it as a good
faith effort,’ and nothing happens to you if you didn’t do
it,” Halling said. “Clearly you
would think the professor
wasn’t taking things seriously
and didn’t actually want you
to be responsible for the con-

tent.”
This year’s training will include videos, making it more
interactive and beneficial in
the eyes of Halling. Last year’s
version of the PowerPoint
wasn’t making the cut, she
said.
“We spend a lot of money
in our marketing department
creating excellent videos that
make KU look really good
and are really compelling and
engaging, and the best thing
that we can come up with to
educate our students about
sexual assault and personal
safety is a white PowerPoint?”
she asked. “Those priorities
are very clear, and I would
like to see them put more effort into something that is so
significant in people’s lives.”
IOA has yet to set a completion date for the training, but
hopes it will take place before
the end of this semester, McQueeny said.
— Edited by Miranda Davis

The University Daily Kansan is the
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FILE PHOTO/KANSAN

Campus libraries, like Watson Library, have extended their hours this week and next week for finals studying.

Libraries have extended
hours for finals
Libraries on campus will be
offering extended hours for next
week and finals week.
“We always extend hours during
finals weeks [...] we know finals
week is an exceptionally busy
week for students.” says Rebecca
Smith, executive director of communications and advancements
at Watson Library.
The decision to extend library
hours can be contributed to data
and information collected over
the years, according to Smith.
The hours for next week and
finals week are as follows:
Anschutz library: Will be open
all 24 hours, while the circulation

desk closes at 12 a.m.
Watson Library: On Friday, Dec.
5, Watson will be open from 8
a.m. to 10 p.m., the following
Saturday will be open 9 a.m. to
10 p.m. Starting next Friday, the
library will stay open until 3 a.m.
Spahr Engineering Library: Will
continue their regular 24 hours.
Wheat Law Library: Open
everyday until 1 a.m. for finals
week (which starts next week for
law students).
Spencer Research Library: 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Saturdays.
Murphy Art & Architecture
Library, Gorton Music & Dance
Library, and the Regents Center
will not be offering extended

hours during finals week. The
normal hours are 8 a.m. to 10
p.m. The Regents Center is open
until 10:30 p.m.
Libraries close their doors for
the semester on Dec. 20.
— Alicia Garza

Every Thursday

$10 OFF UNLIMITED MONTH PACKAGE
ON ANY OF THE 5 LEVELS OF TANNING

Ultimate Tan
2449 Iowa St, Suite o

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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

PAGE 3

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

Amazon’s new robot army ready to ship
BRANDON BAILEY
Associated Press

TRACY, California — A year
ago, Amazon.com workers
like 34-year-old Rejinaldo Rosales hiked miles of aisles each
shift to “pick” each item a customer ordered and prepare it
for shipping.
Now the e-commerce giant
boasts that it has boosted efficiency — and given workers’
legs a break — by deploying
more than 15,000 wheeled robots to crisscross the floors of
its biggest warehouses and deliver stacks of toys, books and
other products to employees.
“We pick two to three times
faster than we used to,” Rosales said during a short break
from sorting merchandise
into bins at Amazon’s massive
distribution center in Tracy,
California, about 60 miles east
of San Francisco. “It’s made
the job a lot easier.”
Amazon.com Inc., which
faces its single biggest day of
online shopping on Monday,
has invested heavily this year
in upgrading and expanding
its distribution network, adding new technology, opening
more shipping centers and hiring 80,000 seasonal workers to
meet the coming onslaught of
holiday orders. Amazon says it
processed orders for 36.8 million items on the Monday after Thanksgiving last year, and
it’s expecting “Cyber Monday”
to be even busier this year.
CEO Jeff Bezos vows to one
day deliver packages by drone,
but that technology isn’t ready
yet. Even so, Amazon doesn’t
want a repeat of last year,
when some customers were
disappointed by late deliveries
attributed to Midwestern ice
storms and last-minute shipping snarls at both UPS and
FedEx. Meanwhile, the company is facing tough competition from rivals like Google
and eBay, and traditional retailers are offering more on-

line services.
Amazon has forecast revenue of $27.3 billion to $30.3
billion for the holiday quarter,
up 18 percent from last year
but less than Wall Street had
expected. However, Amazon
has invested billions of dollars
in its shipping network and its
reliability is a big selling point
to customers, Piper Jaffray Investment Analyst Gene Munster wrote in a note to clients
Friday. He thinks Amazon’s
forecast is conservative.
The Seattle-based company
now has 109 shipping centers around the globe. The
Tracy facility is one of 10 in
which Amazon has deployed
the robots, using technology
acquired when the company
bought robot-maker Kiva Systems Inc. in 2012, said Dave
Clark, Amazon’s senior vice
president for operations, who
gave reporters a tour on Sunday.
More than 1,500 full-time
employees work at the Tracy
center, which has 1.2 million
square feet of space — the
equivalent of 28 football fields.
They are joined by about 3,000
robots, gliding swiftly and
quietly around the warehouse.
The robots navigate by scanning coded stickers on the
floor, following digital commands that are beamed wirelessly from a central computer.
Each of the squat orange
machines can slide under and
then lift a stack of shelves that’s
four feet wide and holds up to
750 pounds of merchandise.
The system uses bar codes to
track which items are on each
shelf, so a robot can fetch the
right shelves for each worker
as orders come in.
Because the robots travel
underneath, the shelves can
be stacked closely together,
which means the warehouse
can hold more goods, Clark
said. The Tracy center now
holds about 20 million items,
representing 3.5 million dif-

According to the 31st Annual PNC
Christmas Price Index, it would
cost you $27,673.22 to purchase
all the gifts from the “12 Days of
Christmas” song, only $208 more
than last year, mainly due to low
energy costs and labor costs.

Dole Student Advisory
Board planning final
service project

ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOP: A Kiva robot drive unit is seen, foreground, before it moves under a stack of merchandise pods, seen on
a tour of one of Amazon’s newest distribution centers in Tracy, Calif., Nov. 30. This Amazon Fulfillment Center
opened in 2013 and was refitted to use new robot technology in the summer of 2014. ABOVE: Amazon.com employees work the shelves on along the miles of aisles at an Amazon.com Fulfillment Center on “Cyber Monday,”
the Monday after Thanksgiving and the busiest online shopping day of the holiday season, in Phoenix.
ferent products, from bottles of gourmet steak sauce
to high-end audio headsets,
books and video games. Clark
said it can ship 700,000 items
in a day, but will hold more
and ship more by next year.
The robots will cut the Tracy center’s operating costs by
20 percent, Clark said. But he
was quick to assert they won’t
eliminate jobs.
“We’re continuing to grow.
Growth has always driven
hiring,” Clark said. The com-

pany has, in fact, increased
its workforce by more than
a third over the last year to
149,500 full-time employees.
Clark said workers are needed for more complex tasks
such as shelving, packing and
checking for damaged items.
However, a 10,000-strong
fleet of robots could help Amazon save $450 million to $900
million a year in labor expenses, Shawn Milne of Janney
Capital Markets estimated in
a report last summer. By al-

lowing Amazon to store and
ship more goods from each
shipping center, the robots
will likely reduce the number
of new centers that Amazon
will have to build and staff as
it grows, Michael Pachter of
Wedbush Securities said on
Monday. He compared it to
automakers’ use of robots on
their assembly lines, which
has reduced the number of
worker hours required to
build a car.

Tonight’s Dole Student Advisory Board meeting will consist
of a final service project for this
semester and planning for next
semester.
The group will come up with
ideas for next semester’s Spring
SAB program. The organization
is considering hosting an event
about income inequality, but is
open to other ideas.
The fall program, “Oppression
or Protection? The Militarization of Police in America,”
featured speakers from law
enforcement, attorney offices
and the University African and
African-American and Communications departments.
Alex Montgomery, coordinator
for the Student Advisory Board
said he believes the Dole Institute is one of the best ways for
students to get involved.
The meeting is open to all
students who are interested,
and will be held at 5:30 p.m. at
the Dole Institute of Politics on
West Campus. The Dole Student
Advisory Board hosts events
and discussions to engage
students in politics.
— Allison Kite

DAY IN THE LIFE OF
ANDREW VOGEL
• Fly Fisherman
• KU Pre-Med Student
• Climbed 19,340 ft to the
top of Mt. Kilimanjaro
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

DECEMBER 4TH

A special issue looking into the lives of people within the KU community.
Pick up the daily paper or visit Kansan.com

Thursday, December 4th

opinion

Text your FFA
submissions to
(785) 289–8351 or
at kansan.com
And all too soon break ends.
Time to attempt to suppress my
panic...
I hope the money K-State paid
the refs is enough for them
to get their eyes checked. So
many calls that should have
happened...
Netflix is a beautiful thing, but
if you’re watching it in class
you might as well have stayed
home. #dontdoit
Darren Wilson should have
stayed on the force…Going to
be tough to find a new job
What’s a girl gotta do for a guy
who enjoys staying in on weekends watching movies instead
of going to the bars?
Woke up this morning with
the unwelcome discovery:
it’s December. #Nope #what
#bloodyhell

Social distractions lead to unreflectiveness
By Sebastian Schoneich
@ThingsSebiThink

I generally try to keep
quiet, at least publicly, about
the lack of honest motivations people like politicians,
students and capitalists have.
I cynically believe that they
mostly satisfy big money,
study and steal money. Following this line of thought,
I was happy to come across
Professor Leonard Krishtalka’s editorial piece in the
Lawrence Journal-World,
“Thinking is just too painful,
study reminds us,” on Nov.
20. I was relieved to find

Halfway point until I get to see
my boyfriend! #deploymentsucks
Is it sad that I want to buy
a Forever Lazy? They look so
comfortable!

don’t need opinions on facts.
You might as well ask, “What
number is bigger: Five or
15?”
Though I’ve watched the
clip five times, that line
always gives me the giggles
because it is so true. We
don’t ask people’s opinions
on whether there are seven
continents or if the earth
revolves around the sun.
Some may say such examples
do not apply because, unlike
climate change, there is no
room for debate. The facts
paint a different picture.
When 97 percent of

By Gabrielle Murnan
@GabrielleKansan

Last spring, “Last Week
Tonight with John Oliver”
featured a spot discussing
the misrepresentation of
climate change in the media.
Citing a poll in which one in
four Americans is said to still
be skeptical about climate
change, Oliver stated, “You

education and economy, I
believe that we naturally desire to be reflective. It’s what
makes us human. We need
to recognize those moments
in which we discover we
actually enjoy thinking, in
order to resist our culture of
mental laziness.
The kinds of moments I
have in mind are analogous
to the following example:
“Bob” hasn’t read a single
reading assignment for
English all semester because
they are “useless” to him —
he knows he can pull off an
A in the class without trying.
One day, Bob gets to class a
half-hour early and doesn’t
know what to do, so he decides to read a little bit of the
book they are supposed to be
reading in class. Amazed by
its contents, Bob discovers

scientists agree that climate
change is real and caused
by humans, that is called
consensus, not “room for
debate.” The 97 percent
includes leading scientists
in the U.S. and abroad: The
International Panel on Climate Change, NASA and The
American Association for
the Advancement of Science,
among others.
We live in a society where
science is respected and
funding for STEM fields
increases each year, yet we
weaken findings from these
same fields of study by

allowing unnecessary debate.
It is time American media,
politicians and citizens stop
calling it a climate change
debate and start calling it a
climate change discussion, or
just “reality.”
The announcement about
the climate change agreement with China means that
now, more than ever, it is
crucial to utilize the power
of language. When a news
anchor, politician or schoolteacher calls it the “climate
change debate,” they give
equal weight to both sides,
when in reality, there is no

By Anissa Fritz
@AnissaFritzz

Group projects create more
complications for students.
They cause endless amounts
of stress. One or two people
do all the work while the rest
sit back and enjoy the free
grade. Meeting with partners
is like the nearly impossible task of trying to find a
parking spot on Daisy Hill. It
is frustrating and exhausting.
They can be a college stu-

dent’s dream but oftentimes
end up being a nightmare.
It is common that several
students in a class will moan
and groan to their professors
requesting that group projects
be discontinued. However,
these students tend to receive
the response of, “You’re going
to have to work in groups
later on in your actual career,
you will need to know how to
work well with others.”
At first, this may seem like
a plausible reason as to why
group projects exist in college, but upon further reasoning, they seem less beneficial
and more of a waste of time
and effort. Group assignments in the professional

field do exist, however,
college group projects barely
resemble them.
Group projects in college
do not give a good reflection
of what group projects in
the real world look like for
various reasons. For one,
usually in the business world
you get to pick your team,
whereas in college you can be
assigned random partners.
Being assigned a random
partner can be beneficial in
the sense of working with
someone who has a different
perspective. However, what
students often find when
being assigned to work with
someone they don’t know is
a clash in personalities and

other personal issues that
frequently end up negatively
impacting the project.
In the real world, individuals put in group projects may
work harder because they are
paid for their work. If all of
my group partners were paid
for the work they contribute,
you can bet they would put
forward more effort and
avoid the issue of having one
person doing most of the
work.
Lastly, in most jobs, you and
your partners will be required
to be there for a certain
amount of time each day.
This eliminates the struggle
of trying to meet up around
everyone’s crazy sched-

Don’t see what all the rage is
about Chipotle... ain’t thaaat
good.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Bye, Felicia

ules. But in college, group
members must find a time to
meet in between their classes,
extra-curricular activities and
jobs.
College group projects
are unfair, overly stressful
and usually not reflective of
scenarios that students will
face in the professional world.
While group projects do offer
a glimpse into the area of trying to work well with others,
the stress is too high and the
effort far too great for the
benefits that group projects
produce.
Anissa Fritz is a sophomore
from Dallas studying journalism
and sociology

@KansanOpinion In the end, the only
one that can work with you every time
is you. Work alone or end up working
alone on a group project.

Bought moustache bag clips
and don’t know how I clipped
chip bags without ‘em

I saw a man wearing a cowboy
hat driving a Zamboni at a
gas station. Help. Help me.

Gabrielle Murnan is a junior
from Pittsburg studying
environmental studies

@harrypotterjew

Only a few weeks left in this
semester and then I’m outta
here!!! #RealWorldHereICome

I want to take a poll on how
many girls wear riding boots on
campus. Any guesses?

wiggle room. Using such
language only stokes political
fires over an issue that must
be thought of as an environmental problem poised to
impact the social, political
and economic integrity of
our nation. Our policies
are already moving toward
significant action on climate
change. It is time that the
language we use matches the
facts.

@KansanOpinion I definitely prefer
solo projects. Working around multiple class schedules is a nightmare!

“House of Cards” comes back in
February. Life is complete.

My cooking consists of food that
uses microwaves and/or cereal
bowls.

Sebastian Schoneich is a
senior from Lawrence studying
biochemistry and philosophy

@elizabeth_karr

My dog is a mix between world’s
cutest dog and the devil.

Alright, Fraser your classrooms
are too cold and I don’t know if I
can handle it anymore. Someone
adjust the temperature!!!

the reading is actually interesting and thought provoking. Even more incredible,
Bob ends up participating
in class discussion and even
makes some insightful comments. That day he leaves
class with his brain on fire,
excited about his ideas and
inspired to be more thoughtful about life.
Though I always start out
speaking cynically about our
generation, I always end the
conversation as an optimist.
If we are being plagued by a
lack of reflection, I believe
that we will eventually recognize that to be the case, and
seek to reverse the trend.

Group projects create problems for students

Wind + cold weather = absolute
worst

Tip: women don’t care what men
prefer. They’ll do what makes
them happy.

all. What if they’re just puppets that do what they’re told
by more powerful people?
And finally, capitalists: When
full-fledged monetary gain
is the only goal in the minds
of powerful capitalists, well,
we’ve seen what can happen,
like the subprime mortgage
crisis of 2008.
There are too many
distractions in society that
make us so unreflective. Recent technological developments have definitely helped
bring this culture about:
Do people even read books
anymore? Do they walk
anywhere without staring
at their phones or listening
to music? Distracted from
reality, we lose sight of the
importance of reflection.
Despite our unreflective
culture hurting our politics,

No ‘room for debate’ with climate change

Cliffhangers are the

I smell queso in my classroom...
This is torture! #HungryBelly

something to read other than
the possible environmental
and economic effects of the
GOP’s impending takeover
of Congress in January.
Krishtalka points out several
ways in which our current
culture is successful at being
unreflective. In response to
his piece, I’d like to present a
case for optimism.
It is apparent that, collectively, we are not interested
in thinking. Let’s look at
students, politicians and capitalists again. Our peers in
class try to avoid thinking by
asking questions like: “What
exactly is going to be on the
exam?” “Is there going to be
a study guide?” “No way am
I taking that class, I heard
the professor is tough.” “C’s
get degrees.” I often doubt
politicians use their brains at

Do you prefer to work
in groups for projects
or by yourself?



@Ignaddio

@KansanOpinion Group projects.
Collaboration is essential to the
sciences, so it’s important to learn
how to work with others.



O

PAGE 4

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

FFA OF THE DAY

People who actively use the word “moist”
need to reevaluate themselves
CONTACT US

HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Send letters to [email protected]. Write LETTER
TO THE EDITOR in the email subject line. Length:
300 words
The submission should include the author’s name,
grade and hometown. Find our full letter to the editor
policy online at kansan.com/letters.

Emma LeGault, editor-in-chief
[email protected]

Cecilia Cho, opinion editor
[email protected]

Tom Wittler, print sales manager
[email protected]

Madison Schultz, managing editor
[email protected]

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[email protected]

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[email protected]

Hannah Barling, digital editor
[email protected]

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[email protected]

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[email protected]

THE KANSAN
EDITORIAL BOARD

Members of the Kansan
Editorial Board are Emma
LeGault, Madison Schultz,
Cecilia Cho, Hannah Barling
and Christina Carreira.

A

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

arts & features

HOROSCOPES

Because the stars
know things we don’t.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8
You're sharp as a tack for the
next few days. Figure out what
you want, get the tools you'll
need and inspire your team.
Expect the best from them. Love
goes both ways.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8
You're spurred to take action.
With study and a loved one's
backing, you can win. You're
good at finances now, so estimate your income and expenses.
Ask your partner's advice. Score
top billing.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 7
Spend less and save more.
Don't argue about money (or
anything else). Increase self-discipline and gain productivity.
Practice looking at things from a
different viewpoint.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 6
Definitely cut costs wherever
possible. You're under pressure
with deadlines, but don't
let them get you down. Keep
chugging along. When in doubt,
breathe deep. Oxygen does
wonders.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6
Consult with your partner.
Leadership comes with listening.
Love wins again to surprise a
cynic. Don't be afraid to ask
others to contribute. Likewise,
offer to make a difference for
others.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7
You're a true artist and have
a lot to say. Say it. Don't worry
if you're misunderstood; that's
part of the process. Repeat
yourself using new words and
different expressions. Friends
help you get the word out. Follow
your joy.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 6
It's adventure time! Water is
definitely involved. Set social
priorities. Postpone a romantic
interlude, but don't obsess.
When in doubt, consult with your
team. Study options. You'll know
what to do.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7
If you're not sure what you want
next, ask your partner or someone that knows you as bigger
than you see yourself. Take a
survey. Circumstances open up
time in your schedule. Gamble
later. Gather opportunity ideas.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8
Don't fall for a trick. Anticipate
some friendly ridicule. Take it
slow to get farther. Spend time
with your partner now. Repay a
favor. Limit sweets in your diet
for balance. Follow a strong
recommendation.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6
Fantasy clashes with
facts. Offer your wisdom to a
person who's feeling sad. Work
interferes with travel. Call upon
energetic friends. Your idea
may take several tries. Avoid
frivolous distractions. Add to
your holdings.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 5
Anticipate disagreement. Your
partner may misunderstand you.
Just talking really does help.
Don't travel right now. Answer
questions directly. Your luck's
improving today and tomorrow.
Take your work home with you,
and stay respectful.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6
Learn something new. Watch
for hidden agendas dotting the
trail. Take a breather. Expand
later. Don't be stopped by
failure; you're gaining skills.
Check instructions for errors or
changes. Replenish reserves. Get
the facts.

PAGE 5

Black Friday starts earlier each year
By Maegan Bull
@Maegan_bull

Black Friday sales have
typically began in the early
morning hours the day
after Thanksgiving, but this
holiday season sales started
on Thanksgiving day and
continued through the
weekend.
Black Friday, which picked
up popularity along with
the start of the modern
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day
Parade in 1924 according
to BlackFriday.com, is considered the unofficial start
to the Christmas shopping
season. But in recent years
the deals have started earlier and earlier and now start
on Thanksgiving day.
This year companies such
as Walmart, Target, Best
Buy and more released
Black Friday advertisements up to three weeks
in advance. These ads gave
consumers a chance to plan
their gift shopping, but also
helped to make consumers aware that these stores
would start having sales as
early as 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving.
According to National
Retail Federation’s Thanksgiving Weekend Spending Survey conducted by
Prosper Insights & Analytics, 55.1 percent of holiday
shoppers were in stores and
online over Thanksgiving

ROBERT F. BUKATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Target shoppers Kelly Foley, left, Debbie Winslow, center, and Ann Rich use a smartphone to look at a competitor’s prices while shopping shortly
after midnight on Black Friday, Nov. 28, in South Portland, Maine. The Black Friday shopping weekend may be losing its mojo. A survey of shoppers
released Nov. 30 by the National Retail Federation shows how early discounting, more online shopping and an improving economy have fewer people
shopping on the weekend that kicks off the holiday shopping season.
weekend, down from 58.7
percent last year. Additionally, more than three-quarters (77.2 percent) say they
took advantage of retailers’
online and in-store promotions to buy non-gift items
for themselves or their
family.
While consumer sales
might have been down,
Black Friday is still one of
the biggest shopping days

in America. NRF estimates
that 86.9 million shoppers
were in stores and online
on Black Friday; nearly
one-third of the people surveyed (32.2 percent or 43.1
million) say they shopped
on Thanksgiving Day.
“Reports of record-breaking online sales and store
crowds point to a more
confident and savvy holiday shopper who knows

when, where and how to
take advantage of all the
promotions retailers are
offering,” president and
CEO Matthew Shay said in
a statement.
Does starting sales and
encouraging shopping on
Thanksgiving ruin the holiday? For Kaley Robinson, a
junior from Lawrence, there
can be a happy medium.
“I don’t think it takes away

from the holiday unless you
do stuff with your family all
day,” Robinson said. “I don’t
need all day for Thanksgiving. I didn’t go (shopping)
with the expectation of
finding good stuff; I just
went shopping with my
family.”

— Edited by Miranda Davis

Judge allows publication of ‘In Cold Blood’ files
ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. — The
son of a Kansas law enforcement officer who helped
investigate the 1959 killings
that inspired the book “In
Cold Blood” can publish his
father’s field notes that he
contended Monday substantially contradict the account
found in Truman Capote’s
literary masterpiece.
In a ruling made public
Monday, Shawnee County
District Court Judge Larry Hendricks said he made
an error when he initially
blocked publication of the
criminal investigation files
in 2012. His decision means
that Ronald Nye of Oklahoma City can use his father’s
files for a book he plans
about the slayings of prominent farmer and community leader Herbert Clutter,
his wife and two children in
Holcomb.
The Kansas attorney general’s office had sued Nye to
keep him from publishing
the files. Nye had planned
to auction the records, but
later decided to write a book
with author Gary McAvoy.
Nye and McAvoy can now
work with agents and find a
publisher for their book.
Nye’s father, Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent
Harold Nye, kept the case
files at his home. Hendricks
ruled Nye’s First Amendment right to publish the
material outweigh the government’s interest in maintaining the confidentiality
of its investigative records.
Nye and McAvoy would not
reveal exactly what is in the
files, but Nye said his father’s notebooks had “vast
discrepancies” from what
Capote wrote.
“Our belief is that there is
no other reason (Kansas)
would want the materials
we have suppressed were
it not for the information
we found in them,” McAvoy said. “That information
connects to other research
I’ve done and supports a
pretty compelling new theory — one that I am reluctant to even discuss at this
point.”
The state’s lawsuit also
asked the court to decide
legal ownership of the case
files. The judge has made no
ruling on that issue.
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt’s office did
not respond to email and

CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOP: A grain truck passes by a park dedicated to the Herbert Clutter family in Holcomb, Kan., on Oct. 19, 2009. A Kansas judge has decided that
the son of a deceased Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent, who investigated the Clutter family murders and kept records at home, can publish
his father’s files from the 1959 murders that inspired the book “In Cold Blood.” ABOVE: The former home of the Herbert Clutter family is seen in
Holcomb, Kan.
phone messages seeking
comment Monday.
Clutter; his wife, Bonnie
Mae Fox; and their children,
15-year-old Kenyon and
16-year-old Nancy, were
killed at their rural farmhouse. The hunt for their
killers mesmerized the nation, drawing journalists
from across the U.S. to the
small, western Kansas town.
Parolees Dick Hickock and
Perry Smith were executed
for the killings in 1965.
Capote’s book about the
crime inspired a movie of
the same name.

The judge wrote that Kansas had not shown a legal
justification for suppressing
the material or for interfering with the public’s right
to know what is in them.
He also rejected the state’s
argument that the Clutter
family’s privacy concerns
justified blocking their release.
“The court is sensitive to
the plaintiff ’s concern about
publicity and its effect on
the Clutters,” Hendricks
wrote. “However, publicity
continues to follow this case
even fifty-five years after its

occurrence.”
O. Yale Lewis, Jr., an attorney for Nye and McAvoy,
said his clients hope to have
their book published in
time for the 50th anniversary in September of the publication of Capote’s book.
Ronald Nye said his late
father took detailed notes
about the case. Nye recalled
that his father was so disappointed in Capote’s book
that he read only about 115
pages before throwing it
across the room. He said his
dad walked out of the movie’s premiere after just 15

minutes.
Harold Nye worked for the
Kansas bureau from 1955
until his retirement in 1975;
he was its director from
1969 to 1971.
The state’s lawsuit names
as defendants Harold Nye’s
adult children, Ronald Nye
and Terry Hurley; his widow, Joyce Nye; and McAvoy and his Seattle-based
auction company, Vintage
Memorabilia, which specializes in film and literature relics.

PAGE 6

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

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GOP aide resigns over criticism
of President Obama’s daughters
MATTHEW DALY
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — An aide
to a Republican congressman resigned Monday after
her Facebook post criticizing
President Barack Obama’s
daughters touched off a backlash.
Elizabeth Lauten, communications director to Rep.
Stephen Fincher of Tennessee, said 16-year-old Malia
Obama and her sister Sasha,
13, should have shown more
“class” at a turkey-pardoning
ceremony last week at the
White House.
Addressing her comments
directly to the Obama girls,
Lauten wrote that they
should “respect the part you
play,” and added: “Then again
your mother and father don’t
respect their positions very
much, or the nation for that
matter, so I’m guessing you’re
coming up a little short in
the ‘good role model’ department.”
Lauten also urged the
Obama girls to “dress like you
deserve respect, not a spot at
a bar.”
Lauten later apologized for
the comments and deleted
the original post, which drew
harsh criticism across social
media.
Jessica Carter, chief of staff
for Fincher, said Monday that
Lauten resigned. Carter had
no additional comment on a
personnel matter.
White House spokesman
Josh Earnest said he was
surprised that a congressional staffer would use a
Thanksgiving-themed event
to criticize the first family,
adding that it’s “pretty much
common sense” that the first
daughters should be off-limits to criticism.

Follow
@KansanNews
on Twitter

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JACQUELYN MARTIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS

President Barack Obama, joined by his daughters Malia, right, and Sasha, center, speaks at the White House
on Nov. 26, in Washington during the presidential turkey pardon ceremony, an annual Thanksgiving tradition.
An aide to a Republican congressman has resigned after her critical comments about President Obama’s
daughters touched off a backlash. Elizabeth Lauten, communications director to Rep. Stephen Fincher of
Tennessee, commented on Malia and Sasha Obama’s pose and dress at a White House ceremony last week in
which the president pardoned a turkey. She wrote that the girls should have shown more class. Lauten later
apologized for the comments on her Facebook page that had drawn harsh criticism.
Earnest said the incident is
a reminder that people who
frequently speak in public
need to choose their words
carefully and be mindful of
how their words will be perceived.
After Lauten’s post became
the topic of conversation on
a variety websites, she issued
an apology, saying “many
hours of prayer,” conversations with her family and a
re-reading of her words made
her reconsider the post.
“When I first posted on
Facebook I reacted to an article and I quickly judged
the two young ladies in a
way that I would never have

wanted to be judged myself
as a teenager,” Lauten told
The Commercial Appeal of
Memphis in an email. “Please
know, those judgmental feelings truly have no place in my
heart. Furthermore, I’d like to
apologize to all of those who I
have hurt and offended with
my words.”
Roy Herron, chairman of
the Tennessee Democratic
Party, called Lauten’s criticism of the Obama daughters
“cruel, outrageous and inexcusable.”
Herron called the comment
an “unprecedented low in
Washington
mudslinging”
and “absolutely toxic for our

civic life and political culture.”
Sean Spicer, communications director for the Republican National Committee, tweeted Monday that
“children, especially the first
daughters, are off limits.”
But while Lauten’s comments were “inappropriate
and insensitive, the mainstream media’s coverage of
this story is appalling,” Spicer
said, adding that in more than
20 years in politics, he has
“never seen one of the countless inappropriate comments
by Democrats ever covered to
a fraction of this” remark by
a previously unknown staffer.

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

PAGE 7

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE DAILY DEBATE

Who will be the No. 4 seed in the playoff when the standings come out?
By Nick Couzin
@Ncouz

“OHIO STATE”

T

his Tuesday, when
the College Playoff
committee comes
out with its weekly top
four standings, there will
be a shake up at the No. 4
position.
We already know the
top-three seeds are locked
right now with Alabama,
Oregon and Florida State all
winning this weekend with
their conference championships coming up. The
current No. 4 seed is Mississippi State, but that is going
to change because it lost its
in-state rivalry game to Ole
Miss on the road.
The current No. 5 seed
is TCU, followed by Ohio
State and Baylor. TCU loses
out on its top-four spot
because of a loss to Baylor,
in addition to nearly losing
to Kansas on the road.
The Bears are favored
because they won their only
regular season meeting

against the Horned Frogs.
Now, Ohio State is in
the best position at No. 6
because it can easily get
into the top four. With TCU
slipping out of that No. 5
seed, the Buckeyes move
up after their convincing
win last weekend against a
falling Michigan team, 4228. The Buckeyes will play
the Wisconsin Badgers on
Friday night for the Big Ten
Championship at Lucas Oil
Stadium in Indianapolis.
It will be interesting to see
how this game plays out.
Quarterback J.T. Barrett,
who started the majority
of the games this season
after starting quarterback
Braxton Miller went down
with a season-ending shoulder injury, is now injured,
too. Barrett was carted
off the field in Saturday’s
game with an ankle injury.
He most likely will be on
the sideline in a cast come
Friday night.
Ohio State will be starting
sophomore quarterback
Cardale Jones, who has only
had 14 snaps all season, in

the most important game
of the season. This will
definitely be a problem for
them with an inexperienced
leader taking the snaps
and the explosive Heisman
favorite, Melvin Gordon,
running havoc on the Buckeye defense.
Come next week, don’t be
surprised if Ohio State falls
out of the four spot after
losing the Big Ten title to
the likes of the Badgers.
As of right now, the top
four is as mentioned: No. 1
Alabama, No. 2 Oregon, No.
3 Florida State and No. 4
Ohio State. On Tuesday, that
is what college football fans
should see. However, based
on what is to come from
conference championship
games this coming weekend
— ACC, SEC and Big Ten —
there will be changes.
— Edited by Ben Carroll

By Evan Riggs
@EvanRiggs15

T

“TCU”

his season marks
the first time college
football will feature
a four-team playoff, which
gives four teams a shot to play
for the national title. From
1998-2013, the top two teams
in the BCS poll played for the
national title. Now, instead
of debating who should be
number two, we are debating
who should be number four. It
has been anything but easy for
the committee to choose the
four best teams.
Barring any upsets in the last
week of the season, Alabama,
Oregon and Florida State are
all locked to make the playoffs.
With Mississippi State losing
to rival Ole Miss last week,
the fourth spot is once again
up for grabs. Led by Heisman
Trophy candidate Trevone
Boykin, TCU — who is fourth
in the current playoff rankings
— should be the fourth playoff
team.
The selection committee will

choose the playoff teams based
on strength of schedule, headto-head results, comparison
of results against common
opponents, championships
and other factors. It has also
said it will take injuries into
consideration, which means
Ohio State’s hopes ended last
week when quarterback J.T.
Barrett fractured his right
ankle, ending his season.
Baylor, on the other hand,
does have an argument with
its 61-58 win over TCU six
weeks ago. However, Baylor
was fortunate to come back
from a 21-point deficit and
was helped by two pass
interference calls against TCU.
If just one of these bad calls
was called differently, there is a
good chance TCU would have
won this game. Baylor did not
prove it was better than TCU,
just that it had luck on its side
that day.
There is a reason Baylor is
still ranked behind TCU. The
Bears’ overall body of work
does not measure up to the
Horned Frogs’. TCU’s strength
of schedule is No. 45, while
Baylor’s is No. 64. Baylor had

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no impressive nonconference
wins, while TCU handled
Minnesota 30-7, who went 8-4
this season.
Last week, Baylor narrowly
escaped Texas Tech, 48-46,
while TCU dominated the
bowl-bound Texas Longhorns, 48-10, in Austin. Their
narrow escape over Texas Tech
stripped the Bears of their only
other edge against the Horned
Frogs, and that was their worst
win. TCU’s worst win came
in Lawrence, where it beat
Kansas just 34-30. TCU had
to play in temperatures below
30 degrees on the road, while
Baylor played in-dome at a
neutral site.
This week, Baylor has a
chance to impress the committee against Kansas State. But
the Bears will be hard pressed
to be more impressive than
the Horned Frogs, who blew
out the Kansas State Wildcats,
41-20.
The playoffs are supposed
to feature the four best teams,
and TCU has 10 weeks of
proof on its side, while Baylor
has just one.
— Edited by Miranda Davis

PAGE 8

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

Football awards continued from page 10
Rookie
of the
Year

Offensive
Player
of the
Year

Defensive
Player
of the
Year

Play
of the
Year

Game
of the
Year

Corey Avery

Corey Avery

Corey Avery

Avery was thrown into the spotlight
early when senior running backs
Brandon Bourbon and Taylor Cox
were injured before the season. He
never showed freshman jitters and
instead became a consistent option.
Despite having to play through multiple changes around him (coach,
quarterback and running mates in the
backfield), he never seemed rattled.
He ended the season with five rushing
touchdowns and added a receiving
touchdown.
— Stella Liang

This freshman running back out
of Dallas, Texas had a lot of expectations after choosing Kansas over
powerhouses such as Baylor, Texas,
and LSU. Avery was ranked the 35th
best running back recruit according
to ESPN.com and handled his sudden role change with ease. He led
the backfield with 631 yards on 151
carries for 5 touchdowns. After an
impressive rookie year, Avery will be
the starting running back for the next
few years.
— Shane Jackson

The freshman running back took the
reins in the backfield to start the season — the first time Kansas started a
freshman running back in the season
opener since 2010 when James Sims
started as a freshman. Avery averaged 12 rushes for 52 yards per game
and five touchdowns on the season,
which were both team highs. Avery’s
103 rushing yards against Iowa State
was the most rushing yards in a game
for any Jayhawk this season.
— Blair Sheade

Jimmay Mundine

Michael Cummings

Tony Pierson

The John Mackey Award semifinalist
got off to a slow start, but quickly became Kansas’ go-to receiving target,
especially down the middle of the
field. He was one of eight semifinalists
to win the award, which goes to the
best tight end in the country, before
failing to make the final cut. Mundine
led the team with 584 receiving yards
and caught three touchdowns. His
best game came against TCU where
had seven catches for 137 yards and
a touchdown. He finished that game
with the most yards by a Kansas tight
end since 1974.
— Stella Liang

One of Clint Bowen’s first changes as
interim head coach was putting Cummings at quarterback over sophomore
Montell Cozart, who was struggling.
Cummings failed to throw for more
than 200 yards in just two of his starts,
while Cozart only had one game this
year with over 200 yards through
the air. Cummings had a personal
best 332 yards and two touchdowns
against TCU.
— Shane Jackson

Senior Tony Pierson only scored
three total touchdowns this season,
but he was successful lining up as a
wide receiver and a running back.
Offensive coordinator John Reagan
used Pierson as a dual threat option
by rushing for 324 yards and catching 22 passes for 203 yards. His five
plays over 20 yards was the most on
the team, and Pierson had the longest
rush (74 yards) from scrimmage this
season.
— Blair Sheade

Ben Heeney

JaCorey Shepherd

JaCorey Shepherd

The bearded face of the team anchored and led the defense this season. Senior linebacker Ben Heeney’s
127 tackles are good for most in the
Big 12. Against Texas Tech, he recorded 21 tackles, which is the most
at Kansas in a single game since 1979.
Just as important as his on-field play
was his leadership on and off the field.
Heeney, a second-time team captain,
finished his career with 335 total
tackles, which puts him eighth on the
school list.
— Stella Liang

Shepherd ended his senior campaign
on a low note after being torched by
the conference’s best receiver Tyler
Lockett. But prior to the Kansas State
game, Shepherd led the Big 12 in pass
defense with 19 passes defended. Of
his 19, 16 of those were pass breakups
and three were interceptions. Aside
from the first and last game of the
year, Shepherd did not surrender a
single touchdown.
— Shane Jackson

Every Big 12 team picked on senior
cornerback JaCorey Shepherd, who
often guarded the opposing team’s
best wide receiver. But Shepherd responded by leading the Big 12 in pass
deflections. Shepherd also led Kansas
with three interceptions. Bowen often
kept Shepherd on an island with the
opposing wide receivers, especially
against TCU, where Shepherd intercepted TCU quarterback Trevone
Boykin and broke up a pass.
— Blair Sheade

Nigel King’s catch

Nigel King’s catch

Nigel King’s catch

There was not a more bizarre or fantastic play this season than junior
wide receiver Nigel King’s circus reception. King was running down the
sideline when the pass was thrown his
way. It was batted into the air by him
and the defender at least three times.
Using extreme concentration, he finally ended up with the ball, evaded
his defender and ran 78 yards into the
end zone.
— Stella Liang

“I don’t believe what I just saw” would
suffice when describing this play
against TCU. In a game in which everything seemed to be going Kansas’
way, even this play was almost hard to
imagine. Many were calling it the best
catch of the college football season.
After being tipped up by a TCU defensive back, King bobbled it with his
right hand three times down the visiting sideline, and proceeded to sprint
down the sideline for the touchdown.
— Shane Jackson

The Nigel King 78-yard catch against
TCU was the play of the year and a
top play on SportsCenter’s top 10
plays. King’s play was the longest
reception from scrimmage and the
most eye-popping play of the season.
A pass thrown by Michael Cummings
was tipped by TCU corner back Kevin White then, before the ball went
out of bounds, King tipped the ball to
himself and ran 78 yards for a score.
— Blair Sheade

TCU

TCU

TCU

Even though the Jayhawks ended up
with the loss, this game provided the
most hope and excitement for both
the team and the faithful Jayhawk
fans. They gave the then-No. 4 team
in the country a huge scare, and the
Jayhawks led that game until late in
the third quarter. The offense was
crisp and the defense disrupted proficient passer Trevone Boykin. King
and Mundine both had over 100 yards
receiving and a touchdown.
— Stella Liang

It is hard to imagine a loss as the game
of the year, but if there was one game
where Kansas played it’s best it would
be the game against TCU. Kansas
took a then-No. 4 ranked TCU team
to the wire in the final game in Memorial Stadium, losing 34-30. Not
only did Kansas look its best in those
60 minutes than it did the entire year,
but that game alone may have torched
TCU’s College Football Playoff hopes.
It made Kansas football seem fun
once again.
— Shane Jackson

A Kansas loss doesn’t mean it can’t
be the game of the year because Kansas played its best three quarters of
the season against TCU. Cummings
threw for a career high 332 yards, and
senior tight end Jimmay Mundine
had a career high 137 receiving yards.
The Jayhawks led No. 4 TCU 13-10
at halftime, and Kansas held a 27-17
lead in the third quarter before the
Horned Frogs scored 17 unanswered
points and won 34-30.
— Blair Sheade

Winner:
COREY AVERY

Winner: TIE

The no-brainer award: TREVOR PARDULA. Pardula was the obvious choice for special teams player of the year.

mp
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Winner:
JACOREY
SHEPHARD

Winner:
NIGEL KING’S
CATCH

Winner:
TCU GAME

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN



QUOTE OF THE DAY

“It’s a badmatchup for Florida State.”
— ESPN Analyst Danny Kanell in
reference to Florida State versus
Georgia Tech

!

FACT OF THE DAY

The last time a two-loss team won
the college football National Championship was LSU in 2007-2008.
— ESPN

?

TRIVIA OF THE DAY

Q: When was the last time the top
two teams lost in the last week of
the college football season?
A: 2007:
(Pittsburg beat #2 West Virginia)
(#9 Oklahoma beat #1 Missouri)
— ESPN

PAGE 9

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014

THE MORNING BREW
College Football Playoff is all but decided

W

ith the college football
regular season coming
to a close this upcoming weekend, the first Saturday in
December will paint a solid picture of
how the postseason will unfold. Four
playoff spots are up for grabs, and no
team is guaranteed a game on Jan. 1.
For the ACC, Pac-12, SEC and Big
Ten conferences, each will have their
conference championship game on
Saturday. Whereas in the Big 12, the
championship will be decided from
the results of two games: No. 9 Kansas
State at No. 5 Baylor and Iowa State at
No. 4 TCU.
The ACC Championship will be between undefeated No. 3 Florida State,
who survived a poor Florida team,
and two-loss No. 12 Georgia Tech,
who defeated Georgia in Sanford
Stadium in overtime.
The Pac-12 Championship features
a rematch of an early October upset,
when No. 2 Oregon fell to unranked

By G.J. Melia
@gjmelia

Arizona at home. It’s a different story
now with Arizona ranked in the
top 10. The Ducks are again ranked
second in country, and will play the
No. 8 Wildcats Friday night at Levi’s
Stadium with revenge on their mind,
and a playoff spot for the taking.
No. 1 Alabama will look to claim its
third SEC Championship under head
coach Nick Saban, and the first since
2012 as they face SEC East Champion
Missouri. The Crimson Tide will look
to tighten up on the defensive side after giving up 44 points in a win versus
Auburn last Saturday.

Lastly, the Big Ten Championship was supposed
to be a matchup of two
Heisman hopefuls in
Ohio State’s J.T. Barrett
and Wisconsin’s Melvin
Gordon. But Barrett
went down with an ankle
fracture against Michigan,
drastically changing Ohio
State’s playoff chances.
Enter redshirt sophomore Cardale Jones, who will make
his first start in the biggest game of
the season. Jones is incredibly talented, yet the biggest question is how he
will handle the pressure.
If both TCU and Baylor win on
Saturday, the College Football Playoff
committee will have to decide if
Baylor’s win over TCU is enough to
put them over the Horned Frogs in
the rankings.
Quarterback Jameis Winston threw
a career-high four interceptions

against Florida,
and Florida State
has not looked
convincing throughout its unblemished
season. A loss against
Georgia Tech could
mean chaos for the
playoff committee.
An upset is unlikely in
the SEC Championship
game, but, at the risk of
sounding cliche, stranger
things have happened. Alabama
cannot overlook Missouri, and if
Oregon were to drop a second game
to Arizona, the Wildcats would have a
case for the playoff.
After Saturday, we should have a
better view of how the playoff will
look. But nothing will be decided
until the College Football Playoff
Selection Show, Sunday at 11:45 a.m.
central time on ESPN on Dec. 7.
— Edited by Lyndsey Havens

This week in athletics
Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

No Events

No Events

Women’s Swim
USA Winter Nationals
9 a.m.
Greensboro, N.C.

Friday

Sunday

Saturday

Men’s Basketball
Florida
8 p.m.
Lawrence

Track
Bob Timmons Challenge
All Day
Lawrence

Women’s Basketball
California
5 p.m.
Lawrence

Monday
No Events

Frankamp leaves Kansas to play for Wichita State
BEN CARROLL
@bcarroll91

Conner Frankamp, who left
the Kansas basketball program in October, has decided
to continue his collegiate basketball career at Wichita State
University.
Frankamp, who is still attending the University, is
a Wichita native and 2013
Wichita North High School
graduate. Frankamp decided
to stay close to home to finish
up his two-and-a-half years of
eligibility, but also considered
Colorado and Creighton.
"I really connected well with
the coaching staff and I feel I

could fit well in their system,"
Frankamp told ESPN.com on
Monday. "And of course, it's
tough to say no to home."
Last season with the Jayhawks, Frankamp averaged
2.5 points in just 8.3 minutes
of play, but played a larger role
in the NCAA Tournament,
where he scored double-digits
in the Jayhawks’ two games.
He decided to transfer to play
a larger role for another team.
Coming into this season,
Frankamp seemed to be behind returning sophomore
point guard Frank Mason and
freshman guard Devonte' Graham. With wing players such
as freshman guard Sviatoslav

Mykhailiuk getting major
minutes early, and sophomore
guard Wayne Selden Jr. doing
the same, playing time would
have been scarce for Frankamp
during the 2014-15 season.
There is also freshman guard
Kelly Oubre Jr. and sophomore
guard Brannen Greene, who
round out the guard position
for the Jayhawks.
Frankamp was the No. 34
recruit of the class of 2013,
according to Rivals.com and
ranked No. 46 according to
ESPN.com. He will be eligible to begin playing with the
Shockers in the spring semester of next year's season.
— Edited by Miranda Davis

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Former Kansas guard Conner Frankamp plays defense against Kansas State on Feb. 10, 2014.

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Volume 128 Issue 55



kansan.com



Tuesday, December 2, 2014

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN

sports

MOVING ON

Former guard Connor Frankamp transfers to Wichita State

PAGE 9

COMMENTARY

Jayhawks heating
up thanks to Ellis,
Mason

By Ben Felderstein
@Ben_Felderstein

Kansas is coming off of
an impressive showing at
thee 2014 Orlando Classic.
Kansas went 3-0 and won
the title in three strong
victories.
Junior Perry Ellis really
stepped up his game in
Orlando, being named both
tournament MVP and Big
12 player of the week.
“There’s no doubt Perry
Ellis is KU’s best player
right now.” Gary Parrish of
CBS Sports writes.
Ellis has taken the reins
of Kansas’ offense since the
Kentucky game. He is averaging 15.3 points per game
and 7 rebounds this season.
The Jayhawks will have to
ride that momentum into
their second hardest test
of the early season against
Florida. This will be Kansas
and Florida’s second matchup in as many seasons; Kansas is coming off of a loss
last season in Gainesville.
One of Kansas’ strong
points in Orlando was the
play from sophomore point
guard Frank Mason. Mason
struggled against a larger
Kentucky team, but has had
an easier time getting to
the basket since. One of the
keys to Kansas’ success this
season is Mason’s ability
to drive to basket and find
the open shooter on the
perimeter.
Kansas will need to
continue its strong nonconference play in order
carry momentum into the
Big 12 schedule. The Big 12
is a strong as it has been in
recent memory, and Texas
looks as ready as ever to
challenge Kansas for the Big
12 title.
Texas freshman Myles
Tuner is averaging 11.2
points per game with 6.7
rebounds and has 18 blocks
on the season. The Longhorns are ranked sixth
in the country and are a
perfect 6-0.
In comparison, Kansas’
freshman big man, Cliff Alexander, is starting to come
into his own. He’s averaging
9.7 points and 6 rebounds
in 18.7 minutes per game.
The matchups between
Alexander and Turner will
be intriguing going forward, as they are set to face
each other at least twice
in the regular season, with
another possible matchup
in the Big 12 Tournament in
March.
Alexander’s minutes will
likely increase as the season
presses on, as long as he
can stay out of foul trouble.
Against Kentucky, Alexander committed fouls on his
first two possessions of the
game. If he is going to be an
important piece for Kansas
going forward, he’s going to
need to stay on the floor.
The Jayhawks have a few
more tough tests before
conference play starts, but
come January, Bill Self and
Kansas will be focused on
one thing: an 11th straight
Big 12 title.
— Edited by Brian Hillix

JAMES HOYT/KANSAN

The Kansas football team walks off the field after Clint Bowen’s first home game as interim coach. One of the Kansan football writers nominated Bowen for Biggest Surprise this year.

The Kansan Presents:

KU FOOTBALL AWARDS
continued on page 8

Most
Valuable
Player

Most
Improved
Player

Biggest
Surprise

Michael Cummings

Ben Heeney

Ben Heeney

There were multiple players
who had good individual seasons, but there is not a player
that was more valuable to the
team than junior quarterback
Michael Cummings. He was
given the starting position
against Oklahoma State on
Oct. 11 and made an immediate impact. Since starting,
he got the tight ends and wide
receivers involved and overall
improved the team’s passing
threat. He took control of the
offense and really helped the
Jayhawks build drives, especially at home.
— Stella Liang

There is little doubt the best
player to put on a Kansas
uniform this season was Ben
Heeney. Captain Ben Heeney’s
conference-best 21 tackles
against Texas Tech alone was
enough to win this award. Every Saturday fans knew exactly what you were going to get
out of the senior linebacker.
Heeney recorded double-digit
tackles seven times, and currently leads the nation in solo
tackles per game. He’s made a
strong case to be considered an
All-American and could very
likely be playing on Sundays
next year in the NFL.
— Shane Jackson

The defense was the consistent
force of the Kansas football
team and the leader of the
defense was senior linebacker Ben Heeney, who led the
Big 12 conference averaging
11 tackles per game. Heeney
had 83 solo tackles, the next
best in the Big 12 had 65 solo
tackles. The MVP of the team
set a career-high against Texas
Tech with 21 total tackles and
17 solo tackles, which are both
Kansas school records.
— Blair Sheade

Michael Reynolds

Jimmay Mundine

Michael Reynolds

Senior linebacker Michael
Reynolds provided energy on
the field and never gave up in
his pursuit of the quarterback.
He ended the season with 45
tackles, 14.5 tackles for a loss
and seven sacks, all up from
last year. His biggest contribution this season came from
forcing fumbles, which he did
five times and is top in the Big
12. His tackles for a loss and
sacks are good for fourth in
the league in both categories.
He did a little bit of everything.
— Stella Liang

To be fair, Mundine did come
into this year with higher expectations after being named
to the 2014 Mackey Award
Watch List, an award for the
nation’s best tight end. He had
20 receptions for 229 yards
and five touchdowns last year.
This year Mundine took tremendous strides catching 45
balls for 584 yards and three
touchdowns. He became one
of Cummings’ favorite targets,
particularly on third down.
He wound up being named
a semifinalist for the Mackey
Award.
— Shane Jackson

Last season, senior linebacker
Michael Reynolds had 37 tackles and 6.5 sacks, which ranked
sixth in the Big 12. This season
Reynolds improved in both
categories. The senior ranks
fourth in the Big 12 in sacks
and tackles for a loss. Reynolds
sacked the quarterback seven
times and had 13.5 tackles for
a loss. Reynolds also had 45
total tackles this season, 35 of
those were solo tackles, and
caused a team-high five forced
fumbles.
— Blair Sheade

Nick Harwell

Clint Bowen

Michael Cummings

After sitting out last season
due to transfer rules, Harwell
proved to be a huge contributor to the offense in his only
year of eligibility at Kansas.
He was one of Cummings’ top
targets, finishing third on the
team in receiving yards with
470. He finished first on the
team with five receiving touchdowns. His teammates showed
trust in him by naming him
captain, even before seeing
him in a game.
— Stella Liang

It surprised a lot of Kansas
fans when they woke up one
Sunday morning following a
23-0 loss to Texas to the news
of Charlie Weis’ firing. It surprised even more when Clint
Bowen — not John Reagan
— took over as interim head
coach. While expectations
were low, Bowen surpassed
them in just a couple weeks.
Although he will only have one
win on his resume, you could
see the difference in this team
with Bowen in charge. Players
wanted to play for this guy,
something no one ever saw
with Weis at the helm.
— Shane Jackson

At the start of the season, all
the attention was on sophomore quarterback Montell
Cozart. After the loss to Texas, newly appointed interim
coach Clint Bowen gave the
starting job to redshirt junior
Michael Cummings. He led
Kansas to its only Big 12 win
against Iowa State and threw
for 332 yards against TCU,
which was the most passing
yards in a game since 2012.
Cummings finished with 13
total touchdowns and 1,715
passing yards.
— Blair Sheade

Winner:
BEN HEENEY

Winner:
MICHAEL
REYNOLDS

Winner: TIE

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