I THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7,2013 PAGE 3 GAME REVIEWS STANDARD OF SUCCESS Relive Kansas clinching the Big 12 title 2005 VOL.115 ISSUE 109 WWW.KANSAN.COM PHI KAPPA THETA Fraternity faces up to 20 charges The judicial board of the Interfraternity Council has until this Friday to decide the punishment for Phi Kappa Theta fraternity. 1111 W 11th St. The IPC has a rule allowing for to lie to the hearing to determine the local punishment. Members of the judicial board read the chapter its formal charges last Friday. John Beyerle, vice president of public relations for the IFC, could not give specific details on how the report would be published. charges until耐旱that shees. He confirmed that the faternity could face stress. The fraternity had an unregistered party at its house on the weekend of Feb. 19. The chapter neglected to submit a Party Notification form, so the event was classified as an uninsured recruitment event by the IPC. The fraternity began an "open saloon," selling alcohol to minors. The chapter's national headquarters in Carmel, Ind., independently suspended on the Feb. 10 release. Louisiana police officers confiscated 16 kegs of beer, $517 in cans and signs that advertised the MONDAY, MARCH 7, 2005 In an interview last week, Kevin Liampe, national secretary of Phi Kappa Theta, said the fainterity could not participate in social functions, perform rituals or recruit new members The board of trustees will have a hearing later in the spring to determine the next course of action. - Eric Sorrentino STUDENT SENATE Delta Force launches campaign of the and heengthen BY DANIEL BERK dberk@kansan.com KANSAN STA WRIITE /iggins activating shoes best to ▼ MEN'S BASKETBALL: 72-68 vor Graff 'Mizz'erable agony BY MIRANDA LENNING mlning@kansan.com KANSAN NEWS FOR WRITER COLUMBIA, Mo. — The Jayhawks lost more than just a game yesterday. Ankle injury takes Langford out of game early on; Kansas can't fill hole The 72-68 loss to the Missouri Tigers can outright Big 12 championship, the seniors' perfect regular season record against their border rival, maybe a No.1 NCA 12 Tournament seed and maybe Keith The senior guard left the court just 3 minutes into the game after driving to the basket and drawing the foul. The basket fell, but so did Langlund. the wrong way on his left ankle. He gingerly limped off the court, and minutes later, he hopped to the locker room on one foot. Langford said he originally hurt the ankle in practice on Thursday. He did not notice it until Friday, when into yesterday's match, but said that he felt good going into the game. Kansas coach Bill Self said he didn't know the condition of the injury. He said he didn't think it was broken, but the doctor would do an MRI tomorrow to assess the injury. Unfortunately, information could be more serious than the one that kept him out of practice all week. "I don't think it's good." Self said. "Right now he can't put any weight on it." If there was ever a day Kansas needed Lending, it was yesterday. It would have been in hand on a day when there was not enough money to would have come in handy on a day when there was not enough money to come in handy from other players. It looked like Self was trying every possible line up in search of any kind of offense. In addition to making a call, he would have served senior guard Mike Lice in place of J.R. Gilden — he was forced to alter the bench to find someone who could perform his duties, absence off the bench, he used fresh men forwards Dumell Jackson. *Al* M” different things but we were unable to penetrate through Missouri's defense, and we didn't make shots. Russell Robinson Freshman forward Galiano and freshman guard Russell Robinson. They played 8, 12 and 11 minutes respectively. numbness to move up. "We tried to mix it up, just to see if we could get some guys scoring. Self said. credit the Tigers for that thing. the Missouri missouri defense did not allow many good looks at the attack. they had no one to create them. "We missed Keith offensive," Robinson said. "We tried some diffe- rences, and they didn't penetrate through Missouri's defense, and we didn't make shots." The tigers and. They went eight for 10 from behind the arc in the first half. bethle me are in the air That was the key reason Mizouz rebounded from an early deficit and took a 43-44 nulllead lead. defense, the jayhawks were as bad, "The problem was not as much offensively as it was defensively. Self said. "The problem we did was." As the Jayhawks hit the court after halftime, Langford hobbled slowly behind on a pair of crutches. The jayhawks looked just about as crippled. Their defense gave up nearly all their scoring, mismanagement and allowed the Tigers to stretch the margin to 49-34. SEE AGONY ON PAGE 6A Dermedi jackets, frontward, and Russell Robinson, freshman guard, block the path for Jimmy McLean, Missouri junior. Guard Davis Kansas' attempts at guarding him, McKinney scored 21 points against the Jayhawk fumiya McKinney 72-68 victory. 2011 That change starts with the Jayhawks' own defense, much maligned this season by coach Bill Self, which has taken a turn for the better under new point guard Elijah Johnson. "We'll talk about how poorly we played this week." Self said, "but we actually guarded better the last two games." TIM DWYER Johnson, who Self has previously said has played the best point guard defense the team has had this year, was the only Jayhawk to play double figure minutes (he played 26) and finish with zero turnovers. The Jayhawks finished with 24 turnovers, shot 28.6 percent from three and 43.6 percent from the field, had 26 personal fouls and a flagrant one by Marcus Morris. "That was definitely a toughness win," Tyrel Reed said. "Missouri's a great team. Hasn't lost at home this year." Tough, maybe, Ugly, definitely. But the Jayhawks won. In spite of the turnovers, and in spite of nearly blowing a 15-point lead in the final four minutes, Kansas won. Judging by the last two games, the Jayhawks have figured out that even when their shots aren't falling they still have to play defense. Before the Texas A&M game, Kansas had shot worse than 50 percent four times in conference play: two were losses, to Texas and Kansas State, and two were victories, by five points or less, to teams with losing records in Big 12 play. But they won. "If this was an artistic, pretty game," Self said, "then it probably wouldn't benefit us very much." There was an obvious blueprint to beating the Jayhawks, and it started with stifling their offense. But in the last two games, Kansas has shot worse than 50 percent against two ranked teams and has come away with victories in each. "I don't want to take full credit it for it," Johnson said. "I just feel like it kind of rile people up, and say some things that they're not used to hearing to make them want to play." It was evident early on, when he was subbed out with a 9-4 lead. The Tigers promptly went on a 10-2 run, which ended on Johnson's first possession back in the game. Kansas still has one major flaw left unresolved; the Jayhawks' penchant for stupid fouls flared up again in Missouri. Marcus Morris, who finished with 21 points and 10 rebounds, picked up a flagrant foul late in the second half that helped ignite Missouri's late run. Thomas Robinson, who finished with 15 and 13, started jawing with the Tigers after a basket and foul before Johnson got in his face and calmed him down. "That's my point guard," Robinson said, "coming in and calming me down." Looks like Johnson will be every Jayhawks' point guard for the rest of the year. Johnson's defense has earned him a late-in-the-season promotion to the starting spot, and he said he's changing the mentality of the team Johnson said he was surprised the team could win in spite of turning the ball over so many times, but that they couldn't afford to keep doing it. "Every team's not Missouri" he said, "so we've got to take care of the ball."