Brighton Leather Goods For Men & Women - Handbags - Wallets - Belts - Briefcases - Dayplanners - Shoes - Watches - Jewelry - Sunglasses * Ray Ban*, Brighton Readers, DKNY, Revo, and Anne Klein Gifts - ETC • ETC • Gifts Inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright. Rennie Macintosh Collection. Lamps, Art Glass, Ties, Clocks. Jayhawk Bronze Doorbell. - Jewelry - Huge selection of Sterling Silver, Custom KU Jewelry, Jayhawk Charm Bead, Chamillia and Troll Beads Efc. Efc. Efc. Ete., Ete., Ete. 928 Massachusetts 785-843-0611 www.thecteshop.com FREE Parking in Garage Behind Store ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC • ETC Send in your Game Day photo and you might see it in The Wave! Submit photos to wave@kansan.com along with name, hometown, and year in school for everyone in the photo. 1000 Massachusetts St (785) 832-0806 18 BIG 12 A football toss east of Massachusetts on $10^{th}$ (785) 832-0806 COLORADO BUFFALOES Buffalo offense falters in loss to Mountaineers By John Raby Associated Press MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Noel Devine ran for a career-high 220 yards and a touchdown and led West Virginia to a 35-24 victory over Colorado on Thursday night. Hawkins threw two touchdown passes, but Colorado (1-3) managed three total points on four other drives that went inside the 30. Jarrett Brown threw two touchdown passes and freshman fullback Ryan Clarke ran for two fourth-quarter scores for West Virginia (3-1). Colorado now faces the impossible task of meeting coach Dan Hawkins' offseason directive of "10 wins, no excuses." The Buffaloes would have to win the remainder of their games, including a bowl, starting next week at No. 2 Texas. Colorado was outgained 405-392 after Both offenses played sloppily despite having an extra week to prepare. West Virginia lost four fumbles and intercepted three of Cody Hawkins' passes. shutting out Wyoming 24-0 on Sept.19. The Buffaloes kept Brown mostly in check, but couldn't match Devine's speed. After Colorado turned the ball over on downs deep in its own territory, Clarke tacked on an 8-yard scoring run to put the game out of reach. Brown, sixth in the nation in total offense at 335 yards per game, twice overthrew wide-open receivers far downfield and finished 12 of 19 for just 148 yards. He was sacked three times. Colorado's Rodney Stewart had another solid game against the Mountaineers. Last year he rushed for 166 yards, the most ever by a Colorado freshman. On Thursday, Stew art had a 36-yard TD run in the first quarter and finished with 105 yards on 21 carries. Cody Hawkins kept his cool at times, avoiding the blitz to hit Scotty McKnight with a 29-yard scoring toss on fourth-and-7 early in the third that cut Colorado's deficit to four at 21-17. But Colorado didn't score again until the final seconds of the game. Hawkins went 27 of 52 for 292 yards. Riar Geer caught eight passes for 113 yards. TEXAS LONGHORNS Longhorn running backs competing for top spot By Michael Sherfield The Daily Texan AUSTIN, Texas — For the first time all season, a running back stood atop the Texas depth chart with no asterisks and no "or" beside his name. Tre Newton, after coming off two big performances against Wyoming and Texas Tech, was the long-awaited committee of one. Then Saturday rolled around. With two huge runs that combined for more than 80 yards and a touchdown, Vondrell McGee, the original starter when the season opened a month ago, reinserted himself in the conversation. He finished with 104 yards on eight carries, Texas' first 100-yard rusher all season. He was joined with impressive performances from Cody Johnson, whose only carry went for an 18-yard touchdown, and Fozzy Whittaker. The promising sophomore took his first carry of the season for a touchdown, only to see it nullified by a holding penalty. He responded with four carries for 38 yards and a score. Jeremy Hills also ran for 68 yards on three carries in the fourth quarter, but fumbled twice, on the same play. "It's a good problem to have," said offensive coordinator Greg Davis. "I'm encouraged by how we ran the ball in the second half." After a poor start from Newton in the first half, the Texas stable of runners galloped for 244 yards in the second half, en route to 303 rushing yards. "It's hard. Everyone that gets a chance to get in there does their thing," McGee said of the competition. The Longhorns have been looking for a feature runner for more than a year, a battle that went on through training camp, where McGee was named the starter. But after being slowed by an ankle injury for two weeks, he saw his carries cut sharply as Newton shined. The weekend leaves Texas in the same position it started, with plenty of able bodies but no clear No. 1. THE WAVE OCTOBER 9,2009 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN