University Daily Kansan, June 12. 1985 continued from p. 1 Page 5 Building 530 units and was built in the early 1970s. Kaw Valley Management is managing newly built apartments on Eddingham Street. Twenty units are complete and another 40 will be completed by the fall semester. The spokesman, who asked not to be identified, said the apartments would rent for $400 a month. Mike Stultz, Rural Route 6, a Lawrence builder, said he had had numerous inquiries from students and others about Aspen West, a 70 unit complex he is building at 2000 W. 15th St. Sulzt said he expected to complete the units in late July and that a one- bedroom apartment would rent for $260 and a two-bedroom apartment for $320, including all utilities except electricity. Doug Holly, spokesman for Stadium Apartments, 1123 Indiana St., said his company had had quite a few requests about the new units called Berkeley Flats being built on the 1000 block of Mississippi Street, although he said there had not been as many as he might have thought. "We haven't done any advertising yet and we only put the sign up last week, so it's early to tell," he said. Holly said the new units would rent for $30, including water. Gas and He said all 42 of the new units would be one-bedroom apartments. electric bills would be the renter's responsibility. "I wish we would have built some two-bedroom units," he said. "It's more economical for the tenants to live with a roommate. They can split the rent, split the utility bills, but with the exception of about 15, all our units are one-bedroom and we have no trouble renting them out." continued from p. 1 Sturgeon said a trend toward smaller complexes for student apartments existed The complex has six one-bedroom apartments and two studios that would rent from $315 to $250. Library and bitter about the way the situation was handled. She said the supervisor in charge at the time of the incident continually accused her of being guilty and of lying to the police when the police officer questioned her. "She assumed guilt from the beginning," she said. "Maybe she was trying to scare me into telling." "When I was explaining what happened, she kept saying, 'Right, that's a good story and, Why don't you just ask her if you're guilty right now?' Fall said. Simmons said that the situation was a stressful one for a supervisor. "You're literally getting someone arrested," she said. "They are pretty much confrontational situations. And it's also time-consuming to press for more authority to admit a little lack of sympathy. The other half will try to come up with excuses for why the book was damaged, she said. "About half of them will admit they're guilty at the time and try to talk their way out of it. But we won't let them do that. The supervisors don't have the authority to let them off." "We check out a quarter of a million books each year. If there are so many damaged books," she said, "then why do we only see them when they are being taken out? Why don't we see them on the shelves? "We are confident they are trying to steal." Fall said, "People who know me said they couldn't believe that it was happening. But people who knew law said they didn't think I stood much of a chance. Asbestos "Personally, I felt trapped. I was offended by the way I was treated. I can see both sides, but if I had really wanted to steal that book, I could have. I know where they keep the books in the包。 "I'm bitter, but more bitter about the way it was handled than the outcome." continued from p. 1 report already had been taken care of by his department. "We know more now than we did then," Anderson said "If we were to do it now, we would do it differently." In April, four employees of facilities operations were certified by the National Asbestos Training Center in Overland Park in the operation and maintenance of areas containing asbestos, and two others received extensive training in different sessions. Anderson said. Lani Himegarner, project manager of the training center, said that the course was sponsored by the KU division of continuing education. The center received a grant last year from the Environmental Protection Agency and began operations in January. "We presented the information on proper procedures, but I can't speak to what they've done since 2015. A lot of the facilities operations staff Anderson said that a program had been set up to monitor the health of 19 workers who had been exposed to the asbestos. But none of the workers contacted had heard of the program. Smith said no one had told him about it. "I've asked several people if we were going to be examined," Smith said. "We were told we were going to Wakins and we haven't been." Smith said he was annoyed that the workers' concern for possible health effects did not seem to be taken seriously by University officials. "Actually getting down to the bare facts that this is a dangerous situation is the problem," Smith said. "We are still being laughed at." But Gerald Kerby, professor of medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center and the physician who screened the volunteers in the monitoring program, said that the danger to the workers was minimal. "Asbestos-related lung diseases only show up after a long exposure to high concentrations of asbestos." Kerby said. "People who are exposed eight to 12 hours a day for 20 years must protect on protection the ones at risk." Kerby said the most common form of asbestos in this country was chrysotile, an asbestos material produced in Canada. Chrysotile is the least hazardous form, he said. "The most dangerous forms are those from South Africa. You see very little of those in the Midwest. They were mostly used in the ship-building industry on the East Coast," he said. Association, by facilities operations staff was tested by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment in February and showed 20 percent asbestos, all chrysotile. A laboratory report of a sample of asbestos taken from the Old Bank Building, a structure at Eighth and Fifth Avenues in Kansas University Endowment No one knows exactly how much asbestos was removed from the boiler. 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