8A NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN CAMPUS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2008 CONTRIBUTED PHOTO --could play. Residents would be able to simply walk on and tee off. The Links at Lawrence would contain 480 one-bedroom and two-bedroom dwelling units. The Links would also include a swimming pool, sauna, hot tub, taming salon, weight room and a game room with ping-pong and pool tables. New complex may offer nine-hole golf course BY ANDY GREENHAW agreenhaw@kansan.com Students may have yet another apartment complex to choose from β€” this one with a nine-hole golf course. The Links at Lawrence would contain 480 one-bedroom and two-bedroom dwelling units surrounding a golf course, which apartment residents would be able to access for free. The public would also get limited access said Hugh Jarratt, project manager. "Our residents have first priority to tee times, but it will be open to the public at a reasonable fee," Jarratt said. "The fee will be a very competitive price on the lower end of the market." Non-residents would have to sign in at the pro shop, pay a fee and wait in line behind residents before they The Links would also include a The Links wos swimming pool, sauna, hot tub, tanning salon, weight room and a game room with a pingpong table and pool table. Lindsay Management Company is proposing the project. Planning Commission and the city planning staff have already voted to approve the project, but it now If approved "Our residents have first priority to tee times, but it will be open to the public at a reasonable fee." HUGH JARRATT Project Manager awaits the approval of the Lawrence City Commission. by city commissioners, the complex would go up outside of city limits about a half-mile north of Sixth Street, west of Queens Road said Mary Miller, the city planner in charge of the project. The decision would have been made at Tuesday's city commission meeting, but adverse weather conditions prohibited the civilians from The Lawrence-Douglas County attending the meeting Jarratt said he thought the consideration will be rescheduled for Feb. $12_{2}$ , but that has not yet been announced by the city. Edited by Daniel Reyes BUSINESS CAREER MONTH we make it easy See our online ad in the Jayplay section of KANSAN.COM Raffle for a chance to win an LCD TV, iPod, Nano, and more! Valid for attendees of three or more events Thursday, Feb. 7 11:00-Noon Researcing Companies 413 Summerfield Friday, Feb. 8 11:00-1:00 Lunch & Learn w/ Recent Grads Relays Room, Burge Union Monday, Feb. 4 2:00-2:30 Resume from Scratch Workshop Harper Lab, 420 Summerfield Friday, Feb. 8 Jayhawks on the Job Student Application Deadline Tuesday, Feb. 5 9:00-4:00 BCSC Open House & Employer Resume Review 125 Summerfield Friday, Feb. 8 UCC Resume Review Day 110 Burge Monday, Feb. 11 10:00-3:00 Resumania Koch Commons Tuesday, Feb. 5 4:00-5:30 Acing the Behavioral Interview Workshop, presented by Sprint 428 Summerfield Friday, Feb. 15 Mock Interviews Sign up in KU Career Connections Tuesday, Feb. 5 6:00-8:00 Consulting Industry Night Relays & Courtside, Burge Union Friday, Feb. 15 Wichita Company Field Trip Sign up in 125 Summerfield Wednesday, Feb. 6 3:00-4:30 Preparing for Grad School, presented by Kaplan 503 Summerfield Tuesday, Feb. 19 4:00-5:30 Employer Panel-Salary Negotiation 427 Summerfield Wednesday, Feb. 6 6:00-8:00 Supply Chain Industry Night Relays Room, Burge Union Wed, Feb. 20 - Fri, Feb. 22 Mock Interviews Sign up in KU Career Connections Thursday, Feb. 7 10:00-3:00 Resumania Koch Commons Friday, Feb. 29 Jayhawks on the Job Advanced sign up required Business Career Month Sponsored by: KPMG CERNER All Together perceptive software Deloitte Answers That Matter. EMBARQ BEAT EXPERIENCE Liberty Mutual ALDI TRADEBOT SYSTEMS INC. KU Business Career Services Center 》 TECHNOLOGY More buildings go Wi-Fi Senate surveying campus as part of two-year plan BY CALEB SOMMERVILLE csommerville@kansan.com Four more buildings on campus went wireless last week. Malott Hall, Haworth Hall, Summerfield Hall and Murphy Hall received wireless Internet access as part of the two-year KU wireless initiative. The initiative, which costs $2.6 million, will add 700 wireless access points to the 218 existing ones. First, a survey of each building is done to decide where to put the access points. Next, the access points are installed, along with any other necessary infrastructure. The points are then activated. The focus, said Bill Myers, director of assessment and outreach for information services, was on buildings that had the most classroom and lab space. Wireless internet, or Wi-Fi, works by sending data through radio waves. A wireless adapter transforms information from the computer into a radio signal and sends it to a router, which is physically hooked into the Internet. The process works in reverse to send information from the Internet to the computer. The survey stage for these four buildings began in fall 2007. Myers said Student Senate contributed $1.3 million of the funds. "The goal of the project is to achieve wireless coverage in 100 percent of the classrooms and labs on campus." Myers said. He also said that the residence halls were not included in the initiative. pus wireless. It would cost about the same to make the residence halls wireless as it would to make the rest of cam- The KU Wireless Initiative is expected to be finished in July 2008, with "Student Senate identified academic areas as the top priority for wireless coverage." Mvers said. In order for the residence halls to become wireless, funding would have to be secured. Myers said this was not a priority with the current plan. R a y Wittling, student body vice president, said were the most important to students. The amount of traffic, Wittlinger said, might overload the routers and cause problems. The infrastructure required to support a wireless residence hall would be expensive. Wittlinger also said that while students were interested in having wireless Internet in the residence halls, several factors made it not feasible. BILL MYERS Director of INfomation Services "The goal of the project is to achieve wireless coverage in 100 percent of the classrooms and labs on campus." that the Student Senate approved the $1.3 million in spring 2007. The money came from a reserve account. "Miscellaneous Common Areas go online on July 14. Wittlinger said Senate looked at campus, talked to students and conducted surveys to decide what areas to make wireless. Through these surveys, Senate decided that classrooms and labs The next buildings to become wireless are the Art and Design Building, Blake Hall, Lindley Hall, and Robinson Center. They are scheduled to be activated this month. Edited by Matt Hirschfeld NATION Holloway investigation reopened after interview reveals information BY MIKE CORDER ASSOCIATED PRESS. THE HAGUE, Netherlands The mother of missing American teenager Natalee Holloway said that she's now convinced her daughter is dead after watching hidden camera footage of a Dutch student allegedly acknowledging involvement, according to an interview published Saturday. "I can let her go now and begin mourning." Beth Twitty said in an interview late Friday with the best-selling Dutch daily De Telegraaf. "The 1 percent of hope I had that she was still alive is gone." Joran van der Sloot on Friday denied that he planned television show in which he will claim to have solved the mystery of Holloway's May 2005 disappearance with the help of an undercover investigation. "I can let her go now and begin mourning. The 1 percent of hope I had that she was still alive is gone." It was not known whether Twity had heard of Van der Sloot's denial before she spoke with the Dutch newspaper. Twity, who is in the Netherlands at De Vries' invitation, was not available to speak Saturday, said Peter Schouten, a spokesman for the crime reporter's show. BETH TWITTY Natalee Holloway's mother Van der Sloot was interviewed by the respected Dutch television show "Pauw & Witteman" following reports that crime reporter Peter R. De Vries had captured him making statements about the case. had anything to do with Holloway's disappearance in Aruba, saying he lied when he told someone privately he was involved. "It is true I told someone. Everybody will see it Sunday," Van Droet said, referring to De Vries' Van dei Sloot spoke to the late night current affairs show by telephone. His voice was recognizable from an earlier appearance on the show, which has closely followed the Holloway case. "That is what he wanted to hear, so I told him what he wanted to hear," Van der Sloot said, adding that he had built up a relationship with the man he spoke to, but had never fully trusted him. He did not identify the man. "It is so stupid, it is so stupid, it is really stupid," Van der Sloot said, his voice cracking. Van der Sloot's statement Friday came hours after Aruban prosecutors announced they were reopening their investigation into Holloway's disappearance after seeing De Vries' material. Aruba prosecutors made no reference to the possibility of an arrest, and Van der Sloot said he does not expect to be arrested again. β€œIt's easy to prove that what I said is not true, and that actually this is much ado about nothing, and so it's actually a shame that her mother has flown here and everything,” he said. One of Van der Sloot's attorneys, Joseph Tacopina of New York, said his client shouldn't have discussed the case. "He should have hung up the phone, but he didn't. Clearly it's not something his parents are happy about," Tacopina told The Associated Press. "The evidence refutes what Joran supposedly said," said Tacopina, who said he heard of the interview through media reports. "It doesn't change the truth of this case. And the truth is, Joran had nothing to do with Natalee's death." De Vries has not made clear what the "confession" consists of. Dutch newspapers published a partial transcript of his talks with Aruba prosecutor Hans Mos, and Mos' office said Friday that "what appeared on the Internet seems to be a reproduction of a part of the conversation."