+ THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MANAGEMENT Editor-in-chief Emma LeGault Managing editor Madison Schultz PAGE 2A Digital editor Hannah Barling Sales manager Tom Wittler Associate digital editors Stephanie Bickel Brent Burford Production editor Paige Lytle Digital media manager Scott Weidner Advertising director Christina Carreira News editor Amelia Arvesen ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT Associate news editor Ashley Booker Arts & features editor Lyndsey Havens Sports editor Brian Hillix Associate sports editor Blair Sheade Special sections editor Kate Miller Copy chiefs Casey Hutchins Sarah Kramer Art director Cole Anneberg Associate art director Hayden Parks Designers Clayton Rohlman Hallie Wilson Opinion editor Cecilia Cho Multimedia editor Tara Bryant Associate multimedia editors George Mullinix James Hoyt ADVISERS Media director and content strategist Brett Akagi Sales and marketing adviser Jon Schlitt + FRIDAY HI: 55 LO: 41 CONTACT US editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) 765-1491 Advertising: (785) 864-4358 Twitter: @KansanNews Facebook.com/thekansan The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of The Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Friday, Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams and weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside KJHK is the student voice in radio. Whether it's rock 'n' roll or reggae, sports or special events, KJHK 90.7 is for you. 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan., 68045 Check out KUJH-TV on Wow! of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at tvku.edu. The Weekly Weather Forecast TUESDAY HI: 59 LO: 37 weather.com KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS Mostly cloudy with a 0 percent chance of rain. Wind NN at 10 mph. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 Sunny with a 0 percent chance of rain. Wind WSW at 14 mph. WEDNESDAY HI: 67 LO: 39 Mostly sunny with a 0 percent chance of rain.Wind SSE at 8 mph. THURSDAY HI: 55 LO: 31 Sunny with a 0 percent chance of rain. Wind NWN at 18 mph. Monday, Nov. 3 What: Humanities Lecture Series When: 7:30-9 p.m. Where: Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union About: A lecture by Amy Wilentz, a journalist and author who focuses on the politics and culture of Haiti. What: Grown-up Lego Club When: 7-8:30 p.m. Where: Lawrence Public Library About: Play legos with like-minded adults. Calendar Three males forced their way into the apartment at approximately 11:10 p.m. One of the males had a handgun. On Saturday, three men broke into a Stouffer Place apartment on Anna Drive. All of the suspects have now been identified, and several individuals are in custody, according to an email sent out by the Public Safety Office. By Alana Flinn A 45-inch television and $30 were taken. What: Cup of Conversation When: 9 a.m. to noon Where: Wescoe Beach About: A public discussion about current events, recurring every Tuesday in November. Tuesday, Nov. 4 This story is developing, check Kansan.com for updates. What: Sexual Education Committee When: 7 p.m. What: Tea @ Three When: 3-4 p.m. Where: Kansas Union About: Drink tea and meet up with friends between classes. Where: Ecumenical Campus Ministries About: Former Prof. Dennis Dailey lectures about jealousy. What: Lunch N Learn When: Noon to 1 p.m. Where: Ambler Student Recreation Fitness Center, Room 202 About: A workshop about the benefits of massage therapy. Thursday, Nov. 6 Wednesday, Nov. 5 What: Student Night When: 5:30-7 p.m. Where: Spencer Museum of Art About: A casual event based off the themes of "Holding Pattern." What: Pause 4 Pups When: 8-9 p.m. Where: Ellsworth Hall About: Hang out with the therapy dogs provided by Loving Paws. Update on Stouffer Place robbery ADVISING FROM PAGE 1A By Alana Flinn differently," said Kelli Nichols, head of the committee and assistant dean and adviser in the School of Journalism. Nichols said the committee is not trying to change the way each school does its own advising, but have the advising network to cooperate and communicate more. “[We're] talking about how we deal with students when they apply to one of our majors, whether they're admitted or denied, and just sharing how each school does that, since each school does that a little differently,” Nichols said. Another administrative inconsistency the committee hopes to address is the different application deadlines, Nichols said. "Deadlines for those applications don't always match up, and [we're asking], could they?" Nichols said. "[We're] looking at making things a little more consistent for students [which] will make it easier for everyone." Edited by Yu Kyung Lee When asked if the case was closed or still under investigation, Shanks said most death investigations don't start and end within a period of 24 hours. Police investigate Sunday morning death Lawrence police investigated a call reporting shots fired at 24th Street and Brush Creek Drive on Sunday at approximately 2 a.m. The shots fired then became a death investigation after officers arrived, said Sgt. Craig Shanks of the Lawrence Police Department. The investigation unit will continue to look into the circumstances of the death, and the officer in charge of public relations will release more information tomorrow. Shanks said the public is in no immediate danger. He could not confirm whether the death was suspicious. This story is developing. Check Kansan.com for updates. Firefighters and emergency workers gather at a flight training facility at Wichita Mid-Continent Airport on Friday in Wichita after a crash and fire that left the building unsafe. Authorities say work begins Friday to recover the remains of victims who died when a small plane crashed into the facility Thursday. ASSOCIATED PRESS All four bodies recovered from Wichita plane crash ASSOCIATED PRESS WICHITA - The bodies of all four victims have been recovered from the rubble of a Wichita flight training facility that was struck by an airplane earlier in the week, according to the city's fire marshal. Wichita Fire Marshal Brad Crisp said in a news conference Saturday night that crews removed the body of the pilot from the roof of the Flight Safety International Learning Center at Wichita Mid-Continent Airport. The bodies of the other three victims who were inside a flight simulator when the twin-engine plane hit Thursday had been removed Friday. Crisp said crews had a hard time reaching the pilot's body because the walls and roof of the structure, which caught on fire after the crash, were crumbling. Wichita fire crews plan to remain at the crash scene through at least Sunday to deal with small flare-ups, Crisp said. "There are a lot of factors, including aviation fuel that's still in the building, that we have to pay attention to," he said. Police have confirmed the identity of the pilot as Mark Goldstein, 53, but Crisp declined Saturday to release the other victims' names, saying that the coroner's office was working to identify them and notify their families. Heavy-equipment operators were also on scene, deconstructing parts of the building,the newspaper reported. National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Peter Knudson told the newspaper Friday that the cockpit voice recorder had been removed by lowering someone in a harness into the rubble. in a hardness into the rubble. "We didn't want to wait until the building was safe to go into," Knudson said. "We wanted to get that information as quickly as possible." Knudson said the voice recorder would be shipped to Washington, D.C., for analysis. Knudson said the NTSB had determined there was also "some sort of data recorder" on board. It was not clear whether that recorder survived because it was not in a crash-hardened black box, though Knudson said officials are hopeful they can secure it. Roberts, Orman fight for narrow moderate eastern Kansas vote ASSOCIATED PRESS PRAIRIE VILLAGE — Republican Sen. Pat Roberts and independent challenger Greg Orman began their closing appeals in this surprisingly competitive race, aiming mainly at dissatisfied moderates in vote-rich eastern Kansas. Roberts, fighting for his fourth term, campaigned with former Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, describing him as a sensible collaborator during his years as majority leader. Orman took his message, stoking dissatisfaction with both parties, to rallies of supporters in Wichita and in the Kansas City suburbs. The two are locked in a neck-and-neck race, with Orman slightly ahead in polls, at a time when Republicans are within striking distance of winning control of the Senate. Yet, "It's time for Kansans to declare their independence from all this," Orman told about 200 supporters at a neighborhood park in Prairie Village, referring to gridlock in the federal government. "I'm asking Kansans to declare their independence by supporting mine on Tuesday." Republicans were not expecting to have to defend Roberts. Orman has led by very narrow margins since October, while Roberts' support has been steady but seldom ahead of Orman's. Orman needs larger than normal turnout from independents, and Democrats. "Because of you what was once an idealistic and hopeful campaign is now a campaign on the verge of victory," Orman told supporters. Recycle this paper +